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KSU Plant Pathology News: Fall 2020

Greetings to friends, alumni, and supporters of KSU Plant Pathology!

Wow – 2020!  The year was extremely challenging. The covid19 pandemic disrupted KSU operations, our community, and our personal lives. The pandemic is ongoing, but the recent vaccine rollout provides hope for a return to more normal conditions later this year.

Despite those challenges our department had many excellent achievements. Faculty shifted gears to teach online, and students shifted gears to learn online. Our research projects kept moving along. Our extension faculty developed and delivered innovative online programs. Our office staff continued to provide excellent service under the remote work situation. I am so proud of our faculty, staff, and students. However, even more than our scientific and scholarly work I am most proud of the care and grace everyone has shown each other this past year. People were checking in on each other, adjusting work schedules to help accommodate family situations, stepping up to cover gaps, and more. We often refer to the Plant Pathology “family” and this year our “family” side was more evident than ever. I am grateful to be part of this family!

Thank you to Kelsey Andersen Onofre, Giovana Cruppe, and Kelly Staab for their hard work on this newsletter and to those who contributed content and ideas.

Megan Kennelly, Dept Head

P.S. apologies this newsletter is late! That is part of the covid19 experience, right? A few deadlines have been shifted! The delay rests on my shoulders.

 

Awards, Grants, and Recognitions

 

Eduard Akhunov lab awarded $1 million grant to lead IWYP US Winter Wheat Breeding Innovation Hub

The USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture (NIFA) has awarded a $1 million grant to Kansas State University (KSU) to lead the IWYP US Winter Wheat Breeding Innovation (WWBI) Hub. The IWYP US Winter Wheat Breeding Innovation (WWBI) Hub will focus on the development of discoveries for higher yielding winter wheats for the US wheat market. The Hub is structured as a public-private partnership and granted NIFA funds will be supplemented by its partners. The Hub will capitalize on the state-of-the-art infrastructure, equipment and widely recognized technical expertise of the KSU and USDA wheat scientists located  at  KSU. KSU wheat geneticist Dr. Eduard  Akhunov serves  as  the  Project  Director  and in collaboration with the  KSU  and  USDA-ARS wheat  breeding  and  genetics  teams will coordinate  the Hub activities. 

Read More: https://www.ksre.k-state.edu/news/stories/2020/06/kstate-chosen-for-winter-wheat-breeding-research-hub.html

https://iwyp.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/34/2020/06/Press-Release-IWYP-Announces-US-Winter-Wheat-Hub-FINAL.pdf

 

Jesse Poland awarded $1 million from USDA NIFA to mine wheat wild relatives for disease resistance, stress tolerance, and yield potential

Jesse Poland’s team received this award from the U.S.Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture, through its Agriculture and Food Research Initiative to increase genetic diversity in modern wheat cultivars. The project will focus on Aegilops speltiodes and Triticum dicoccoides, two important wild relatives of wheat. The first of two projects funded will include collaborations between K-State, 2Blades Foundation, the University of Minnesota, and the John Innes Center. The second project will bring together resources within the K-State Plant Pathology department, including collaborations with Bernd Friebe and Dal-Hoe Koo, as well as with Assaf Distelfeld of the University of Haifa in Israel. 

Read more: https://www.k-state.edu/media/newsreleases/2020-06/nifa-grant-poland61920.html

 

Barbara Valent, Jim Stack, Allan Fritz, Giovana Cruppe, Sanzhen Liu, and other collaborators awarded $570,000 from USDA- NIFA

Barbara Valent and collaborators received the AFRI Tactical Sciences award to continue support of their wheat blast research. The project “Strategic Resource Development and Deployment to Limit the Spread of Wheat Blast” combines the use of molecular breeding, rapid detection and diagnostics, ecology, and student training. This project involves several U.S. and international institutions

 

K-State teams with Canadian university to apply gene editing technology for improving wheat

Kansas State University was awarded a $650,000 grant from the USDA’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture to establish a breeding partnership with a Canadian university to improve wheat using genome editing technology. Eduard Akhunov will lead K-State’s work on this project in collaboration with colleague Harold Trick’s research team. Akhunov said the university will join with researchers at the University of Saskatchewan in using genome editing technology to improve productivity and nutrition in the world’s wheat lines.

Read more: 

https://www.ksre.k-state.edu/news/stories/2020/08/nifa-awards-grant-to-edit-wheat-genome.html 

 

Bob Bowden, Mary Guttieri, and other USDA-ARS scientists awarded 2020 BRGI Gene Stewardship Award

This USDA-ARS research team was awarded the 2020 BGRI Gene Stewardship Award for work to introduce and improve resistance to stem rust, particularly Ug99. Since 2006, the team has identified over 20 new resistance genes effective against this new strain of stem rust by evaluating over 20,000 germplasm accessions. This groundbreaking work has provided markers that can be deployed in breeding programs around the world to facilitate gene stewardship. 

Read more: https://bgri.cornell.edu/2020/10/07/u-s-wheat-researchers-win-borlaug-gene-stewardship-award/

 

Upasana Dhakal wins Robert Nunemacher Scholarship 

Upasana Dhakal, PhD student in Chris Toomajian’s lab, was a recipient of a 2020-21 Robert Nunemacher Scholarship from the KSU College of Agriculture for exceptional students in research programs that impact production agriculture. Congratulations, Upasana! 

Upasana Dhakal

Afsana Noor earns Nunemacher Award

Afsana Noor, PhD student in Chris Little’s lab, received a Nunemacher Scholarship from the College of Agriculture. Congratulations Afsana!

Afsana Noor

Nar Ranabhat wins 2020 K-State International Student Scholarship and Nunemacher Award.

Nar Ranabhat, PhD student in Jessica Rupp’s lab, received the competitive 2020 International Student Scholarship from the K-State Alumni Association. This award is given to those who show exceptional academic abilities and involvement in campus activities. He also earned a Robert Nunemacher Scholarship from the College of Agriculture. Congratulations, Nar!

Nar Ranabhat

Elina Adhikari earns Robert Nunemacher Scholarship

Elina Adhikari, PhD student in Eduard Akhunov’s lab, earned a Robert Nunemacher Scholarship from the College of Agriculture. Congratulations Elina!

Elina Adhikari

 

Joel Steyer earns Nolan G and Jean M McKenzie Graduate Student Fellowship

Joel Steyer, PhD student in Richard Todd’s lab, was the inaugural awardee for the Nolan G and Jean M McKenzie Graduate Student Fellowship for 2020-21.  The McKenzie Fellowship is committed to an exceptional student in a research program within the College of Agriculture. Congratulations Joel!

Joel Steyer

Paper of the Year award for Poland lab members

Combining high-throughput phenotyping and genomic information to increase prediction and selection accuracy in wheat breeding”. This paper, co-authored by Jesse Poland, Jared Crain, and collaborators, was selected as the 2020 ‘Editor’s Citation for Excellence Award for Outstanding Service’ in the journal The Plant Genome. The paper can be found here: https://acsess.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.3835/plantgenome2017.05.0043

 

LAB HIGHLIGHTS

Dr. Bernd Friebe and collaborators receive patent 

Bernd Friebe, Jesse Poland, Tatiana Danilova, Bikram Gill, and Erick Jackson received the patent “Wheat lines, plants and grain with increased beta-glucan content” which is aimed at producing heart-healthy wheat with increased beta-glucan content. Bernd and several other collaborators have two other patents pending. 

Nature Paper published with authors from Poland lab members and Dr. Koo

Liangliang Gao, Emily Delorean, DalHoe Koo, and Jesse Poland (plus KSU Agronomy colleague Allan Fritz) were co-authors on a paper in Nature titled “Multiple wheat genomes reveal global variation in modern breeding”. The paper can be found here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-2961-x

Dr. Chris Little was elected to Faculty Senate in Spring 2020

Dr. Chris Little also serves on the Faculty Affairs subcommittee. If you have questions, concerns, or issues that needed to be raised in these shared governance bodies, please contact: crlittle@ksu.eduThanks for your service, Dr. Little!

Dr. Richard Todd’s lab partners with Architecture for innovative project

Dr. Todd has started a new project funded by a Global Food Systems Seed Grant, collaborating with Dr. Jonathan Dessi-Olive (Architecture) and Dr. Vincent Amanor-Boadu (Agricultural Economics) to investigate fungal mycelium-based building materials.

Dr. Chris Toomajian publishes in special issue of Phytopathology

Dr. Toomajian and collaborators just published the paper “Divergence and Gene Flow Between Fusarium subglutinans and F. temperatum Isolated from Maize in Argentina”. The paper is part of a special focus issue on Population Genomic- and Phylogenomic- Enabled Advances to Increase Insight into Pathogen Biology and Epidemiology.  Please check the online version at https://apsjournals.apsnet.org/doi/10.1094/PHYTO-09-20-0434-FI

 

 

Personnel changes

Megan Kennelly appointed Department Head 

Megan Kennelly was appointed to be the Department Head in August by Dean Ernie Minton. Prior to being named Department Head she was the Interim Department Head beginning in December 2018. There is a full story about the appointment in this KSU press release: https://www.ksre.k-state.edu/news/stories/2020/08/kennelly-named-department-head-for-plant-pathology.html

New Faces

One of my favorite things about my job is getting to meet and onboard our new employees. We added a few new Graduate Research Assistants and essential employees this semester. It’s my honor to get to introduce them to you. It’s certainly an odd time to start something new, so feel free to help me welcome them by shooting these new faces an email to introduce yourself as well. – Kelly Staab

Graduate Research Assistants

Nathan Smith joined us in August as a new Graduate Research Assistant (MS) with Chris Little. Nathan is originally from Holton, Kansas and his current project aims to identify factors that influence lodging in sorghum and their interactions with stem rot pathogens. Outside of his research, he enjoys reading, running, and biking. His favorite holiday is Fourth of July because “there’s fireworks, there’s barbeque, and it’s summertime. What more could you want?”

