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Professor Anna Koltunow
Professor

Anna Koltunow

Email: 
Phone: 
0452413270

Overview

Background

Professor Anna Koltunow has a formidable record of accomplishment in plant reproduction research and translating that research into gains in agricultural sectors.

Her research focus is on the molecular and genetic mechanisms that regulate development of plant reproductive cell types and, therefore, seed and fruit formation. Accomplishments include developing seedless fruit, a sought-after commodity in the horticultural sector.

She was selected by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to head an international collaborative research venture between six research organisations and a multinational seed company to develop technologies so smallholder African farmers could economically save seed from cowpea and sorghum hybrids. Professor Koltunow led the first five-year phase of this project, called Capturing Heterosis, while at CSIRO. This project finished in July 2019. The second phase, also funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation – Hy-Gain for smallholders – commenced in March 2020, at The University of Queensland.

The Hy-Gain project is a multi-party international research project comprising seven world leading teams aiming to develop a novel technology to increase seed yield and productivity in sorghum and cowpea crops for smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa. This exciting 5-year project, is led by Professor Koltunow in QAAFI’s Centre for Crop Science. Hy-Gain aims to ensure the technology is compatible with plant breeding to support the future, rapid delivery of new high yielding sorghum and cowpea hybrids and improved varieties. The project has some fundamental discovery work, however its key aim is building and testing the utility of the technology in plants. The research objectives span molecular work in the laboratory to field work involving genetic, genomic and transgenic technologies and testing reproductive productivity of sorghum and cowpea plants in glasshouse and in the field.

Together, the Hy-Gain project team is developing new ways to breed sorghum and cowpea varieties that make it possible to achieve large gains in yields, while increasing resilience to diseases and environmental stress.

Professor Koltunow’s collaborations have had an international focus and she has consistently obtained external research funding from several sources (ARC, Australian rural development corporations, and bilateral funding involving CSIRO and India, China, Japan and Brazil and philanthropic funds). She has participated in EU consortia, trained international researchers and national and international students in plant reproduction research in partnership with national and international University collaborators. She has Professorial Affiliations with the University of Adelaide, La Trobe University and works with Huazhong Agricultural University in China.

Whilst maintaining an international profile in plant reproduction research, Professor Koltunow has also held senior leadership roles at CSIRO (including Program leader and Deputy Chief). She served on the Premier’s science council in South Australia, ARC College of Experts, as President and Past President of the International Association of Plant Reproduction Research and on various scientific boards including a CRC and two New Zealand Crown Research Institutes. She has been involved in the organization of 9 international conferences, works on advisory panels, editorial boards. She is a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science and the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering.

Availability

Professor Anna Koltunow is:
Not available for supervision

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, University of Adelaide

Research impacts

Academic achievements:

  • Fellow of the Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (2018)
  • Elected a Fellow of the Australian Academy of Science (2016)
  • Member of the Australian Research Council College of Experts, Biology and Biotechnology (2010-2012)
  • President and Past-President of the International Society for Plant Reproduction Society (2002-2006;2006-10)
  • Director of two New Zealand Crown Research institutes, CRC for Viticulture and Provisor, a research companies (2003-2009)
  • Served terms as Program Leader and two terms as Deputy Chief at CSIRO Plant Industry (2001-2006 and 2013-2014)
  • Board of the IPMB society (elected, 1997-2000)
  • Australian Research Council 5-year Fellow (1991-1995).
  • Postdoctoral studies: CSIRO Horticulture (1986-1988), UCLA, USA (1989-1990).
  • PhD University of Adelaide, 1987.

Works

Search Professor Anna Koltunow’s works on UQ eSpace

104 works between 1983 and 2026

101 - 104 of 104 works

1988

Journal Article

Isolation of three viroids and a circular RNA from grapevines

Rezaian, M. A., Koltunow, A. M. and Krake, L. R. (1988). Isolation of three viroids and a circular RNA from grapevines. The Journal of general virology, 69 ( Pt 2), 413-422. doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-69-2-413

Isolation of three viroids and a circular RNA from grapevines

1987

Journal Article

Promoter efficiency depends upon intragenic sequences

Koltunow, A. M., Gregg, K. and Rogers, G. E. (1987). Promoter efficiency depends upon intragenic sequences. Nucleic Acids Research, 15 (19), 7795-7807. doi: 10.1093/nar/15.19.7795

Promoter efficiency depends upon intragenic sequences

1986

Journal Article

Intron sequences modulate feather keratin gene transcription in Xenopus oocytes

Koltunow, A. M., Gregg, K. and Rogers, G. E. (1986). Intron sequences modulate feather keratin gene transcription in Xenopus oocytes. Nucleic Acids Research, 14 (16), 6375-6392. doi: 10.1093/nar/14.16.6375

Intron sequences modulate feather keratin gene transcription in Xenopus oocytes

1983

Journal Article

Cycloheximide inhibition of cytokinin-dependent protein synthesis: correlation with betacyanin synthesis

Elliott, D.C and Koltunow, A. (1983). Cycloheximide inhibition of cytokinin-dependent protein synthesis: correlation with betacyanin synthesis. Functional Plant Biology, 10 (2), 145-151. doi: 10.1071/pp9830145

Cycloheximide inhibition of cytokinin-dependent protein synthesis: correlation with betacyanin synthesis

Funding

Current funding

  • 2023 - 2026
    Predicting Perfect Partners: climate resilient seed production technology
    ARC Linkage Projects
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2026
    Hy-Gain for Smallholders (2020-2025)
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Professor Anna Koltunow is:
Not available for supervision

Media

Enquiries

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