Due to pregnancy, I had to suspend SPLINTER four months after its commencement.
1.During the first four months, I initiated the characterization of a promissing signalling protein candidate that interacts with several N-terminal signalling domains from different NLRs (protein-protein interaction validation and reverse genetic). This finding allowed me to develop a new collaboration in France.
2. Upon exploration of available transcriptomic data, I observed that several truncated NLR genes are upregulated upon R. solanacearum infection in Arabidopsis, suggesting that these proteins may play a role in Arabidopsis immunity in response to Ralstonia.
3. Before SPLINTER started, I have shown that immune signalling induced by isolated N-terminal domain from two different NLRs from Arabidopsis and flax, is not inhibited by an elevation of temperature. During SPLINTER, I have extended this finding by showing that signalling induced by another type of signalling domain present in wheat NLRs is also tolerant to elevated temperature, hence supporting that temperature stress tolerance of immune response dowstream of NLR activation is a general mechanism including in crops.
During this short period I established my research network in France. This includes participating to and presenting my project at the first Toul-effectome meeting, a local network of scientists working on microbe effectors and plant immunity. I also attended seminars series of the host institute and presented at weekly group meeting of the Deslandes’ group, which allowed me to interact and exchange with my peers on a regular basis. I was also contacted by a coordinator of « pint of science » Toulouse to present my work to the general public (planned in May 2019)