The big picture: using wildflower strips for pest control
Plant Sciences for the Bioeconomy
Mark has 30 years' experience in plant tissue culture working with Solanaceous species and wheat. In recent years he has established Brassica napus transformation at Rothamsted Research (RRES) and is developing a transformation system for broad bean (Vicia faba) and black-grass. Mark has been running the Crop Transformation and Genome Editing Unit at RRes since 2022. Mark's past research interest has focused on a wide range of grain quality/end use projects in wheat including grain quality and cell wall composition for dietary fibre. He has been involved in the successful identification of key enzymes, arabinoxylans (AX), involved in cell wall biosynthesis in wheat endosperm, an important source of dietary fibre. Other research projects have looked at the role of puroindoline genes (wheat grain hardness) and genes involved in arabinogalactan biosynthesis, which may have application in human health, for example, prebiotics.