Priya Rajarapu: 'Insect-Plant Molecular Interactions: Stories from Invasive Insects to Disease Vectors'

April showers bring June flowers, but
Insect physiologist Swapna Priya Rajarapu
Insect physiologist Swapna Priya Rajarapu
spring also brings seminars about insects.
 
Insect physiologist Swapna Priya Rajarapu, a postdoctoral research scholar in the Dorith Rotenberg laboratory at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, will present the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology's first seminar for the month of April. The department hosts online seminars at 4:10 p.m. on Wednesdays through June 2.
 
Rajarapu will speak on "Insect-Plant Molecular Interactions: Stories from Invasive Insects to Disease Vectors" at 4:10 p.m., Wednesday, April 14. Professor Diane Ullman is the host. Access this link to register for the Zoom event. 
 
In the Rotenberg lab, she works on understanding the molecular interactions of an insect vector and their virus and their ability to modify the host plants. 
 
"Insects have evolved physiological mechanisms to overcome the molecular defenses of their host plants," Rajarapu  says. "Some of these mechanisms include detoxification, target-site mutations, excretion and plant defense alteration.  Invasive insects and disease vectors employ these physiological mechanisms to utilize their host plants. My talk focuses on understanding these interactions between insects and plants in the light of invasion biology and vector biology." See her work on her website.
 
She seeks "to understand the physiological basis of insect adaptation to unique niches. Specifically, I am interested in molecular mechanisms evolved by insects to overcome toxic insults in their environments. I have studied physiological adaptation strategies of herbivorous insects to overcome host plant defenses. Outcomes of my research address broad ecological and evolutionary concepts such as invasion biology, nutritional ecology and insect-plant-virus interactions."
 
Rajarapu's expertise includes studying such insect pests as emerald ash borer, termites, leafhopper and thrips. Her technical expertise covers the top-down approaches, including tissue specific transcriptomics, proteomics, enzyme assays, western blots, gateway cloning and transient gene expression for functional studies.  

A first-generation college student, Rajarapu holds two biochemistry degrees from Osmania University, India: her bachelor's degree (2006) and her master's degree (2008). She obtained her doctorate in entomology in 2013 from The Ohio State University, working with Professors Daniel Herms and Larry Phelan. Her dissertation: "Integrated Omics on the Physiology of Emerald Ash Borer."

Spring Seminar Schedule

Here's the seminar line-up for the spring quarter. All are scheduled from 4:10 to 5 p.m. on Wednesdays. 

April 21 
Chris Hamilton
University of Idaho, Department of Entomology, Plant Pathology and Nematology
Title: "Understanding Aphonopelma Diversity Across the Madrean Pine-Oak Woodlands Hotspot by Integrating Western Science and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK)"
Host: Jason Bond
Zoom info

April 28
Ellen Currano
University of Wyoming, Department of Geology and Geophysics
Title: "Ancient Bug-Bitten Leaves Reveal the Impacts of Climate and Plant Nutrients on Insect Herbivores"
Host: Emily Meineke
Zoom info

May 5 
Gabe Zilnik
USDA-ARS Wapato, Wash., Temperate Tree Fruit and Vegetable Research
Title: "Improving Tobacco IPM with Machine Learning"
Host: Madi Hendrick
Zoom info

May 12
Margarita López-Uribe
Pennsylvania State University, Department of Entomology
Title: "Ecoevolutionary Consequences of Crop Domestication on Plant-Pollinator Interactions"
Host: Rachel Vannette
Zoom info

May 19
Manuela Ramalho 
Cornell University
Title: "Exploring Connections Among Microbial Community, Ecology and Phylogenetic History of Ants" 
Host: Marshal McMunn
Zoom info

May 26
Javier Ceja Navarro
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Biological Systems and Engineering 
Title:  (Pending) 
Host: Rachel Vannette 
Zoom info

June 2 
Alexandra Harmon-Threatt
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Department of Entomology 
Title: (Pending) 
Host: Neal Williams 
Zoom info

For any questions, email Ian Grettenberger (imgrettenberger@ucdavis.edu).