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dr. L (Lisa) van Sluijs

dr. L (Lisa) van Sluijs

assistant professor

Biography

Biography

Research:

Nematodes (microscopic roundworms) are key in maintaining soil biodiversity and health, but some species can also infect and damage agricultural crops. In soil nematodes encounter natural parasites, such as bacteria, microsporidia and viruses, that infect and sicken them. My research focuses on the interactions between hosts (mainly nematodes) and their parasites and experiments range from laboratory to field studies. My current research topics are summarized below.

Nematode biodiversity and parasite presence – Species biodiversity can shape parasite presence in different systems of macroscopic species, however if this is also true for (soil) microorganisms is unknown. I am currently testing this so-called ‘dilution theory of disease’ in bacterivorous nematode communities. I extract bacterivorous nematode communities together with their parasites from natural habitats. Communities are then screened morphologically and by long-read amplicon sequencing and species information is linked to parasite observations. In case nematode biodiversity determines parasite presence, this has broad implications ranging from fundamental understanding of soil ecosystems to application of biocontrol parasites in agriculture.

Natural variation in parasite susceptibility - Genetic variations within the same species determine susceptibility to natural parasites. I use the model nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and its naturally occurring parasite the Orsay virus to understand how within-species variation changes parasite susceptibility. To this end, I employ the extensive genetic, molecular and microscopic tools available for this model system.

Nematodes disperse soil parasites (collaborative research with the NIOO-KNAW) – Bacterivorous nematodes feed on bacteria. At the same time, these bacteria-feeding nematodes disperse their bacterial food source, thus enhancing bacterial spread through soil. However, if nematodes moving through soil also spread a key parasite of bacteria, bacteriophages, is undetermined. In case nematodes spread bacteriophages, this explains how immobile bacteriophages can spread through soil. Because bacteriophages drive key soil processes, this illustrates how complex biological interactions can be critical in soil health.

Characteristics and application of persistently infecting narnaviruses (research performed at the Laboratory of Virology) – Narnaviruses persistently infect many invertebrate species, including nematodes and mosquitos. Mosquitos also vector many other viruses, including human-infecting viruses such as Zika virus and West-Nile virus. I investigate biology of narnaviruses and potential of using a modified narnavirus as a vaccine protecting mosquitos from co-infection with human-infecting viruses.

Research group:

  • Jose Estiben Pacheco Diaz
  • Annamaria Mattia

Education - dr. L (Lisa) van Sluijs

Education

Courses

CodeTitle
NEM11305
Plant Sciences in Practice
NEM30306
Host-Parasite Interactions
NEM79224
MSc Research Practice Nematology
NEM34806
Parasite Paradigms
NEM70224
MSc Internship Nematology
NEM70424
MSc Internship Nematology
NEM80424
MSc Thesis Nematology
NEM79324
MSc Research Practice Nematology
NEM80436
MSc Thesis Nematology
YBI37806
Frontiers in Biology
ENT30306
Ecological Aspects of Bio-interactions

Courses

  1. Code
    NEM11305
    Title
    Plant Sciences in Practice
  2. Code
    NEM30306
    Title
    Host-Parasite Interactions
  3. Code
    NEM79224
    Title
    MSc Research Practice Nematology
  4. Code
    NEM34806
    Title
    Parasite Paradigms
  5. Code
    NEM70224
    Title
    MSc Internship Nematology
  6. Code
    NEM70424
    Title
    MSc Internship Nematology
  7. Code
    NEM80424
    Title
    MSc Thesis Nematology
  8. Code
    NEM79324
    Title
    MSc Research Practice Nematology
  9. Code
    NEM80436
    Title
    MSc Thesis Nematology
  10. Code
    YBI37806
    Title
    Frontiers in Biology
  11. Code
    ENT30306
    Title
    Ecological Aspects of Bio-interactions
About

Personal information

Address

Droevendaalsesteeg 1, 6708PB, WAGENINGEN

Postal address

Postbus/POBox 8123, 6700ES, WAGENINGEN

Building

Radix Westvleugel, 107, W3.Da.011

Telephone

+31317482998

Secretary

+31317482197

Subdivision

Laboratory of Nematology

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