Jabeen Ahmad in lab with colleagues.
Archaea are single-celled organisms with unique characteristics that distinguish them from bacteria and eukaryotes. Many archaea are known as extremophiles, living in some of the most extreme environments such as the boiling acidic hot springs of Yellowstone National Park, the sea ice, permafrost and polar regions of the Arctic and Antarctic, the hypersaline desert lands of Tunisia and the deep-sea hydrothermal vents and trenches off the coast of Iceland. Archaea also have novel pathways for nitrogen fixation, methanogenesis, phosphorus solubilization and chemosynthesis, which allow for discovery of new beneficial processes and molecules.
My area of research expands on the knowledge of PGP archaea by identifying and determining the function of soil- and root-colonizing archaea in wheat. By being able to effectively live in adverse or stressful conditions, archaea maintain the functionality of the soil, plant and microbial system, giving plants what they need while buffering them from environmental conditions that can cause harm. My research seeks to better understand how we may be able to harness the super heroic features of archaea to boost plant growth and development while enhancing tress tolerance and increasing pathogen resistance.
Jabeen Ahmad and colleagues.