The 2025 MSE Summit would not be possible without the expertise and dedication of our organizing team. Drawing from diverse disciplines and backgrounds, these leaders are at the forefront of microbiome research, social equity, and public health. Each team member brings a unique perspective and wealth of knowledge to help shape the summit’s discussions, inspire collaboration, and co-develop actionable solutions that advance microbiome stewardship for a healthier, more equitable planet.

Sue Ishaq
Assistant Professor of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, University of Maine

Sue Ishaq
Assistant Professor of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, University of Maine
Dr. Sue Ishaq is an Associate Professor of Microbiomes, University of Maine; and founded MSE in 2020. She received her doctorate in Animal, Nutrition and Food Science from the University of Vermont in 2015 where she focused on the rumen microbiology of the moose. She held post-doctoral positions at Montana State University, and a research faculty position at the University of Oregon. Over the years, her research has gone from wild animal gut microbiomes, to soils, to buildings, and back to the gut. Since 2019, her lab in Maine focuses on host-associated microbial communities in animals and humans, and in particular, how host and microbes interact in the gut and can be harnessed to reduce inflammation. She is also the early-career At Large member of the Board of Directors for the American Society for Microbiology, 2024- 2027.
- Twitter:
- @DrSueIshaq

Kieran C. O’Doherty
Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Guelph

Kieran C. O’Doherty
Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Guelph
Dr. Kieran C. O’Doherty is professor in the department of psychology at the University of Guelph, where he directs the Discourse, Science, Publics research Group. His research focuses on the social and ethical implications of science and technology and public engagement on science and technology. He has published on such topics as data governance, vaccines, human tissue biobanks, the human microbiome, salmon genomics, and genetic testing. A particular emphasis of his research is on theory and methods of public deliberation, in which members of the public are involved in collectively developing recommendations for the governance of science & technology. Recent edited volumes include Psychological Studies of Science and Technology(2019) and The Sage Handbook of Applied Social Psychology (2019). He is editor of Theory & Psychology.

Rob Beiko
Head of the Algorithms and Bioinformatics Research, Dalhousie University

Rob Beiko
Head of the Algorithms and Bioinformatics Research, Dalhousie University
Dr. Rob Beiko, is a Professor and Head of the Algorithms and Bioinformatics research cluster in the Faculty of Computer Science at Dalhousie University. His research aims to understand microbial diversity and evolution using machine learning, phylogenetics, time-series algorithms, and visualization techniques. His group is developing software tools and pipelines to comprehensively survey genes and mobile genetic elements in bacterial genomes, and understand how these genomes have been shaped by vertical inheritance, recombination, and lateral gene transfer. He is also a co-founder of Dartmouth Ocean Technologies, Inc., a developer of environmental DNA sampling devices.

Emma AllenVercoe
Professor of Microbiology, University of Guelph

Emma AllenVercoe
Professor of Microbiology, University of Guelph
Dr. Emma AllenVercoe is a Professor of Microbiology at the University of Guelph, and a Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Human Gut Microbiome Function and Host Interactions. Her research portfolio is broad, encompassing host-pathogen interplay, live microbial products as therapeutic agents, gut microbiome and anaerobic culture (humans and animals), and the study of ‘missing gut microbes’ i.e. those that are present in hunter-gatherer societies but missing in the industrialized world. She has developed the Robogut – a culture system that allows for the growth of gut microbial communities in vitro, and is currently busy a centre for microbiome culture and preservation at the University of Guelph.

Mallory Choudoir
Assistant Professor and Soil Microbiome Extension Specialist , North Carolina State University

Mallory Choudoir
Assistant Professor and Soil Microbiome Extension Specialist , North Carolina State University
Dr. Mallory Choudoir is an Assistant Professor & Soil Microbiome Extension Specialist in the Department of Plant & Microbial Biology at North Carolina State University. The goal of her applied research and extension program is to translate microbiome science to sustainable agriculture. She aims to develop microbial-centered solutions for optimizing crop productivity, reducing agronomic inputs, and enhancing agroecosystem resilience to climate change.

Diego Silva
Senior Lecturer in Bioethics, Sydney Health Ethics and the University of Sydney School of Public Health

Diego Silva
Senior Lecturer in Bioethics, Sydney Health Ethics and the University of Sydney School of Public Health
Dr Diego Silva, PhD, is a Senior Lecturer in Bioethics at Sydney Health Ethics and the University of Sydney School of Public Health. His research centers on public health ethics, particularly the application of political theory in the context of infectious diseases and health security, e.g., tuberculosis, COVID-19, antimicrobial resistance, etc. He is currently the outgoing Chair and a member of the Public Health Ethics Consultative Group at the Public Health Agency of Canada and works with the World Health Organization on various public health ethics topics on an ad hoc basis.
