Volume 1 • 2017

Featured InterView: Dr. Maria Harrison

This InterView with Maria Harrison, professor at Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, was performed by one of the 2016 IS-MPMI student travel awardees, Kevin Cope, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Editor’s note: Kevin communicated to me that after the interview, he was interested in joining Dr. Harrison’s lab as a postdoc….

Impostor Syndrome and You: A Discussion of a Little-Discussed Phenomenon

by Katelyn Butler and Michelle Marks, Department of Plant Pathology, University of Wisconsin-Madison Editor’s note: After participating in a roundtable discussion on impostor syndrome led by Michelle and Katelyn at the 2017 APS Annual Meeting, I invited them to develop the following article. The Interactions advisory board and I feel…

December Issue of Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions online

Next stop: Glasgow! IS-MPMI XVIII Congress, July 14-18, 2019

ICPP2018 Comes to Boston, July 29-August 2, 2018

InterView: Pamela C. Ronald

This InterView with Pamela C. Ronald, University of California, was performed by one of the 2016 IS-MPMI student travel awardees, Gazala Ameen, North Dakota State University. Gazala Ameen (GA): Dr. Ronald, your work and efforts to connect lab to land is a role model for many budding scientists. What is…

Fat Cats Can Jump Over The Wall: Plant Biotic Interactions Workshop in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, China

— By Sophien Kamoun with contributions from LFCats On a cloudy Norwich day in 2011, post-docs Sebastian Schornack, Sylvain Raffaele, and Tolga Bozkurt were having a typical British lunch of fish and chips with mushy peas with their supervisor Sophien Kamoun. Somehow, the discussion turned to the importance of sustained…

A Recap of the 2017 APS Annual Meeting

This year’s Annual Meeting of The American Phytopathological Society was held in San Antonio, TX, on August 5–9. As someone whose research program is based primarily on studying molecular plant-microbe interactions, I have always found that the science presented at the APS Annual Meeting is more focused on the applied…

InterView: Thomas Baum

Thomas J. Baum Iowa State University What area(s) of molecular plant-microbe interactions do you feel your research has impacted most? I think our work and that of our collaborators was instrumental in bringing plant nematology into the next phase of research questions and approaches. We led plant nematology awayfrom pure…

InterViews: Andrew Bent

Andrew F. Bent University of Wisconsin – Madison What area(s) of molecular plant-microbe interactions do you feel your research has impacted most? From my early days, it would have to be developing and popularizing Arabidopsis and Pseudomonas syringae as experimental models for plant pathology research and discovering thatR genes encode…

InterView: Yong-Hwan Lee

Yong-Hwan Lee Seoul National University What area(s) of molecular plant-microbe interactions do you feel your research has impacted most? My research group has been undertaking comprehensive and integrative approaches to understand the molecular and genomic basis of fungal pathogenesis in the rice blast fungus. Wealso developed a powerful bioinformatics platform…

InterView: Hailing Jin

Hailing Jin University of California What area(s) of molecular plant-microbe interactions do you feel your research has impacted most? I think my research has the most impact on the areas of cross-kingdom RNAi and how this affects host-pathogen communications and of small RNA and epigenetics-mediated regulationin plant-pathogen interactions. What advice…

Expand on Discussions Reported in New, Open-Access MPMI Whitepaper

A new whitepaper published in Molecular Plant-Microbe Interactions, entitled “Foundational and Translational Research Opportunities to Improve Plant Health,” offers a detailed accounting of deliberations at a recent workshop focused on the various biotic challenges to maintaining plant health. This fully open-access paper provides an outline and an accounting of the…

Save the Date for the IS-MPMI XVIII Congress

We are pleased to announce that the next iteration of the IS-MPMI Congress will take place among the beautiful vistas only found in Scotland. During July 14–18, 2019, you will be able to interact with your molecular plant-microbe interactions community from around the world. Witness the majesty and history of…

Make Plans to Attend ICPP2018

The International Congress of Plant Pathology (ICPP) is an exciting global event that takes place once every five years. In 2018, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A., will host plant health scientists from around the world from July 29 to August 3. Leading experts from around the world will present the latest advances…

Welcome to the New Interactions

Welcome to the new IS-MPMI Interactions issue format! This enhanced publication, updated quarterly, will provide members with a glimpse of topic research developments, current events, opinions, and career opportunities. We are hopeful that Interactions will become a forum for serious (and occasionally less-than-serious) thoughts that stimulate new interactions between members….

Get to Know the IS-MPMI Interactions Advisory Team

Dennis Halterman Research Geneticist USDA/ARS Vegetable Crops Research Unit Madison, WI U.S.A. Joined IS-MPMI in 2001 Current/past positions: EIC of IS-MPMI Interactions 2017-present Dennis’s research is focused on identifying and characterizing disease resistance genes from wild species relatives of cultivated potato. His research involves a wide range of disciplines that…

InterViews: Sophien Kamoun

This InterView with Sophien Kamoun, John Innes Centre, was performed by one of the 2016 IS-MPMI student travel awardees, Jixiang Kong, Gregor Mendel Institute. JIXIANG KONG: What led you to study biology? More specifically plant-pathogen interactions. SOPHIEN KAMOUN: I grew up with a passion for nature. As a teenager I…

Using Scoop.it to Share Science Related to Your Interests

By Dennis Halterman, Interactions Editor-in-Chief If you’re like me, you have a Twitter account but you only use it once in a while. Or maybe you’ve heard about using social media to communicate your science but haven’t yet taken the leap. Setting up work-related social media accounts is relatively easy…

InterMurals – Oliver Ellingham

As part of the new IS-MPMI Interactions, we would like to include photos of you doing what you do best—science. Send a photo that best represents your research with a short caption to dennis.halterman@ars.usda.gov, and we will include it in the InterMurals section of Interactions.   Oliver Ellingham, University of…

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