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Biochemistry & Biophysics

Biochemistry & Biophysics

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Fall awards: Celebrating excellence in research and administration

By Srila Nayak

2019 Fall Faculty and Staff Awards

The College of Science celebrated research and administrative excellence at its 2019 Fall Faculty and Staff Awards ceremony and reception on November 21.

Dean Roy Haggerty delivered welcome remarks. This year, the College recognized exceptional achievement in advancing inclusive excellence, distinguished service, as well as highest quality performance beyond the call of duty. As a result, there were three new award categories: Inclusive Excellence, Distinguished Service, and Champion of Science awards.

Hearty congratulations to these award-winning faculty and staff who were recognized for their outstanding achievements:

Milton Harris Award in Basic Research

Ryan Mehl receiving award on stage with colleagues

Ryan Mehl with Roy Haggerty (left) and Andrew Karplus

Ryan Mehl, professor of biochemistry and biophysics, received the Milton Harris Award in Basic Research for his impactful, internationally recognized basic research in the area of genetic code expansion (GCE). The latter involves engineered protein synthesis machinery to incorporate novel chemical groups at pre-specified places. Mehl has several patents and 66 research articles to his credit, quite a few of which have been cited more than 4000 times.

Among his many distinguished research discoveries are groundbreaking studies providing the first evidences how the protein nitro-tyrosine contributes to pathology in Lou Gehrig’s disease and in artherosclerosis. Mehl has been awarded several NIH and NSF grants to support his research. At OSU since 2011, Mehl has established and leads the Unnatural Protein Facility, a unique, first of its kind in the world facility that promotes the use of GCE by non-expert researchers.

“This work has also established OSU as an international leader in this arena, and NIH has invited us to submit a proposal to establish an NIH Center focused on GCE technology development,” said Andrew Karplus, head of the Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics.

F.A. Gilfillan Award

Michael Blouin receiving award from colleagues on stage

Michael Blouin with Roy Haggerty and Virginia Weis

Professor of integrative Biology Michael Blouin was honored with the F.A. Gilfillan Award for Distinguished Scholarship in Science. The Gilfillan award honors a faculty member in the College whose scholarship and scientific accomplishments have extended over a substantial period of time.

Blouin’s contributions to the field of evolutionary and population genetics have been impressive. In his 24 years at OSU, Mike has developed a remarkably broad, distributed and well- funded research program that has spanned evolutionary genetics and parasite molecular ecology and evolution.

“We believe that Mike is performing transformational research in critical areas of biology. His scholarship has raised the profile of the College and the University,” said Virginia Weis, head of the Department of Integrative Biology.

In his early years at OSU, he essentially started the field of endo-parasite molecular ecology. Endoparasites are remarkably difficult to study given that they live within other organisms and are often microscopic in size. Blouin’s group used molecular markers to find these parasites in animal populations, opening up a whole new field of host-parasite populations.

In recent years, Blouin has made distinguished contributions in two new fields: salmonid conservation genetics and schistosome molecular biology. Schistosomiasis is a human infectious disease that is cause by a schistosome flatworm. It affects 200 million people worldwide and is under-studied, in large part because the affected populations live in developing nations that often lack clean water and resources to combat the disease.

In the case of salmonids, he has revealed the fundamental importance of life history traits in the success/limitations of hatchery fish in the Pacific Northwest.

Dean’s Early Career Impact Award

Kim Halsey receiving award from college on stage

Kim Halsey with Roy Haggerty and Jerri Bartholomew

Kim Halsey, associate professor of microbiology, and Rebecca Terry, associate professor of integrative biology, received the Dean’s Early Career Impact Award. At OSU since 2011, Halsey began her career as a microbial physiologist and biochemist studying the enzyme butane monooxygenase, and its role in the bioremediation of the environmental pollutant trichloroethylene. Her precise research on this process, which explored the role of protein structure in determining the substrate range of the enzyme, has been cited over 100 times.

“Her groundbreaking research and scholarship is opening new areas of scientific enquiry and has earned her the respect of the international scientific community,” said Jerri Bartholomew, head of the Department of Microbiology.

In addition to other areas, Halsey also studies the ocean carbon cycle, with a focus on photosynthetic energy producing phytoplankton, particularly diatoms, which alone account for over 25% of global primary production, and are a key to forecasting climate change.

Halsey became internationally respected for defining the fates of photosynthetic energy with unprecedented precision, in multiple phytoplankton taxa, and fitting this data into a theory of cell strategies for distributing photosynthetic energy.

Rebecca Terry talking with students in lab

Rebecca Terry with students

Rebecca Terry’s interdisciplinary research involving paleontology, ecology, and geography significantly broadens the research landscape at the College. The discipline of paleoecology — the ecology of fossil animals and plants — is constantly gaining importance as it reveals important insights into the past that can inform the future of our planet during the Anthropocene.

“Dr. Terry is highly respected by her peers for pushing the boundaries of what information can be deduced from fossilized remains of mammals. Dr. Terry develops innovative approaches and uses them to reveal important insights into the past,” said Virginia Weis, head of the Department of Integrative Biology.

Many of her publications appear in high impact journals, such a Nature and PNAS. On top of that, Terry’s work has received broad media attention; For example, the 2016 Nature paper that she co-authored was highlighted in 16 news outlets including the Washington Post, Science Daily, and Nature News and Views. It also won a 2016 Science Achievement Award from the National Museum of Natural History.

Inclusive Excellence Award

Vrushali Bokil receiving award from colleagues on stage

Vrushali Bokil with Roy Haggerty and Enrique Thomann

Professor of Mathematics Vrushali Bokil and the physics student club Physicists for Inclusion in Science (PhIS) received the College of Science Inclusive Excellence Award. Bokil’s leadership in advancing equity, justice and inclusion (EJI) at OSU has had a substantial impact on the Department of Mathematics and the College.

Bokil participated in the 60-hour immersive Oregon State Advance Seminar, which takes participants deep into the literature on difference, power and discrimination both theoretically and practically with STEM disciplines. She has developed and embedded ADVANCE materials into the professional development seminar for mathematics graduate students as well as for students across the College.

“Professor Bokil brings a deep understanding of the value of diversity for faculty and student success, and has put into play important structural changes that can ensure sustainable impact,” said her colleagues Edward Waymire, Enrique Thomann and Rebecca Warren.

Bokil has also supported a workshop on “Sexual Harassment in the Mathematical Sciences: Moving Towards Action” for the Association of Women in Mathematics and participated in recruiting/assisting students from underrepresented groups in pursuit of a Ph.D. in mathematics.

female students receiving award from science faculty on stage

PhIS members with Roy Haggerty and Henri Jansen

Physicists for Inclusion in Science (“PhIS”, pronounced “fizz”) grew out the Women in Physics group. The group supports members of underrepresented groups as they pursue their careers. The 2019/20 officers are Acacia Patterson (President), Gina Mayonado (Vice President), Abbie Glickman (Treasurer), Mattia Carbonaro (Secretary).

PhIS members walk the walk and have gone far beyond expectations of a standard student group. They have run several Diversity & Inclusion in Physics Instruction workshops for the first-year graduate students in physics, at the National Meeting of the AAPT, and at the annual meeting of the Pacific Northwest Association for College Physics. PhIS was an important co-organizer of the CUWiP conference in Winter 2016. This was a big national event with over 200 participants. The OSU Conference for Undergraduate Women in Physics (CUWiP) was one of nine conferences held across the U.S.

