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How Plants Recognise Seasons Using Molecular Memory – with Caroline Dean



The Royal Institution

Caroline Dean explores how plants monitor seasons and how their molecular memory systems help them sense fluctuating winter temperatures.
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Watch the Q&A: https://youtu.be/UrwjJBTccE0

Dame Caroline Dean is a plant scientist working at the John Innes Centre. She is focused on understanding the molecular controls used by plants to seasonally judge when to flower. She is specifically interested in vernalisation — the acceleration of flowering in plants by exposure to periods of prolonged cold.

This talk and Q&A was filmed in the Ri on 28 June 2019.


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16 thoughts on “How Plants Recognise Seasons Using Molecular Memory – with Caroline Dean
  1. About 15% of audience puts their hands up and she assumes they allknow. Apart from that great present from royal institute and the speaker once again!

  2. I'd put money on there being a proximity effect , such that a molecular off state will switch on easier if there is a on state molecule next to it. The hysterisis during spring is likely due to a low population of on state molecules.

  3. This lecture could have been finished within 20 minutes .bit this schalor is uselessly interested in her personal biography & unwanted over explainstion simple things of her research that could have been bypassed.

  4. Packed with knowledge which most of us should be aware of. Particulatly if we consider our own Health and physical changes by things we eat amd stages in Life.. and ofcourse our microbiome too😛😌📚📖💡🕯🗝📊🧬🧘‍♂️

  5. Excellent presentation for the nonfamiliar. I wonder if I the epigenetic relationship in Parkinsons disease has been looked at in this expert way. I did a web search — but you know how those go. More data mythology than i can deal with. but i will delve further. How fine would it be to discover that the gut influences the epigenetic such that they "freeze"

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