STEM majors awarded NASA/Ohio Space Grant Consortium scholarships
Three students from the BW School of Natural Sciences, Mathematics and Computing will receive 2018-2019 Undergraduate Junior-Senior Scholarship awards from the NASA/Ohio Space Grant Consortium (OSGC).
The students will pursue and present research on Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis and a destructive pathogen destroying American beech trees.
The OSGC is part of the National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program (Space Grant) funded by Congress and administered through the NASA Headquarters Office of Education. Space Grant consists of a national network of colleges and universities that work to support science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) education, including competitive scholarships for STEM majors.
BW students chosen as 2018-2019 recipients are:
Garrett McCue
McCue
is
a
junior
neuroscience
biology
major
who,
in
collaboration
with
biology
and
neuroscience
professor
Dr.
Jeffrey
Zahratka,
plans
to
study
Alzheimer's
disease.
The
team
will
use
the
roundworm
C.
elegans
as
a
model
since
humans
and
C.
elegans
share
a
related
gene
structure.
The
study
will
focus
on
the
PPP2R4
gene
that
aids
in
the
dephosphorylation
of
protein
fragments
which
can
assist
in
the
reversal
of
Alzheimer's.
McCue
and
Zahratka
will
be
adding
extra
copies
of
this
gene
to
C.
elegans
that
have
Alzheimer's
with
the
hope
of
seeing
the
side
effects
of
the
disease
slowed
or
even
reversed.
McCue
plans
to
pursue
a
career
in
the
medical
field.
Sarah Shapley
Shapley
is
a
junior
neuroscience
biology
major.
Under
the
guidance
of
biology
professor
Dr.
Jackie
Morris,
Shapley
will
be
conducting
research
to
understand
myelination
in
development.
Using
zebrafish
as
models,
Morris
and
Shapley
will
measure
actin,
a
structural
protein,
at
different
stages
of
development
by
interfering
in
its
assembly
or
disassembly.
This
research
will
assist
in
understanding
the
mechanisms
of
demyelination
in
multiple
sclerosis
and
may
provide
insight
into
therapies
for
the
disease.
Shapley
plans
to
earn
a
doctorate
in
an
interdisciplinary-based
neurobiology
program
and
pursue
a
career
in
pre-clinical
research
for
the
development
of
pharmaceutical
interventions
in
neurodegenerative
diseases.
Joel Kavaras
Under the guidance of mathematics professor Dr. Aaron Montgomery, Kavaras, a senior mathematics major who won an OSGC scholarship last year as well, will continue his research focusing on beech leaf disease, a destructive pathogen that was first found in Lake County, Ohio, and has since spread to four states and Canada. The disease affects American beech trees by damaging the leaves and eventually killing the tree, but the causal agent of the disease is unknown. Kavaras' task is to create mathematical models of the spread pattern to shed light on possible causes and, hopefully, combat its further spread.
Kavaras plans to pursue a doctorate in mathematical ecology and would ultimately like to work in higher education or a government agency.
Continuing the pursuit of excellence
"The OSGC scholarships are providing financial support to students pursuing excellence in the classroom and in research," said associate dean Dr. Jim McCargar. "The results of student research in the previous round of scholarships led to a proud showing by last year's awardees, Tayla Brooks, Joel Kavaras and Kyle Pellegrin, at the recent Annual Student Research Symposium held at the Ohio Aerospace Institute. I fully expect that the current group of OSGC scholars and their mentors will continue to represent the very best in mentored undergraduate research."
The 2018-2019 award recipients will present the results of their research at the Annual Student Research Symposium at the Ohio Aerospace Institute in March 2019.