Postdoctoral researchers

Kyle Meyer (2019-2023): Dr. Meyer joined the group in 2019 from Brendan Bohannan’s group at the University of Oregon. He has published broadly on the spatial ecology of microbial communities, how microbial communities drive biogeochemical functions, and how environmental change impacts microbes living in tropical soils (see here), and here his work focuses on understanding how dispersal and transmission mode shape the plant microbiome.

Wenke Smets (2019-2021, BAEF Postdoctoral fellow): Dr. Smets joined the group in October 2019 as a B.A.E.F. Postdoctoral Fellow from Sarah Lebeer’s group at the University of Antwerp, Belgium. Her previous work focused on the impact of pollution in urban environments on the phyllosphere, and vice versa. Her time in the lab included examination of the process of phyllosphere community assembly and the functional response of these communities over the course of succession.

Graduate students

Reena Debray (2018-2023, PhD student, UC Berkeley, Integrative Biology): PhD student in Integrative Biology, and NSF GRFP fellow. Dr. Debray, a NSF GRFP fellow, completed her dissertation focusing on priority effects and evolution within microbial communities. More on her work here!

Elijah Mehlferber (2017-2022, PhD student, UC Berkeley, Integrative Biology): Dr. Mehlferber completed his dissertation examining the role that phyllosphere associated bacterial communities play in modulating their host health and functions. He is now a NSF postdoctoral fellow with Sam Brown at Georgia Tech.

Catherine Hernandez (2015-2021, PhD student, UC Berkeley,Integrative Biology): Dr. Hernandez completed her dissertation in Integrative Biology Department as an NSF GRFP and Berkeley fellow. Her work focused on measuring coevolutionary change between bacteria and phages living within leaves of tomato plants. She used a combination of experimental evolution and molecular approaches to test when/how the coevolutionary process differs between the in planta and in vitro environments, and how coevolution impacts upon molecular evolution of bacteria. She is now a postdoctoral fellow with Prof Paul Turner at Yale.

Norma Morella (2015-2019, PhD student, UC Berkeley, Plant and Microbial Biology): Dr Morella completed her dissertation work examining: (i) the impact of microbial transmission (e.g. via seeds or via aerial transmission) on microbiome assembly and function; (ii) novel methods to measure bacteria-phage dynamics and assess the risk of bacteriophage infection in microbial populations/communities; and (iii) the impact of phages in host-associated microbial communities. She is now a postdoctoral research fellow at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Institute in the group of Prof. Neelendu Dey, studying the role of the microbiome in cancer.

Sean Meaden (2012-2015, PhD student, University of Exeter): Sean finished his PhD focusing on understanding how coevolution with phages affects the fitness of a bacterial pathogen on its plant host. He went on to work as a postdoctoral researcher with Prof Mike Boots at UC Berkeley, then as a postdoctoral researcher with Prof. Edze Westra, and most recently as a Marie Curie Research fellow in the lab of Prof. Peter Fineran at the University of Otago.

Research technicians

Julia Sherman (2019-2023, Lab Manager): Julia joined the lab in 2019 as an undergraduate at UC Berkeley to work with Kyle on understanding how microbiome transmission shapes host-microbe interactions. She then transitioned to working as the full-time Lab Manager for both the Boots and Koskella labs.

Alina Lee (2018-2021): Alina joined the lab in 2018 as an undergraduate researcher helping on numerous projects, including leading the way in hunting for phages to complement our growing synthetic microbiome of tomato plants. She then stayed on as a full-time research technician leading the Pear project, and is now a researcher in Paul Turner’s lab at Yale.

Isabella Muscettola (2019-2021): Isabella joined the lab in 2019 as an undergraduate researcher working with Kama to characterize interactions among fungi within the phyllosphere. She then stayed on as a part-time research technician working with Kyle on a large scale microbiome passaging experiment, and is preparing to start her PhD in Microbiology.

Tristan Caro (2017-2019, Undergraduate researcher and then full-time research technician): Tristan joined the lab in 2017 to work with Britt on developing a new system to explore natural bacteria-phage dynamics during fire blight infection of pear trees. He is now undertaking his PhD work at the University of Colorado at Boulder.

Nicole Parr (2013-2015, Full-time research technician, University of Exeter; now a PhD student at the University of Exeter, working with Lucy Hawkes on bird migration). Nicole worked on measuring bacteria-phage coevolution in the horse chestnut phyllosphere (Koskella, B., & Parr, N. (2015). The evolution of bacterial resistance against bacteriophages in the horse chestnut phyllosphere is general across both space and time. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences370(1675), 20140297).

