Dr. Jungnam Cho (right), one of the CEPAMS Group Leaders is presenting his joint project to FCO Chief Scientific Adviser, Professor Carole Mundell (left). (Image by QI Lei)
China and the United Kingdom launched four new joint projects to extend their current cooperation landscape on March 27, during the visit of the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office Chief Scientific Adviser, Professor Carole Mundell, to Shanghai Campus of the CAS-JIC Centre of Excellence for Plant and Microbial Science (CEPAMS).
These projects will boost research links between Norwich, Beijing and Shanghai. All four are being led by newly-hired CEPAMS principal investigators, working closely with John Innes Centre colleagues. Two of the projects look at the close association between microbes and plants and how this association can be both harmful and beneficial. It is this association that holds the key to future growth in crop yields, reductions in disease and fewer chemical treatments for crops.
One project will explore the anti-cancer properties of some plants used in traditional Chinese medicine in a CEPAMS collaboration that also involves the UK’s Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew.
One further project will examine plants’ molecular responses to abiotic stresses such as heat and drought, which will be of crucial importance in adapting to a changing climate.
The Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) - John Innes Centre (JIC) Centre of Excellence for Plant and Microbial Science (CEPAMS) has been described as the most advanced Sino-UK collaboration in life sciences.
CEPAMS has been nurturing and strengthening links between UK and Chinese researchers since 2014. It has also been hiring some of the best scientists globally to work in CEPAMS’ state of the art laboratories in Beijing and Shanghai.
Between 2014 and 2018, 22 UK-China collaborative research projects have been funded, building on the complementary strengths of the three CEPAMS campuses.
FCO Chief Scientific Adviser, Professor Carole Mundell, said: “I am delighted to be here at CEPAMS to mark the launch of these four exciting projects, doing exactly what the UK-China Joint Strategy for Science, Technology and Innovation Cooperation set out to facilitate: British and Chinese scientists working in partnership to tackle global problems. All four are excellent examples of how by combining our expertise and sharing information, we can together find solutions to some of the world’s biggest challenges”.
Professor HAN Bin, director of the Shanghai Institute for Plant Physiology and Ecology of CAS confirmed that both sides will provide full support to these projects, including the necessary funding in China.