Tom Gilmore Renews BU SURF Award

By sprudhviOctober 18th, 2022in Faculty News, News, Student News

Dr. Tom Gilmore received funding for BU’s SURF Program. The Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) program is dedicated to promoting access to graduate education for talented undergraduate students, specifically, those from minority groups that are underrepresented in the sciences. The program is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF-REU) and Boston University. It is open to rising junior and senior students outside of Boston University with interests in conducting research in the sciences or technology-related fields. Students have the opportunity to work full-time for 10 weeks in a BU lab and be mentored by a BU faculty member. More information on the program can be found here.

Dr. Tom Gilmore and a previous group of SURF students.

Sarah Davies Wins the ARROWS Mary Eskrine Award

By sprudhviOctober 18th, 2022in Faculty News, News

Congratulations to Sarah Davies for Winning the ARROWS Mary Eskrine Award. The Mary Eskrine funding award is given to BU STEM faculty members to fund professional development activities that support the BU community of women and other underrepresented genders in STEM. This July, Dr. Davies attended the 15th International Coral Reef Symposium (ICRS) in Bremen, Germany with five BU graduate students working in her lab and an NSF REPs fellow. 

 

Together they presented six oral presentations and one poster. Dr. Davies organized a workshop called, “How can we develop tools and best practices to accurately delimit Symbiodiniaceae diversity in reef research?” She was also the chair of a coral restoration genetics session as well as a plasticity and adaption session. In addition, Dr. Davies was awarded a pin for becoming an ICRS Fellow. Dr. Davies used the funds from the Mary Eskrine award to cover travel and registration costs. 

Dr. Davies describes the most rewarding part of her job as mentoring her students:

“Watching my Ph.D. students and my technician up in front of an international room of the top reef scientists, delivering amazing talks and answering questions seamlessly was very fulfilling. I was really proud of the awesome science we delivered and it was also just really great to be together networking with many folks from all over the world.”

Congratulations to Dr. Sarah Davies and her team!

 

Brandon Güell Wins BU’s Inaugural Research Photo Contest

By Jen CorreiaOctober 7th, 2022in Grad Student News, News

PhD candidate Brandon Güell of the Warkentin Lab is the winner of BU's inaugural research photo contest in the field research category (entry pictured above).  The competition had more than 120 entries in three categories—field research, research happening at BU, and research imaging—with three winners and six runners-up chosen by a panel of faculty and staff judges.

Winners were announced during the Kilachand Day celebration on September 27th and featured in The Brink. Read the full article and see the other winners and runners-up here.

Congratulations, Brandon!

Congratulations to Cynthia Bradford for Winning the 2022 Perkins Award

By sprudhviSeptember 22nd, 2022in Faculty News, News

 

5/3/22 -- Boston, Massachusetts
John S. Perkins Award Ceremony in the Metcalf Trustee Center on May 3, 2022.
Photo by Jake Belcher for Boston University Photography

Congratulations to Cynthia Bradford for winning the 2022 John S. Perkins Award for her outstanding long-term service at the College of Arts & Sciences, Department of Biology. As a proposal development specialist, Cindy has gathered grant proposals, which have received 70 awards, totaling over twelve million dollars in funding within the past year alone. According to CAS Professor and former Chair of Biology Kimberly McCall, Cindy’s ability to gather potential grants for faculty and review final applications saves Biology faculty hours of time.

In 1982, Cindy started her work at BU as an Administrative Assistant for a recently formed neuroscience research center called Adaptive Systems. She held multiple titles such as assistant director of the Center for Adaptive Systems and Administrative Director of the Center of Excellence for Learning in Education, Science, and Technology (CELEST), Associative Director of the Center for Computational Neuroscience and Neural Technology (CompNet), and Editorial Assistant for the international journal Neural Networks. By 2015, she began working with BU Biology Department as the Proposal Development Specialist for the Department of Biology. Cindy describes her experience as, 

“One that no one else had held before. I had the responsibility and also the pleasure of designing and implementing  the administrative procedures.”

Since 2016, she has served as one of the inaugural members of the BU-wide Advisory Council on Research Administration (ACRA). 

When asked about her reaction about receiving the reward, Cindy replied, 

"I felt very humbled and still do. Of course, I would hope to be doing a good job always but to be recognized by colleagues and in such glowing terms is a moment to treasure. It’s also important to say here that sponsored research is always a group effort and several BU colleagues, in particular, deserve public thanks for any success I have enjoyed. Cynthia Kowal and Dolores Markey have been valued mentors, and in more recent years Danielle Van Vooren has been invaluable for her guidance and support during my time in Biology."

Starting this September, Cindy formalized her retirement from BU. In conclusion of her career in the Department of Biology, she states,

"The work has been fascinating. I’m going to miss the intellectual stimulation—and seeing the baby geese along the Charles each spring—but I will miss the people the most, some of whom have become good friends over the years."

Congratulations Cindy, and thank you for everything!

