Boor, Kathryn Jean
Professor
The increasingly competitive nature of the food and beverage market highlights the need for improvement of dairy product quality, variety, and availability to ensure the economic vitality of the dairy industry. To work toward meeting these challenges, Kathryn Boor has established an integrated research and extension program in dairy microbiology quality and safety which is dedicated to improving dairy product shelf-life, wholesomeness and safety through reduction of spoilage and pathogenic bacteria in processed products and in raw milk. The long-term objective of this program is the creation of an integrated and interactive University/regulatory agency/dairy industry network to protect dairy product safety and quality. The specific foci of her research program are to identify and characterize factors that affect the presence and persistence of spoilage and pathogenic organisms in food products intended for human consumption. Her strategies integrate the tools of molecular biology and phenotypic microbiology to: (i) explore factors linking the ability of bacteria to survive under various conditions, including in foods and in food processing environments, with bacterial ability to cause human and animal disease; and (ii) rapidly identify and track spoilage and pathogenic bacteria in food systems. Her program targets the long-term food quality and safety needs of the food and dairy processing industries and facilitates rapid translation and communication of research results to these industries. The major impacts from these programs will be (i) continued discovery and application of new information for production of high quality, wholesome dairy and food products; (ii) an improved understanding of the cellular mechanisms contributing to bacterial survival under widely varying environmental conditions; and (iii) training of highly qualified students for employment in dairy- and food-related sectors of industry, government, and academia.
research
primary investigator of
- LISTERIA MONOCYTOGENES STRESS RESPONSE SYSTEMS AND THEIR SIGNIFICANCE FOR SURVIVAL IN FOOD PROCESSING ENVIRONMENTS | Research Grant
- MILK QUALITY IMPROVEMENT RESEARCH | Research Grant
- MILK QUALITY IMPROVEMENT RESEARCH | Research Grant
- PH.D. TRAINING IN FARM-TO-TABLE FOOD SAFETY AND BIOSECURITY | Research Grant
- REGULATORY NETWORKS CONTRIBUTING TO L. MONOCYTOGENES TRANSMISSION AND VIRULENCE | Research Grant
research areas
- bioinformatics | collaborative research area (CALS)
- dairy science | collaborative research area (CALS)
- food science | collaborative research area (CALS)
- microbiology | collaborative research area (CALS)
- milk | collaborative research area (CALS)
- molecular biology | collaborative research area (CALS)
- molecular genetics | collaborative research area (CALS)
- new life sciences | collaborative research area (CALS)
- pathogens | collaborative research area (CALS)
submitted impact statement
- Dairy industry outreach at Cornell University | 2007 Impact statement
- Dairy industry outreach at Cornell University | 2006 Impact statement
- Dairy industry outreach at Cornell University | 2005 Impact statement
- Dairy industry outreach at Cornell University | 2004 Impact statement
affiliations
head of
- Cornell Institute of Food Science (CIFS) | research institute
- Food Science (FOOD) | Cornell department
- Pathogen Tracker project | research project
faculty appointment in
- Food Science (FOOD) | Cornell department
administrative appointment
- Food Science (FOOD) | Cornell department
member of graduate field
- Environmental Toxicology | graduate field
- Food Science and Technology | graduate field
- Microbiology | graduate field
other Cornell affiliations
- Institute for Comparative and Environmental Toxicology (ICET) | research institute
- Microbial Genomics | NLSI/Genomics focus area
- Northeast Dairy Foods Research Center | extension program unit
teaching
teaches
- FDSC 4960 - Undergraduate Internship in Food Science (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 4970 - Individual Study in Food Science (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 4980 - Undergraduate Teaching Experience (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 4990 - Undergraduate Research in Food Science (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 4991 - Undergraduate Honors Research in Food Science (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 5000 - Master of Professional Studies (Agriculture) Project (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 6960 - Graduate Internship in Food Science (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 8900 - Masters-Level Thesis Research (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 9900 - Doctoral-Level Thesis Research (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- TOX 8900 - Master's Thesis and Research (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- TOX 9900 - Doctoral Thesis and Research (TBA -) | fall 2009 class
- FDSC 4960 - Undergraduate Internship in Food Science (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
- FDSC 4970 - Individual Study in Food Science (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
- FDSC 4980 - Undergraduate Teaching Experience (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
- FDSC 5000 - Master of Professional Studies (Agriculture) Project (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
- FDSC 8900 - Masters-Level Thesis Research (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
- FDSC 9900 - Doctoral-Level Thesis Research (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
- TOX 8900 - Master's Thesis and Research (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
- TOX 9900 - Doctoral Thesis and Research (TBA -) | spring 2009 class
background
featured in
- Cornell food scientists awarded $1.67 million to improve fresh food safety | Cornell Chronicle feature
- Cornell program identifies New York State's top milk for 2005 | Cornell news release
- Cornell testers choose Crowley Foods of Albany for best milk in New York | Cornell Chronicle feature
- CU food scientists keep watch over New York dairy foods | Cornell Chronicle feature
- Professors brief Congressional staffers about food safety before key vote | Cornell Chronicle feature
publications
linked articles
- Alternative sigma factor sigmaB is not essential for listeria monocytogenes surface attachment. | journal article
- Characterization of pasteurized fluid milk shelf-life attributes | journal article
- Contributions of Listeria monocytogenes sigma(B) and PrfA to expression of virulence and stress response genes during extra- and intracellular growth | journal article
- Development of molecular typing methods for Bacillus spp. and Paenibacillus spp. isolated from fluid milk products | journal article
- How the bacterial pathogen Listeria monocytogenes mediates the switch from environmental Dr. Jekyll to pathogenic Mr. Hyde | journal article
- Listeria monocytogenes sigmaB contributes to invasion of human intestinal epithelial cells | journal article
- Managing microbial spoilage in the dairy industry | journal article
- Mastitis-causing streptococci are important contributors to bacterial counts in raw bulk tank milk. | journal article
- sigmaB-dependent gene induction and expression in Listeria monocytogenes during osmotic and acid stress conditions simulating the intestinal environment | journal article
- Vibrio parahaemolyticus growth under low-iron conditions and survival under high-magnesium conditions | journal article
Keywords: bacterial pathogenesis, dairy foods research, dairy microbiology, dairy products, food microbiology, food microbiology/food safety, food safety, food security, microbiology, molecular microbiology, regulation of microbial transcription initiation