Qianru Yang

Qianru Yang

Center for Veterinary Medicine, U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Affiliated withU.S. Food and Drug Administration

Research Area

Biography

Qianru Yang is a microbiologist/virologist in the Division of Molecular Biology, Office of Applied Research and Safety Assessment, at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition in Laurel, Maryland. She received her master’s degree in food science from Oregon State University in 2009 and a Ph.D. from Louisiana State University in 2013. Dr. Yang has a strong background in Food Safety and Food Microbiology.

In 2012, Dr. Yang joined the FDA to work with Dr. Beilei Ge on addressing microbial food and feed safety issues in support of the Center for Veterinary Medicine’s regulatory mission. Their research group works on developing rapid, reliable, and robust pathogen detection methods in animal food, characterizing phenotypic and genotypic traits of foodborne pathogens and indicator organisms in animal food, evaluating mitigation strategies for pathogen control in animal food, and investigating dynamics of antimicrobial resistance development in foodborne bacteria. Their novel LAMP assay was successfully completed its single-lab validation and multi-lab validation of Salmonella detection in food and feed, then has been incorporated into the FDA’s Bacteriological Analytical Manual as an FDA approved reference method. In 2019, she joined the Virology team to work on the surveillance of foodborne viruses which supports the key initiatives of the Office of Applied Research and Safety Assessment, at the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. The team works on developing and validating detection methods for foodborne viral pathogen (especially Norovirus and Hepatitis A virus) from food and environmental samples. Dr. Yang employs traditional microbiological and molecular methods and next-generation sequencing tools in her research.

JoVE Journal Publications

ArticleTotal : 1
Year
Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification for Screening <em>Salmonella</em> in Animal Food and Confirming <em>Salmonella</em> from Culture Isolation
Publication title

Cited by 12

2020

Other Publications

Article
Year
Evaluation of a loop-mediated isothermal amplification suite for the rapid, reliable, and robust detection of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli in produce.

Applied and environmental microbiology| PubMed ID: 24509927

2014
2014
2015
2016
2017
2017
Validation of a Salmonella loop-mediated isothermal amplification assay in animal food.

International journal of food microbiology| PubMed ID: 29121500

2018
2018