Nathan Smith

David Rowe is a new Graduate Research Assistant (PhD) in Genetics with David Cook (David under David, easy-peasy to remember!). Rowe is from Clarksville, Maryland. At the University of Maryland, he worked in two different labs researching drought tolerance in tomato plants and nitrogen storage in poplar trees. Prior to that, he spent two summers at the USDA National Fungal Herbarium examining historic specimens of smut fungi parasitizing poaceous hosts. His current hobbies include hiking, cooking, making bread and cheese from scratch, and an interest to get more into gardening. I bet there’s some people around here who could help with that! His favorite holiday tradition is dressing up as a headless person on Halloween and handing out candy. 

David Rowe

Heather Forster is also pursuing her PhD in Genetics and is currently on a lab rotation with Richard Todd. She joins us from Wichita, Kansas and has an MS in Biology from Wichita State University, an MS in Biology from Emporia State University, and a BA in Environmental Science from University of Massachusetts Lowell. Her previous research focused on using RNA interference to suppress the growth of a phytopathogenic fungus. She found that knocking down expression of even a single cell wall synthesizing enzyme negatively impacted both the magnitude and quality of fungal growth. She is currently working on utilization of N-acetylglucosamine – an important component of cell walls and chitin, and a carbon and nitrogen source for the fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Her interests include anime, learning to code, music, and fitness. A favorite holiday tradition is hunting for chocolate eggs on Easter, even now, as an adult. She also enjoys cooking feasts on Thanksgiving and Christmas.  

Heather Forster

Full-Time Staff

The Akhunov lab welcomed Jason Zurn as a new Post-Doc. From Horace, North Dakota, Zurn earned his B.S. in Biotechnology, a graduate

Jason Zurn

certificate in statistics, and his PhD in Plant Pathology from North Dakota State University. He was recently employed as a research geneticist/post-doc research associate with the USDA-ARS National Clonal Germplasm Repository (NCGR) in Corvallis, Oregon. At the USDA-ARS NCGR, he worked to identify QTLs associated with disease resistance and horticultural quality traits and develop diagnostic tests for DNA-informed breeding for strawberries, blackberries, roses, and pears. He also developed DNA fingerprinting assays and characterized the genotypic diversity of the U.S. pear, strawberry, blackberry, and raspberry germplasm collections. His new role with the Akhunov lab will focus on characterizing NB-LBR genes in a diverse set of wheat germplasm and identifying and characterizing wheat rust resistance genes. Outside of work, he enjoys archery, fishing, and hunting upland birds. His favorite holiday is Thanksgiving because of all the delicious foods. 

Alyssa Dunnivan transitioned from a student worker to a Research Technician role in the Akhunov lab. Originally from Rantoul, Kansas, she just completed her Bachelor’s degree in Horticulture Science with a Plant Pathology minor. Her current work involves helping manage the lab and coordinate student employees. Outside of work, she enjoys true crime documentaries and podcasts, watching scary videos, and exploring the outdoors with her dog, Aries. Her favorite holiday is Christmas, because everything is a bit cheerier and everyone is a bit more generous and courteous.

Alyssa Dunnivan

Rodrigo Borba Onofre started as a Post-Doc with Dr. Kennelly. He will be working on row crop disease management and has hit the ground running

Rodrigo Borba Onofre

already by helping Judy O’Mara with the Crop Disease course last semester. Rodrigo is from Brazil, Conceição da Aparecida – Minas Gerais State. He has his PhD in Plant Pathology from the University of Florida and a BS in Agronomic Engineering from the Federal University of Vicosa-Brazil. His PhD work was with the management and epidemiology of strawberry powdery mildew under the guidance of Dr. Natalia Peres. His research focused on the development of practical alternative strategies to single-site fungicides to control powdery mildew. One of the projects involved night-time UV-C light application, using a tractor-drawn apparatus and robots which suppressed powdery mildew as well or better than fungicide treatments. His current hobbies include running, biking, and training his German shorthaired pointer puppy, Mabel. Christmas is his favorite holiday because he loves to see the lights and spend time with his family.

Maryam Rastegar joined us from Shiraz, Iran and is working as a post-doc for Dr. Shahideh Nouri. Maryam earned her M.S. and PhD from Shiraz University in Plant Pathology. During her PhD, she worked at the National Institute of Agricultural Research (INRA) in France on virus vector interaction. Then worked as a faculty member in the Iranian Research Institute for plant Protection. In her current role, she works on research with plant and insect viruses, particularly virus vector interactions. Outside of work, she enjoys spending time with her family and friends in nature and traveling. Her favorite holiday tradition is eating traditional Persian foods for Persian’s new year dinner. I think she’s a total rockstar for starting life in a new country during a pandemic. 

Maryam Rastagar

The Poland Lab welcomed Chaney Courtney as a Computational Scientist. Originally from the Kansas City area, Chaney just completed his PhD in computer science with K-State. He has experience working on multiple NSF grants focusing on high-throughput phenotyping and was previously a Graduate Research Assistant creating novel deep learning algorithms and applying real-time systems to mobile devices. His hobbies include developing Android applications, computer vision projects, and kayaking. 

Chaney Courtney

Graduations

Congratulations! to our fall graduates

 

Bliss Betzen

  • Degree: MS Genetics
  • Major Professor: Eduard Akhunov
  • Thesis: The effect of the allelic diversity in AcrSr35 on Sr350based resistance in wheat
Bliss Betzen

Kseniya Chumachenko

  • Degree: M.S. Plant Pathology
  • Major Professor: James Stack
  • Thesis Simple sequence repeat analysis and qualitative pathway analysis of Rathayibacter toxicus
Kseniya Chumachenko

Elina Adhikari

  • Degree: PhD Genetics
  • Major Professor: Eduard Akhunov
  • Dissertation: Genetic basis of eco-geographic adaptation in wild relatives for wheat improvement
Elina Adhikari

Megan Calvert

  • Degree: PhD Genetics
  • Major Professor: Jesse Poland
  • Dissertation: Assessment and implementation of new breeding methods in the Kansas State winter wheat breeding program
Megan Calvert

KSU Plant Pathology News: Spring Semester 2020

Spring and summer greetings to friends, alumni, and supporters of KSU Plant Pathology!

Spring 2020 was challenging due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but we as a department have been coping well. The University moved to limited operations status in mid-March, and all the teaching was shifted to remote instruction. The research operations were also minimized to only essential activities. Here in this newsletter, we would like to share with you some non-COVID-19 news.

Professors on Parade!

In January, the Plant Pathology Graduate Student Club kicked off the semester with the professors-on-parade event. The faculty members were given 3 minutes to tell the new students (and the whole department) about their labs and/or their career journey. It was a lot of fun!!!

Here are the faculty members who participated, and Dr. Kennelly played some violin melodies for the whole department. We would like to thank graduate students for hosting this fun event.

Awards and recognition

Barbara Valent elected to NAS

Barbara Valent was elected to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). We are honored and proud to have Dr. Valent as our colleague. She is the first faculty member at K-State to be elected to the prestigious organization. The NAS elects members based on their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research. Dr. Valent is a University Distinguished Professor at K-State, and is a fellow of the American Phytopathological Society (APS) and the American Association for the Advancement of Sciences (AAAS). Dr. Valent has studied the rice blast fungus (Magnaporthe oryzae) for more than 40 years, and is currently focusing on a pathotype of this fungus that infects wheat.

Read more: News article about the election of Dr. Valent to the NAS

Doug Jardine retires

After 35 years with KSU Plant Pathology, Doug Jardine is trading his Extension hat for a cycling helmet and a fishing pole. Dr. Jardine joined the Department of Plant Pathology as an Extension Specialist and Assistant Professor in 1985. Over the next 35 years, through promotion to Associate and Full Professor, he would build and lead an impressive Plant Pathology Extension program in the state of Kansas. His contributions to Extension and agricultural research did not stop at the state’s border. Dr. Jardine’s Extension work in grain sorghum attracted national and international recognition. In addition to his role as Extension Specialist, he also developed a strong applied research program which evaluated seed treatments for control of seedling diseases and contributed service to the profession of plant pathology. Dr. Jardine has been a member of the American Phytopathological Society (APS) and related societies throughout his professional career. In 2013, he was recognized as a Fellow of APS for his service to the profession. The field of plant pathology is a better place for Dr. Jardine’s participation. We wish him all the best in his retirement and hope to see him again from time to time in the department. 

Jen Schlegel awarded President’s Award of Excellence

Jen Schlegel, our business manager, was awarded the 2020 President’s Award of Excellence. We are proud and fortunate to have Jen as our business manager. This award recognizes unclassified professional staff members who achieve excellence and/or make exemplary contributions to the mission and values of K-State. Jen is an essential member of the department and contributes significantly to the department’s excellence and productivity.

 

Read more: 2020 President’s award of excellence award

Paula Silva received Women in Triticum award

Paula Silva, a PhD student in Dr. Jesse Poland’s lab, was awarded one of the 2020 Jeanie Borlaug Laube Women in Triticum awards from the Borlaug Global Rust Initiative (BGRI) and the Delivering Genetic Gain in Wheat project. Paula is looking for novel sources of rust resistance in wheat.

Read more: Doctoral candidate receives prestigious award

BGRI announces 2020 Women in Triticum Awardees

Paula was also awarded the Alvin and RosaLee Sarachek Predoctoral Honors Travel Award in Molecular Biology.

Read more about the award: Alvin and RosaLee Sarachek Predoctoral awards

Nar Ranabhat awarded by Kansas Academy of Sciences

Nar Ranabhat received a graduate student research award from Kansas Academy of Sciences (KAS). Nar is investigating the dynamics of host-virus interaction between Wheat streak mosaic virus and winter wheat, under the guidance of Dr. Jessica Rupp. Nar will present results of research at a future KAS meeting.

Bliss Betzen and Victoria Cast recognized by Sunset Zoo

Bliss Betzen and Victoria Cast both received recognition as Science Communication Fellows in February through Sunset Zoo. As one part of this fellowship, Bliss and Victoria will be developing a personalized web page to engage multiple audiences with their work on Sunset Zoo’s Behind the Science website.

Victoria Cast also received a Certification of Professional Development for completing the Graduate Student Council Professional Development Program for 2019-2020 in April.

