Supervisors
Leadership
Plant Biology Institute
Chief Scientific Officer of the Plant Biology Institute

Professor Steve Kelly

Steve is Chief Scientific Officer of the Plant Biology Institute at EIT. Steve is also Professor of Plant Science in the Department of Biology at the University of Oxford and co-founder and chief scientific officer of Wild Bioscience Ltd, a spin-out from the University of Oxford that harnesses insights from the vast genomic resources of wild plants to improve yield in the worlds most important crops.

With a background in genomics, plant science and evolutionary biology, Steve has played a key role in driving the application of comparative genomics to unlock the genetic basis of evolutionary innovation. From developing the software tools and conceptual frameworks that facilitate this discovery, to identifying and harnessing the sequence changes that drive phenotypic change in plants. Steve has had central roles in multiple crop improvement projects in both commercial and academic contexts and has made contributions to environmental sustainability of scientific publication.

Steve has worked on challenges from dissecting the molecular basis of variation in productivity in plants, to the evolution of diverse biochemical pathways and using genetic data to drive innovation in technology and crop improvement. He is author of over 100 scientific articles and multiple patents.

Awards and certifications

Publications

Increased chloroplast occupancy in bundle sheath cells of rice hap3H mutants revealed by Chloro-Count: a new deep learning–based tool
Widespread adaptive evolution in angiosperm photosystems provides insight into the evolution of photosystem II repair
Metabolic engineering of stomatal precursor cells enhances photosynthetic water-use efficiency and vegetative growth under water-deficit conditions in Arabidopsis thaliana
Increased chloroplast area in the rice bundle sheath through cell specific perturbation of brassinosteroid signalling
INCREASED CHLOROPLAST OCCUPANCY IN BUNDLE SHEATH CELLS OF RICE hap3H MUTANTS REVEALED BY CHLORO-COUNT, A NEW DEEP LEARNING-BASED TOOL
Realisation of a key step in the evolution of C4photosynthesis in rice by genome editing
A prion-like protein regulates the 2-dimensional to 3-dimensional growth transition in the mossPhyscomitrium patens
Integration of population genetics with oceanographic models reveals strong connectivity among coral reefs across Seychelles
Rubisco is evolving for improved catalytic efficiency and CO2 assimilation in plants
Transposable elements contribute to the establishment of the glycine shuttle in Brassicaceae species
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