Six Cal State Fullerton Student Scientists Headed to Labs in England and Thailand
June 14, 2004 :: No. 272a
Six outstanding Cal State Fullerton students
will spend the summer conducting research with top scientists at
Oxford and Cambridge universities in Great Britain, and at Chiang
Mai University in Thailand, as participants in the Minority International
Research Training (MIRT) program.
They will join eight other MIRT scholars from five
other California State University campuses in Southern California.
The aim of the program is to increase the number of minority research
scientists. The students depart this month and return in August.
The CSUF student participants are described below:
Amy Duyen Bui of Santa Ana will work in the laboratory
of David Sherratt, Department of Biochemistry, Oxford University.
Sherratt’s research is concerned with the molecular mechanisms
of genetic recombination processes and how these mechanisms relate
to biological functions. Bui is a Class of 2004 magna cum laude
graduate with a bachelor’s degree in biological science. A
President’s Scholar, she received the American Society for
Quality Control Award as an “Outstanding Minority Biomedical
Research Student.” Bui plans to pursue an M.D./Ph.D. program.
Michelle Cathorall and Pauline de Leon,
both of Fullerton, will travel to Chiang Mai University in Thailand,
where they will work in the Department of Community Medicine. The
pair will be involved in a research project that involves data collection
and analysis, as well as community and health-related interaction
with various populations being studied. They are both Class of 2004
graduates with bachelor’s degrees in health science.
Rafael Fernandez of Whittier will
work in the laboratory of Richard W. Farndale, Department of Biochemistry,
Cambridge University. Farndale’s research centers on the investigations
of signaling pathways activated in human platelets by collagens
of the blood vessel wall. Fernandez is a Class of 2004 graduate
with a bachelor’s degree in biological science.
Jimmy Hernandez of Ontario will
conduct research in the laboratory of Fran Platt and Terry Butters,
Department of Biochemistry, Oxford University. The research focus
of the lab is therapy and pathogenesis of lysosomal storage diseases.
Hernandez also received the American Society for Quality Control
Award as an “Outstanding Minority Biomedical Medical Research
Student” and was editor of Dimensions: The Journal of
Undergraduate Research in Natural Sciences and Mathematics.
He is also a Class of 2004 graduate with a bachelor’s degree
in biochemistry and plans to pursue a doctoral degree.
Michael Longo of Whittier will conduct
research in the laboratory of Tom Blundell, Department of Biochemistry,
Cambridge University. One of Blundell’s research interests
is structural biology, one of fastest-growing points for recruitment
in the biotechnological, pharmaceutical and agrochemical industries.
Longo is a graduate student in chemistry.
MIRT mentors Bruce H. Weber, emeritus professor of
chemistry and biochemistry; Marcelo E. Tolmasky, professor of biological
science; Alfonso F. Agnew, assistant professor of mathematics; and
Vincent C. Merrill, assistant professor of kinesiology and health
science, will oversee the scholars during their assignments.
In their spare time, students will have the opportunity
to explore their host countries. Students receive stipends, travel
and living expenses.
Now in its 10th year, the MIRT program has enabled more than 100
biomedical, science and health science students to spend the summer
studying with top scientists in Great Britain, Thailand, Mexico
and Israel. The program has been supported by more than $2 million
in grants from the Fogarty International Center of the National
Institutes of Health.
The concept for the program was generated at a 1993
luncheon meeting at the Hard Rock Café in Atlanta, where
Weber and colleagues from Southern California were attending the
National Institute for General Medical Sciences Minority Research
Conference.
“We were discussing ways to increase the number
of students, particularly minorities, to pursue biomedical research,”
said Weber, who has directed the program for the past nine years.
“We already had funded programs for this purpose,
but we wanted to do something special that would involve a research
experience to stretch a student’s horizon, both as a person
and as a potential scientist, and develop in them the international
perspective of contemporary science.”
At the suggestion of a colleague from Cal State Long
Beach, Weber applied for a grant from NIH, and the program was born
for a consortium of CSU campuses in the Los Angeles basin.
“That lunchtime conversation has led to a program
for students that has turned out to be the most satisfying experience
of my 30-plus years of teaching,” Weber noted. “Student
participants benefit by being able to conduct research at some of
the world’s outstanding laboratories, staffed by world-class
scientists.
‘We all benefit because society will eventually
gain additional biomedical researchers who will join other researchers
in unraveling the mysteries of human diseases.”
After heading the program since its inception, Weber
is passing the baton to Tolmasky for 2004. Weber will become associate
director.
Students have called the program “awesome,”
“an experience I’ll never forget,” “one
that has re-energized me” and “enriching.”
Media Contacts: |
|
Marcelo E. Tolmasky,
professor of biological science and MIRT director, at 657-278-5263 or mtolmasky@fullerton.edu
Bruce H. Weber, emeritus professor of chemistry
and biochemistry, and associate MIRT director, at 657-278-3885
or bhweber@fullerton.edu
Dave Reid, Public Affairs, at 657-278-4855
or dreid@fullerton.edu |
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