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- Food security represents a major global issue. This was also a major problem in the middle of the last century when food production failed to keep pace with population growth. In this latter case, plant breeders were able to develop new high yielding dwarf varieties of rice and wheat that responded to high inputs of fertilisers. The so-called 'Green Revolution' has delivered 50 years of food security. However, western societies are increasingly demanding that agriculture becomes more sustainable, through reductions in chemical inputs; whilst in the developing world, farmers with little access to fertilisers, need crops that can grow in infertile soils. In both cases, developing crops with improved nutrient use efficiency would provide the solution. Root architecture critically influences nutrient and water uptake efficiency. For example, rooting depth impacts the efficient acquisition of soil nitrogen (and water) since nitrate leaches deep into the soil. In contrast, phosphate use efficiency could be significantly improved without increasing root depth by manipulating the angle of root growth to better explore the top soil where this macronutrient accumulates. Despite this knowledge, root architecture has not been a trait selected for by plant breeders in major cereal crops. However, the need to improve nutrient use efficiency in crops through manipulating root architecture is becoming increasingly urgent. Its impact on world agriculture would be such that the crop scientist Jonathan Lynch has called for a 'Second Green Revolution' focussing on root architecture, and that this should be made 'a priority for plant biology in the 21st century'. This research proposal aims to first identify the genes that regulate root architecture in the simple plant Arabidopsis thaliana, then use this information to manipulate equivalent genes in cereals, with the ultimate goal of altering their root architecture and improving nutrient use efficiency. The ambitious programme of research relies on a new X-ray based technique (called Micro-CT) that can image the 3D arrangement of living roots in soil. We will use the Micro-CT technique to identify Arabidopsis mutants (which lack a specific gene) with an altered arrangement of roots. This will enable us to pinpoint exactly which genes regulate root architecture. Identifying equivalent genes in cereal crops is relatively straight forward since barley and rice are distantly related to Arabidopsis. We will then use advanced genetic techniques to inactivate these barley and rice genes and then examine their consequences on root architecture and nutrient use efficiency. Promising rice and barley lines will be made available to professional breeders at IRRI and SCRI with the ultimate aim to introgress their modified root traits into elite crop varieties.