Projects
What is a Project?What is PlaSMo? PlaSMo stands for Plant Systems-biology Modelling Ensuring the achievements of yesterday's Mathematical Modellers will be available for the Systems Biologists of tomorrow.
Our aims
To identify plant mathematical models useful to the UK plant systems biology community, which are currently in a variety of legacy formats and in danger of being lost To represent these models in a declarative XML-based format, which is closer to the systems biology standard SBML To evaluate the behaviour ...
Programme: SynthSys
Public web page: Not specified
Research programme in the Takato Imaizumi lab, with multiple collaborators. Published in Song et al. Nature Plants 2018; Kinmonth-Schultz et al., in silico Plant 2019.
Programme: SynthSys
Public web page: https://faculty.washington.edu/takato/
Andrew Millar's research group, University of Edinburgh
Programme: SynthSys
Public web page: http://www.amillar.org
For plants, light is a signal that carries information about the environment, and a source of energy for photosynthesis. PHYTOCAL focuses on the interaction between phytochrome signalling and photosynthesis, and seeks to understand fundamental processes that make carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) resources available for plant growth. These unexplored connections underlie biomass production and plasticity, which contribute significantly to yield variability in the field.
Programme: SynthSys
Public web page: http://hallidaylab.bio.ed.ac.uk/node/1
EPSRC project with Exeter, SynthSys and EPCC
Programme: SynthSys
Public web page: Not specified
EU FP7 collaborative project TiMet, award number 245143. Funded 2010-2015. "TiMet assembles world leaders in experimental and theoretical plant systems biology to advance understanding of the regulatory interactions between the circadian clock and plant metabolism, and their emergent effects on whole-plant growth and productivity."
Programme: SynthSys
Public web page: http://timing-metabolism.eu/