Five graduate students received the Tillman Family and Christine Lee Shepard Memorial Fund Awards

Selected graduate students were awarded The Tillman Family Agriculture Graduate Student Award and Christine Lee Shepard Memorial Fund Award. The Tillman Award perpetuates the memory of Marcia Edythe Tillman and other immediate family members to provide financial assistance to graduate students properly enrolled in the College of Agriculture at Kansas State University. The Shepard Award perpetuates the memory of Christine Lee Shepard and is given by former Department Head, James F. Shepard. The award provides funds for research in non-conventional approaches to crop improvement.

The recipients of this year’s Tillman Family Agriculture Graduate Student Award are Joel Steyer, Jun Huang, Afsana Noor, and Dylan Mangel. The recipient of the Christine Lee Shepard Memorial Fund for 2020 is Nar Ranabhat.

Four undergraduates received the Tillman Family Undergraduate Scholarship

Brock Hazelton, junior in agronomy; Abigail Parker, junior in biochemistry; Kenny Dodson, senior in horticulture; and Daniel Tran, junior in food science and industry, will receive the Tillman Family Undergraduate Scholarship, administered by the plant pathology department. These students have demonstrated outstanding academic performance in plant pathology minor or through plant pathology undergraduate research. Each student will be awarded $1,000 at the beginning of 2020-2021 academic year.

Daniel Tran, undergraduate researcher in Richard Todd’s lab, also won a $4,000 K-INBRE summer-semester scholarship for 2020-2021.

Fellers et al. 2019 was among the top 10 most downloaded paper in Plant Disease

A Plant Disease journal paper from John Fellers’s group was among the top 10 most downloaded papers in 2019. Other co-authors of the paper are Christian Webb, Madison C. Fellers, Jessica Shoup Rupp, and Erick DeWolf.

Read more: Wheat Virus Identification Within Infected Tissue Using Nanopore Sequencing Technology

Personnel changes

New Faces

Heather Gardner joined us in January as a new Graduate Research Assistant pursuing her Master’s degree. From Wamego, she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Horticulture from Kansas State. Under Dr. DeWolf, Heather is working with stripe rust on wheat. Her hobbies include running, weightlifting, and her favorite summer activity: fishing. 

 

 

 

 

Dr. Divya Mishra started as a new post-doc under Dr. David Cook. She joins us from Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India. She received her PhD in Plant Molecular Biology from the National Institute of Plant Genome Research from Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi. She previously worked on unraveling the identity of key regulatory molecules and how they play an important role under high temperature conditions in common wheat. In her current role, she is working on research related to CRISPR-Cas13 development in plants and is working to design, implement, and test a new strategy to alter plant defense and growth. Her hobbies include traveling, listening to good music, making and enjoying food. 

Ethan Faryna started as a Laboratory Administrator for the Poland Lab. Originally from Perry, New York, he received his Bachelor’s of Science in Biotechnology from the Rochester Institute of Technology. He has worked in a variety of fields including working on his family dairy farm, pharmaceutical manufacturing, event timing, lab administration, and aquaponics. His current role involves managing supplies, organizing meetings, and processing samples for the molecular lab. His hobbies include running, mountain biking, traveling, and genealogy.

Sarah Bastian joined us as a Research Assistant under Dr. Alina Akhunova. From Newton, NJ, Sarah received her Bachelor’s in Biology (cellular/molecular emphasis) and Bachelor’s in Biological Science Composite Teaching with a minor in Chemistry Teaching from Utah State University. As an undergrad, she worked at the Center for Integrated Biosystems in the Genomics lab. She has also previously taught 8th and 9th grade science. Currently, she works for the Integrated Genomics Facility, helping out with DNA/RNA sequencing and quality control, NGS library prep for Illumina sequencing platforms, and miSeq based sequencing. Her current hobbies are exercising, hiking, biking, and spending time with her family. 

We are happy to welcome Kelsey Andersen-Onofre as our new Assistant Professor/Wheat Extension Specialist. Kelsey is originally from West Long Branch, New Jersey. She received her Bachelor’s in Biology from Lafayette College in Easton, Pennsylvania, her Master’s in Plant Pathology from the Ohio State University and most recently completed her PhD in Plant Pathology from the University of Florida. At Ohio State, Kelsey’s research focused on Fusarium head blight forecasting and management. Upon completion of her MS, and prior to her PhD, she entered the workforce joining Monsanto’s (now Bayer’s Soybean Breeding and Plant Health organizations. Kelsey’s PhD research was focused on modeling epidemics in seed systems to inform landscape-scale intervention strategies, primarily in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia. In her new role, she plans to build a collaborative, extension-centered program with an emphasis on pathogen biology, diagnostics, distribution, and integrated management. Kelsey has a special interest in integrating data layers using big-data tools to inform on-farm recommendations. She enjoys running, biking, and baking. 

Transitions

You may recognize this face as one of our graduates from the December Newsletter! After completing her dissertation on Wheat Blast Management, Dr. Giovana Cruppe transitioned to the role of Research Assistant Professor under Dr. Barbara Valent.

 

 

 

 

 

Another familiar face is Ms. Chandler Day. After graduating in December with her Master’s degree, Chandler transitioned into the role of Assistant Director for the Great Plains Diagnostic Network (GDPN). In her new role she supports the GDPN laboratories and diagnosticians and works with the National Plant Diagnostic Network to communicate plant health problems effectively. Chandler’s hobbies include plant identification and collecting, birding, and embroidery. Her favorite summer activities are hiking and kayaking. 

Congratulations to Jie Ren, who transitioned from Research Technician to Research Assistant. Jie works for the Integrated Genomics Facility (IGF) with Dr. Alina Akhunova. Originally from Nanchong, Sichuan Province in China, she received her Bachelor’s degree in Biology from Beijing Forestry University and her PhD in Molecular and Biochemistry from the Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences. She started with the department as a research assistant for Dr. Liu in 2014 studying maize gross’s wilts disease and then joined the IGF in 2016. We are thankful for all of her hard work and service! 

 

After graduating with his Bachelor’s degree in Biosystems Engineering, Cameron Amos is transitioning to a Graduate Research Assistant (MS) in Genetics. He will be working under Dr. Jesse Poland mapping deleterious mutations in wheat. Cameron’s hobbies include painting, drawing, camping and cooking. His favorite summer activity is stargazing. 

 

 

 

 

Judy O’Mara was selected as the State Leader for Extension Plant Pathology. Judy will serve as a point of contact for university and state plant health issues. The state leader also works to ensure team members have the resources and working environment needed to ensure fulfillment of our team mission which is to assist Kansas growers maintain agricultural profitability and healthy yards.

Congratulations to Alina Akhunova on being promoted to the rank of Research Professor. Dr. Akhunova is the director of Integrated Genomics Facility, which supports researchers at KSU, in the USA, and around the world. She also runs a genomic technologies workshop during summer semesters, which attracts students from multiple colleges at K-State.

Lucky Mehra was designated as Teaching Assistant Professor. Dr. Mehra teaches Principles of Plant Pathology, coordinates plant pathology minor, and coordinates Research and Extension Experiences for Undergraduate Program. He also teaches workshops on R programming.

Graduations

Congratulations! to our spring graduates

Monica Navia

Degree: PhD Plant Pathology

Major Professor: Harold Trick

Dissertation: Engineering the Wheat Genome to Reduce the Susceptibility to Fungal and Viral Diseases.

 

 

 

 

Jordan Brungardt

Degree: PhD Plant Pathology

Major Professor: Harold Trick

Dissertation: Biotechnological Approaches for Improved Disease Resistance in Soybean and Wheat

 

 

 

 

Department representation

Richard Todd chaired the 17th International Aspergillus Meeting in Rome, Italy, February 16-17, 2020.

Chris Little was elected to faculty senate for a 3-year term that will begin in fall 2020. The faculty senate is responsible for a lot of behind the scene activities such as academic affairs (e.g. curriculum) and faculty affairs (e.g revision of the university handbook). Thank you Chris for representing our department and our college.

Read more: 2020 faculty senate results

KSU Plant Pathology News: Fall Semester 2019

Winter greetings to friends, alumni, and supporters of KSU Plant Pathology!

Fall semester is almost over, and the department and campus are getting into winter break mode. We, as a department, accomplished a lot over the summer and fall semester. Here in this newsletter, we will give you a snapshot of our achievements, progress, and educational activities.

 

Awards and recognition

Harold Trick received the Distinguished Scientist Award at the Society for In Vitro Biology Meeting held in Tampa, FL in June. This award recognizes outstanding mid-career professionals who have made significant contributions to the field of in vitro biology and/or in the development of novel technologies that have advanced in vitro biology. 

 

 

 

 

Jesse Poland, has been selected as one of the new program leaders for Phenomics program within the Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Crop Improvement. Kansas State University is a partner on an international team that includes U.S. universities and national institutes in a new global crop improvement research program to advance plant breeding tools, technologies and methods aimed at delivering crops that can increase yields, enhance nutrition and have greater resistance to pests and diseases. “The improvement of crop varieties is happening at a rate of about 1% per year around the world. This is good progress, but we need to see a rate of gain above 2% per year to keep pace with increasing global population demand,” Poland said. “Here at K-State, we will be partnering with national programs to help implement rigorous scientific inquiry to address the constraints of crop productivity.” 

 

Chandler Day received a North Central Division Student Travel Award to attend the APS North Central Division meeting that was held jointly this year with the APS Annual Meeting in Cleveland, Ohio in August. Chandler was also recently named the Assistant Director of the Great Plains Diagnostic Network, working with Dr. Jim Stack who is the Director. She will begin her duties in January 2020.

 

 

Paula Silva, a doctoral student in Genetics from Uruguay, was one of 10 Kansas State University graduate students who were selected to represent the university at the 17th Capitol Graduate Research Summit, Feb. 26, 2020, at the State Capitol in Topeka. The Capitol Graduate Research Summit is an annual statewide summit that features current research of graduate students at Kansas State University, the University of Kansas, the University of Kansas Medical Center, Wichita State University, Emporia State University, Fort Hays State University and Pittsburg State University. Silva was selected for her research presentation, “Harnessing the wild side to improve wheat curl mite resistance.” Silva’s faculty adviser is Jesse Poland, associate professor of plant pathology.

