
Dr Imogen Sparkes
BA(Cantab.), MA(Cantab.), PhD(Leeds)
Current positions
Senior Lecturer
School of Biological Sciences
Contact
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Research interests
Organelle movement is a seemingly chaotic event in the vast majority of cell types which can be imaged in plants (such as epidermal and spongy mesophyll cells). Movement appears more ordered in cells under going polarised tip growth (pollen tubes and root hairs). The speed of movement is correlated with cell size and therefore plant growth. Movement parameters also alter in response to external stimuli such as light, pathogens and heavy metals.
We are using a combination of live cell imaging, molecular cell biology and modelling to understand the molecular and biophysical principles governing the global phenomenon of organelle movement. Using optical tweezers we have uncovered, and been able to quantify, physical interactions between organelle pairs in vivo.
Our overall aim is to understand the positional information relayed by organelle movement and interaction, which ultimately results in changes in cell size. By dissecting out the molecular components which control these processes, we can then use them as tools to probe the functional response of changing organelle movement and interaction parameters.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Shapeshifting: Plant ER architecture manipulation by pathogen effectors
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Biological SciencesDates
01/06/2022 to 31/05/2025
Thesis supervisions
Publications
Recent publications
07/12/2024Emergence and stability of endoplasmic reticulum network streaming in plant cells
Journal of Theoretical Biology
ARP2/3 complex associates with peroxisomes to participate in pexophagy in plants
Nature Plants
Applying optical tweezers with TIRF microscopy to quantify physical interactions between organelles in the plant endomembrane system
Current Protocols
Plant Endoplasmic Reticulum
Encyclopedia of Life Sciences
Arabidopsis thaliana myosin XIK is recruited to the Golgi through interaction with a MyoB receptor
Communications Biology