5/3/22 -- Boston, Massachusetts
John S. Perkins Award Ceremony in the Metcalf Trustee Center on May 3, 2022.
Photo by Jake Belcher for Boston University Photography
5/3/22 -- Boston, Massachusetts
John S. Perkins Award Ceremony in the Metcalf Trustee Center on May 3, 2022.
Photo by Jake Belcher for Boston University Photography

 

Spring 2022 Undergraduate Research Award Winners

By sprudhviSeptember 22nd, 2022in News, Student News

Congratulations to Maria Salgado Patino, Russell Laman, and Jamie Li for receiving the Spring 2022 Undergraduate Research Award. This annual award is given to outstanding seniors of any major who are performing research in Biology Department labs by the Biology Research and Honors Committee. 

Maria Salgado (Neuroscience and Psychology) conducted her research on a non-canonical mechanism of complement 4-Driven Cortical Synaptic Loss in the Cruz-Martín Lab.

Russell Laman (Biology with specialization in Ecology & Conservation Biology and Marine Science) did research using photomosaics to analyze the structural complexity and conservation success of restored Belizean coral reefs in the Kaufman Lab.

Jamie Li (Biochemistry & Molecular Biology) carried out her research on the regulation of indole glucosinolate and melatonin production in arabidopsis thaliana in the Celenza lab.

Congratulations to Maria, Russell, and Jamie!

2022 Loren E. Wold Research Award Recipients

Douglas Alvarado, Erika Broeker, Evelyn Harper, and Judy Wong are the recipients of the Loren E. Wold Research Award for 2022

The Loren E. Wold Research Awards have been established by Biology alumnus Dr. Loren E. Wold (CAS ’97), a distinguished research scientist and Professor at Ohio State University.  Dr. Wold is a strong advocate of undergraduate research and mentoring and this award supports summer research projects in the amount of $5,700 for salary and a $200 Conference Travel Award. Recipients are chosen based on outstanding UROP applications. This year's recipients are:

Douglas Alvarado, a Biochemistry and Molecular Biology major, conducting research with Dr. Peter Buston on a project titled “An Investigation of Genetic Mechanisms Underlying Strategic Growth in the Clown Anemonefish Amphiprion Percula.”

Erika Broeker, a Biology major, conducting research with Dr. Francisco Naya on a project titled “Determining the role of the lncRNA Meg3 in Cell Lineage Determination.”

Evelyn Harper, a Biology major, conducting research with Dr. Angela Ho on a project titled “Neurodevelopmental effects of inhibiting the Aldolase A – Actin interaction.”

Judy Wong, a Biochemistry and Molecular Biology major, conducting research with Dr. Thomas Gilmore on a project titled “Effect of Human Disease Mutations in a Central Region of the Scaffold Protein-NEMO on Cellular Activity.”

Congratulations to this year's recipients for their hard work and dedication to undergraduate research. Thank you to Dr. Wold for his support of undergraduate students and their research.

Meg Younger Publishes Study in Cell

By Angela ClarkeAugust 19th, 2022in Faculty News, News

A new study published in Thursday's edition of Cell reports that a mosquito's sense of smell is more complicated than we once thought. 

Neuroscientist and faculty member Meg Younger along with colleagues Leslie Vosshall of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Rockefeller University, Margo Herre of Rockefeller University, and Olivia Goldman of Rockefeller University peered into the mosquito's brain to decipher how it smells its surroundings.

Pete Buston and Tim Clutton-Brock Publish a Review in Trends in Ecology and Evolution Journal

By Trinity AliciaAugust 8th, 2022in Faculty News, News
Congratulations to Pete Buston and Tim Clutton-Brock for a review of the evidence for strategic growth in social vertebrates, published in the journal Trends in Ecology and Evolution. The review highlights how phenotypic plasticity is the genotype’s ability to express various phenotypes in response to variations in environmental conditions. Adaptive and non-adaptive elasticity of body size in response to changes in ecological conditions is taxonomically pervasive. The adaptive plasticity of body size in response to fine-grain changes in social conditions is known as strategic growth. It is a less well-known phenomenon and is more difficult to comprehend. Buston and Clutton-Brock review examples of strategic growth in social vertebrates. For example, the ability of clownfish to decrease growth as they approach the size of their dominants to avoid eviction from their social group. Another example would be the ability of meerkats to increase growth in response to the growth of rivals to maintain their social rank. Circumstantial evidence suggests that strategic modifications of growth and size may be taxonomically widespread, occurring in many other social vertebrates, including humans, and social plants, enabling individuals to resolve social conflicts and confront social challenges.

 

Congratulations to Pete and Tim on this publication!

Meg Younger named 2022 Searle Scholar

By Trinity AliciaAugust 5th, 2022in Faculty News, News

Dr. Meg Younger has been named a 2022 Searle Scholar. Younger is one of 15 young faculty members in the biomedical sciences and chemistry who have recently been appointed as one of the assistant professors on tenure-track appointments. The cohort was selected from a group of 191 applicants from 137 universities and research institutions. Each Scholar receives an award of $300,000 in flexible funding to support their research over the next three years. Dr. Younger's lab focuses on olfaction in mosquitos, examining how they detect and encode human odor.