PhD Candidate · The Sainsbury Laboratory · Norwich, UK

Angus
Bucknell

Using novel protein design and structural bioinformatics to decode effector function in the fungal plant pathogen Magnaporthe oryzae.

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Angus Bucknell

Decoding the mechanisms of fungal invaders

I'm a PhD candidate at The Sainsbury Laboratory (TSL), Norwich, UK. Supervised by Prof. Nick Talbot, my work focuses on the molecular biology of the blast fungus Magnaporthe oryzae.

To infect plants, M. oryzae secretes effector proteins that suppress immunity and promote pathogenesis. I use novel protein design and computational, structural methods to probe how these effectors function.

Alongside my research, I care about science communication and making complex biology accessible, primarily through public engagement talks.

What I'm working on now

01
Novel protein design for effector characterisation
We're using novel protein design to generate bespoke binders against M. oryzae effector targets. In doing so, we hope to bypass the limitations of traditional methods to answer previously intractable biological questions.
02
High-throughput structural prediction of effectors
By using high-throughput structural modelling we can learn a little about a lot of effectors. Through this, we can prioritise targets and generate initial hypotheses to test in lab.
03
Analysis of Starships transposons
Starships are giant transposons capable of moving host beneficial genes, including virulence factors, between fungal species. By studying these elements, we hope to understand their role in driving the rapid emergence of new pathogenic traits.
Explore my research in detail →

Where I've worked

Oct 2023 — present
Norwich, UK
PhD Researcher
The Sainsbury Laboratory
I'm currently completing doctoral research on effector function in Magnaporthe oryzae. My research is split between in silico analyses and a combination in vitro and in planta work. Supervised by Prof. Nick Talbot.
Molecular bio Protein design Bioinformatics
Jun — Aug 2025
Norwich, UK
PhD Intern
Sequence Analysis UK
As part of our doctoral training programme, all students must take a 3 month placement outside of their field of research. I joined Dr. Lisa Crossman, analysing metagenome-assembled genomes as part of the WISH Fiji project.
Metagenomics Julia Bioinformatics
Sep 2022 — May 2023
Birmingham, UK
MSci Researcher
University of Birmingham
I joined Dr. Megan McDonald's group for my Master's research project. Focusing on the Starship transposon Sanctuary and its horizontal gene transfer in fungal wheat pathogens.
Molecular bio
Jul — Aug 2022
Vienna, AT
VBC Summer School Student
Gregor Mendel Institute
As a Vienna BioCenter Summer School student, I investigated transposon silencing mechanisms in Duckweed within Dr. Arturo Marí-Ordóñez's lab.
Molecular bio Phylogenetics Bioinformatics

Academic background

PhD, Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions
University of East Anglia
2023 – present
Doctoral research on effector biology and structural bioinformatics in Magnaporthe oryzae. Supervised by Prof. Nick Talbot. Funded by the NRPDTP (BBSRC grant BB/T008717/1).
MSci Biological Sciences
University of Birmingham
2019 – 2023
Master's research supervised by Dr. Megan McDonald, focusing on the Starship transposon Sanctuary and its role in horizontal gene transfer in fungal wheat pathogens.

Selected publications

* indicates co-authorship

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Contact

I'm always happy to hear from collaborators, students, or anyone interested in fungal biology and effector function.