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Where
are you from, and what is your role in Extreme 2004?
I'm a postdoctoral student working with Alison
Murray of the Desert Research Institute in Reno, Nevada.
On this expedition, I will be collecting the tiny organisms that
live on the hairs of the Pompeii worm (Alvinella pompejana) and
extracting their RNA and DNA. The goal is to use a relatively new
scientific technology called microarrays to profile epibiont community
gene expression.
What kinds of questions will you try to answer, and why?
One question we are trying to answer is: what are the organisms that
live on the hairs of the Pompeii worm doing? Or, put a different way:
how do they eke out a living in this extreme environment? Normally,
this could be done experimentally in the lab by making observations.
For example, we can "feed" yeast a water/flour mixture and "watch" them
grow (this is done every time you make bread). If we wanted to quantify
this growth, we could count cells or measure the by-product of respiration —
carbon dioxide. We could make more detailed measurements by growing a
lot of yeast and extracting certain cell constituents like enzymes or
proteins and measuring function, quantity, and activity. However, in
the oceans, most of the organisms responsible for biology cannot be
cultivated in the laboratory. We know they are there, but we don't know
what they do.
Recent technological advances provide a way to figure out what these
organisms are doing. We hope to do this with the symbiotic bacteria
associated with the Pompeii worm. High-throughput automated DNA sequencing
has made it possible to sequence large parts of this epibiont community.
The enormous, increasingly comprehensive genetic database (Genbank)
has made it possible to "de-code" a lot of the epibiont genome into
probable genes. Finally, microarray technology makes it possible to
make "chips" of thousands of
small spots of these genes. When a cell needs something done, it normally
sends a message — these messages are associated with specific
genes and functions. For example, when we sit out on the boat too long
under the hot sun, our cells send a message to "make us tan" or make
more pigment. If we had a microarray of the human genome and we had
a collection of all of our messages under two conditions — "sun" and "no
sun" —
one of the differences in gene expression patterns we would see is in
the "make us tan" gene or collection of genes. We will do just this
and examine gene expression patterns in this community of bacteria.
These data will provide information on what they are doing or how they
live.
Why
is this research important?
This
is important because we need methods to explore how and why organisms
thrive in such a wide variety of ocean niches. In-situ analysis of
gene expression will not only provide information on how organisms
grow, adapt, survive, and die but could lead to novel discoveries
of metabolic pathways, proteins, and cell products. Some of these
might benefit humanity.
What is your educational background? What lured you into marine
research?
I received my bachelor's degree in philosophy and biology from Bowdoin
College in Brunswick, Maine. I loved living on the water in Maine and
decided that I would rather spend my time on the ocean thinking about
the meaning of life than pulling my hair out in a small office while
contemplating Kant. I spent over a year living in Trondheim, Norway,
while on a Fulbright Scholarship working in Egil Sakshaug's lab. Upon
returning to the United States, I started working in Oscar Schofield's
lab at the Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences, Rutgers University.
Oceanography
is as much an adventure as it is a profession. My adventures have
taken me as far north and south as 79° and to six continents.
I have shared these adventures with incredibly interesting and bright
people. The combination of adventure and intellectual stimulation
is intoxicating and makes for a great day in the "office." I graduated
from Rutgers and moved to New York City in 2001 to work in biophysics
with David Mauzerall at Rockefeller University. I recently joined
Alison Murray's lab at the Desert Research
Institute in Reno, Nevada, in
an attempt to become more proficient in genomics.
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