Monday, Juy 1, 2024
Ten students gain knowledge from CEEZAD’s 2024 BSL-3 Summer Training Program
A CEEZAD recent summer workshop has given 10 future veterinary researchers a chance to explore the full range of professional opportunities that will be available to them when they complete their studies. It also acquainted those candidates with recent developments in the field of veterinary infectious disease studies in high level biocontainment.
The USDA BSL-3 Training Program for Research Support Personnel is an annual exercise in which CEEZAD gathers experts in the fields of biosecurity, virology, pathobiology and related fields in order to educate promising candidates who are interested in veterinary research in those fields. It was held June 10 through June 20. Most of the sessions took place at the Biosecurity Research Institute, a level 3 biocontainment facility at Kansas State University.
The program was funded by the United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service.
The participants, most of them DVM/PhD or PhD students, received instruction on protocols and procedures for working in a BSL Level 3 biocontainment environment, and gained experience with protective gear used in such environments. They also listened to internationally recognized experts in the fields of veterinary or zoonotic research and veterinary pharmaceuticals which discussed opportunities and present findings concerning their areas of expertise.
Here are brief biographies of the students along with their observations of what they gained from the experience:
Zachary Barrand is a PhD candidate and research associate at the Translational Genomics Research Institute at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. His research interests focus on vector genomic and microbiome influences on the maintenance, evolution and transmission of vector-borne diseases between reservoir, wildlife and human hosts.
He said the CEEZAD Summer Training Program intrigued him because of his interest in vector-borne zoonotic diseases. His goal is to be a principal investigator “at an academic institution or in a government position,” potentially with the Centers for Disease Control or the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Estefany Cotto-Lopez is a doctoral student at the University of Minnesota. Holder of masters degrees in OneHealth from the University of Florida and Environmental Health from the University of Puerto Rico, she has been a research assistant in the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Minnesota. She hopes to use her summer experience to facilitate her long-term professional goal of conducting research to develop innovative technologies to combat infectious diseases.
She said her participation in the Summer Training Program “opens the door for more high-containment training.” She wants to work in that type of facility, and finds it helpful to be able to see and hear from “people who are doing the (high-containment) research.”
Meghan Donaldson is a PhD student in the biochemistry, microbiology and molecular biology program at Pennsylvania State University. She has a degree in microbiology from Colorado State University and has been a doctoral research fellow for Dr. Jose Joyce at Penn State. Her aspiration is to pursue educational and professional experiences relevant to BSL-3 and BSL-4 lab facilities.
Meghan, who has researched COVID-19 and Zika virus, hopes to work in a BSL-3 or BSL-4 environment. “My dream has always been to work in high-containment,” she said. Meghan found one of the most valuable aspects of the institute to be the opportunity to “grow my network” of knowledgeable professionals.
Daryn Erickson is a PhD student in the College of the Environment, Forestry and Natural Sciences at Northern Arizona in Flagstaff. Her (?) research interests include non-invasive viral surveillance methods to improve proactive mitigation strategies. Her doctoral studies have focused on surveillance of RNA viruses in complex, sometimes non-traditional sample types such as wastewater, mosquito pools and residual rapid test swabs.
Daryn has gained experience as a user of the Select Agent facility at Northern Arizona and sought to broaden her experience with Level 3 facilities through the Summer Training Program. “There are strict guidelines at all Level 3 facilities,” she said, “but when it gets to procedural things you will see slight differences,” she added. She also wants to research ways “to make what we’re doing less scary to the public.”
Kayla Buck Garrett is a doctoral student and associate wildlife biologist with the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study at the University of Georgia. Holder of a masters in forest resources at Georgia, she hopes to use her summer training institute experience to expand her research capabilities to BSL-3 facilities, enabling her to work on a wider range of pathogens.
Kayla found the program “incredibly useful” because she came to it with little exposure to BSL-3 operations. “This program has been useful in teaching me how to do BSL-3 work,” she said.
Hayley Masterson is a doctor of veterinary medicine who is a PhD student at Washington State University. She has worked in a research laboratory and hopes to use her summer experience to enhance her ability to develop and perform laboratory research with a particular interest in tick-transmitted disease.
Hayley said she “really likes the “clinical part of research” because of the opportunity it provides to do laboratory work.
Greyson Moore is a PhD candidate in biomedical and veterinary science at Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine in Blacksburg, Va. Greyson has a degree in biology and hopes to use the Summer Program experience to help him fulfill he ambition for a career “at the intersection of translational medicine … to drive scientific discovery in relation to clinical and public applications.”
Greyson found the opportunity for “networking and learning about career paths” to be a valuable aspect of the program .
Kade Shomin is a graduate of the microbiology program at Michigan STATE or UM??. He is in the process of applying to veterinary schools with the hope of studying zoonotic high-consequence pathogens.
“I thought this (summer program) was an awesome opportunity,” Kade said. He hopes to focus his studies on Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, which he said he is “fascinated by.”
Jason Thornton is a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Veterinary Corps and a PhD student in infectious diseases and immunology at the University of Florida. He is also board-certified in veterinary anatomic pathology. Following completion of his PhD work, he hopes to serve in a high-priority position within the U.S. Medical Research and Development Command or the Defense Threat Reduction Agency.
He is now working on a Tier 1 select agent that requires BSL-3 experience. He hopes some day to work at the Army’s USAMRIID facility at Frederick, Md., using both his military and veterinary research expertise.
Morgen VanderGiessen is a doctoral student in the Infectious diseases Interdisciplinary Graduate Education Program at the Virginia-Maryland College of Veterinary Medicine in Blacksburg, VA. She has a degree in biochemistry and a masters in life sciences. Her doctoral research focuses on intersecting neurological pathways of traumatic brain injuries, organophosphate exposure and encephalitic alphavirus infections. She hopes to use her summer experience to obtain BSL-3 lab research training, especially as it relates to large animal research.
She said she was interested in the summer program because she had previously met CEEZAD Director Dr. Juergen A. Richt, and “I knew they would know the right people’ to further her professional pursuits. She is undecided between a government or industry career, but wants to work with BSL-3 Ag pathogens.