Will Crowther (2014, Research assistant based at Oxford University; now a research technician at Warwick University) Will worked with Jessica Metcalf and Britt on a project exploring the role of the microbiome in tree health (Koskella, B., Meaden, S., Crowther, W. J., Leimu, R., & Metcalf, C. J. E. (2017). A signature of tree health? Shifts in the microbiome and the ecological drivers of horse chestnut bleeding canker disease. New Phytologist, 215(2), 737-746).

Masters students

Emily Dewald-Wang (2023, Masters student, UC Berkeley, Integrative Biology ) Emily initially joined the lab from Washington University, St. Louis in October 2019 as a research technician to help coordinate the Pear Fire Blight Project. She graduated with a Masters in 2023, focusing on the interaction of community and disease ecology.

Alexander Rose (2015, Masters student at Exeter; now a Graduate Teaching Associate at Bangor University)

Reinier van Velzen (2014, Visiting masters student at Exeter)

Amy McLeman (2013, Masters student at Exeter; now pursuing a PhD at the University of Exeter with Profs Richard Ffrench-Constant and Chris Bass to design bee-safe pesticides)

Jennifer Bates (2009, Masters student at Oxford)

Undergraduate researchers

Fernando Trent Diaz: Fernando joined the Pear Project in 2019 to help isolate and characterize phages from the phyllosphere. He then received an NSF REPs fellowship to stay on the Pear Project and examine coexistence of strains within the phyllosphere.

Sophie Zhai: Sophie joined the lab in 2019 and worked with Cathy to understand the role of phylogeny in phage host range.

Ethan Kau: Ethan joined the lab in 2019, and worked with Wenke on understanding the role of the microbiome (and phages) in shaping disease.

Elodie Jungerman: Elodie joined the lab in 2019 and worked with Elijah in characterizing within-microbiome interactions using a synthetic phyllosphere community.

Nikita Chigullapally: Nikita joined the lab in 2019 and worked with Elijah in characterizing within-microbiome interactions using a synthetic phyllosphere community.

Joy He: Joy is a Nutritional Sciences – physiology major from Waterloo, Canada. She joined the lab in 2019 to work with Shirley Zhang on understanding the role of defensive symbionts in shaping disease outcome, and received a URAP Summer fellowship to examine the factors that shape pathogenesis.

Aspen Pastore: Aspen joined the lab in 2018 and is working on the interaction between phages and biofilm formation with Cathy Hernandez.

James Lu: James joined the lab in 2018 and worked with Elijah on variation in phage traits.

Rachel Rovinsky: Rachel joined the lab in 2017 and is working with Elijah on the role of bacterial and plant signaling molecules in inducing plant immunity.

Charmaine Fong: Charmaine joined the Pear project in 2018 to help track bacteria-phage dynamics in pear trees.

Kore Lum: Kore ran an experimental evolution project using two lytic phages that have evolved in a variety of environmental conditions with different strains of Pseudomonas syringae. She received a URAP summer research grant to complete this work.

Aditi Maheshwari: Aditi joined the lab in 2018 to work on the Pear project – helping us track the dynamics of bacteria and phages within the phyllosphere of diseased pear trees infected with Erwinina amylovora, the causal agent of fire blight disease.

Shirley Zhang: (2017-2020) Shirley joined the lab as a Sophomore working with Norma Morella on a project to determine the protective effects of bacterial communities against the pathogen P. syringae (Morella, N. M., Zhang, X., & Koskella, B. (2019). Tomato Seed-Associated Bacteria Confer Protection of Seedlings Against Foliar Disease Caused by Pseudomonas syringae. Phytobiomes Journal3(3), 177-190) She then completed her honor’s thesis exploring the coevolution between a pathogen and a protective symbiont, and is now a PhD student at Cornell!

Callie Cuff: Callie joined the lab in 2017 and worked with Britt on a project exploring natural bacteria-phage dynamics during fire blight infection of pear trees. She is now attending medical school at UCLA.

Michelle Leung: Michelle joined the lab in 2016 and was working with Britt, in collaboration with Jenn Lewis, on a method for rapidly identifying phage receptors allowing infection of the plant pathogen, P. syringae. She also collaborated on a large project exploring the impact of phages in the phyllosphere (Morella, N. M., Gomez, A. L., Wang, G., Leung, M. S., & Koskella, B. (2018). The impact of bacteriophages on phyllosphere bacterial abundance and composition. Molecular ecology27(8), 2025-2038). She is now attending Medical School at UCSF.