 

Lucky Mehra, instructor in Plant Pathology, recently received certification from the Association of College and University Educators (ACUE). Faculty who satisfy course requirements earn certificates in effective college instruction, awarded in collaboration with the American Council on Education. These credentials distinguish faculty and institutions for their commitment to educational excellence. Mehra received his certificate for satisfying the requirements for ACUE’s Course in Effective Teaching Practices.

 

 

 

Selected graduate students were awarded The Tillman Family Agriculture Graduate Student Award and Christine Lee Shepard Memorial Fund Award. The Tillman Award perpetuates the memory of Marcia Edythe Tillman and other immediate family members to provide financial assistance to graduate students properly enrolled in the College of Agriculture at Kansas State University. The Shepard Award perpetuates the memory of Christine Lee Shepard and is given by former Department Head, James F. Shepard. The award provides funds for research in non-conventional approaches to crop improvement.

The recipients of this year’s Tillman Family Agriculture Graduate Student Award are Paula Silva, Afsana Noor, Victoria Cast, Joel Steyer, and Bliss Betzen. The recipients of the Christine Lee Shepard Memorial Fund for 2019 are Dylan Mangel and Nar Ranabhat.

 

Welcoming new members of the department!

We have several new Graduate Research Assistants and Staff join us! 

Yoonha Ju is a new Graduate Research Assistant pursuing her PhD. She joins us all the way from Gwangju, South Korea. Ju has her Bachelor’s degree in Life Science and her Master’s degree in convergence science, both from Sahmyook University in Seoul. She is working under Dr. Bernd Friebe and Dr. Dal-Hoe Koo to establish immunostaining of meiosis-specific proteins in wheat and oligonucleotide labeling for chromosome-specific labeling of fungi chromosomes. Outside of work, she enjoys taking pictures on her phone to help her capture all of her important memories. 

 

 

Joseph Fenoglio joins us as a new Master’s Graduate Research Assistant under John Fellers and David Cook. He completed his Bachelor’s degree in microbiology from Kansas State University. During his undergraduate career he worked in Chris Little’s lab with Rodrigo Pedrozo on characterizing pathogenicity of Fusarium isolates on Soybeans. He has most recently been a Research Assistant at Montana State University in the Regional Pulse Crop Diagnostic Laboratory. In his current role, he is working on characterizing EMS mutagenized wheat that exhibit a decrease in infection when challenged with leaf rust. Outside of the office, Joseph is an avid fisherman, outdoorsman, and plays guitar. His favorite holiday tradition is eating too much food, especially pie! 

 

Buket Sahin is a new Master’s Graduate Research Assistant working with Dr. Bernd Friebe and Dr. Jesse Poland. She joins us as the Ministry of Agriculture scholar from Tekirdag, Turkey. Buket obtained her Bachelor’s degree and Master’s degree in Field Crops, both from Namik Kemal University in Tekirdag. Her current research investigates the leaf, stripe, and stem rust evolution of a core set of diploid A-genome species in wheat. She enjoys traveling and believes it’s a great way to learn.

 

 

 

Tyler Suelter joins us as a Graduate Research Assistant pursuing his PhD. From Lincoln, Kansas, he has his Bachelor’s degrees in Biology and Chemistry. Interested in science and plants from a young age, he used to make his dad help him identify all the plants he found in the pasture. As an undergrad, Tyler worked in an ecosystem ecology laboratory and worked on projects in the arctic tundra and tallgrass prairie. After college, he joined Heartland Plant Innovations as a Research Associate in the Advanced Plant Breeding Lab and has spent the last six years focusing on wheat doubled haploid breeding. He is currently working with Dr. Barbara Valent on Magnaporthe oryzae, focusing on understanding the role of mini-chromosomes in effector shuffling to overcome host resistance. Outside of the lab, Tyler enjoys traveling, hiking, gardening and making and enjoying a good meal or adult beverage. His favorite holiday tradition is spending Christmas Eve at his grandparents’ with a huge meal, gifts, and games. 

 

Josiah Altschuler is the new Database Administrator for the Poland Lab. From Vestal, New York, Josiah received a B.S. in Biology from Cornell University and an M.S. in Bioinformatics from Northeastern University. He started his career as a computational biologist at the Bauer Center for Genomics Research, at Harvard University. After that, he worked as a bioinformatics engineer at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. He most recently worked as a senior web developer for JSI and then BlueAlly, before joining the Poland Lab as a database administrator. In his current role, he develops and maintains software pipelines to automate the processing, analysis and quality control of genomics datasets, designs and develops databases for “big data” projects including high-throughput phenotypic data, large genomic datasets, field data, and germplasm resources and develops project websites. Outside of work, he enjoys cichlid fish keeping, fingerpicking guitar, eating good black licorice and watching MMA. His favorite holiday tradition is Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners. 

 

Lindsey Ashmore joined our staff in June as an Instructional Designer for the National Plant Diagnostic Network. Lindsey received her bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Mass Communications and Journalism with a focus on animal and crop sciences from Kansas State University. She was most recently the Instructional Designer and Technologist for the Biosecurity Research Institute (BRI) at Kansas State University where she managed their Learning Management System (LMS), training records and training inspection documents. During her time at the BRI, she led the training department through three Federal Select Agent Program inspections with zero findings. In her current role for the NPDN, Lindsey will select and manage a Learning Management System where the Professional Development Program will be hosted. She has identified potential LMS candidates through interviews and live demo testing to ensure that compatible technologies are selected and IT security issues are addressed.  Outside of the office, she enjoys spending time with her family and attending KSU sporting events. Her favorite holiday tradition is eating traditional German cookies while decorating the Christmas tree. 

 

Ferdinand Nanfack Minkeu is a Post-Doc in the lab of Dr. Shahideh Nouri. He received his Bachelor’s degree and a Master’s degree in Biochemistry and Biotechnology, both from the University of Yaoundél in Cameroon and his Ph.D. in Life Science complexity (Entomology and Virology) from Sorbonne University in Paris, France. He has previously worked as a Scientist at the Institut Pasteur in Paris, France. In his current role, he works with insect and plant viruses, transmission and immune responses. Outside of work, Ferdinand enjoys playing soccer and has an interest in sociology. 

 

 

Sandeep Marla is working as a Post-Doc for Dr. David Cook. He’s originally from Khammam, India and received his Ph.D. in Plant Pathology from Purdue University in Indiana. He was previously a Research Associate with the Department of Agronomy at KSU. His research focused on identifying the genetic architecture underlying early-season chilling tolerance in sorghum, a tropical-origin crop grown extensively in Kansas but lacking chilling tolerance. In his current role, he’s evaluating the applicability of novel gene-editing tools to regulate gene-expression for bypassing antagonistic pleiotropism in plants. Outside of work, he enjoys playing volleyball and soccer. His favorite holiday tradition is organizing a Christmas Indian dinner with friends.

Graduations

Giovana Cruppe

  • Degree: PhD Plant Pathology
  • Major professor: Barbara Valent
  • Dissertation: Wheat Blast Management through Identification of Novel Sources of Genetic Resistance and Understanding of Disease Dynamics

 

 

 

 

Chandler Day

  • Degree: M.S. Plant Pathology
  • Major professor: Megan Kennelly
  • Thesis: Identification and resistance to thiophanate-methyl of Botrytis species on Kansas greenhouse crops and a specialty crops grower survey to assess extension IPM resource needs

Javier Kiyuna

  • Degree: M.S. Plant Pathology
  • Major professor: Jim Stack
  • Thesis: Limits of Detection of Magnaporthe oryzae Triticum in Wheat Seed: Implications for Pathogen Dissemination

Workshops and outreach

  1. Lucky Mehra, Megan Kennelly, and Kris Silver with the help of graduate students organized ‘The Secret Life of Plants’ workshop for middle school girls attending Girls Researching Our World (GROW) workshop at K-State. The participants learned about fungi, nematodes, insect pests, and disease diagnosis. The GROW workshop is a yearly 3-day program held at Manhattan campus during the month of June. This workshop is designed to encourage and inspire middle school girls to pursue a future in science, technology, engineering, mathematics (STEM) and pre-health professions.
  2. The K-State Integrated Genomics Facility (IGF) and the Department of Plant Pathology hosted the Genomic Technologies workshop on June 17th-21st, 2019. Twenty one workshop participants learned about recent technological advances in the field of genomics. The students were provided with conceptual knowledge and hands-on training on next and third-generation sequencing, Real Time PCR, single cell sequencing and gene editing. The Genomic Technologies Workshop was taught by the Plant Pathology faculty members and postdocs: Eduard Akhunov, David Cook, Katie Jordan, Fei He, Alina Akhunova, and Jie Ren. The invited speakers were Pamela Lussier – Agrigenomics Specialist, Illumina Inc and Brandon Blakey – Sales Executive, 10x Genomics. The next workshop is scheduled for June 8th -12th, 2020.
  3. The 20th Annual Fusarium Workshop was held at K-State under the guidance of Dr. John Leslie from June 23rd to 27th, 2019. This workshop is taught by international Fusarium experts. Participants are introduced to standard morphological, genetic and molecular biological techniques used to identify and characterize strains of Fusarium. This year there were 36 participants.
  4. Our department also showcased a station at Kids Field Day, held at North Agronomy Farm in September. We showed kids nematodes and stripe rust spores under the dissecting scopes.
  5. This summer, we hosted eight undergraduate students from all over the country for our first year of Research and Extension Experiences for Undergraduates (REEU). This program is funded under the USDA-NIFA’s Education and Workforce Development initiative, and project directors are Megan Kennelly, Lucky Mehra, and David Cook. The purpose of the program is to train undergraduate students in research and extension. We will be training 35 students over the course of 4 years (2019 to 2022). Each student had an assigned mentor in the Departments of Plant Pathology, Entomology, or Agronomy. In addition to working with their mentors on their research or extension projects, the students also participated in professional development seminars, field trips, and FACT workshops. FACT stands for Food and Agriculture Cyberinformatics Tools. Our goal was to introduce students to a wide variety of topics related to modern plant health research so that they have enough experience in hand to make a decision about what they would like to pursue for further studies.
  6. Dylan Mangel, Emily Delorean, Nar Ranabhat, and Lucky Mehra taught an Introduction to R workshop in November for agricultural scientists to 32 participants, which included graduate students, postdoctoral scholars, technicians, and program managers. They taught fundamentals of R language, data manipulation and visualization using a `tidyverse` suite of packages.

