PhD position – Evolution of transcriptional networks shaping the legume root symbiosis with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia

  • //applyindex.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/germany.png Germany
  • University/Institute Name Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
  • Attendance Type On Campus (Full Time)
  • Position DurationSee Position Description
  • Position Funding Type PhD Research Funding
  • Unspecified Unspecified

Position Details (PhD Research Project)

Institute: LMU Munich, Faculty of Biology, Genetics

Subject areas/Research fields: Protein Biochemistry/ Structural Biology/ Molecular Biology/ Molecular Plant Sciences, Microbiology, Microbiology, Cell Biology, Developmental Biology, Evo-Devo, Genetics

Keywords: Development, Evolution, Symbiosis, Plant-Microbe interaction, transcriptional regulation, transcriptional networks

Name of supervisor: Prof. Dr. Martin Parniske and Dr. Chloé Cathebras

Funding: LSM-CSC/DAAD-GSSP (LSM), Application for funding by the DFG is in progress

Project title: 

Evolution of transcriptional networks shaping the legume root symbiosis with nitrogen-fixing rhizobia

Project description:

Crop production worldwide is sustained through nitrogen fertilizer produced via the energy-demanding Haber-Bosch process. Legumes evolved to become independent of nitrogen from the soil by engaging in symbiosis with bacteria, collectively called rhizobia, that convert atmospheric nitrogen to plant-usable ammonium. The project builds on the underlying idea that the nitrogen-fixing root nodule symbiosis of legumes experienced modifications and improvements by dynamically evolving transcriptional networks. By focusing on transcription factors and cis-regulatory elements on cognate promoters, the early career scientist will investigate and compare the connections between different signaling pathways involved in the evolution of the nitrogen-fixing symbiosis of legumes. 

The project will require a strong knowledge base and ideally practical experience in protein biochemistry, analysis of protein-protein and protein-DNA interaction in vitro and transcriptome analysis in silico.

References:

https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=1g3whIEAAAAJ&hl=en

For further information, please contact: 

Dr. Chloé Cathebras, [email protected]

Prof. Dr. Martin Parniske, [email protected]

Reseach group website: 

https://www.genetik.biologie.uni-muenchen.de/research/parniske/parniske/index.html

Apply: Please send your application through the online portal of the Graduate School Life Science Munich (LSM)

Position Start Date