The Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research is committed to a
number of research goals, one of which is "to determine whether and how a
detailed understanding of molecular mechanisms defined in model plant
species can be used to rationally manipulate selected traits in crop
plants." The Institute was founded in 1928 as part of the
Kaiser-Willhelm-Gesellschaft and the first director, Edwin Baur, was
interested in creating breeding programs with fruits and berries, though
the Institute's scope has expanded since then. Visitors to the homepage
should start by clicking on the News section. Here they can peruse
recent releases from the Institute on how plants use mobile proteins to
defend themselves against bacteria and the evolutionary "dead end" of
powdery mildew. Scholars and others will want to click on the Reports
and Publications area to look at some recent scholarly works and annual
reports from 2009, 2006, and 2003.
From The Scout Report, Copyright Internet Scout
1994-2012. http://scout.wisc.edu/
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