Dr Mike Haydon - Lecturer and Group Leader

Mike completed his undergraduate degree and PhD at the University of Melbourne, Australia. He then travelled to Europe for post-doctoral work at the University of Heidelberg in Germany as a Marie Curie Fellow and then the University of Cambridge in the UK. From 2013, he was a lecturer and research group leader at the University of York before moving to the School of BioSciences at the The University of Melbourne in March 2016.

 

 

Dr Ángela Román-Fernández - PDRA (York)

Ángela completed her undergraduate degree and PhD in Biochemistry at the University of Zaragoza, Spain. She joined the lab as a post-doc in September 2014 to work on a BBSRC-funded project on sugar signalling in Arabidopsis and continues to work on this project at the University of York

 

 

Heather Eastmond - Research Technician (York)

Heather completed her undergraduate degree in Biological Sciences at the University of Leicester followed by a Masters degree at the University of York in 2011. She joined the lab in August 2015 to work on a BBSRC-funded project on sugar signalling in Arabidopsis and continues to work on this project at The University of York.

 

 

Opportunities   

If you are interested in joining the lab, please check News for current vacancies.

 

Prospective Masters and PhD students or post-docs thinking of applying for fellowships can contact me by email anytime.

 
 
 
Former members

Waheed Arshad

Waheed studied Biology at Durham University and completed a Masters at the University of Reading. He joined the lab in September 2014 as a Research Technician and left in September 2015 to start a PhD at Royal Holloway London.

 

 

 

© 2016 Haydon

Haydon lab

Molecular plant physiology

Based in the School of BioSciences at The University of Melbourne (and also in the Department of Biology at the University of York) we use genetics, chemical genetics, molecular biology and biochemistry to understand signalling pathways underpinning adaptive mechanisms in plants in response to changes in environment.

Please note: This webpage is now obsolete. Please visit us at our new webpage.