Shangyang Christopher Yang: Chris joined the lab in 2016 and worked with Norma on designing phage specific probes to measure phage-phage competition in vitro (Morella, N. M., Yang, S. C., Hernandez, C. A., & Koskella, B. (2018). Rapid quantification of bacteriophages and their bacterial hosts in vitro and in vivo using droplet digital PCR. Journal of virological methods259, 18-24). He is now attending Medical School at UCLA.

Nishani Abeydeera: (2015-2017, Volunteer, Berkeley) Nishani joined the lab within my first few months at UC Berkeley and worked here for nearly two years on projects ranging from phage genome sequencing to identifying new phage receptors on bacterial cells; now working as a medical scribe at the Northridge Hospital emergency room

Izaak Coleman: (2013, 2015, Volunteer, University of Exeter) now pursuing a PhD at Columbia University (see here).

Jennifer Weller: (2014, Undergraduate, University of Exeter) now doing a PhD at Queen’s University Belfast on aggression in domestic animals)

Benjamin Keningale: (2013, Undergraduate, University of Exeter) won Darwin award for top honor’s project in University of Exeter’s BioSciences department; just finished his MSc at the Royal Veterinary College and now deciding among PhD programs.

Olivia Lee: (2013, Undergraduate, University of Exeter) Graduatd with an MSc from University of Liverpool, then volunteered with Edze Westra, looking into the whens and whys of the evolution of CRISPR immune system in bacteria, and now a Lab technician at the University of Southampton, Clinical and Experimental Science department, looking into the effects of a novel topical pharmaceutical gel on skin cells cultured in vivo.

Derek Lin: (2010, Honor’s project student at UC Santa Cruz, where I was a postdoctoral fellow) now a research technician at the Biomedical Research Institute of New Mexico, and an active collaborator. He is interested in the role that phages play in the microbiome: Lin, D. M., Koskella, B., & Lin, H. C. (2017). Phage therapy: An alternative to antibiotics in the age of multi-drug resistance. World journal of gastrointestinal pharmacology and therapeutics8(3), 162.

Angela Pogson: (2015-2017, Volunteer, Berkeley) Angie joined us in her 1st year at Berkeley to work, in collaboration with Britt and Steve Lindow, on bacterial ice nucleation in the tomato leaf.

Priyanka Ranade: (2016-2018) Priyanka joined the lab in 2016 and was working with Cathy on bacteria-phage interactions within the leaves of tomato plants.

Grant Wang: (2016-2017, Volunteer, Berkeley) Grant spent over a year in the lab working closely with Norma to study the impact of phages within the tomato microbiome (Morella, N. M., Gomez, A. L., Wang, G., Leung, M. S., & Koskella, B. (2018). The impact of bacteriophages on phyllosphere bacterial abundance and composition. Molecular ecology27(8), 2025-2038); now beginning a 1-year’s masters program at Tufts University.

Visiting researchers

Ana Luisa Soares de Vasconcelos (2019/2020): Ana was a visiting PhD student from the University of São Paulo, Brazil. She collaborated on a number of projects relating to how microbiomes adapt to the plant phyllosphere. See more about Ana and the fantastic work she is doing here: https://scholar.google.com.br/citations?user=P4k6wmcAAAAJ&hl=en

Nina De Luna (2019): Nina was an undergraduate at Pennsylvania State University who spent the summer working with Reena Debray on the loss of phage resistance due to fitness costs as an Amgen Scholar.

Rob Porch (2019): Rob was a visiting NSF REU scholar at Berkeley who is helping Kyle with his field study to examine the role of plant neighborhoods in the assembly of aboveground microbial communities.

Francis Weng (2018): Francis joined the lab for a semester at the end of his Phd on an Academia Sinica fellowship from the National Taiwan Normal University. He is working with us to apply network models to understand when and how a microbiome confers protection against a given pathogen.

Annika Gomez (2016): Annika is an undergraduate at Cornell University who spent a summer in the lab as part of the prestigious Amgen Scholars program.

William Feeney (2016): Will visited the lab for a summer as a Fulbright Fellow based between the University of Queensland (AUS) and the University of Delaware studying numerous coevolutionary interactions, including brood parasites. More here: http://www.williamefeeney.com

Stefanie Barbosa Potful Soares (2016): Stefanie is an undergraduate at the Federal University of Espirito Santo (UFES) in Brazil who worked in the lab over the summer as part of Brazil’s Scientific Mobility program.