Jeffrey B.
Jones
- Ph.D., Virginia Tech., 1980
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My research centers on studying
bacterial plant pathogens. Much of my research focuses on the ecology
and host-parasite interaction of bacterial plant pathogens. I am
interested in plant pathogen variation as measured by phenotypic and
genotypic analyses. Techniques used in my laboratory for studying
variation include fatty acid analysis, serology, pulsed-field gel
electrophoresis, DNA homology and sequence analysis of 16S rRNA. Much
of my work has focused on bacterial spot disease of pepper and tomato
caused by Xanthomonas campestris pv. vesicatoria. I am interested in
resistant mechanisms in bacterial-plant interactions. My present
approach is to use genetic recombination techniques to isolate
avirulence genes involved in the interaction. I am also studying
microbe interactions on plant surfaces and in plant tissue in an
attempt to determine mechanisms that affect microbe fitness. I also
teach the Bacterial Plant Pathogens course. |
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