Version 2 Universidade Nacional da Irlanda em Galway -- Ciência sem Fronteiras PhD Project Template Use one form per project Please complete & submit to international@nuigalway.ie as soon as possible, and by 27/11/2012 In your email, begin the subject line with [SWB] (be sure to use square brackets) to ensure that your email is filed correctly. Emails will be automatically filed PI name & contact details: School: Dr. Ronan Sulpice Ronan.Sulpice@nuigalway.ie School of Natural Sciences http://www.nuigalway.ie/natural_sciences/research.html Has project been agreed with head (or nominee) of proposed registration school? Yes Research Centre / group affiliation: Plant & AgriBiosciences Research Centre (PABC) www.plantagbiosciences.org Plant Systems Biology Research Lab http://www.nuigalway.ie/botany/ http://www.nuigalway.ie/botany/sulpice_home.html Research group / centre website: PI website / link to CV: Brief summary of PI research / research group / centre activity (2 or 3 lines max): The Plant Systems Biology Lab aims at understanding how plants cope with the fluctuating environmental conditions they encounter in nature, i.e. understand what are the genetic/physiological bases of plant robustness. In other words it is about understanding how plants use fluctuating and unpredictable resources in order to survive and grow. Title & brief description of PhD project (suitable for publication on web): REGULATION OF CARBOHYDRATE ASSIMILATION AND GROWTH OF THE AMAZONIAN TREE SENNA RETICULATA IN RESPONSE TO ENVIRONMENTAL CUES Collaboration with Pr. Marcos S. Buckeridge – Laboratorio de Fisiologia Ecologica de Plantas (LAFIECO) - Universidade de Sao Paulo, Brazil Photosynthetic processes are restricted to the light period and the leaves, but the use of the photoassimilates produced for growth and metabolic processes occurs during the whole diurnal cycle and in all plant tissues. Thus, the photoassimilates have to suffice not only for the immediate demand for growth (from the synthesis and mobilization of sucrose), but also be stored usually as transitory starch for the demands at night. The proportion of assimilated carbon stored as starch for the night demands largely varies between species, but also between environmental conditions, this Version 2 Universidade Nacional da Irlanda em Galway -- Ciência sem Fronteiras regulation still remaining poorly understood. It has been proposed that plants respond in an acclimatory manner, modifying carbon utilization to minimize harmful periods of carbon depletion, which usually occur towards the end of the night. The forests of the Amazonian varzea are seasonal floodplains with a monomodal, predictable flood-pulse (Junk et al. 1989) and cover approximately 300.000 km2 along the main rivers in the Amazon basin. The periods of extended flooding can last as much as 210 days per year, with a water column of up to 6-7 m. This causes drastic changes in the availability of nutrients and oxygen levels. Despite these adverse growth conditions, Amazonian floodplain forests are highly diverse and Amazonian trees can be well adapted to the periodical floodings due to the use of different morphological and physiological strategies. As demonstrated by our Brazilian collaborators on this project (Dr. Buckeridge lab in the University of Sao Paulo), one important mechanism is the plasticity of the carbohydrate metabolism (Ferreira et al., 2009; Arenque et al., submitted). Senna reticulata Irwin & Barneby (Fabaceae) is a pioneer species typical from seasonal floodplains and is considered one of the most efficient colonizing species of this environment. This species has been studied for 7 years by Buckeridge´s group, focusing mainly on aspects of carbon metabolism in experiments with elevated CO2 concentration in relation to the actual concentration in the atmosphere. One of the key results is about the high capacity of Senna reticulata to store starch in their leaves and not in the roots as observed before in other species from Amazonian floodplain, which might allow this species to easily access the carbohydrates necessary for the synthesis of new leaves when the trees are waterlogged. Starch amounts in Senna reticulata leaves spam from around 16% of the dry weight at ambient CO2 (390ppm) conditions up to 32% under elevated atmospheric CO2 (780ppm). Moreover, Senna reticulata has a very high growth and resprout rates, what allow this species to be used as bioenergy source (e.g. bioethanol production from starch and/or gasification) for the small and isolated communities in Amazonian region where it is not possible use electricity from hydroelectric companies. Besides these characteristics, this species has an unique carbohydrate metabolism that together with high tolerance to flooding and a high growth rate makes Senna reticulata a model of choice for physiological studies. Up to now studies have focused on the effect of elevated CO2 and flooding, but Global Climate Change is likely going to modify as well the temperature and the periods of drought in the Version 2 Universidade Nacional da Irlanda em Galway -- Ciência sem Fronteiras Amazon area (IPCC, 2007). Therefore, studies involving these variables can be, together with the