Department representation

  1. The annual meeting of American Phytopathological Society (APS) was held in Cleveland, Ohio from 3rd to 7th August, 2019. Our department was well represented by our graduate students: Chandler Day, Mónica Navia, Giovana Cruppe, Victoria Cast, Corrine Melvin, and Afsana Noor
  2. Graduate students Bliss Betzen and Elina Adhikari went to 2019 Wheat Coordinated Agricultural Project (WheatCAP) at Cornell University. The workshop featured Practical Haplotype Graphs (PHG). PHG aims to represent diversity by creating pan-genome that captures genome variants across individuals in a species. 
  3. Victoria Cast was selected as a Science Communication Fellow. She’ll be working over the next year to design and implement activities pertaining to her research and enhancing her skills in science communication to connect to a broader audience. We couldn’t be more proud and love that our students continuously want to be involved with Kansas Science Communication Initiative here at Kansas State University.
  4. Dylan Mangel presented a poster at US Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative meeting held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Plant Pathology Graduate Student Club Activities

Interested in supporting the Plant Pathology Graduate Student Club? As a fundraiser the club is selling wheat license plates. Cost: $25 for students and $30 for faculty and staff. If interested, contact Joe Fenoglio at fenogjj@ksu.edu.

Thank you to our 2018-2019 club officers, Joel Steyer (President), Bliss Betzen (Vice President), Dylan Mangel (Treasurer), and Jameka Jefferson/Corrine Melvin (Social Chair), for their dedication to our department and graduate students. Please welcome new 2019-2020 officers, Dylan Mangel (President), Immaculate Wanjuki (Vice President), Joseph Fenoglio (Treasurer), and Carla Redila (Social Chair). We look forward to new opportunities and adventures.

 

This edition of the newsletter was written by Lucky Mehra, Kelly Staab, Doug Jardine, Myron Bruce, and Chandler Day.

Thank you for reading our news! If you are an alum of our department please get in touch and let us know what you are doing. You can contact us by emailing Megan Kennelly. You can also follow us on Facebook.

If you are interested in supporting the department financially, here is one opportunity. Click the purple button and follow the prompts to the pulldownlist and select Plant Pathology Department Head Excellence Fund.

Plant Pathology Department Excellence Fund – The Excellence Fund is used to support Seminar speakers from outside K-State and may be used to supplement graduate student learning opportunities. Please note KSU Foundation Fund # D35825 in the special instructions. (NOTE: the text box is a link button)

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KSU Plant Pathology News: Spring Semester 2019

Spring greetings to friends, alumni, and supporters of KSU Plant Pathology!

It was a long winter and it continues to be a long, muddy spring. However, in between the rains we’ve enjoyed redbuds, flowering crabapples, tulips, irises and peonies popping all over Manhattan. Finals are done, our Little Apple is in summer mode, and it’s time to share our news from spring semester 2019.

Awards

American Phytopathological Society Fellow: Dr. James Stack

The American Phytopathological Society (APS) grants the title of Fellow in recognition of distinguished contributions to plant pathology or to APS for research, teaching, administration, professional and public service, and/or extension and outreach.

Dr. Stack is the director of the Great Plains Plant Diagnostic Network (GPDN), and his leadership and vision shaped the network from the start. Dr. Stack’s efforts have helped stabilize the GPDN and National Plant Diagnostic Network. He is also an internationally recognized leader in the field of plant biosecurity, with numerous international and domestic speaking invitations. His research focuses on important plant biosecurity problems which includes high consequence plant pathogens from around the world, and he has had collaborations with Australia, New Zealand, Brazil, Bolivia and Israel. Dr. Stack’s lab focuses on genome-informed diagnostics, epidemiology, and ecology of toxigenic fungi and bacteria. Currently, he has ongoing research on the Select Agent Rathayibacter toxicus. In addition, he is a key member of the wheat blast research team. Dr. Stack also values training and getting students and professionals inspired in the field of biosecurity, so he created a course named “Plant Biosecurity in Theory and Practice” which is held at the Biosecurity Research Institute for 5 days and brings together on average more than 30 participants from many countries each year.

(More information available at https://www.apsnet.org/members/give-awards/awards/Pages/James-Stack-.aspx)

 

2018 Employee of the Year: Diana Pavlisko

This spring, Diana received one of the two Employee of the Year awards from the College of Agriculture for the year of 2018. She has been with the Plant Pathology department for 20 years and has played a very important and supportive role for all the students, researchers, and faculty. Diana was the Human Capital Assistant for the department and handled the department’s personnel recruitments, onboarding new hires, all HR paperwork,

Diana Pavlisko receives her award

work eligibility for visa holders, Extension Diagnostic Lab support, department deposits, and ordering office supplies. These were big responsibilities that affected us all in some form, but she always went above and beyond to do much more than her job description, making her a model employee of the plant pathology department. Diana recently moved on to take an opportunity working at KSU Counseling Services. We miss her but wish her the best of luck in her new employment.

 

April 2019 Graduate Student Council Travel Grant award: Kseniya Chumachenko

This travel grant was given to Kseniya Chumachenko to attend the National Diagnostic Network Meeting in Indianapolis, Indiana. This meeting consisted of several diagnostic workshops, research presentations, and networking with many plant diagnosticians, university, government, and industry affiliates. Kseniya presented a poster there, titled “Simple Sequence Repeats (SSR) as markers for Rathayibacter toxicus evolutionary history”.

 

2019 Plant Pathology 3-Minute Thesis Award winners:

First place (two-way tie)

  • Guifang Lin, presentation titled “Lr42, A Wheat Leaf Rust Resistance Gene”
  • Jun Huang, presentation titled “Investigating transcriptional regulation of effectors in Magnaporthe oryzae

Second place

  • Afsana Noor, presentation titled “Understanding physiological and molecular aspects of charcoal rot resistance mechanism in sorghum and soybean”

 

2019 The Kansas Academy of Science (KAS) Graduate Research Grant Award: Afsana Noor

Afsana Noor

This award was established to “foster the scientific research endeavors of student members of the KAS”, and grants funds that can be used to support of the students’ research. Afsana received the competitive grant of $1,500 for PhD students for her work on the detection of the cellular responses of sorghum and soybean that underlie host senescence induced by the nectrophic fungus Macrophomina phaseolina. The title of her grant proposal was “Understanding physiological and molecular aspects of charcoal rot resistance mechanism in sorghum and soybean”.

(information from http://www.kansasacademyscience.org/research-grants.html)

Lifetime achievement award

Barbara Valent

Barbara Valent recently received the Lifetime Achievement Award in Rice Blast Disease, presented by the international rice blast community at the 8th International Rice Blast Conference, May 27-31, Chengdu, Sichuan, China. Congratulations to Barbara on her career-long efforts to understand this globally-important plant disease. Dr. Valent joined the Department of Plant Pathology at Kansas State University in 2001 as a Professor and was recognized as a University Distinguished Professor in 2002. Dr. Valent’s research focuses on diseases of rice and wheat caused by related pathotypes (strains) of the plant pathogenic fungus Magnaporthe oryzae.  These diseases of wheat and rice are called “blast” and they pose threats to key crops worldwide, including Kansas.  Her work has important implications for the practical world of real-time plant breeding and deployment of rice and wheat varieties around the world. Her discoveries about intricate, molecule-to-molecule interactions of fungus and plant have clarified the disease process, opening the door to future targets for control by fungicides or resistant varieties. She has published more than 120 papers that have garnered over 8,000 citations. Prior recognition includes being named a Fellow of the American Phytopathological Society, Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and recipient of the Noel T. Keen Award for Research Excellence in Molecular Plant Pathology from the American Phytopathological Society among other achievements.

 

 

Patent Recognition

Jessica Rupp, Harold Trick, and John Fellers were recognized by the KSU Research Foundation for their patent, “Plant germplasm resistant to RNA viruses.”

 

A busy semester of visiting seminar speakers

Dr. Segenet Kelemu, 2019 College of Agriculture Alumni Fellow

The Plant Pathology Department hosted a number of impressive academics and renowned scientists during our spring seminar series.

Dr. Kevin Folta, professor at University of Florida who also hosts the famous Podcast “Talking Biotech Podcast – Evidence-Based Discussion with Dr. Kevin Folta” visited in March. Our own graduate student, Bliss Betzen, was included for one of his episodes.

Dr. Segenet Kelemu was the 2019 College of Agriculture Alumni Fellow. She delivered a seminar, met students and faculty across the college, and was recognized at a university-wide awards reception. Dr. Kelemu earned her PhD here at KSU in Plant Pathology. She is the director of the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology in Kenya. You can read more about Dr. Kelemu’s inspiring career on the KSU Alumni Association page. One of our graduate students, Immaculate Wanjuki, worked under Dr. Kelemu before coming to Kansas State.

Other speakers in the department seminar series included Dr. Carlos Guzman from CIMMYT, Dr. Josh Herr from University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Dr. Edward Buckler from USDA-ARS, Dr. Jacob Washburn from Cornell University, and Dr. Andrew Friskop from North Dakota State University.

Representing the department near and far

Throughout the semester faculty, staff, and students have had the opportunity to represent our department through attending various training sessions and conferences.

In January the Plant and Animal Genome Conference 2019: PAG XXVII was held in San Diego, CA where there were over 130 exhibits, 150 workshops, 1100 posters, and 1800 abstracts. There were also over 3000 people in attendance, of those 3000, there was a nice representation from our group. Of our faculty, Jesse Poland was a session organizer, Barbara Valent was a plenary speaker, and Eduard Akhunov, Alina Akhunova, Sanzhen Liu, and Bikram Gill were speakers. Of our graduate students, Paula Silva, Emily Delorean, Megan Calvert, and Shichen Zhang all presented posters. Of our post-docs, Trevor Rife was a speaker, and Sandesh Shrestha and Jared Crain both presented posters. (https://www.intlpag.org/2019/)

Within the same week as the PAG meeting in San Diego, the week-long Alliance for Science-Science Communication Training was held. Elina Adhikari and Bliss Betzen attended this training, which was mostly focused around communicating the science of gene editing and CRISPR technologies with consumers. (https://allianceforscience.cornell.edu)

March was a very busy month, starting with the 16th International Aspergillus Meeting (Asperfest16) that graduate students Joel Steyer and Cameron Hunter, and faculty Dr. Richard Todd attended in Pacific Grove, CA. Dr. Todd also served as the Local Organizer and Chair. At the Asperfest meeting, Dr. Todd was elected to a third 3-year term on the Aspergillus Genomes Research Policy Committee and was elected Chair of the Asperfest17 meeting in Rome in 2020.