“I am sure that several students stayed and received a degree from OSU mainly because of the activities of this group.”

“PhIS gives the physics department a clearly visible face in the area of diversity, even though our diversity numbers are small,” said Henri Jansen, professor of physics and associate dean for academic and student affairs.

College of Science Distinguished Service Award

Randall Milstein receiving award from colleagues on stage

Randall Milstein with Roy Haggerty and Janet Tate

Randall Milstein, physics instructor, and Margie Haak, senior instructor of chemistry, received the College of Science Distinguished Service Award. Milstein, who is also the Astronomer-in-Residence for the Oregon NASA Space Grant Consortium, was recognized for his extraordinary efforts during the August 21, 2017 OSU’s total solar eclipse event which was witnessed by thousands of people in Corvallis.

“His effort represented hundreds and hundreds of hours of personally donated time to make this event as special as it was. It was truly above and beyond the call of duty,” said Janet Tate, professor of physics.

His activities ranged from high-level organization (OSU’s Total Solar Eclipse/OSU 150 Space Grant Celebration Planning Committee), to education (dozens of talks to help people understand, reaching nearly 4000 people), education workshops (solar filter parties to teach people to be safe), advertising (numerous radio and television interviews — Al Jazeera America, CBS News, Los Angeles CBS, etc.) and, of course, observation of stars and of the eclipse itself (telescopes, binoculars).

In the months ahead of the eclipse, he traveled the state tirelessly. His knowledge and enthusiasm reached thousands and OSU benefited beyond measure.

Margie Haak receiving award from faulty on stage

Margie Haak with Roy Haggerty and Paula Weiss

Haak has been a member of OSU Chemistry for 26 years. During this time, she has given countless hours in service to the chemistry department, the College of Science, Oregon State University, and surrounding communities.

Haak serves as the coordinator for the Mole Hole (Chemistry Help Center). She spearheaded the expansion of the Mole Hole from approximately 15 hours per week to over 60 hours per week. Because of her, the Mole Hole now has consistent hours that extend into the evening and weekends, which are prime study times for undergraduates. This space has had a large impact, serving several thousand undergraduate students each term.

“It’s an honor to work with Margie. She has helped thousands of students experience the beauty of science. Her impact has undoubtedly led many of them to go on to study science at OSU,” said Paula Weiss, senior instructor of chemistry.

Haak’s effort in science outreach are unparalleled in the chemistry department. For the last 17 years she has coordinated and presented Family Science & Engineering Nights and Family Math Nights at local elementary schools. She typically has 15 – 20 of these events each year. She has coordinated the Science Olympiad State Tournament at OSU. For 14 years she was the coordinator for Discovery Days, a two-day science outreach event attended by approximately 1800 K-9 students.

Champion of Science Award

Bettye Maddux receiving award from Roy Haggerty on stage

Bettye Maddux with Roy Haggerty

Bettye Maddux, Director of Research Development in the College of Science, received the Dean’s Champion of Science Award. This is the Dean’s award recognizing an individual or individuals who demonstrate excellence and extra effort that goes beyond what is requested, and the highest quality performance. The award is modeled, including its name, after the President’s Beaver Champion Award.

With more than 20 years of research experience in academic and industry, Bettye created the College’s Office of Research Development from scratch. In its first full year of operation, Bettye increased the value of science proposals submitted by 30% and increased the number of proposals submitted by 6%.

“In more than 25 years of funded research at several institutions, none of us have ever had as much help and expert advice as we have received from Dr. Maddux,” professors Juan Restrepo and Vince Remcho said in a statement.

“She is constantly seeking funding opportunities, she strategizes with us in the writing process, she helps us understand the requirements of every call for proposals, she oversees budget preparation, she interfaces with the Research Office on all matters concerning proposal requirements, and has led inter-institutional funding efforts with complex organizational requirements.”

Science Research and Innovation Seed Program Awards

award recipients holding up awards on stage with colleagues

Roy Haggerty with SciRis awardees (left to right) Matthew Graham, Richard Cooley, Victor Hsu, Ryan Mehl, Weihong Qiu, Chris Cebra and Siva Kolluri.

Six research teams won the Science Research and Innovation Seed Program (SciRis) and the Betty Wang Discovery Fund Awards for projects that contribute to physical chemistry, organic chemistry, solar cells and thin film display transistors, human health and the development of diagnostic tools.

The SciRis awards went to the following teams:

Assistant Professor of physics Bo Sun, along with collaborators from the University of California, San Diego and Northeastern University, was awarded $10,000 to elucidate the causes and consequences of cancer cell migrational phenotype plasticity, which contributes critically to the process of cancer metastasis. The research will potentially lay the groundwork to develop new classes of cancer screening assays and metastasis-targeting treatments.

Biochemists Ryan Mehl, Rick Cooley, physicist Weihong Qiu, and Chris Cebra and Shay Brachafrom the Carlson College of Veterinary Medicine received the SciRis Stage 2 award for their project “Chemically Functionalized Nanobodies.” Nanobodies, a subclass of small antibody fragments, where discovered in 1989 and represent an exciting new technology for the development of therapeutic and diagnostic agents.

The $75,000 grant will help the researchers develop a unique technology platform that enables generation of chemically functionalized nanobodies which will function as new therapeutic and diagnostic tools opening up new avenues for medicine and basic research. The resulting chemically functionalized nanobodies will be engineered to bind a specific antigen/protein target and deliver a therapeutic antibody

Chris Beaudry, professor of chemistry, Victor Hsu, associate professor of biochemistry and Siva Kolluri in the College of Agricultural Sciences received the SciRis Stage II award for their project, “Homoharringtonine: Chemical Synthesis amd Evaluation of Designed Analogs.” The group will conduct research on analogs of Homoharringtonine (HHT) with improved pharmaceutical properties. HHT is a plant alkaloid isolated from the plum yew Cephalotaxus harringtonii.

HHT shows great promise as a starting point for the development of new medicines for multiple forms of cancer, however it is highly expensive and difficult to acquire both as a chemical and as a medicine. Among other objectives, the group will work on creating an efficient chemical synthesis of HHT which quadruples the chemical yield, and can be used for investigation in combination therapies and evaluation in modern drug delivery systems.

Physicist Matthew Graham and chemist Paul Cheong received a $10,000 SCiRIs Stage I award for their project “Performance Optimization of Transistors and Solar Photovoltaics by Ultrabroadband Photoconductance Microscopy of Trap-State Density and Lifetimes.” The team will further enhance and develop an ultrabroadband photoconductance microscope that was invented in the Graham lab in 2016. This novel microscope tackles fundamental grand challenges that inhibit the performance of photovoltaic and thin film display transistors.

The Betty Wang Discovery Fund made two awards to maintain state-of-the-art laboratories to advance fundamental discoveries in the basic sciences.

Associate professor of Chemistry Chong Fang was awarded funds for a new fluorometer in the ultrafast laser spectroscopy lab at Linus Pauling Science Center. Chemistry professors Chris Beaudry and Paul Blakemore received a grant to purchase an improved model of a microwave synthesis reactor, an essential technology for organic synthesis.

Awards for administrative excellence

Mary Fulton receiving award from Roy Haggerty on stage

Mary Fulton with Roy Haggerty

Mary Fulton, assistant to the head of the Department of Microbiology, received the Gladys Valley Award for Exemplary Administrative Support. Fulton was appreciated for her hard work, professionalism and exemplary administrative abilities.