elevated CO2 responses, of great importance to build models and help to explain the impacts of future climate change scenarios on tropical species. By combining the research efforts of Buckeridge lab in physiological studies with tropical plants in Brazil together with the metabolic/molecular expertise developed by Sulpice´s lab in Ireland, we expect to improve the understanding of the influence of the environmental fluctuations induced by the Global Climate Change on the carbon metabolism and investigate its effects on growth patterns in a tropical environment. Methods used in the frame of this project will non-exhaustively involve the phenotyping of the plants for the determination of photosynthesis, growth rates and the use of state of the art methodologies for the determination of metabolites, enzyme activities and transcripts. To our knowledge, this will be the first time that such an approach including sophisticated techniques of molecular and metabolomics techniques will be applied to an Amazonian species in order to evaluate responses to the forecasted impacts of climate change. REFERENCES Arenque, B.C., Grandis, A., Pocius, O., de Souza, A.P., Buckeridge, M.S. Responses of Senna reticulata, a legume tree from the Amazonian floodplains, to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration and flooding. Submitted to Plant, Cell and Environment. Ferreira, C. D. S., Piedade, M. T. F., Tine, M. A. S., Rossatto, D. R., Parolin, P., Buckeridge, M. S. (2009) The role of carbohydrates in seed germination and seedling establishment of Himatanthus sucuuba, an Amazonian tree with populations adapted to flooded and non-flooded conditions. Annals of Botany, v.104, p.1111 - 1119. IPCC (2007). Climate change 2007: the physical science basis. In: Solomon S, Qin D, Manning M, Chen Z, Marquis M, Averyt KB, Tignor M, Miller HL (eds). Contribution of Working Group I to the Fourth Assessement Report of the Intergovernamental Panel on Climate Change, Cambridge, UK/New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.Karl & Trenberth 2003 Modern Global Climate Change Junk WJ (1989) Flood tolerance and tree distribution in central Amazonian floodplains. In: Tropical forests: botanical dynamics, speciation and diversity (eds Holm-Nielsen LB, Nielsen IC, Balslev H), pp. 47-64, Academic Press, New York. Version 2 Universidade Nacional da Irlanda em Galway -- Ciência sem Fronteiras Unique selling points of PhD project in NUI Galway: NUI Galway projects should emphasise features that are not typically available in Brazil – specific equipment, multi-disciplinarity, aspects of structured programme, links with industry, placements, links with other research groups etc. The PhD project will strategically position the student for a successful career in plant biosciences and biotechnology. The Plant Systems Biology Lab publishes in high-impact international journals which improves the competitiveness of the researchers within the Lab. The Plant Systems Biology Lab is located in the Plant & AgriBiosciences Research Centre which has a dynamic mix of research groups and researchers, working with industrial and institutional partners to advance plant and agribiosciences innovations. The structured PhD program in NUI Galway allows students to get high-quality English language training and training in additional science skills including statistics, science communication and advanced molecular biosciences. NUI Galway is one of the top universities in Ireland with almost 18,000 students and 2200 staff, and has regularly won accolades such as being nominated as the Sunday Times University of the Year. Galway is a small, safe and friendly city, with a vibrant cultural scene and the largest Brazilian population in Ireland. Name & contact details for project queries, if different from PI named above: Please indicate the graduates of which disciplines that should apply: Biotechnology, molecular biology, genetics, plant sciences, biosciences, systems biology Ciência sem Fronteiras / Science Without Borders Priority Area: Please indicate the specific programme priority area under which the proposed PhD project fits- choose only one (tick box): Engineering and other technological areas Pure and Natural Sciences (e.g. mathematics, physics, chemistry)/Physical Sciences (Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry, Biology and Geosciences) Health and Biomedical Sciences / Clinical, Pré-clinical and Health Sciences Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs), Computing Aerospace Pharmaceuticals Sustainable Agricultural Production X Oil, Gas and Coal Renewable Energy Minerals, Minerals Technology Biotechnology Nanotechnology and New Materials Technologies for Prevention and Mitigation of Natural Disasters Bioprospecting and Biodiversity Marine Sciences Version 2 Universidade Nacional da Irlanda em Galway -- Ciência sem Fronteiras Creative Industry New technologies in constructive engineering Please indicate which of the following applies to this project (referring to Science Without Borders arrangements): Suitable only as a Full PhD (Y/N): _ _Y Available to candidates seeking a Sandwich PhD arrangement (Y/N): _N Suitable for either/Don’t know: _____