Following Asperfest, the 30th Fungal Genetics Conference was held and participants gathered to present their recent findings.  The Plant Pathology department was very well represented by our faculty members: Richard Todd, Chris Toomajian, David Cook, John Leslie, and Barbara Valent, who was a speaker, as well as post-doc Wei Zhang. Graduate students Joel Steyer, Cameron Hunter, and Jun Huang all presented posters at this conference as well. (http://conferences.genetics-gsa.org/fungal/2019/index)

Our sister state to the north hosted the Nebraska Plant Science Symposium in March which was titled “Training 21st Century Plant Breeders in the “Omics” Era.” A handful of Plant Pathology graduate students in the Plant Breeding and Genetics Club went to this symposium included Paula Silva, Emily Delorean, Elina Adhikari and post-doc Sandesh Shrestha. (https://agronomy.unl.edu/plant-breeding-symposium)

Paula Silva at the KSU Grad Forum

It was Kansas State University’s turn to host SciComm 2019 which was organized by the Kansas Science Communication Initiative and the Sunset Zoo. This conference was centered around finding the right form of science communication techniques for you. Faculty such as Marty Draper represented the Plant Pathology department alongside graduate students: Bliss Betzen, who was a speaker, Joel Steyer, Dylan Mangel, and Nar Ranabhat. (https://www.k-state.edu/scicomm/conference2019/). The theme

Joel Steyer at the KSU Grad Forum

of the conference was to better encourage engaging and effective science communication by learning how to connect with the broader public. The keynote speakers included Dr. Danielle Lee, an out

reach scientist who studies animal behavior and behavioral ecology, and Dr. Kevin Folta, chairman of the horticultural sciences department at the University of Florida and host of the Talking Biotech Podcast. Bliss Betzen, a graduate student in the Plant Pathology Department, presented on ‘Crash Course Workshop: Scientific Symposium’ in which she outlined her experience in helping to plan the 4th Biennial Plant Breeding and Genetics Symposium at KSU. The next SciComm conference will be at the

Chandler Day at the KSU Grad Forum

University of Nebraska-Lincoln in March 2020.

 

We wrapped up March with the KSU GRAD Forum held at the Student Union where graduate students: Elina Adhikari, Paula Silva, Joel Steyer, and Chandler Day all presented posters about their research. (https://www.k-state.edu/grad/students/studentcouncil/research-forums/)

 The Plant Breeding and Genetics Club started April off with a bang with their biennial symposium. This year, the officer team consisting partly of Plant Pathology graduate students: Emily Delorean, Paula

Silva, Giovanna Cruppe, Elina Adhikari, and Bliss Betzen;

Elina Adhikari presents her talk at the KSU grad forum

were driven to showcase the

advancements of women in agriculture. The symposium was titled “A New Era for the Green Revolution: Celebrating Women in Agriculture,” where the program set was entirely made up of women in all agricultural sectors. Mary Guttieri of the USDA was a speaker for this event and a friend of the KSU Plant Pathology department. Our department had an immeasurable amount of representation and provided a great amount of support to the officer team (https://ww

w.pbgatkstate.com).

Presenters included Dr. Amanda Hulse-Kemp, a computational biologist from USDA; Dr. Mary Guttieri, a research geneticist from USDA at KSU; Dr. Natalia de Leon, a professor at University of Wisconsin; Dr. Maria Salas Fernandez, an associate professor at Iowa State University; and Dr. Ruth Wagner, a Genome and Marker Design Platform lead at Bayer Crop Sciences. In addition to the amazing woman researchers hosted, two of our Plant Pathology students, graduate student Joel Steyer and undergraduate student Cameron Amos from Dr. Jesse Poland’s lab won Excellence in Research Poster Presentation at the symposium.

Participants at the Plant Breeding and Genetics Symposium

Later in March the National Plant Diagnostic Network (NPDN) took place in Indianapolis, IA where plant diagnosticians, extension specialists, and policymakers to discuss plant biosecurity. We had a great representation from the Plant Pathology department for this conference. Christian Webb, Assistant Director: Great Plains Diagnostic Network, Judy O’Mara, Diagnostician, and Dr. Jim Stack, Professor, Director: Great Plains Diagnostic Network are all faculty members who attended. Alongside faculty, Dr. Jarred Yasuhara-Bell, post-doc, and graduate students, Kseniya Chumachenko, Javier Kiyuna, Victoria Cast, and Chandler Day. (https://www.npdn.org/2019_national_meeting)

To wrap up the semester the Midwest Bioinformatics Conference took place in Kansas City, MO. This conference is in place to bring together bioinformaticians from industry and academics to collaborate and exchange techniques. Graduate student, Joel Steyer attended this conference and presented a poster. (http://kcbioinformatics.org/conference/)

Plant Pathology Graduate Student Club Activities

The Plant Pathology Graduate Student Club (PPGSC) has been busy this semester with hosting events and fundraisers. Each year, PPGSC coordinates and runs the department’s b

Students and faculty ready to greet the public at KSU Open House

ooths at Kansas State University Open House. It was no different this year and it was amazing for the level of outreach and involvement by the students and faculty. Attendees had the chance to win some plants that the students had grown after answering a few questions about plant pathology in Kansas. In addition to public engagement at Open House, the PPGSC officer team participated in two additional plant sales, one at Kansas State’s spring Farmer’s Market and one in Throckmorton Hall on May Day.

Joel Steyer and Bliss Betsen selling plants for PPGSC fundraiser

Over the course of the three events, the club raised over $300 and engaged with hundreds of people on the topic of plants and plant pathology.

 

Did we miss any conference, training, or workshop that you attended? Please let us know! We love to share opportunities!

Research updates

It’s been a busy spring for publications. Here are just a few recent examples:

Effector Gene Reshuffling Involves Dispensable Mini-chromosomes in the Wheat Blast Fungus

The urgency of protecting the world’s wheat crops from one of the most devastating crop diseases, wheat blast, led to an exciting project that utilized cutting-edge genome approaches. A research team led by Drs. Sanzhen Liu and Barbara Valent constructed a high-resolution map for the genome of the wheat blast pathogen. The map covers core chromosomes as well as a dispensable mini-chromosome. Dynamic genetic content in mini-chromosomes implied the frequent crosstalk between mini-chromosomes and core chromosomes. The involvement of the pathogenicity-associated genes in the crosstalk suggests the important role of the mini-chromosome in pathogen adaptation. The results provide a new mechanism to understand fast-evolving wheat blast pathogens and their interactions with wheat varieties, and thus would provide genetic information to develop effective strategies to combat wheat blast. The research team included Dr. David Cook, Dr. Zhao Peng, Dr. Ely Oliveira Garcia, Guifang Lin, and Melinda Dalby from our department. The paper is available as a pre-print in biorxiv. (https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/359455v1)

Exome sequencing highlights the role of wild-relative introgression in shaping the adaptive landscape of the wheat genome

Dr. Eduard Akhunov’s group along with wheat geneticists from the US Wheat CAP project and Agriculture Victoria (Australia) published a paper in Nature Genetics. This collaborative project also includes scientists from the University of Saskatchewan (Canada) and University of Minnesota (USA). They performed a detailed analyses of genetic diversity in genetically diverse populations of wheat cultivars and landraces, and wild and domesticated tetraploid wheat. They used exome capture method to re-sequence and catalog variation in the gene coding regions of the wheat genome in nearly 1000 wheat accessions (http://wheatgenomics.plantpath.ksu.edu/1000EC/). More than seven million differences in genetic code which can can affect the function of genes that control various traits in wheat adaptation to new growth conditions were identified. Researchers found that gene flow from the wild ancestor reduced the deleterious mutation burden, and played an important role in the wheat’s ability to adapt to new climatic conditions. The findings in this paper will be very important in targeted deployment of wild relative diversity in the breeding programs for wheat improvement. The project is a part of NIFA-International Wheat Yield Partnership funded by Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Competitive Grants 2017-67007-25939 (Wheat-CAP) and 2016-67013-24473 from the USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, and grants from Kansas Wheat Commission and Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Corteva Agriscience, Agriculture Division of DowDuPont provided financial support through collaboration with Agriculture Victoria Services enabling the development of the SNP dataset and technologies.

Welcome new office staff

The main office is the hub of many office activities. We welcome two new people to this key piece of our department:

Welcome Kelly Staab

We are thrilled to have Kelly Staab as the newest addition to our office staff. Kelly is familiar with the K-State family, as she was previously part of KSRE Extension Operations. Kelly’s bright smile warms the front office, so stop by to introduce yourself and to get to know her better.

Welcome Adriana Hurst

We are excited to have Adriana Hurst, our new student worker, as a member of our office personnel. She joined the plant pathology team this May all the way from Charlottesville, Virginia. Adriana is a sophomore majoring in journalism with minor in German and is a member of the K-State forensics team. Please help us welcome Adriana by stopping by the office and introducing yourself.

The articles above were written by Joel Steyer, Bliss Betzen, Chandler Day, Elina Adhikari, and Kseniya Chumachenko.

 

In Memory

In closing, the department is sad to report on the passing of two outstanding colleagues.

Larry Clafin

Larry Claflin, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Plant Pathology at Kansas State University, passed away on February 3, 2019 after a long, hard fought battle with cancer and heart disease. He was 78 years old.