“Working with Mary is truly a pleasure. She has the patience, intuition and persistence required to work with all kinds of people, traits that are valued by everyone in the department.”

I think the faculty perfectly captured that she is the soul of the department and highly deserving of this award,” said Jerri Bartholomew, head of the Department of Microbiology. Among other administrative accomplishments, Fulton’s successful event planning and coordination made microbiology one of the most successful departments in raising funds for the Annual Food Drive.

Bill Freund receiving award from colleagues on stage

Roy Haggerty with Bill Freund and Wei Kong

Bill Freund of the Department of Chemistry won the Outstanding Faculty Research Assistant Award. Freund has served as a faculty research assistant in Professor Wei Kong’s group since 2009. This award recognizes a faculty research assistant who has a record of outstanding job performance and contributions.

“He has been instrumental in almost all aspects of my laboratory, from design of new experiments to troubleshooting of equipment, and ultimately to completion of any project, large and small,” said Kong.

“He has also been a great mentor to all of my students and postdoctoral fellows, showing them problem solving skills and transferring to them his life’s experience in being a responsible and wise citizen.”

2019 Fall Faculty and Staff Awards Photos

male student working with lab equipment

More than 50 students awarded scholarships for summer research

By Mary Hare

The College of Science warmly congratulates our 2019 SURE Science scholars!

Oregon State University and the College of Science have made it their mission to help students prepare for a bright future by providing potentially life-changing summer research opportunities.

This year, contributions from generous donors have helped more than 50 science students win competitive summer research awards, including the college-wide SURE Science Award (Summer Undergraduate Research Experience) as well as several department-specific awards.

Undergraduate research often plays a key role in developing student-faculty relationships, and gives students hands-on learning experiences that help them grasp the practical applications of science beyond the scope of the classroom.

“For me, a lot of it is about the students who wouldn’t be able to do research if they weren’t getting paid,” program coordinator Gabs James explains.

By providing fellowships to the greatest possible number of students, these awards give many undergraduate students the financial leverage to pursue career goals that would otherwise be unattainable.

The SURE Science Program is available to all full-time science students who meet the academic requirements. The scholarship provides the opportunity to conduct paid research for up to 440 hours over the summer. The scholarship includes a stipend of $5060 and an additional amount of $500 stipend that can be used as funding for activities that support their research. This year, greater donor support has made it possible for 40 students to receive the award — an unprecedented number with the award money totaling more than $220,000!

In addition to SURE Science, there are also several awards which may be received by high achieving students within a department.

New this year in Integrative Biology is the Alexei Lubchenco Menge Fellowship, which was awarded to Kris Bauer to support his research under the guidance of Postdoctoral Scholar Sarah Gravem and Professor Bruce Menge. The fellowship was established in memory of Alexei Lubchenco Menge, who died at age 27 in 2005. Like his biologist parents, Lubchenco Menge was deeply passionate about the ocean and the life it contains. The award seeks to help a student within the department who exemplifies these values.

Also receiving awards this summer are Ryley Tishendorf, who received a Special Integrative Biology Award, and Jiadi He, who received a Special Physics Award. Tishendorf will perform research in biologist Rebecca Terry’s lab, and He will be mentored by biophysicist Weihong Qiu.

In the biochemistry and biophysics department, students applying for the SURE Award are also eligible to apply for the CURE Fellowship. CURE is sponsored by the Ray and Frances Cripps Education Endowment, as well as by faculty mentors who match the awarded funds. This year, eleven biochemistry students received the award, in addition to eight other students from the department who received the SURE Award.

Congratulations to the inspiring next generation of scholars!

SURE Science awardees:

StudentMajorFaculty
1McKenzie BarkerBiologySally Hacker
2Kelley BastinMicrobiologySusan Tilton
3Dreagn BennettBiologySarah Gravem
4Nathanael BowlesMathematicsMalgorzata Peszynska
5Elizabeth CarrollBiologyClaudia Hase
6Cynthia CedenoChemistryPaul Blakemore
7Addison DeBoerBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyDaniel Rockey
8Luz Dimas-MunozBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyDaniel Rockey
9Haelyn EppBioHealth SciencesWeihong Qiu
10Rebecca FranceBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyColin Johnson
11Kailie FrancoBiochemistry and BiophysicsBo Sun
12Ilana Gottfried-LeeBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyRichard Cooley
13Cat HoangMicrobiologyElisar Barbar
14Kendra JacksonBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyMichael Freitag
15Jin KiatvongcharoenMathematicsDavid Roundy
16Taylor KuntzBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyMatt Andrews/Adam Higgins
17David LehrburgerBiologyStephen Atkinson
18Lauren LewisChemistryStaci Simonich
19Kitty LiuBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyAdrian Gombart
20Chantelle MacAdamsBiology & ZoologyBruce Menge/Sarah Gravem
21Anabel MendozaBioHealth SciencesCarla Schubiger
22Alanis MoralesBioHealth SciencesVirginia Weis
23Rina MullendoreBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyMaria Franco
24Duy NguyenPhysicsEthan Minot
25Makenzie NordChemistryJulie Pett-Ridge
26Acacia PattersonPhysicsJanet Tate
27Taylor PrichardBiologyKatja Duesterdieck-Zellmer
28Victor PuociBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyEhren Pflugfelder
29David RockowBiologyMark Novak
30Kelsey ShimodaBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyJaga Giebultowicz
31Leigh SkalaChemistryTaifo Mahmud
32Ulises Solis OcanaBioHealth SciencesDavid Dallas
33Jason SreyChemistrySandra Loesgen
34Yi Peng TeoPhysicsMatt W Graham
35Dustin TreecePhysicsElizabeth Gire
36Sophia VahsholtzBiologyDee Denver
37Andrew WilliamsBiologySusanne Brander
38Elizabeth WirschingBiologyVirginia Weis
39Tara WirschingBiologyDr. Felipe Barreto
40Wanling XieMathematicsYuan Jiang

CURE Foundation Awardees:

StudentFaculty
1Dorice Goune GoufackMaria Franco
2Mahir PalanMaria Franco
3Juno ValerioViviana Perez
4Brooke GalyonMichael Freitag
5Carolyn LazaroffMichael Freitag
6Maja EnglerMatt Andrews
7Audrey KorteWeihong Qiu
8Seth PinckneyElisar Barbar
9Jacob NorthRyan Mehl
10Isabella KarabinasAlvaro Estevez
11Asra NoorAlvaro Estevez

group photo of bio ethics team holding banner

Science students helm inaugural biomedical ethics conference

OSU Bioethics Society

The OSU Bioethics Society hosted its first annual NW Collegiate Biomedical Ethics Conference (NCBC) in April 2019, bringing in ethicists and physicians from around Oregon. The conference provided an opportunity for students to present their scholarly work and discuss pressing issues in the world of modern healthcare.

Students from several majors in the College of Science played a key role in making the conference a successful and intellectually engaging experience. Undergraduate students from programs in biochemistry, molecular biology and biohealth sciences enthusiastically volunteered and participated in the conference. The young scientists who dedicated much of their time and energy to the event include Delaney Smith (’19), a recent biochemistry and biophysics graduate and outgoing vice president of the OSU Bioethics Society; biochemistry and molecular biology graduate Nick Brown (’19), outgoing president of the OSU Bioethics Society; biochemistry and molecular biology student Avalon Kelly; and biohealth sciences majors Francine Mendoza and Sydney Phu. Pharmacy, psychology and public health students also volunteered and participated in the conference.

