Idah Sithole-Niang
Zimbabwean biochemist and educator
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Idah Sithole-Niang's Degrees
- Bachelors Biochemistry University of Zimbabwe
- Masters Biochemistry University of Zimbabwe
- PhD Biochemistry University of Zimbabwe
Why Is Idah Sithole-Niang Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Idah Sithole-Niang is a Zimbabwean biochemist and educator. Her main area of research has been viruses which attack the cowpea, one of the major food crops of Zimbabwe. Biography Idah Sithole was born in Hwange, Zimbabwe, on 2 October 1957. She attended the University of London, on scholarship, earning a BS in biochemistry in 1982. When she was awarded a USAID Fellowship in 1983, Sithole chose to continue her education, studying plant and virus genetics. She earned a PhD in 1988 from Michigan State University in Lansing, Michigan. She completed a post-doctoral fellowship at the Plant Research Laboratory at MSU researching the genetics of photosynthesis in cyanobacteria on the first William L. Brown Fellowship, awarded by the Resources Development Foundation. Returning to Zimbabwe, she became a Lecturer at the University of Zimbabwe in 1992 on viruses which infect plants. Her chief area of research is the potyvirus, which attacks the cowpea, a legume which is a chief food crop of Zimbabwe. That same year, she married Sheikh Ibrahima Niang, a Senegalese professor of anthropology, whom she met at Michigan State University. They have a commuting marriage, as he works at the University of Cheikh Anta Diop in Dakar, Senegal. She was awarded a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship for careers in Biotechnology between 1992 and 1995. She has continued teaching and researching, publishing numerous papers. In 2006 she was made Associate Professor at the University of Zimbabwe.
Idah Sithole-Niang's Published Works
Published Works
- Crop biotechnology and the African farmer (2006) (86)
- TO REACH THE POOR: RESULTS FROM THE ISNAR-IFPRI NEXT HARVEST STUDY ON GENETICALLY MODIFIED CROPS, PUBLIC RESEARCH, AND POLICY IMPLICATIONS (2004) (51)
- Transgenic Plants Expressing HC-Pro Show Enhanced Virus Sensitivity While Silencing of the Transgene Results in Resistance (2004) (36)
- Genetically modified crops in Africa: Economic and policy lessons from countries south of the Sahara (2013) (32)
- Subcellular Location of the Helper Component-Proteinase of Cowpea Aphid-Borne Mosaic Virus (2002) (29)
- Microbial community analysis of drinking water sources from rural areas of Zimbabwe (2007) (28)
- Putting GM technologies to work: public research pipelines in selected African countries (2004) (28)
- The genomic sequence of cowpea aphid-borne mosaic virus and its similarities with other potyviruses (2002) (25)
- Genetic studies and a search for molecular markers that are linked to Striga asiatica resistance in sorghum (2005) (20)
- Transgenic plants expressing the coat protein gene of cowpea aphid-borne mosaic potyvirus predominantly convey the delayed symptom development phenotype. (2009) (18)
- Sequence of the 3′-terminal region of a Zimbabwe isolate of cowpea aphid-borne mosaic virus (CABMV) (2005) (16)
- Biotechnology and the African farmer (2005) (12)
- Active biomonitoring of a subtropical river using glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and heat shock proteins (HSP 70) in Oreochromis niloticus as surrogate biomarkers of metal contamination (2015) (8)
- Potential commercialization of a microbial medium formulated from industrial food waste (2007) (5)
- Special Anniversary Paper- Putting GM technologies to work: publicresearch pipelines in selected African countries (2004) (4)
- Future of plant science in Zimbabwe. (2001) (4)
- Cowpea aphid-borne mosaic potyvirus (CABMV) (2000) (4)
- Diversity and host associations of ectomycorrhizae fungi in fallow lands of the mid-Zambezi valley area, Zimbabwe (2015) (3)
- Biogeographical survey of soil microbiomes across sub-Saharan Africa: structure, drivers, and predicted climate-driven changes (2022) (3)
- Cloning, sequencing and expression of an endo-β-1,4-glucanase gene of a Bacillus subtilis CHZ1 (2005) (3)
- Transgenic Horticultural Crops on the African Continent (2011) (3)
- Successful Agricultural Innovation in Emerging Economies: Transforming the cowpea, an African orphan staple crop grown predominantly by women (2013) (2)
- Advanced genetic technologies for improving plant production (2019) (2)
- Random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) based assessment of genetic relationships among some Zimbabwean sorghum landraces with different seed proanthocyanidin levels (2014) (2)
- Genetic Engineering of Plants for Resistance to Viruses (2012) (2)
- Rapid Isolation of Bacteriophages: Steps Towards Phage Therapy (2019) (1)
- Biotechnology and biosafety initiatives in sub-Saharan Africa. (2008) (0)
- The Mae I assay for scoring atrazine resistance is codon-usage dependent in legumes (2000) (0)
- Molecular Characterisation of Bacterial endophytes from the Medicinal Plant Diplorhynchus condylocarpon (2021) (0)
- The Role of African Universities in Training and Mentorship of Biotechnology Scientists to Embark on Future Challenges in Africa (2014) (0)
- Use of RAPD-PCR for breed/genotype identification in Zimbabwean cattle (2017) (0)
- Scientific Achievements for Agricultural Development in Sub-Saharan Africa 1 (2007) (0)
- Distribution of SPV genes, plasmid profiles and pulsotypes of Salmonella enteritidis isolates of animal and human origins in selected locations of Zimbabwe (2012) (0)
- Biogeographical survey of soil microbiomes across sub-Saharan Africa: structure, drivers, and predicted climate-driven changes (2022) (0)
- Biotechnology and the future of agriculture in Zimbabwe: strategic issues (2006) (0)
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