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Target audience: students, high-school pupils, university faculty, high-school teachers, biologists, agriculturalists, professionals in the food or agricultural sector, anyone interested in biology, food safety, biodiversity, etc..
In this half-day symposium at BOKU we will:
1) explain and describe the systems around gene editing in an understandable way;
2) showcase some examples of gene editing for genomic research and crop improvement;
3) discuss some of the economic and political aspects; and
4) discuss with you your expectations, concerns, and questions.
Keynote speker Prof. Steven Runo is working on understanding host-parasite interaction between Striga hermonthica (witchweed) and its host plants. Striga is a noxious parasitic weed that causes major crop losses, particularly in Africa and poses a threat to food security and the livelihoods of smallholder farmer. Steve Runo has identified genes in wild millet that are responsible for resistance to Striga and is using his knowledge to equip cultivated millet varieties with Striga resistance. Gene editing is one approach used for this purpose: one of many examples in which this principle can contribute to increasing yields and food security.
Monday, 10 February 2025, 14:00 – 18:00 CET
@ BOKU University, Vienna
Ilse Wallentin House, Seminar Room 29, Peter Jordan Strasse 82, 1190 Vienna
Livestream at: https://youtube.com/live/EEgEhFPReog
Free admission but registration required: https://survey.boku.ac.at/629924
Contact: Prof. Hermann Bürstmayr, BOKU and Gregor Mendel Society Vienna.
Email: plant.breeding@boku.ac.at
Hosted by BOKU University Vienna, in cooperation with the Gregor Mendel Society Vienna, the Gregor Mendel Institute of Molecular Plant Biology, and the Austrian Academy of Sciences.