Biological colloquium
Biological guest lectures

Biological guest lectures
The lectures are an excellent opportunity for students, researchers and anyone interested to find out about the latest trends and developments in biology and to exchange ideas with experts in biological research groups.
Most of the lectures are given in English by external scientists. Guests are very welcome!
Attention room change, in the winter semester 2025/26 the colloquium will take place in building 42-110.
Many photosynthetic species have evolvedCO2-concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) to improve the efficiency ofCO2 assimilation by Rubisco and reduce the negative impacts of photorespiration. As the majority of plants (i.e. C3 plants) lack an active CCM, introducing a functional heterologous CCM into crops is a key engineering ambition to enhance yield potential. Most algae, including the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, possess a pyrenoid-based CCM that and enhancesCO2 concentrations in the chloroplast and aggregates Rubisco into a liquid-like phase separated condensate resulting in faster catalysis and decreased photorespiration. Through advances in our understanding of the Chlamydomonas CCM (and more recently those in other species), the complex task of building a functional pyrenoid-based CCM in crops has moved several steps closer to reality, particularly now with a model-based roadmap to guide future engineering efforts. I will outline how pyrenoid-based CCMs can boost plant performance and resilience to climate change and our recent progress in transferring key components and features into plant chloroplasts.
Important for students:
The credit points earned are reported after attending at least 10 courses in two consecutive semesters.
Please submit these attendances to the Dean's Office and indicate the dates attended.
Organization:
Luigina Hanke: bio-dekanat(at)rptu.de