Doctor Richard Hill
Candidature
Graduated PhD 2023
Thesis Title
Investigating how Eucalyptus grandis Processes Fungal Signals During Colonisation
Research Project
I am essentially studying how Eucalyptus roots differentiate between pathogenic and mutualistic fungi. Starting off with the interaction between Eucalyptus grandis roots and firstly the mutualistic fungi Pisolithus microcarpus, and secondarily the pathogenic fungus Armillaria luteobubalina; I shall independently study and later compare these two interactions. Through this, I shall construct a model of E. grandis gene regulation and how this differentiates between the two interactions. I shall then test this model, trying to identify responsible signal molecules and later seeing how this model translates to other such plant-fungal interactions.
This research shall help enable further developments to tailor plants to their local microbiome and optimize the mutualistic plant-fungal interaction for human benefit.
Publication
Hill RA, Wong-Bajracharya J, Anwar S, Coles D, Wang M, Lipzen A, Ng V, Grigoriev IV, Martin F, Anderson IC, Cazzonelli CI, Jeffries T, Plett KL, Plett JM, (2022) 'Abscisic acid supports colonization of Eucalyptus grandis roots by the mutualistic ectomycorrhizal fungus Pisolithus microcarpus', New Phytologist, vol.233, no.2, pp 966-982
Research Supervisors
Dr Jonathan Plett, Dr Krista Plett and Dr Thomas Jeffries