The conference stimulated thoughtful conversation between students of diverse backgrounds by bringing together alumni, undergraduate, and graduate students from Oregon State University, Western Oregon University, and Oregon Health and Science University.

Dr. Michael Huntington, an oncologist with a 35-year career, kicked off the conference with an enlightening keynote address. He discussed universal healthcare, exploring healthcare disparities and the effects on both individuals and businesses.

Following the keynote presentation, the conference featured three panels: a student panel where Smith, Phu and other participants shared their research followed by an insightful Q&A session, and two professional panels on patient autonomy and resource allocation.

female students sitting on panel during meeting

Student panel at the biomedical ethics conference.

Led by students and their research, the student panel covered topics in pediatric cancer patients, healthcare rationing, the pharmaceutical industry, and stem cell therapies. With a surplus of questions from both students and professionals, participants were actively engaged in examining biomedical topics from different perspectives.

“The insight students shared was profound and the participants definitely learned something new,” reported Smith.

Dr. Steve Neville, an oncologist and guest speaker on the patient autonomy panel, also featuring OSU faculty Courtney Campbell and pulmonologist Dr. Cliff Hall, found his discussion with the students to be “insightful” and “always interesting and provocative.” The panel examined the Dax Cowart case, a chilling story about a burn victim that exemplifies some of the complex issues surrounding patient autonomy.

The resource allocation panel examined a medical triage case for admittance to the intensive care unit between five diverse patients. After the discussion, biochemistry major Nick Brown stated that the panel was “very educational in the sense that we learned a lot about outcomes for ailments commonly persisting in ER patients, but we were also shocked to learn how medical professionals and ethicists would triage these patients based on various metrics.”

The conference was sponsored by OSU’s School of History, Philosophy, and Religion, and the Hundere Endowment.

NCBC was organized by OSU Bioethics Society’s officers, with the support of their club members who volunteered at the event. “It was so exciting to see everything finally come together and see how easily discussion flowed,” said Francine Mendoza, the newly elected president of the OSU Bioethics Society. “Hearing everyone’s thoughts and perspectives was really enlightening and I can’t wait for us to bring the conference back next year!”

Header image: (Back row, l to r) Delaney Smith, Nick Brown and Dr. Courtney Campbell. (Front row, l to r) Kelli Hoang, Sydney Phu, Francine Mendoza, Andrea Chiou.

diploma icon above vibrant galaxy

Celebrating excellence: 2019 teaching and advising awards

Winter 2019 Teaching and Advising Awards

The College of Science recently celebrated its 2019 Winter Teaching and Advising Awards with faculty, advisors and students to recognize exceptional teaching and advising – key areas of distinction in the College. Effective teaching, advising and mentorship are at the heart of the College of Science’s mission to build leaders in science.

Dean Roy Haggerty delivered opening welcome remarks, Associate Dean Matt Andrews served as the lively emcee, and several science students offered earnest tributes and presented the awards.

“This awards ceremony is our opportunity to recognize teaching and advising excellence and emphasize our College’s dedication to student success,” said Dean Roy Haggerty. “I am proud to celebrate this year’s recipients whose commitment to their students models the College of Science’s highest values.”

Congratulations to all of our award winners and nominees. Their hard work to make science education more meaningful, relevant and effective advances our mission and transforms lives.

2019 Award Winners

Olaf Boedtker Award for Excellence in Academic Advising

Indira Rajagopal receiving award from student and Roy Haggerty

Newly retired senior instructor Indira Rajagopal (center) ands biochemistry and molecular student Lily Sloan (left) with Dean Haggerty (right).

Indira Rajagopal, who retired as senior instructor in biology and biochemistry and biophysics in December, won the Olaf Boedtker Award for the second time in three years for her exceptional and inspirational advising of undergraduate students. The award was presented to Rajagopal by Lily Sloan, a biochemistry and molecular biology junior.

“Indira Rajagopal provided endless support and guidance to her students, and we were lucky to have such a dedicated advisor. My wonderful experience in the biochemistry and biophysics department was significantly impacted by Indira and the amount of effort she put in to help students. Indira brought so much positivity to the department, and I could not think of anyone more deserving of this advising award,” wrote one of her student nominators.

Rajagopal, newly retired as senior instructor in biology and biochemistry and biophysics, has consistently been credited throughout her 30-year tenure at Oregon State for the devotion she brings to her roles as an inspiring mentor, professor and advisor. Her work of encouraging students to pursue meaningful opportunities stems from her passion to help students reach their potential. That same dedication is exemplified by the work Rajagopal has done with her husband Kevin Ahern, recently retired biochemistry and biophysics professor, writing and publishing free electronic textbooks for online learners worldwide.

Nominees: Kevin Ahern, biochemistry and biophysics; Alex Beck, BioHealth sciences; Linda Bruslind, microbiology; Cody Duncan, integrative biology; Henri Jansen, physics; Barbara Kessel, microbiology; Shawn Massoni, BioHealth sciences; Brock McLeod, integrative biology; Jennifer Olarra, integrative biology; Kari Van Zee, biochemistry and biophysics.

Loyd F. Carter Award for Outstanding and Inspirational Teaching (Undergraduate)

Nate Kirk receiving award from two female students and Roy Haggerty

Instructor of biology Nate Kirk (center right) with Dean Haggerty (right) and students Anastasiya Prymolenna (left) and Sonya Bedge (center left).

Instructor of biology Nate Kirk received the Loyd Carter Undergraduate Teaching Award for his effective and inspirational approach to teaching undergraduate biology students. Bioresource research student Sonya Bedge and chemistry student Anastasiya Prymolenna presented the award to Kirk.

“Nate is an incredibly thoughtful, understanding and kind professor, and I feel honored to have had him for the Principles of Biology series. His lectures were engaging, and he facilitated great discussions among peers about the course material. Nate clearly dedicated a lot of time to figuring out how to help his students learn best and gain a deeper understanding of the subject as a whole,” wrote one of his nominators.

Kirk, who teaches Honors and non-Honors Principles of Biology Series in the College, believes students learn best from each other and from practical experience, so he limits his direct lecture time in favor of directed learning. Combining lectures with hands-on experiences, he leads students to make their own discoveries and experience the thrill of science. Kirk was also honored as 2016 Honors College Professor of the Year.

Nominees: Nathan Kirk, integrative biology; Phillip McFadden, biochemistry and biophysics; Richard Nafshun, chemistry; Ryan Mehl, biochemistry and biophysics; Daniel Myles, chemistry; Chris Orum, mathematics; Devon Quick, integrative biology; Indira Rajagopal, biochemistry and biophysics; Lyn Riverstone, mathematics; Daniel Rockwell, mathematics; KC Walsh, physics; David Wing, mathematics.

Loyd F. Carter Award for Outstanding and Inspirational Teaching (Graduate)

Assistant professor of chemistry Sandra Loesgen received the Loyd Carter award for her outstanding and inspirational teaching of graduate students. She mentors and teaches graduate students to a variety of state-of-the-art techniques to identify and develop drug leads to cancer treatment.

“Dr. Loesgen’s enthusiasm for the topics she teaches are contagious. When you are in her classes, you are truly immersed in the subject. This means you are learning to become a true chemist in interpreting NMR spectra and understanding how organisms make their natural products. As she teaches these subjects, she wants you to understand rather than memorize,” wrote one of her students. “She is energetic, and her passion for the topics exudes as she delivers each lecture.”

