Helen Brabham
@helenbrabs.bsky.social
640 followers 720 following 14 posts
(she/her) Working in the wonderful world of plant disease resistance. 🌾🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 Team Leader in 2Blades, The Sainsbury Laboratory, Norwich, UK.
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Reposted by Helen Brabham
Reposted by Helen Brabham
Reposted by Helen Brabham
natbiotech.nature.com
Engineered pattern recognition receptors enhance broad-spectrum plant resistance - @zmbp-tuebingen.bsky.social go.nature.com/474nnA9
Reposted by Helen Brabham
philippaborrill.bsky.social
The mystery of redundancy between homoeologs continues! Knocking out one homoeolog in wheat doesn't cause the other homoeologs to be upregulated... nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...

Great work led by @delfidorussen.bsky.social with @emilieknight.bsky.social @simmojsimmo.bsky.social
Reposted by Helen Brabham
baptistebio.bsky.social
Exploring fern pathosystems and immune receptors to bridge gaps in plant immunity - BMC Biology
Land plants include angiosperms, gymnosperms, bryophytes, lycophytes, and ferns, each of which may deploy distinct strategies to resist pathogens. Here, we investigate fern-pathogen interactions by characterizing novel pathosystems and analyzing the diversity of fern immune receptors. A collection of fern species was inoculated with a diverse set of filamentous microbes, and disease symptoms were assessed. We further leveraged published genome mining tools to analyse the diversity of receptor-like kinases, receptor-like proteins (RLKs/RLPs) and nucleotide-binding and leucine-rich repeats (NLRs), along with key immune signalling components, in ferns. Our results reveal that ferns exhibit a range of responses to pathogens, including putative non-host resistance and more specific resistance mechanisms. Among ten ferns tested, Pteris vittata displays the broadest spectrum of pathogen compatibility. Genome mining indicates that ferns encode a diverse repertoire of putative immune receptors, antimicrobial peptides, and mediators of systemic acquired resistance. Ferns possess numerous RLKs/RLPs, resembling those required for cell-surface immunity in angiosperms. They also encode diverse NLRs, including sub-families lost in flowering plants. These findings provide insights into disease resistance evolution and open promising perspectives for crop protection strategies.
bmcbiol.biomedcentral.com
Reposted by Helen Brabham
Reposted by Helen Brabham
mcdonaldmeganc.bsky.social
Very excited to have our small contribution to the growing Starship field now published @mbio.bsky.social, as always a great peer review process with one of my favorite society journals
Reposted by Helen Brabham
biorxiv-evobio.bsky.social
Regulatory features determine the evolutionary fate of laterally acquired genes in plants https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.08.22.671697v1
helenbrabs.bsky.social
An interesting sentiment; bringing more critical thinking, analysis, and interdisciplinary work across all courses is crucial to develop and empower students in the age of AI.
djvanness.bsky.social
Interesting article on the things that AI does and does not do well, and why the skills we work to instill in our PhD students are exactly what is needed to continue to generate meaningful insights and expand the frontiers of knowledge. #AcademicSky www.forbes.com/sites/shivar...
The PhD Is The New MBA
In the PhD program, we train students to ask the right questions, always ask about the basis for an inference and to keep coming up with new approaches to problems. With AI, MBAs might need these ver...
www.forbes.com
Reposted by Helen Brabham
onisillos.bsky.social
"Science is not a popularity contest; you can’t bully your way to truth … Science simply cannot advance without people sticking to the truth even in the face of opposition"

I can think of a few people outside AI who also need to hear this...

garymarcus.substack.com/p/openais-wa...
OpenAI’s Waterloo? [with corrections]
Post GPT-5, the narrative has flipped — and that could hurt them
garymarcus.substack.com
Reposted by Helen Brabham
ryankatzrosene.bsky.social
Woah! Such an important study published in Nature today! Quick thread with some of their key figures!
🧵
Reposted by Helen Brabham
pdchristine.bsky.social
VACANCY

Optical Microscopy Specialist

Come work alongside the plant and microbial scientists at JIC and help us explore the biological frontier at the tissue, cell and subcellular scale!
johninnescentre.bsky.social
VACANCY - We’re seeking an Optical Microscopy Support Specialist to join our Bioimaging Platform, to help train users on light microscopes, collaborate on imaging projects and provide technical support.

www.jic.ac.uk/vacancies/op...

