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Professor Lorenzo Frigerio

Lorenzo Frigerio

Contact Details

Professor Lorenzo Frigerio

School of Life Sciences, University of Warwick

 

Research Interests

The majority of the plant proteins that humans and animals eat are produced and stored in the secretory pathway, which is a system of organelles found inside each plant cell, starting with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) – a network of membrane tubules that resembles a fishnet – and ending with the vacuole – a large container that can act as both a storage compartment or a dustbin, depending on the cell type.

We study how the endoplasmic reticulum gets its peculiar shape and how this shape relates to its function as a protein assembly factory. When pests or bacterial pathogens attack a plant, the ER changes shape very rapidly. We are trying to work out how this shape change helps the plant protect itself.

We also study how the vacuole changes its function from a site of degradation into a container of protein accumulation during the maturation of plant seeds. Understanding these processes is essential for exploiting the capacity of plants to produce and accumulate large amounts of nutritious, or high-value proteins.


MIBTP Project Details

Current Projects (2025-26)

Joint primary supervisor (with Professor Isabelle Carre) for:

Previous Projects (2024-25)

Primary supervisor for:

Joint primary supervisor (with Professor Isabelle Carre) for:

Co-supervisor on a project with Professor Jose Gutierrez-Marcos.