Loesgen leads a highly motivated team of graduate students from diverse backgrounds, including pharmaceutical sciences, chemistry, biochemistry, molecular biology, and microbiology. In the Loesgen Lab, she guides student researchers as they explore target-based drug discovery with a focus on new anticancer, antimicrobial and antiviral compounds from microbial sources. She and her students discovered a soil-dwelling bacterium whose molecules destroy melanoma cells.

Nominees: Sally Hacker, integrative biology; David Hendrix, biochemistry and biophysics; Sandra Loesgen, chemistry; and Oksana Ostroverkhova, physics

Frederick H. Horne Award for Sustained Excellence in Teaching Science

Marita Barth, senior instructor of chemistry, won the Frederick H. Horne Award for her exceptional qualities as a teacher and a mentor. Barth, who focuses on distance chemistry education, has distinguished herself as an educator who bolsters the confidence and success of undergraduate students.

“Marita creates a really positive environment, and many students draw a contrast with their experiences at other institutions, telling us that they felt more comfortable, more supported and engaged with OSU Ecampus. Even at a distance, Marita has been able to convey an enthusiasm and passion for chemistry that sparks student interest – and remember that she is working with a student population that is more likely to come to us fearful of, or reluctant to, study this subject,” said Michael Lerner, chair of the Department of Chemistry.

“Marita has been able to convey an enthusiasm and passion for chemistry that sparks student interest.” – Michael Lerner

Barth leads her department’s general chemistry for non-majors courses at Ecampus, which are OSU’s largest online classes with ever-increasing enrollments – 430 students are currently enrolled in the sequence. She has continuously redeveloped and improved courses by producing videos and interactive materials that are now used by other faculty in the Department of Chemistry.

The awards ceremony also included a special presentation by participants of the Faculty-Student Mentor Program who shared their inspiring experiences. Led by Dean Haggerty, this new program aims to enhance student engagement in learning and improve retention and graduation rates. At its foundation are relationships built between faculty mentors and students. Mentors focus primarily on helping students – many of whom are first-generation college students – transition and adjust to college life. Based on the program’s success, OSU plans to expand the program across the entire university.

Photos from the College of Science Teaching and Advising Awards, February 21, 2019.

Spiral icon above lit-up cityscape

Synergies unleashed to tackle human health and disease

By Debbie Farris

The mysteries of human health and disease are as numerous as they are elusive. They pose complex problems that demand complex solutions. As science becomes increasingly interdisciplinary, the edges blurring and blending faster than we can name those evolutions, the challenges of human health require that we examine them from multiple perspectives, from biohealth, bioinformatics and biochemistry to chemistry, mathematics and biology.

In the 21st century, human health and disease require that we as scientists working in the life, physical and mathematical sciences collaborate. That we put our heads together, step outside the traditional academic boundaries to ignite new thinking and spur innovative solutions to address the most pressing problems in human health.

The proliferation of data is transforming the scientific landscape. Scientists are grappling with how to analyze and integrate data quickly across disciplines. With the mounting need for better, faster ways to harness vast amounts of information, mathematical and statistical researchers make for natural partners who are well trained to manage and interpret data to deepen understanding of the scale of health issues. This approach enables scientists to test more theories and manage more data to develop a greater, more sophisticated understanding of human health.

This fall the National Science Foundation’s Division of Mathematical Sciences and the National Institutes of Health’s National Library of Medicine launched a Joint Initiative on Generalizable Data Science Methods for Biomedical Research to support the development of innovative and transformative mathematical and statistical approaches to address data-driven biomedical and health challenges.

OSU researchers are harnessing the power of global collaborations to deepen understanding of and to address our most important concerns in human health.

The chemistry behind aging

Biophysicist Elisar Barbar and team discovered that the intrinsically disordered state of the protein ASCIZ, a key transcription factor in cells, plays a major role in regulating production of the protein LC8, a hub protein regulating over 100 other proteins critical to a wide range of life processes from viral infection to tumor suppression to cell death. Her work on intrinsically disorganized proteins, a hot frontier of research in biochemical and medical research today, has far-reaching implications due to their critical role in a vast array of cellular functions.

Colleagues Afua Nyarko and Viviana Perez are studying the chemistry behind the biological processes and the synthesis of biologically active molecules. Nyarko studies protein interactions and their role in the formation of tumors. She is one of a handful of scientists worldwide studying proteins from a structural biology perspective, where detailed information on the structure of specific amino acids can reveal how tumor suppressor proteins inhibit specific growth-promoting proteins.

Perez studies the biological processes of aging, specifically the protein aggregation in neurodegenerative diseases and protein misfolding. She discovered a new function for the compound rapamycin that, with its unusual properties, may help address neurologic damage.

Barbar and Nyarko’s work uses nuclear magnetic resonance to describe molecular structures of proteins. They also focus on protein informatics, from the analysis of experimental mass-spectrometry evidence for proteins to the integration and curation of large-scale data warehouses of protein sequence and functional annotation.

Genetics and bioinformatics

Our bioinformatics researchers are working on groundbreaking developments at the nexus of data science and human health. David Hendrix developed a neural network program that illuminates connections between mutant genetic material and disease. His team used deep learning to decipher which ribonucleic acids (RNA) have the potential to encode proteins, an important step toward better understanding RNA, one of life’s fundamental, essential molecules. Unlocking the mysteries of RNA means knowing its connections to human health and disease.

Hendrix compares it to a tool similar to calculus or linear algebra, but one used to learn biological patterns. Deep learning is helping his team manage vast amounts of data and learn new biological rules that distinguish the function of these types of molecules. He recently teamed up with the Barbar group to develop an algorithm that will predict new proteins that interact with LC8. This validates the importance of LC8 in many systems and opens up new interactions to study, underscoring the power of big data to guide new experiments.

David Koslicki recently discovered that the blood of patients with schizophrenia features genetic material from more types of microorganisms than the blood of people without the debilitating mental illness. His team performed whole-blood transcriptome analyses on 192 people, including healthy people and people with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and Lou Gehrig’s disease. The findings showed that microbiota in the blood are similar to ones in the mouth and gut. There appears to be some permeability there into the bloodstream.

Koslicki and his collaborators received an NIH grant to build a biomedical translator, a software system that connects various distributed databases of biomedical knowledge and that can “reason” over these data sources to answer relevant biomedical questions. This is one example of how mathematical and computational sciences are syncing with biomedical research to accelerate translation for the scientific community.

Fighting disease

Microbiologist Bruce Geller scored a monumental win against antibiotic resistance. He crafted a compound known as a PPMO that genetically neutralizes a pathogen’s ability to thwart antibiotics. His team designed and tested PPMOs against Klebsiella pneumonia, an opportunistic pathogen that’s difficult to kill and resistant to many antibiotics. A platform technology, PPMOs can be quickly designed or modified to kill nearly any bacterium. They are not found in nature so bacteria have not developed resistance to them. PPMOs may be highly effective therapeutics.

Geller expects that the wave of the future will be molecular medicine, a broad field that draws on physical, chemical, biological, bioinformatics and medical techniques to describe molecular structures and mechanisms, identify molecular and genetic errors of disease and develop interventions. OSU scientists are combining these experimental and mathematical tools to develop anti-viral drugs.

