Portrait of Dr Dr Helen Cockerton

Dr Dr Helen Cockerton

Industry Research Fellow in Agri-Biotechnology
Expertise: Crop improvement, Biopesticides, Quantitative Genetics and Plant Path

About

Dr Cockerton graduated from the University of York with a degree in biology before conducting a PhD in plant and environmental science at the University of Warwick. During her PhD she uncovered a gene amplification mediated mechanism of herbicide resistance in Amaranths. From here, Dr Cockerton went on to conduct postdoctoral research at NIAB EMR where she focused on quantifying genetic components controlling desirable traits in octoploid strawberry. Further projects involved the study of plant pathogen interactions, through using inter-kingdom RNAi to investigate the disease infection process and assisting the development of disease resistant varieties through guiding marker assisted breeding and genomic selection.

In 2021, Dr Cockerton joined the University of Kent as an industrial research fellow. Her research group is comprised of 4 PhD students working on fungal pathogens of horticultural crops. The group is using CRISPR-Cas9 mediated gene editing to generate disease resistant strawberry varieties, identifying resistance loci to Verticillium nonalfalfae in hop and generating genomic resources for apple pathogens to identify host specific virulence factors.

Areas of Expertise:

Molecular Biology

  • Assisting the implementation of marker assisted breeding (KASP marker development)
  • Confirming disease resistance targets (Gene Editing)

Genetic Analysis

  • Identifying genetic markers associated with traits of interest for breeding (QTL mapping, GWAS, advanced phenotyping)
  • Genetic informed breeding of highly quantitative traits e.g. yield (Genomic selection)
  • Pathogen race/ fungicide resistance diagnostics (QTL mapping, comparative genomics)

Disease Control

  • Novel strategies for pathogen control (Spray Induced Gene Silencing and Host Induced Gene Silencing)
  • Optimising performance of environmentally favourable biocontrol’s for fungal pathogens

Research interests

Research interests are focused on developing advanced techniques for improved crop modification. These include novel methods of gene insertion and the exploitation of ‘rapid evolution’ individuals. Interests also incorporate the development of environmentally-safe crop protection strategies, namely the exploitation of RNAi to assist the control of plant pathogens. Ultimately, all research efforts are driven by the desire to translate genetic advances into horticulture.

Last updated 17 May 2022