Home state: Colorado
Year in school: Junior
Plans after school: attend college, undecided about what to study
Year in school: Senior
Plans after school: Attend UCLA, possibly studying medicine
Jesus and Jolie are working with Rachel Schaefer and Jesse Hinshaw, undergraduate students in molecular biology and chemical engineering, respectively, in Dr. Mark Gomelsky’s molecular biology lab. Although they have only been working on their project for a few weeks, Jesus and Jolie have a deep understanding of their research project.
In highly technical terms, Jesus explains, “We’re trying to make an enzyme whose activity can be turned on by infrared light. We are doing it by adding a light switch, call bacteriophytochrome, to an enzymatic part. The cyclase makes a small molecule, cGMP, that activates a transcription factor that can turn on a gene of our desire. We use the LacZ enzyme as a marker because it produces blue E. coli colonies on Petri dishes, so we can monitor how well our cyclase works.”
In other words, the tool that Jesus and Jolie are working on will act as programmed antennas that can detect light and respond to it in a predicted manner. The function of the light-activated antenna is to make a small molecule that can turn genes on or off. In the future, doctors could place gene coding for these antennas into patient cells. Antennas could then be programmed to perform certain functions inside a patient’s body. Then doctors may simply shine an infrared light at the desired places in the body at the desired time to activate these antennas.“Infrared light is helpful because it penetrates deep into animal and human tissues and it does not require doing anything invasive, like cutting a person,” says Jesse. For Jolie, the most exciting part about this research is its future. “I’m really excited about the potential. I think it might actually be really good for saving lives,” she says.
SRAP is a six-week long intensive research program based at the University of Wyoming and sponsored by Wyoming EPSCoR
By Robin E. Rasmussen and Kali S. McCrakin
Photos by Robin E. Rasmussen
No comments:
Post a Comment