Microbiologist Thomas Sharpton made a key advance toward understanding which of the trillions of gut microbes may play important roles in how humans and other mammals evolve. His global team created a new algorithm and software to taxonomize and clarify key microbial clades, or groups of microbes that appear frequently across mammalian species. A Western lifestyle tends to reduce microbial diversity so knowing which clades have been evolutionarily conserved opens up potential health interventions.

star icon above image of the Memorial Union at night

Recognizing outstanding achievement: 2018 Alumni Awards

2018 College of Science Alumni Awards

The College of Science is pleased to announce its 2018 Alumni Award recipients. Fred Horne, the former Dean of the College of Science and Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, was recognized with Lifetime Achievement in Science Award; Joan Countryman Suit (’53) received the Distinguished Alumni Award. Justin Hall (’10) won the Young Alumni Award.

The awards publicly recognize alumni or friends of the College of Science for distinguished professional and personal accomplishments and for exemplary contributions to society that bring credit to the College and the University.

“I congratulate these exceptional individuals whose contributions have made a deep impact on science and society. They have distinguished themselves by nurturing an inspiring legacy of service and scientific achievement for future generations,” said Roy Haggerty, dean of the College of Science.

“They have enriched our communities through their passion for science and education and have brought honor and distinction to the College of Science and the University. I am grateful to each of them,” added Haggerty.

The College celebrated the accomplishments of these distinguished scientists and leaders with a gathering of invited guests comprising faculty, campus leaders, students, alumni and friends at its annual award ceremony and dinner at the Memorial Union’s Horizon Room on November 15.

Congratulations to these outstanding alumni and friends of the College for their scholarship, leadership and service to science at Oregon State!

Fred Horne sitting in office

Fred Horne, Lifetime Achievement in Science Award

Lifetime Achievement Award

Fred Horne

As Dean of the College of Science for more than 13 years (1986-2000), Fred Horne was responsible for hiring some of the best scientists and leaders at Oregon State University. Of the 70 faculty that he hired, most remain at OSU and have made sizeable contributions. Horne had a deep commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion in science, and during his tenure, he actively increased the number of women scientists at the university. The Fred Horne Award for Excellence in Teaching Science and the Clara Ann and Fred Horne Women in Science Scholarship have had a decisive impact on education and undergraduate achievement in the College.

Read more about Horne’s incredible journey as a student, scientist and leader.

Joan Countryman Suit with her husband with research equipment

Joan Countryman Suit (’53), Distinguished Alumni Award

Distinguished Alumni Achievement Award

Joan Countryman Suit

A student of bacteriology and microbiology at OSU, Joan Countryman Suit (’53) pursued a career in science at a time when women scientists were scarce. She enjoyed a distinguished career as a research scientist in prominent national labs, spending 17 years at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology working alongside medicine Nobel laureate Salvador Luria. Joan and her husband, Herman, support science students through the SURE Science scholarships, which enable motivated undergraduates to pursue three months of summer research, and the Joan Countryman Suit Scholarship for microbiology graduate students.

Read more about her journey from humble beginnings on a farm in eastern Oregon to her achievements in the field of bacterial genetics.

Justin Hall with his daughters in park

Justin Hall (’10), Young Alumni Award

Young Alumni Award

Justin Hall

Oregon State’s strong Ph.D. program in biochemistry and biophysics helped alumnus Justin Hall (Ph.D. ’10) jumpstart his career at Pfizer Pharmaceuticals, one of the world’s premier biopharmaceutical companies. Since then he has gone on to become a Principal Scientist at Pfizer and is currently the biophysics lead for multiple drug development projects. Justin and his wife, Andrea (a biochemistry Ph.D. alumna), distinguished themselves as exceptional students in the biochemistry graduate program and won awards for academic achievement.

Read more about his path to success as a scientist and his advice for current students.

Thomas Sharpton with colleague looking at samples in lab

From scientific ideas to innovative solutions in the marketplace

Innovation Days

The College of Science is launching a transformative program to support and strengthen innovation and entrepreneurship that will enable us to better identify, validate, and develop the commercial impact of basic research. Innovation Days will bring together faculty, faculty research assistants and research associates to discuss and learn about moving basic research ideas and discoveries from the lab to commercial applications and practical solutions.

Co-hosted by the College of Science and the Office of Commercialization and Corporate Development (OCCD), Innovation Days will host its first session on January 7, 2019, 2:30-5 pm followed by a reception from 5-6 p.m. The deadline to register is December 14, 2018. Additional sessions to follow on February 4, April 1 and April 29.

Innovation Days is designed to build awareness and engagement with experts who will help advance and propel the OSU innovation enterprise. Workshop participants will learn about resources to:

  • Leverage basic research and research funding opportunities toward application
  • Increase the impact of basic research through patents and commercialization
  • Validate broader impacts of research projects to enhance proposal success
  • Connect with local innovation ecosystem and identify pathways to translate research to application
  • Create opportunities with industry
  • Integrate invention disclosures, patent applications, and company formation into day-to-day work to advance your career

Facilitators represent and support the many pathways available to successfully transfer technology and commercialize scientific research. The workshop series includes: Berry Treat, director of OCCD, who will provide an overview of his office and how it supports the research to industry pathway; Joe Christison, senior intellectual property and licensing manager at OCCD, who will introduce participants to technology transfer at OSU; Katie Pettinger, commercialization catalyst at OSU Advantage Accelerator, who will discuss startup support available to OSU researchers; chemistry professor Rich Carter, who will share his success story as an inventor; and Chris Stoner, senior industry contracts manager, OCCD, who will discuss the development of appropriate and effective research agreements with companies.

coral at bottom floor of shallow ocean

From the first 3-D virtual microscope to new antibiotics: A year in review, 2017-18

By Mary Hare

Dangers for corals reefs

The College of Science’s efforts to advance engagement with science at all levels have been steadily gaining momentum thanks to the incredible contributions of our faculty and students. As a College, we continue to show that science does not have to be confined to an ivory tower, but can and must be used to inform the public about the complexities of life and the world we live in.

Several of this year’s notable accomplishments have been in global research and national and international recognition of our faculty and students.

The research our faculty and students are engaged in demonstrates their passion for the environment, sustainability, oceans, human health, and the data that underlie and illuminate those areas. Our faculty and students are committed to improving the world around us by making it better than how we found it. The year was marked by groundbreaking research on ocean acidification, earthquake forecasting, the dangers affecting coral reefs and more.

Our scientists made key research advances in curing disease from the discovery of a bacterium that kills melanoma cells to successfully combating drug resistance in certain infections. Science faculty and students have won national and international awards and recognition for their extraordinary achievements in improving undergraduate education and innovative research. We look forward to building on this trajectory of growth and momentum this year and beyond.

Highlights of 2017-18


Awards and leadership

Teaching and innovation

  • We were one of three universities to receive a national award from the American Physical Society for improving undergraduate physics education in 2018.
  • Science faculty awarded prestigious $1M HHMI grant to develop culturally inclusive pedagogies in STEM programs.
  • Mathematics faculty replaced the traditional classroom model to improve student success in introductory algebra courses by integrating technology, new active learning approaches and measurement of student performance and understanding. These have improved retention, performance and student engagement in 100- and 200-level mathematics classes at OSU.
  • In partnership with Ecampus, biology faculty helped create a groundbreaking, first-of-its kind 3-D Virtual Microscope and online introductory biology course series, winning a 2017 WCET Outstanding Work (WOW) award for technology-based solutions that transformed the college learning experience.

