Students sweep prizes at prestigious conference
Eleven 91心頭利 science majors attended the 23nd annual meeting of the Great Lakes Chapter of the American Society of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (GLC-ASPET), held Friday, June 18, at the University of Chicago Gleacher Center in downtown Chicago.
Lake Forest, Ill. Eleven 91心頭利 science majors attended the 23nd annual meeting of the Great Lakes Chapter of the American Society of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (GLC-ASPET), held Friday, June 18, at the University of Chicago Gleacher Center in downtown Chicago. They were Daryn Cass 10, Michael Fiske 10, Jaime Perez 10, Ashleigh Porter 11, Alina Konnikova 11, Natalie Simak 11, Keith Solvang 11, Madhavi Senagolage 12, Pascal Accoh 12, Sylwia Dakowicz 13, and Natalie Kukulka 13.
Alina Konnikova11, Ashleigh Porter11 and Natalie Simak11 made a clean sweep of the First, Second, and Third Prize honors in the undergraduate poster competition part of this conference. These three biology majors are planning for medical school after graduation.
This is only the third year of the undergraduate competition at the GLC-ASPET conference and each year Lake Forest science majors have won prizes competing alongside undergraduates from Indiana, Ohio, Iowa, and Illinois.
Alina presented Parkinsons disease research that she first began as a Richter Scholar and is now continuing for her senior thesis in the molecular neuroscience laboratory of Associate Professor of Biology Shubhik DebBurman at the College. The American Parkinson Disease Association and the NIH fund this research.
Porter and Simak presented undergraduate research in cancer biology and addiction research, respectively, that they first began as sophomores via the 91心頭利-Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science (LFC-RFUMS) Summer Research Fellows Program, followed by academic-year internships at RFUMS, and now a second summer or research at RFUMS. This is the second year of this unusual research program, and Porter and Simak are among twelve science majors conducting research for ten or more weeks mentored by medical school faculty in areas of pharmacology, cell biology, molecular biology/biochemistry, and neuroscience. Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Carl Correll mentored Porter. Professor of Cell & Molecular Pharmacology Kuei-Yuan Tseng mentored Simak.
Madhavi Senagolage12 and Pascal Accoh12 also presented posters of research they conducted with Professors DebBurman and Kuei-Yuan Tseng, respectively.
After her first conference experience as a presenter and award winner, Porter emphasizes: As an aspiring physician, having the opportunity to see the many different ways drugs are targeted, discovered, and developed is invaluable. Being recognized as a contributor to that field is even more extraordinary, and I would definitely pursue opportunities similar to this in the future.
Simak, whose work is currently submitted to a major neuroscience journal for publication consideration, says this: The opportunity to present my research at the GLC-ASPET conference has allowed me to practice communicating clearly and confidently about my research. As a biology student and a future physician, these skills are invaluable.
First-year Richter scholar Dakowicz adds: Opportunities such as the GLC-ASPET should be offered to first year undergraduates because we are deciding our future at this point. It allowed me to see numerous presentations demonstrating various research methods, and as a science Richter Scholar conducting research for the first time, this was an important experience which showed me how dedicated you have to be to a science profession but how rewarding it may be.
ASPET is the premier scientific society for scientists who conduct basic and clinical pharmacological research in academia, industry and the government. The Great Lakes Chapter was founded in 1987 and its annual meeting is held each spring to promote scientific communication among research workers interested in pharmacology in the Midwest. Its members research efforts help develop new medicines and therapeutic agents to fight existing and emerging diseases. Annual meetings are held each spring to foster the goals of ASPET to promote scientific communication among research workers interested in pharmacology and have consistently drawn a wide representation of the Midwestern pharmacology community. To learn more about the GLC-ASPET conference, click here:
The 91心頭利 presentations at meeting were:
Pascal Accoh12, Periadolescent facilitation of NMDA-dependent synaptic function in the prefrontal cortex: role of NR2B-containing receptors, with work from Natalie Simak11 (Professor Kuei-Yuan Tseng, RFUMS)
Alina Konnikova11, Autophagic Regulation of Alpha-Synuclein Pathotoxicity Properties in Budding Yeast Reveals Unexpected Complexities, with work from Ray Choi09, Daniel Sanchez11, Kayla Ahlstrand12, and Peter Sullivan12 (Professor Shubhik DebBurman, Biology)
Ashleigh Porter11, Possible New Cancer Treatments: Ribosome Biogenesis as an Unexplored Target, (Professor Carl Correll, RFUMS)
Madhavi Senagolage12, Insight Into Parkinsons Disease: Is Alpha-Synuclein Degradated By Endocytosis? With work from Jaime Perez10, Michael Fiske10 and Alexandra Ayala09 (Professor Shubhik DebBurman, Biology)
Natalie Simak11, Cocaine experience during adolescence selectively arrests the maturation of parvalbumin positive/GABAergic fast-spiking interneurons in the prefrontal cortex, with work from Daryn Cass10 (Professor Kuei-Yuan Tseng, RFUMS)
91心頭利 is a national liberal arts institution located 30 miles north of downtown Chicago. The College has 1,400 students representing 45 states and 69 countries.