Larry was born July 3, 1940 to Bernice Lucille Mitchell Claflin and Avery Eugene Claflin. He leaves his wife, Dixie Campbell Claflin, son, Michael Eugene Claflin, and daughter, Kimberly Suzanne Claflin, and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Larry grew up on the family farm near Wakita, OK. He went on to receive his B.S in Biology/Chemistry from Northwestern Oklahoma State University, his M.S. in Botany from East Texas State University, and his Ph.D. in Plant Pathology from Kansas State University under the direction of Don Stuteville.

Larry’s first position was as an Extension Plant Pathologist at Montana State University where he also served as the director of the Montana Potato Improvement Association. He joined the faculty at Kansas State University in 1975 as an Extension Specialist. He later gave up his Extension responsibilities for a research/teaching appointment. From 1979 to 1982 he served as head of the department. For many years Larry taught the Plant Pathogenic Bacteria class, where students were required to identify unknown cultures of bacteria and then present their results formally, as if at the APS annual meeting. In 1984-85, Larry spent a sabbatical leave in the laboratory of Anne Vidaver at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, where he developed MXP media, a semi-selective medium for Xanthomonas campestris pv. phaseoli. He retired from the department in 2006. During his career, he considered it a very rewarding experience to serve as the Major Professor for over 30 M.S. and Ph.D. students. Many of these were foreign students, whom he and Dixie took into their home, forming lasting friendships. Larry’s international experience was extensive. Over the years he worked in 11 countries spread over four continents. Bacterial diseases of corn and sorghum were his primary emphases.

Larry had an extensive service record. He chaired the International Sorghum and Millet (INTSORMIL) Technical Committee and was the Plant Pathology Section Chair for the Sorghum Improvement Conference of North America (SICNA). Larry was also a member of the NCR-25 Corn and Sorghum Diseases Committee. His service to APS included Associate Editor of Plant Disease, the Office of International Programs (OIP), and as a member of the Regulatory Work and Foreign Plant Diseases, the Plant Disease Losses, and the Standardization of Common Names for Plant Diseases Committees.

He received the Outstanding Education Award from Northwestern OSU in 1992 and the Commitment to Plant Disease Knowledge Award from Kansas State’s Hale Library in 2006 for his donation of over 700 images that are now housed in the Larry Claflin Plant Disease Image Collection.

Larry was famous for presiding over mid-morning coffee breaks in his lab where discussions routinely spanned science, politics, religion and sports. Larry was also known by friends and relatives as “the man with the green thumb,” for he could make anything grow. He once commented that he did not wish flowers at his funeral, because he would rather they continue to grow. After retirement, he moved to Anthony, KS to be closer to his home farm in Wakita. While in Anthony, Larry entered politics serving on the city commission and as mayor. In his last years, he came home to his farm near Wakita where he developed a very successful business of growing irrigated alfalfa until he could no longer continue because of ill health.

 

Merle Eversmeyer

Merle Eversmeyer, age 83, died on Monday February 4, 2019 at the Ascension-Via Christi Hospital, Manhattan, Kansas.

He was born on December 9, 1935 in Waterville, Kansas the son of Gideon F. and Susie E. (Kintigh) Eversmeyer. On March 14, 1982, he was united in marriage to Beverly Ringey.

Merle earned a B.S in Agronomy and his M.S. and Ph.D. in Plant Pathology all from Kansas State University. Following completion of his Ph.D. in 1971, he joined the USDA-ARS’s Plant Science and Entomology Research Unit, which was housed within the Kansas State Department of Plant Pathology as the Cereal Rust Epidemiology Project Leader. In 1972, he became the Research Leader for the Plant Science and Entomology Research Unit, a position he held until his retirement in 2002. He also held a faculty appointment as an adjunct associate professor within the Kansas State Department of Plant Pathology.

Merle specialized in the epidemiology and ecology of wheat diseases, particularly leaf rust. He spent much time surveying for leaf rust each spring to determine if it had overwintered in Kansas (which always resulted in the most severe epidemics) and then entering the data for use in simulation models. His career was spent developing and improving these models for the improved forecasting of rust epidemics and yield losses. He was also actively involved in screening wheat germplasm for resistance to wheat rust and searching for new sources of resistance.

Merle enjoyed gardening, planting flowers and bringing flowers home to Beverly. He also loved Christmas and was known for starting the Christmas music in July and having the house fully decorated. He also loved watching the K-State Wildcats, the Kansas City Royals and the Kansas City Chiefs. He and Beverly traveled extensively through his work, traveling to over 26 different countries.

He was a lifelong member of the United Methodist Church and together, he and Beverly led an adult singles group that traveled all over; at one time they had 85 members.

Survivors include his wife: Beverly of the home; a brother: Harold Eversmeyer and his wife Ruth of Nashville along with many nieces, nephews, other family members and many friends.

Memorial tributes prepared by Doug Jardine

Thank you for reading our news! If you are an alum of our department please get in touch and let us know what you are doing. You can contact us by emailing Megan Kennelly. You can also follow us on Facebook.

If you are interested in supporting the department financially, here is one opportunity. Click the purple button and follow the prompts to the pulldownlist and select Plant Pathology Department Head Excellence Fund.

Plant Pathology Department Excellence Fund – The Excellence Fund is used to support Seminar speakers from outside K-State and may be used to supplement graduate student learning opportunities. Please note KSU Foundation Fund # D35825 in the special instructions. (NOTE: the text box is a link button)

Give now!

KSU Plant Pathology News: Fall Semester 2018

Greetings to friends, alumni, and supporters of KSU Plant Pathology

Winter is a good time to reflect on the hard work, perseverance, and growth throughout the year. With that idea of reflection, we at the Department of Plant Pathology welcome you to this first edition of the Departmental E-newsletter. This E-newsletter will be published twice a year at the end of each semester and will highlight the people and the new and exciting events of our department. 

Plant Pathology by the Numbers –  Snapshot of 2018

  • Graduate Students – 33
  • Post Doctoral Researchers – 15
  • Visiting Scientists – 5
  • Publications – 122
  • Diagnostic lab samples – >1,000
  • Competitive grants – $6.9 Million
  • Total external funding  – $7.4 million

Welcome To Our Newest Faculty

Lucky Mehra

Dr. Mehra received his B.S.  in Plant Protection from Punjab Agricultural University in Punjab India, Ph.D. his M.S. in Plant Pathology from the University of Georgia and his Ph.D in Plant Pathology with a minor in Statistics from North Carolina State University, Raleigh. He has a 100% teaching appointment, teaching Principles of Plant Pathology that is offered every spring semester and is the biggest course offered in terms of student enrollment. This is a fundamental course in plant pathology that introduces students to different types of plant pathogens and to cause, effect, and management of plant diseases. In addition to teaching, he coordinates undergraduate minor in plant pathology, and serve as a senior editor on American Phytopathological Society education center. Dr. Mehra collaborates with colleagues in the department and across the US in researching and analyzing quantitative aspects of plant diseases. Current projects are focused on epidemiology of citrus greening, angular leaf spot of strawberry, white mold of soybean, and Septoria nodorum blotch of wheat

David Cook

Dr. Cook grew up in Ohio and received his B.S. and M.S. degrees in Crop Soil Environmental science in 2005 and 2008, in Virginia Tech University. For his Master’s program, he worked in a soybean breeding program where he looked at genotype by environment effects on soybean traits important for Natto production. Dr. Cook went on to do his PhD at the Department of Plant pathology in University of Wisconsin-Madison, where his thesis was on soybean-soybean cyst nematode interactions and understanding host defense. Then, for three years from 2013-2016, he moved to Netherlands to be a postdoc at Wageningen University. There, he researched the soil borne fungal pathogen, Verticillium dahliae, focusing on molecular genetics and genomics related to fungal virulence on tomato and Arabidopsis. Dr. Cook joined K-State in January 2017 as an associate professor to continue studying molecular plant-microbe interactions. His lab currently has two broad themes: 1) molecular control of transcription and chromatin dynamics in fungal plant pathogens; 2) developing and deploying RNA-targeting CRISPR in plants. His lab has received support from federal funding  through the USDA Plant Biotic Interactions Program, and through a Young Faculty Award through the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). He received further support for the RNA-targeting project from the Joint Genome Institute (JGI). He is also teaching the proposal seminar course for graduate students in the Spring semester and Molecular plant-microbe interactions course in the Fall of odd years. Dr. Cook’s lab has grown a lot since he joined, and now includes three postdocs, Wenguang Zheng, Wei Zhang, and Veerendra Sharma, two PhD students, Jun Huang and Jameka Jefferson, and two undergraduates, Shumin Li and Brett Plemons. When not working, Dr. Cook enjoys spending time with his wife and 3 children, coaching their basketball team, and being outdoors.

Jessica Rupp

Dr. Rupp has been able to call Kansas home for the majority of her life. Born and raised in Pittsburg, Kansas, she attended Pittsburg State University where she received a dual B.S. in biochemistry and cellular and molecular biology. While at Pitt State, she joined a lab working on transgenic tomato, which ultimately led her to apply to work in Dr. Harold Trick’s plant transformation lab. She become a graduate student co-advised by Dr. Trick and Dr. John Fellers, working on wheat streak mosaic virus. After her PhD, Dr. Rupp accepted a faculty position at Montana State University, where she worked as a state Extension specialist, working on potatoes, sugar beets, and pulse crops. Based on her work in Montana, she and research assistant professor Dr. Myron Bruce published a book chapter on potato transformation. Since the summer 2018, Dr. Rupp is the assistant professor of Applied Wheat Pathology and is focused on several diseases affecting wheat. These include many important Kansas wheat issues such as wheat streak mosaic complex, Fusarium Head blight, the leaf spot complex, root rots, and more. She is offering a new class starting in fall 2019, Integrated Strategies of Pant Disease Management, which will be aimed mostly at upper level agronomy but also plant pathology students who wish to gain practical field experience. Dr. Bruce and two graduate students, Dylan Mangel and Nar Ranabhat, also moved from Montana to stay in her lab. When not at work, Dr. Rupp likes running with her Hungarian vizsla dog named Asta and watching her daughter’s athletic activities as she competes for Wamego Middle School and Northeast Kansas Track Club. 