Student Success

  • We graduated 5% more science students than 2017!
  • We launched an Integrated Professional Development platform featuring innovative career preparation programs with content delivered in first-year experience science courses that help to build students’ professional skills and give them a competitive edge in the job market or in graduate school.
  • A biohealth sciences major founded OSU’s first pre-osteopathic student club that earned national recognition as Chapter of the Year, from the parent organization Student Osteopathic Medical association, in its first year of operation.

Research

cell icon above light texture

Recognizing research and administrative excellence

2018 Fall Faculty and Staff Awards

The College of Science celebrated research and administrative excellence at its 2018 Fall Faculty and Staff Awards ceremony and reception on October 11.

Dean Roy Haggerty delivered welcome remarks, sharing his priorities for the upcoming year in the areas of research and innovation development, student recruitment and retention, revenue growth for the College and diversity, inclusion and justice.

In keeping with the College of Science’s key objective to spur research and innovation, Dean Haggerty announced three new awards to support fundamental discoveries and collaborative scientific projects with the potential for substantial social impact. The Science Research and Innovation Seed Program (SciRis) provides funding in three stages for high impact collaborative proposals that build teams, pursue fundamental discoveries and create societal impact. The awards range from $10,000 to $125,000 for various stages of the proposal.

SciRis-II Award will provide up to $10,000 for an individual faculty who seeks to establish or augment research relationships with external partners, either inside or outside of Oregon State University, in academia, industry, or other organizations inside and outside of the United States.

The Betty Wang Discovery Fund, recently established by a generous endowment of $750K from the estate of Samuel Wang, will grant one or more awards to maintain state-of-the-art laboratories to advance fundamental discoveries in the basic sciences.

Hearty congratulations to these award-winning faculty and staff who were recognized for their outstanding achievements:

Ethan Minot receiving award from Janet Tate and Roy Haggerty

Physicist Ethan Minot (center) with Janet Tate and Roy Haggerty

Ethan Minot, associate professor of physics, received the Milton Harris Award in Basic Research for his impressive accomplishments as a scientist. At Oregon State, Minot has built a world-class materials physics laboratory for the study of the structure and properties of carbon nanomaterials and devices for nanoelectronics.

His research at Oregon State has pushed the limit of fundamental properties of nanoelectronic devices, which have a broad range of applications to biosensing and solar energy harvesting. Some of his achievements are: identifying the fundamental noise mechanism that limits the performance of graphene biosensors in liquid environments; becoming the first to electrically generate and detect single point defects; reaching a new level of control over point defect chemistry; and other pioneering advances in the development of high-quality nanodevices and biosensors.

“Using the exceptionally strong, flexible, stable and sensitive electronic materials Ethan has demonstrated that the carbon-based nanodevices can be intimately interfaced with biological systems. His research impact extends beyond the science he has produced. Ethan’s group is a highly-prized destination for graduates and undergraduates alike,” said Professor of physics Janet Tate.

Minot’s graduate and undergraduate students have gone on to successful careers in academic and high tech or medical tech sectors. His versatile research activities have led to many high-impact publications. During his tenure at OSU, Minot has published 34 refereed articles in prestigious journals such as Nano Letters and Applied Physics Letters.

May Nyman receiving award from Michael Lerner and Roy Haggerty

Chemist May Nyman with Michael Lerner (left) and Roy Haggerty

Professor of chemistry May Nyman was honored with F.A. Gilfillan Award for Distinguished Scholarship in Science. The Gilfillan Award honors a faculty member in the College whose scholarship and scientific accomplishments have extended over a substantial period of time.

A leading scientist in the areas of metal-oxo cluster chemistry, X-ray scattering, aqueous ion-pairing and nuclear waste chemistry, Nyman joined Oregon State in 2016 after a distinguished career at Sandia National Laboratories where she developed new sorbents and other waste treatment technologies for nuclear waste management. Her work on Cs-139 removal technologies led to the licensing of a sorbent that is currently used to treat contaminated seawater at the failed Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant in Japan.

At Sandia, Nyman developed a powerful and effective sorbent for removal of strontium-90, plutonium and neptunium from cold war era nuclear wastes. The sorbent was commercialized and then produced at the Savannah River site for real world waste treatment. Through her work with applied chemistry technologies, Nyman made tangential discoveries that ultimately led to the development of an entire new class of polyoxometalates (POMs) that she termed the polyoxoniobates (PONbs). These new POMs opened up the field to new discoveries and applications that include the potential development of a new class of nerve agent degraders.

At Oregon State, Nyman has developed expertise solution characterization of clusters using X-ray scattering. She has now become a world leader in applying this technique to clusters. She continues to be an international leader in the field of POMs, PONbs and other metal oxo clusters formed from elements across the periodic table. Her research group’s latest discovery and paper on this topic show how PONb cluster geometries and nucleation are changed simply by the presence of alkali metal cations.

“This latter work is also one example amongst several from the Nyman group that suggests a revolutionary concept – that the standard Pourbaix diagrams collected and widely used by materials and chemistry researchers for several decades may be not be accurate without careful consideration of the electrolytes in solution,” said Michael Lerner, Head of the Department of Chemistry.

The broader impact of improving the model used in such fundamental chemistry is significant – aqueous chemical processes such as geochemical weathering, corrosion and energy production in fuel cells may all be improved. Moreover, through these studies, Nyman’s team learned how to make very high concentration Nb solutions with a neutral pH that can be used to deposit niobate materials for different energy applications. This future work can lead to new functional materials deposited by ‘green’ processes.

Nyman is a leading member of the materials science of actinides program at the Department of Energy’s Energy Frontier Research Center program—her roles include developing uranyl peroxide clusters for fundamental actinide science applied in the nuclear fuel cycle, and training the next generation of actinide scientists.

Elise Lockwood receiving award from Bill Bogley and Roy Haggerty

Mathematician Elise Lockwood with Bill Bogley (left) and Roy Haggerty

Elise Lockwood, associate professor of mathematics, received the Dean’s Early Career Impact Award for exceptional achievement in research and education by an early career faculty member. Lockwood has achieved international distinction as a researcher in mathematics education, specializing in Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education (RUME). She is described as the “top young scholar” in RUME.

Lockwood’s prominence in the field is evidenced by her winning the 2018 Annie and John Selden Prize of the Mathematical Association of America, which is given to the top early-career mathematics education researcher in RUME. Her research focuses on the practical and theoretical aspects of the teaching and learning of combinatorics, a field of mathematics that connects with probability, computer science, and many diverse areas of science.

“Led by her internationally recognized achievements in research, Dr. Lockwood has assembled an impressive array of professional accomplishments that excels in all dimensions,” said Bill Bogley, Head of the Department of Mathematics.

Lockwood was awarded a five-year National Science Foundation CAREER Award—NSF’s most prestigious award for early-career faculty— for her project on developing undergraduate combinatorics curriculum in computational settings. The project focuses on the use of computational resources to help students develop as combinatorial thinkers.

Koslicki, Loesgen, Chan, David and Hokanson receiving awards together

Front row (L to R): David Koslicki, Sandra Loesgen, Francis Chan and Maude David. Back row (L to R): Thomas Sharpton, James Strother, Roy Haggerty and Kenton Hokanson.

Four research teams won the Science Research and Innovation Seed Program Award (formerly known as the College of Science Impact Award) for projects that contribute to human health, drug development and marine science. The SciRis Award carries an amount of $10,000 for each team. The award-winning SciRis teams comprising:

Assistant Professor of Mathematics David Koslicki and Thomas Sharpton, assistant professor of microbiology and statistics, received the SciRis award for metagenomic analysis of voluminous microbiome data that are germane to diverse processes from global nutrient cycling to human disease. The project will enable Koslicki and Sharpton to create a leading-edge research portfolio of new algorithmic and data science solutions for the analysis and mathematical modeling of microbiome data and enhance research productivity by aiding OSU investigators in the analysis of microbiome data. The project will also recruit and train students in metagenomic science. In the long term, the researchers seek to “establish OSU as a center of excellence in microbiome data science.

