Significant time was spent getting to grips with the fundamentals of electron microscopy. Several attempts were made to visualise different auxiliary factors — the Rad51 paralogs Rad55-Rad57, Swi5-Sfr1, and Rad54 — bound to Rad51 filaments, but these attempts ultimately proved unsuccessful. In parallel, biochemical experiments were devised to investigate whether phosphorylation modulates the interaction of Swi5-Sfr1 with Rad51. This line of enquiry proved fruitful and we discovered that phosphorylation of Sfr1 negatively regulates the binding to and activation of Rad51, leading to less efficient DNA repair. These results were disseminated in several ways. Firstly, they were presented locally to other lab members in lab meetings. Secondly, I conducted this project with a MSc student that I was responsible for supervising, and this student also presented the project locally to obtain his masters degree. Thirdly, this project was presented at departmental meetings and symposia, both at Imperial College London and at the Francis Crick Institute, where we are currently on secondment. Fourthly, this work has just been accepted for publication in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, an international peer-reviewed scientific journal. There has not yet been an opportunity to disseminate these findings to the general public but efforts will be made going forward to utilise any opportunities that do arise.