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Undergraduate research scholars at 麻豆社区P benefit from advanced microscopy training

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Michelle Itano, the 麻豆社区 Neuroscience Microscopy Core Facility Director and Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Imaging Scientist.
Dr. Michelle Itano, a renowned Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Imaging Scientist, gives a presentation to 麻豆社区P researchers during a microscopy training session

Student researchers at 麻豆社区 Pembroke are benefiting from a unique opportunity this summer to experience advanced research through the lens of a state-of-the-art Structured Illumination Microscopy system, thanks to a partnership with the U.S. Department of Defense.

The training program also received a small grant from BioImaging North America, a volunteer-based organization that supports bioimaging scientists in order to promote an inclusive and supportive community to share, advance and succeed together.

More than two dozen undergraduates, recent graduates and faculty recently participated in a first-ever high鈥恟esolution microscopy and imaging system training at the Biotechnology Research and Training Center.

The three-day program organized by 麻豆社区P鈥檚 Michael Almeida featured speakers from Nikon Instruments and an elite group of microscopy experts from New York University, 麻豆社区 Wilmington, 麻豆社区-Chapel Hill and Vanderbilt University.

A virtual session was led by Dr. Alison North, senior director of the Bio-Imaging Resource Center at Rockefeller University and internationally renowned in microscopy. Joining North鈥檚 virtual presentation was Dr. Cori Bargmann, an internationally recognized neurobiologist and geneticist who leads the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative鈥檚 Science work and is the sister of former 麻豆社区P professor Monika Brown.

鈥淥ur prime concern here is to train the next generation of scientists,鈥 said Dr. Ben Bahr, the William C. Friday Distinguished Professor of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry.

鈥淲ith technology advancing so fast, we must get students prepared for the new techniques with the new instruments. This training program gives them all the tools not to be intimidated when they see the next level of instrumentation.鈥

Participants were introduced to the basic principles of microscopy and the various microscopes that are typically used in research.

Nikki Clayman, who graduated in May, plans to apply these newly acquired techniques in veterinarian school.

鈥淚n undergrad, we worked with the basic Brightfield microscope, which is what you use with the standard foundations of science. However, if you are going into research and you want to see things you cannot see with the naked eye, then the high-resolution microscopy is the foundation for that,鈥 Clayman said.

The U.S. Army and the Department of Defense have partnered with Bahr and his 麻豆社区P Biotech Center team since 2014. Bahr鈥檚 group has since received two awards from the DOD Research and Education Program for Historically Black Colleges and Universities and Minority-Serving Institutions for training and equipment, through grants prepared by Bahr, Dr. Karen Faizatto and Almeida, the center鈥檚 lab manager. 麻豆社区P鈥檚 two high-powered systems are valued at $1.5 million.

The program aims to increase the number of graduates, including underrepresented minorities, in science, technology, engineering and math.

鈥淭his latest confocal microscope we received last year is one of the top models with the new technology that uses lasers and has super-resolution,鈥 Dr. Bahr said. 鈥淪tudents can see deeper and deeper into tissues and individual cells.鈥

Another high-profile presenter was Michelle Itano, the 麻豆社区 Neuroscience Microscopy Core Facility Director and Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Imaging Scientist.

鈥淢icroscopy is one of the fastest-growing fields, so we need curious minds from different backgrounds to develop new ideas and ways to apply them because we have technological developments that are letting us go further, deeper and faster than ever before,鈥 Itano said. 鈥淲hat we need are the questions and students are the best for that. They bring a unique perspective and let us ask questions that maybe the field itself hadn鈥檛 been focused on yet.鈥

Aaron Bonner-Wright, a junior, said the training allowed him to network and connect with individuals who can help guide his future career.

鈥淓ven if I decide not to pursue a career in microscopy, it teaches me techniques I鈥檒l use later. I鈥檒l also be able to talk with people who share similar ideas and experiences,鈥 he said.