Assistant Professor of Chemistry Sandra Loesgen and Assistant Professor of Integrative Biology James Strother will collaborate on a project to identify novel microbial natural products with antinociceptive, or pain-relieving, activity using a zebrafish-based behavioral assay, and to characterize the mode of action of new compounds using neural activity mapping. This innovative approach addresses major challenges in neuroactive drug discovery and is highly likely to produce potent new bioactive compounds to develop improved drugs for chronic pain.

This research combines the Loesgen Lab’s expertise with natural products and the Strother Lab’s experience in neuroscience to forge a bold new approach for neuroactive drug discovery.

Associate Professor of Integrative Biology Francis Chan and Stephen Giovannoni, Distinguished Professor of Microbiology, will pursue research on zero oxygen (anoxic) events in ocean ecosystems that are of greatest concern for ecosystems and fisheries. While scientists have developed a clear understanding of the climate-dependent factors that determine the formation of hypoxic (low oxygen) zones, the onset of anoxia remains both difficult to predict and surprisingly infrequent despite the prevalence of hypoxia.

Through recent research combining ocean climate science and marine microbial ecology, Chan and Giovannoni have discovered that oxygen availability has played an important but previously unrecognized role in shaping the evolution of metabolic pathways in microbes, and that such pathways may serve as climate-resilient barriers to anoxia.

Assistant Professor of Microbiology Maude David and Kenton Hokanson, instructor of microbiology and biochemistry and biophysics, will conduct molecular research to address anxiety disorders that affects 40 million people in the U.S. Although women are twice as likely as men to suffer from anxiety disorders, most research at the molecular level has exclusively studied male humans or animal models.

David and Hokanson aim to bridge this knowledge gap by integrating functional, molecular, and behavioral data to identify the role of specific microbial metabolites produced by a bacterium linked with anxiety in humans. This project will be conducted in female mice, maximizing their work’s impact on the large and underserved population of females affected by anxiety disorders.

Paula Christie, assistant to the head of the Department of Chemistry, received the Gladys Valley Award for Exemplary Administrative Support. Christie was appreciated for her hard work, professionalism and exemplary administrative abilities.

“Paula’s single best characteristic could be described as excellent and dedicated customer service. Her customers in this case are the entire department, from leadership to entering students to our staff,” said Michael Lerner, Head of the Department of Chemistry.

Jie Zhang from the Department of Chemistry received the 2018 Outstanding Faculty Research Assistant Award. Zhang has served as a faculty research assistant (postdoctoral fellow) in Professor Wei Kong ’s group since 2010. This award recognizes a faculty research assistant who has a record of outstanding job performance and contributions.

“From conversations with Wei Kong and from my observations, Jie Zhang has been as a key factor in the Kong group’s vitality and longevity. Wei gives Jie full credit for numerous important experimental breakthroughs, and also for the continued success in her research grant applications,” said Michael Lerner, Head of the Department of Chemistry.

In addition to her many achievements in the Kong lab, Zhang has trained several graduate students from start to completion, and the acknowledgements from those students’ theses are effusive. “Everybody needs a Jie Zhang in their lab,” said Kong.

Susan Machacek, an accountant in the Arts and Science Business Center (ASBC) received the ASBC Exemplary Service Award. This award recognizes exemplary service by a member of ASBC to the colleges within the Division.

students analyzing beakers in lab

Nearly 40 students win 2018 SURE Science awards

By Mary Hare

Students in the College of Science had another rewarding summer of research, thanks to the financial support from SURE Science scholarships. In 2018, 38 students received $5,500 each for a total of $209K. This is a substantial increase from previous years, thanks to a generous contribution to the 2018 SURE Science program, which is supported by generous science alumni and friends.

SURE Science is a competitive program designed to support undergraduate summer research opportunities for College of Science students, which can be invaluable for student success. Besides the hands-on learning experience, students build connections with world-class scientists and are able to actively participate in groundbreaking research. The award is most appreciated by students who already have jobs working in labs during the school year, and use the scholarship to be able to stay and work in Corvallis when they could not otherwise.

Beginning last year, students were able to participate in an information session geared to help them make the most of the research opportunities available on campus. Additionally, they will participate in three valuable professional development workshops:

  • Team dynamics
  • Scientific writing and presentations
  • Informal scientific communication

What makes these workshops so important is that they provide a critical link between the knowledge learned in the classroom and the work they are conducting on a professional level. This prepares students for graduate school or a professional job upon graduation.

As always, students gain valuable experience by presenting their work in a professional setting. For example, several SURE Science scholars presented their research posters at the College’s Fall Faculty and Staff Awards this month.

While SURE Science is only open to undergraduate majors in the College of Science, several SURE Science scholars have faculty mentors from departments in the Colleges of Public Health and Agricultural Sciences.

Congratulations to these impressive SURE Science Scholars!

2018 SURE Science Scholars

Student MajorFaculty Mentor
1Nicolas ArevaloMathematicsSastry Pantula
2Molly AustinChemistrySandra Loesgen
3Carlos AvendanoBiologyBruce Menge
4Connor BaileyChemistryClaudia Maier
5Andrew BakerBiochemistryMolly Burke
6David BemisChemistryVincent T. Remcho
7Sophia BethelBiologyMichael Freitag
8Jenna BeyerBiochemistryRichard Cooley
9Rebekah ClearyBiochemistryDee Denver
10Zachary ColbertPhysicsMatt W. Graham
11Andrew CollinsPhysicsEthan Minot
12Jamison CozartMicrobiologyMartin Schuster
13Lam DucBioHealth SciencesAlvaro Estevez
14Joseph EdgertonBiologyJeff Chang
15Clark EmbletonPhysicsEthan Minot
16Mary EnglishMicrobiologyRyan Mueller
17Franco FelixBiologyMichael Bouin
18Brooke FreyBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyArup Indra
19Samuel FuBiologyJaga Giebultowicz
20Sonia GrutziusBiochemistry & BiophysicsRyan Mehl
21Kaito HiokiBiochemistry & BiophysicsAndrey Morgun
22Lylan HoBiochemistry & Molecular BiologyWei Kong
23Tera HurstBioHealth SciencesEmily Ho
24Sophia JadzakMicrobiologyStephen Atkinson
25Marija JozicBiologyAndrew Annalora
26Nadia KingBiologyShauna Tominey
27Austin MartinMicrobiologyMaude David
28Blake MigakiBioHealth SciencesGary Merrill
29Cocoro NagasakaChemistryMay Nyman
30Elora OrmandZoologyRebecca Terry
31Mikayla PivecBioHealth SciencesKelly D. Chandler
32Tristan ReynoldsChemistryDouglas A. Keszler
33Rachel SousaMathCory Simon
34Sean TrobaughBiologyVirginia Weis
35Oliver Valdivia CamachoBiochemistry & BiophysicsMaria Clara Franco
36Daniel WhittleBiochemistry & BiophysicsAdrian F. Gombart
37Kaseylin YokePhysicsHeidi Schellman
38Bahiya ZahlBiochemistry & Molecular BiologySteven Strauss

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