It's a Good Day When Nematodes Make the News

In an era when folks say they have no clue what nematology is, it's gratifying to see it make the headlines.

At least, the UC Davis headlines!

We're delighted to see that UC Davis undergraduate student Juan Amado “Ado” Sales, a member of the Research Scholars Program in Insect Biology and a laboratory assistant for nematologist Shahid Siddique, UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology, has just been awarded a coveted summer fellowship from the UC Davis Innovation Institute for Food and Health (ILFH) to do independent research on parasitic nematodes. 

As we wrote in a news story today, Sales submitted his successful research application on “Toward a More Resistant Plant: Uncovering Plant Host Targets of Novel Plant Parasitic Nematode Effectors.”  He is one of only four students to be awarded the summer fellowship. 

Sales, who is on track to receive his bachelor's degree in biotechnology (with an emphasis on plant biotechnology) in June 2022, draws high praise from Siddique.

“Ado is a highly gifted student with a strong interest in agriculture and plant biology,” said Siddique. “I have really enjoyed one-on-one interaction with Ado and I have observed him growing academically and intellectually. He has a level of maturity in his research, including contributing ideas for troubleshooting, that I had no hesitations about giving him the space to continue his project independently. The IIFH fellowship program will add to his personal and professional growth and contribute to the experience of first-generation immigrant students like himself.” 

ILFH awards Undergraduate Research Center Fellowships (URC-IIFH) to faculty-guided undergraduate students who perform research related to food, agriculture and health.  Each fellow receives a summer research stipend, and funds for travel and/or research supplies. The fellows also will participate in professional development and entrepreneurship training, including the on-campus Entrepreneurship Academy. They will present their research results at the annual IIFH Innovator Summit in spring 2022, with opportunities to participate in the UC Davis Little Bang poster competition and the Big Bang competition.  

Ado, who joined the Siddique lab in May 2018, works with postdoctoral researcher Henok Yimer and principal investigator/assistant professor Siddique, to “elucidate the nature of plant parasitic nematode effector that establishes successful parasitism, identified relationship of a nematode effector with other parasitic effectors.”  

His research involves RNA extraction, cDNA synthesis, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), and gel electrophoresis, as well as GreenGate Cloning of plant parasitic nematodes genes. His skills also include seed germination and nematode hatching for plant-nematode assays, and the microscopic evaluation of nematode damage on plants. 

Sales' journey to the Siddique lab began in May 2019 when he was selected a research scholar in the campuswide program, Research Scholar in Insect Biology (RSPIB), launched by UC Davis Entomology and Nematology faculty Jay Rosenheim, Joanna Chiu and Louie Yang to provide undergraduates with a closely-mentored research experience in biology. Students join in their first or second year and are placed in a faculty mentor's laboratory where they receive ongoing training and career guidance in research and scientific writing. They also learn how to present their research results at professional scientific meetings and to prepare applications for graduate or professional schools. 

His research involves RNA extraction, cDNA synthesis, Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR), and gel electrophoresis, as well as GreenGate Cloning of plant parasitic nematodes genes. His skills also include seed germination and nematode hatching for plant-nematode assays, and the microscopic evaluation of nematode damage on plants. 

Sales' journey to the Siddique lab began in May 2019 when he was selected a research scholar in the campuswide program, Research Scholar in Insect Biology (RSPIB), launched by UC Davis Entomology and Nematology faculty Jay Rosenheim, Joanna Chiu and Louie Yang to provide undergraduates with a closely-mentored research experience in biology. Students join in their first or second year and are placed in a faculty mentor's laboratory where they receive ongoing training and career guidance in research and scientific writing. They also learn how to present their research results at professional scientific meetings and to prepare applications for graduate or professional schools. 

Sales enrolled in Rosenheim's class, BIS2B (Introduction to Biology, Ecology and Evolution) and the rest is history, as they say. 

It was in the Rosenheim class that Sales learned about RSPIB, joined the Siddique lab, and applied for--and received--the summer fellowship. 

Well done, Ado Sales.

Next step? Explaining what the study of nematology (microscopic round worms) is all about? Read what Siddique says about plant parasitic nematodes.