Closing date - 11 August 2025
Contract - Full time, indefinite
Optical Microscopy Support Specialist | John Innes Centre
An exciting opportunity has arisen for an Optical Microscopy Support Specialist to join the Bioimaging Platform at the John Innes Centre.
www.jic.ac.uk
helenbrabs.bsky.social
"This raises the possibility that the fitness costs of other commonly studied immune system genes may be grossly misjudged without field studies." 🌱 Great to see work including environmental variation and community effects.
behavecolpapers.bsky.social
A major trade-off between growth and defense in Arabidopsis thaliana can vanish in field conditions @PLOSBiology.org
A major trade-off between growth and defense in Arabidopsis thaliana can vanish in field conditions
by Derek S. Lundberg, Sonja Kersten, Ezgi Mehmetoğlu Boz, Pratchaya Pramoj Na Ayutthaya, Wangsheng Zhu, Karin Poersch, Wei Yuan, Sophia Swartz, David Müller, Ilja Bezrukov, HARVEST TEAM , Detlef Weigel When wild plants defend themselves from pathogens, this often comes with a trade-off: the same genes that protect a plant from disease can also reduce its growth and fecundity in the absence of pathogens. One protein implicated in a major growth-defense trade-off is ACCELERATED CELL DEATH 6 (ACD6), an ion channel that modulates salicylic acid (SA) synthesis to potentiate a wide range of defenses. Wild Arabidopsis thaliana populations maintain significant functional variation at the ACD6 locus, with some alleles making the protein hyperactive. In the greenhouse, plants with hyperactive ACD6 alleles are resistant to diverse pathogens, yet they are of smaller stature, their leaves senesce earlier, and they set fewer seeds compared to plants with the standard allele. We hypothesized that ACD6 hyperactivity would not only affect the growth of microbial pathogens but also more generally change leaf microbiome assembly. To test this in an ecologically meaningful context, we compared plants with hyperactive, standard, and defective ACD6 alleles in the same field-collected soil, both outdoors and in naturally lit and climate-controlled indoor conditions, taking advantage of near-isogenic lines as well as a natural accession and a CRISPR-edited derivative. We surveyed visual phenotypes, gene expression, hormone levels, seed production, and the microbiome in each environment. The genetic precision of CRISPR-edited plants allowed us to conclude that ACD6 genotype had no effect on mature field plants in our setting, despite reproducibly dramatic effects on greenhouse plants. We conclude that additional abiotic and/or microbial signals present outdoors—but not in the greenhouse—greatly modulate ACD6 activity. This raises the possibility that the fitness costs of other commonly studied immune system genes may be grossly misjudged without field studies.
dlvr.it
Reposted by Helen Brabham
hpidon.bsky.social
🚨 Our Nature paper is out!
We present a chromosome-scale assembly of a wild barley relative, unlocking insights into virus resistance and genome evolution 🌾🧬
My contribution focused on dissecting the BYDV resistance locus.
#PlantScience #Genomics #Barley #BYDV #NaturePaper
Reposted by Helen Brabham
davidrvetter.bsky.social
🚨NEW from me: the U.S. and Europe could experience a 40% drop in food production this century as temperatures rise, a major new study has found. "It's almost like in this context, those with the most to lose, lose the most," said Prof Andrew Hultgren, a lead author of the study.
U.S. And Europe Face 40% Drop In Food Production, Scientists Warn
Major study finds world's most productive farming regions are especially vulnerable to rising temperatures, and face steep declines in agricultural output this century.
www.forbes.com
Reposted by Helen Brabham
plantevolution.bsky.social
Must read for all who use Nicotiana benthamiana as a platform: “Causes and consequences of experimental variation in Nicotiana benthamiana
transient expression”
#plantscience

www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...