Shahideh Nouri

Dr. Nouri is originally from Iran and completed her B.S. and M.S. degrees in plant protection and plant pathology, respectively, from Isfahan University of Technology in Iran. For her M.S. project, she studied the natural populations of Ralstonia solanacearum, the causal agent of bacterial wilt of plants in the tomato/potato family.  Certain strains of this bacterium are select agents in the U.S. She identified R. solanacearum phylotype II/biovar 2T in potato fields in Iran and reported the existence of this group outside South America for the first time. Soon after, Dr. Nouri came to the U.S. in 2007 to join a Ph.D. program at the Plant Pathology department in the University of Wisconsin-Madison. For her dissertation, she researched molecular-based phylogenetics of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) and elucidated possible mechanisms that gave rise to the variation of CMV isolates in the U.S. Afterwards, she joined Bryce Falk’s research group at University of California -Davis and investigated a novel strategy to manipulate insect-specific viruses (ISV) to target the Asian citrus psyllid (D. citri), the most important recent invasive insect vector of a plant pathogen in the U.S. It vectors the bacterial plant pathogen (Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus) that causes a citrus greening disease. Dr. Nouri discovered a diverse array of novel viruses (virome) in global natural populations of D. citri using small RNA and transcriptome sequencing. The potential use of these new viruses as biological agents is under investigation. Dr. Nouri joined our department in June 2018 and plans to continue studying ISVs of D. citri. In addition, her research will include the wheat virome and genetic variation of natural populations of Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV) in wheat, WSMV-wheat curl mite interactions, and Barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV)-aphid microbiome interactions. Dr. Nouri will also be teaching Plant Virology at the graduate level in the fall 2019. Dr. Nouri`s hobbies/interests outside of work include walking, hiking, and traveling.

Best Wishes to Retiring Faculty

Along with welcoming new faculty we had two faculty retire recently and we thank them for their many contributions to the department.

Bikram Gill – University Distinguished Professor Emeritus 

Bikram Gill retired from the Department of Plant Pathology in July,following 39 years of service to K- State and the KSU College of Agriculture. A native of the Punjab region of India, Bikram came to the US in 1968 to attend college. In 1977, he arrived at K-State to lead a new wheat cytogenetics program. By 1984, his impact was extended when he established the Wheat Genetics Resource Center (WGRC) at Kansas State University. The WGRC brought together plant pathologists, entomologists, breeders, and USDA personnel with a vision of germplasm conservation and utilization for crop improvement for sustainable production by broadening the crop genetic base; creating and promoting the free exchange of materials, technology, and new knowledge in genetics and biotechnology among the world’s public and private organizations.  State-of-the-art laboratories, greenhouses, and field plot facilities helped establish the WGRC. Interaction with Bikram on a day-to-day basis will be missed, but he will still be around, collaborating with colleagues and stimulating new ideas. Bikram can still be reached at his K-State e-mail, bsgill@ksu.edu. We’re sure he would love to hear from past colleagues!

Kevin McCluskey – Research Professor 

Kevin McCluskey, has been curator of the Fungal Genetics Stock Center for the last 23 years, spanning three institutions. About the last four and a half have been at K-State. Dr McCluskey is retiring to a job in private industry starting in January 2019.  Kevin’s meticulous attention to detail has served the collection well and has raised the visibility and reputation of the FGSC. He developed the current database and modernized many of the preservation and collection management protocols we all rely on. Kevin was successful at bringing funding to the FGSC and to the greater collections community, with the hope of building a sustainable future for all collections. There was no greater authority or champion of culture collections than Dr. McCluskey. His expertise and enthusiasm for the project will be missed. Kevin will not be dropping out of contact with the fungal genetics community.  You can continue to contact him through his K-State e-mail address (mccluskeyk@ksu.edu). You can reach out to him at his K-State e-mail to wish him well.

Congratulations to our Recent Graduates!

The Department of Plant Pathology is proud of our students who were recognized at the December 2019 Graduate School Commencement Ceremony.

Christian Webb

Christian is pictured at right with Dr. Marty Draper.

 

Lorena Gomez-Montano

We also want to acknowledge the contributions of Dr. Karen Garrett. Dr. Garrett was Lorena’s original major professor and remained highly involved in Lorena’s project after leaving KSU.

Anupama Joshi

 

 

Daljit Singh

 

 

Andres Salcedo 

 

Last but not least, we’d like to recognize one more student. Mingying Xiang was in the Department of Horticulture and Natural Resources, but her project had a strong plant pathology focus looking at two different turf diseases and our own Dr. Kennelly served as her co-major professor. At right she is pictured at commencement with Dr. Kennelly along with Dr. Jack Fry from Horticulture and Natural Resources.

Congrats to all these students, and their mentors!

Department Achievements in 2018

Our department has had many successes in 2018. Here are just a few!

Wheat Blast and BRI work
K-State’s Biosecurity Research Institute (BRI) is a Biosafety Level-3 biocontainment facility for the study of high-consequence plant, animal, and human pathogens that threaten U.S. agriculture and public health. Through projects led by Dr. Barbara Valent and Dr. Jim Stack, our department has collaborated closely with BRI since 2009 to research Magnaporthe oryzae, the causal agent of wheat blast that decimates wheat production in South America and southern Asia. More recently, research has begun on Rathayibacter toxicus, the U.S. select agent plant pathogenic bacterium that produces a neurotoxin lethal to grazing animals. Currently, graduate students Javier Kiyuna, Giovana Cruppe, Monica Navia, and research assistant Edwin Navia are researching wheat blast, while post-doc Jarred Yasuhara-Bell and graduate student Kseniya Chumachenko are researching R. toxicus. Our department is grateful for the productive collaboration with BRI that increases our knowledge of two important plant pathogens that compromise plant biosecurity and threaten global food security. 
Feed the future innovation lab funding extension
 Under the direction of Dr. Jesse Poland, the Feed the Future Innovation Lab for Applied Wheat Genomics was awarded $4.9 million from U.S. Agency for International Development for the next five years. Standard deployment of a new wheat variety can take over a decade to do properly, a substantial amount of time used for verification. With the extension of the Applied Wheat Genomics lab, genomic tools can expedite the deployment process down to four years. Faster deployments of wheat varieties will increase our global ability to adapt to changing environmental conditions and disease outbreaks. This lab was one of three at Kansas State University to receive additional funding to combat global food insecurity and poverty. For more information, you can visit the Innovation Lab website at http://wheatgenetics.org/innovation-lab.
Highly cited researcher 2018

Dr. Eduard Akhunov, has been ranked in the top 1% of researchers worldwide by Highly Cited Researchers 2018. “This list recognizes world-class researchers for their exceptional research performance, demonstrated by production of multiple highly cited papers that rank in the top 1% by citations for field and year in Web of Science.” Highly Cited Researchers identifies top scientists in both the fields of science and social sciences “who have demonstrated significant influence through publication of multiple highly cited papers during the last decade.” Dr. Akhunov has been a member of K-State’s Plant Pathology department since 2007. His research focuses on wheat genome diversity and evolution, disease resistant genes in wheat as well as genetic/genomic tools and resources for wheat improvement. For more information about Highly Cited Researchers 2018, please visit https://hcr.clarivate.com/. 

Dr. Barbara Valent recognized with national award

 

Dr. Valent earned the 2018 Noel T. Keen Award for Research Excellence in Molecular Plant Pathology from the American Phytopathological Society. As stated on the APS website, “the award recognizes APS members for research excellence in molecular plant pathology. Nominees will have made outstanding contributions and demonstrated sustained excellence and leadership in research that significantly advances the understanding of molecular aspects of host–pathogen interactions, plant pathogens or plant-associated microbes, or molecular biology of disease development or defense mechanisms.” Dr. Valent is an international leader in research on rice blast and wheat blast, two diseases that threaten global food security. You can read more about her work on the Keen Award Website.

Tim Todd honored with excellence in graduate teaching award

The KSU College of Agriculture named Tim Todd as the recipient of the Excellence in Graduate Teaching Award. Though Plant Pathology is a research powerhouse, we are dedicated of our teaching mission too. Tim was nominated by colleagues, several students, and several alumni for his outstanding contributions to classroom teaching and his mentoring for experimental design and statistical analysis. Congratulations Tim!

Student awards

  • Christian Webb: North Central American Phytopathological Society, student travel award
  • Javier Kiyuna: North Central American Phytopathological Society, 3rd place, student poster competition
  • Chandler Day: North Central American Phytopathological Society. 2nd place, student poster competition; North Central American Phytopathological Society, student travel award
  • Mohammad Mokhlesur Rahman: 2018 BIFAD Student Award for Scientific Excellence in a Feed the Future Innovation Lab

Leadership changes

Last summer, Dean John Floros left the K-State College of Agriculture to become President of New Mexico State University. Associate Dean Ernie Minton was appointed as the Interim Dean. To support College efforts, Department Head Marty Draper has moved to the Interim Dean for Research position. In the chain reaction, Dr. Megan Kennelly has been named Interim Department Head. The duration of the Interim positions is unknown, but is expected to last until Fall semester.

 

 

 

 

 

Upcoming Events 

  1. Plant Breeding and Genetics Symposium https://www.k-state.edu/pbg/symposium2017/ – 2018 schedule coming soon) 
  1. Alumni Fellow recognition – Dr. Segenet Kelemu (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3rTidB-E32g 
  1. Science Communication 2019 – March 22-24, 2019 (http://www.k-state.edu/scicomm/conference2019/index.html 

The Kansas Science Communication Initiative (KSCI) and the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL) have joined forces to co-host SciComm 2019 at Kansas State University in Manhattan, KS on March 22-24, 2019. 

Care to Support K-State? Donate Now! 

It is nearing year-end. If you are interested in supporting K-State or the department, here are a couple of opportunities.

Plant Pathology Department Excellence Fund – The Excellence Fund is used to support Seminar speakers from outside K-State and may be used to supplement graduate student learning opportunities. Please note KSU Foundation Fund # D35825 in the special instructions. (NOTE: the text box is a link button)

Give now!

If you feel moved to provide a larger donation, a recent matching gift was made to K-State to support undergraduate scholarships.

This edition of the Plant Pathology newsletter was prepared as a team effort by Marty Draper, Kseniya Chumachenko, Elina Adhikari, Joel Steyer, Alex Kieffaber, and Megan Kennelly.