Dr Megan McDonald PhD In 'People' StaffResearch FellowsHonorary staff Back to 'School of Biosciences' School of BiosciencesAssistant Professor Contact details Emailm.c.mcdonald@bham.ac.ukTwitter@McDonaldMeganc View my research portal AddressN113, School of Biosciences Megan uses next-generation sequencing tools identify and characterise virulence genes from fungal pathogens of wheat and barley. To do this Megan has worked extensively with long-read de novo genome assembly, genome annotation and transposon annotation. Megan’s background is in population genetics of plant pathogens, studying their origins and global movement during her graduate studies. More recent interests include transposon mediated horizontal gene transfer and 3D chromosomal reconstruction techniques using sequencing data. Qualifications PhD Plant Pathology ETH Zürich Biography Dr. Megan McDonald completed her PhD in 2012 in the Phytopathology Group at the ETH Zürich in Switzerland. After completing her PhD she was awarded a Swiss National Science Foundation Fellowship to take-up post-doctoral work in the genomics of plant pathogens at the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia. In Australia she was funded by wheat growers to continue her work on the genomics of fungal plant pathogens, looking specifically at genome plasticity and fungicide resistance. In 2020, Megan was awarded a Birmingham Fellowship to start her own research group at the University of Birmingham. Postgraduate supervision Any national/international students interested in learning more about postgraduate projects please feel free to email me directly. You can also find available projects in the Midlands Integrative Biosciences Training Partnership (MIBTP). Research Fungal plant pathogens, genomics, long-read sequencing, genome plasticity, horizontal gene transfer, horizontal transposon transfer Other activities Member of the British Society for Plant Pathology Member of the American Society for Microbiology Member of the Genetics Society of America Publications Full list available on google scholarView all publications in research portal
School of BiosciencesAssistant Professor Contact details Emailm.c.mcdonald@bham.ac.ukTwitter@McDonaldMeganc View my research portal AddressN113, School of Biosciences Megan uses next-generation sequencing tools identify and characterise virulence genes from fungal pathogens of wheat and barley. To do this Megan has worked extensively with long-read de novo genome assembly, genome annotation and transposon annotation. Megan’s background is in population genetics of plant pathogens, studying their origins and global movement during her graduate studies. More recent interests include transposon mediated horizontal gene transfer and 3D chromosomal reconstruction techniques using sequencing data. Qualifications PhD Plant Pathology ETH Zürich Biography Dr. Megan McDonald completed her PhD in 2012 in the Phytopathology Group at the ETH Zürich in Switzerland. After completing her PhD she was awarded a Swiss National Science Foundation Fellowship to take-up post-doctoral work in the genomics of plant pathogens at the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia. In Australia she was funded by wheat growers to continue her work on the genomics of fungal plant pathogens, looking specifically at genome plasticity and fungicide resistance. In 2020, Megan was awarded a Birmingham Fellowship to start her own research group at the University of Birmingham. Postgraduate supervision Any national/international students interested in learning more about postgraduate projects please feel free to email me directly. You can also find available projects in the Midlands Integrative Biosciences Training Partnership (MIBTP). Research Fungal plant pathogens, genomics, long-read sequencing, genome plasticity, horizontal gene transfer, horizontal transposon transfer Other activities Member of the British Society for Plant Pathology Member of the American Society for Microbiology Member of the Genetics Society of America Publications Full list available on google scholarView all publications in research portal