- Assistant Professor
- EschLEAD Faculty
Biography
Dr. Seifert is the PI of the Molecular Ecology of Zoonotic and Animal Pathogens (MEZAP) lab where she studies the factors contributing to viral emergence and cross species transmission. Dr. Seifert completed her doctoral dissertation research in the Dept. of Biology, Ecology and Evolution track at UPenn. Her postdoctoral training was completed at the NIH Laboratory of Virology where she worked on filoviruses and henipaviruses in bats both in the field and in the BSL4 laboratory. Dr. Seifert assisted in several outbreak response efforts at NIH including work in Congo during outbreaks of Ebola virus disease in 2017 and 2018 and in early 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic. Research in the MEZAP lab at WSU incorporates methodologies from field-based ecology, population genetics, computational biology, and laboratory modeling to better understand and ultimately mitigate cross-species transmission of viruses at human-livestock-wildlife interfaces. My goal is for the research environment in the MEZAP lab to be interdisciplinary and inclusive so our work can be innovative, and impactful. Ongoing collaborations include research with the Viral Emergence Institute, the EEID-Palouse team, and the NIH Center for Research in Emerging Infectious Diseases – eastern and central Africa.
NIH Protein Biotechnology Training Program
Research Interests in proteins and biotechnology
Employs tandem mass spectrometry to study the innate immune response in non-model organisms, and develops serologically based, multiplex viral detection assays for clinical and environmental applications.
Education
- Postdoctoral Training, NIH/NIAID Laboratory of Virology, Virus Ecology Section, 2020
- PhD, University of Pennsylvania, 2017
- BSc, University of California, Davis, 2010
Research Interest
- Virus Ecology
- Host-virus interactions
- Pathogen dynamics in animal populations
- Pathogen detection tools
- Evolution
Publications
Professional Service
- Editorial Board, Virology Section for the journal Microorganisms (IF 3.864), 2021 – present
- Review Board, Viruses (IF 5.048), 2021 – present
- Faculty Member, WSU Tri-Alpha Society for First Generation College Students, 2021 – present
Honors and Awards
- Scialog: Mitigating Zoonotic Threats Fellow, 2022
- NSF ADVANCE at WSU award, 2021
- Merit Award, Laboratory of Virology COVID-19 Research Group, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, 2020
- Fellows Award for Research Excellence, National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, 2018
- Graduate Research Fellowship Program Award, National Science Foundation, 2012
News
- WSU researchers develop machine learning model to predict virus reservoirs A new AI tool could help curtail pandemics by identifying animal species that may harbor and spread Zoonotic viruses. | April 1, 2025
- Machine learning model uses host characteristics and virus genetics to predict potential reservoirs Phys.org | March 31, 2025
- WSU professor to co‑lead NSF‑funded institute for emerging virus research Stephanie Seifert has been named as a co‑lead investigator for a new National Science Foundation-funded institute designed to advance research and education around viral emergence. | August 10, 2022
- Squirrels could make monkeypox a forever problem The Atlantic | June 21, 2022
- Is the coronavirus in your backyard? The New York Times | February 7, 2022
- Global health researchers looking to improve the human condition Deep in the Republic of the Congo’s vast rain forests, Stephanie Seifert helped equip hammerhead bats with GPS tracking devices so she and her team could watch their every move. | December 14, 2021
- Listen to the bats Bats could be a key to help prevent a future pandemic. January 29, 2021
- A wild mink in Utah has Covid-19 Vox | December 16, 2020