Training Events
Polyploidy Undergraduate Research Experience (PURE)
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June 9-13, 2025 • The Biodiversity Institute at the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL
Undergraduates! Are you looking for an exciting training opportunity this summer? Join us for a special workshop on polyploidy. Polyploidy (genome doubling) is common in many living things, including plants and animals. Understanding polyploidy helps with the creation of sustainable products like biofuels, food, and fiber. Polyploidy even plays an important role in human health!
Workshop Benefits: Learn about polyploidy and its impact on everything from cells to cancer to whole ecosystems. Workshop topics span genetics, evolution, and ecology and will include lectures, discussions, and hands-on training in lab techniques, such as colchicine formation of polyploidy, chromosome squashes, and flow cytometry. Discussions will also focus on career development and team science.
Participant Support: PI3 will cover travel, lodging, and meal costs for all participants.
Workshop Eligibility: PURE participation is open to undergraduates at all levels. This year marks the first year of annual workshops for undergraduate research training.
Application Process: The application deadline is April 15, 2025. Participation is limited to 20 undergraduates. All applicants will be notified of the status of their application by April 30, 2025.
Learn More: Review the PI3 website to learn more about the project. More about PI3: https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/new-grant-awarded-to-study-polyploidy/.
Tentative Schedule
Sun, June 8—Arrival in Gainesville
Mon, June 9—Overview: mini-lectures & discussions in the mornings; hands-on activities in the afternoons
Morning:
•Introduction to Polyploidy—Doug and Pam Soltis
•Background and History
•Types of Polyploids
•Organism-level Polyploidy
Afternoon:
•Generating Autopolyploids in Arabidopsis—Jon Spoelhof
Tues, June 10
Morning:
•Cells: Impact on Cell Size—Soltis
•Tissue-level Polyploidy: Animals—Don Fox
•Tissue-level Polyploidy: Plants—Adrienne Roeder
•Landscape-scale Impacts of Polyploidy—Pam and Doug Soltis
Afternoon:
•Chromosome Squashes—Soltis Lab
Wed, June 11
Morning:
•Hike at Sweetwater Branch Wetlands Park
Afternoon:
•Flow Cytometry & Measuring Guard Cells—Soltis Lab
Thur, June 12
Morning:
•Cancer—Dietmar Siemann (UF Cancer Center)
•Agriculture: Blueberries—Patricio Munoz or Anisa Khalid (UF)
•2x/4x Game: Concepts—Yves Van de Peer et al. (Ghent Univ.)
Afternoon:
•Digital Organisms Game: 2x vs 4x—Van de Peer lab
Fri, June 13
Morning:
•Team Science—UF Team
•Careers—UF Team
•Assessment—UF Team
Afternoon:
•ICBR Tour – Core Facilities
•Departures Friday Evening or Saturday
June 14—Departure from Gainesville
“Polyploidy is one of the most important biological processes that hardly anybody knows about.”
– Doug Soltis