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Bloomberg School

Curiosity and Discovery

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Robert Lyle McPherson PhD student Lyle McPherson in Leung's lab, where curiosity leads to discovery.

Five years ago, Lyle McPherson was a pre-med undergrad when he peered through a microscope at a cluster of fruit fly neural stem cells鈥攁 glimpse of another world at the molecular level. It wasn鈥檛 long before he began to reconsider med school, ultimately shifting his focus to a research track.

Now, as a PhD student in , he is part of a team whose discovery of a key infection mechanism in the chikungunya virus could play a role in preventing and treating the debilitating disease.

The researchers identified the function of a protein vital to the virus鈥檚 ability to replicate itself within a host. The was published in PNAS in January.

The implications of the findings are potentially vast, says BMB assistant professor . Mosquito-borne chikungunya, which is rarely fatal but can cause severe joint pain and neurological complications, shares a profile with other related viruses, he says.

鈥淥ur findings not only reveal a fundamental mechanism of virulence caused by viruses that cause human diseases,鈥 says Leung, 鈥渂ut also open new avenues for developing antiviral drugs or vaccines for chikungunya or other viruses,鈥 including those that cause SARS, MERS and Mayaro.

McPherson says it did not occur to him that the team鈥檚 investigation into the chikungunya virus would yield information that may help to thwart its infection abilities.

鈥淭he thing about basic science is that you don鈥檛 know the problems you鈥檙e going to end up solving and that鈥檚 part of the drive to keep doing it,鈥 he explains. 鈥 鈥 discoveries about a virus can stem from curiosity about a protein.

McPherson says that he can't imagine a better place to do "high-impact science."

鈥淎s a graduate student, between the quality of research you鈥檙e going to be doing in your own lab to the collaborations that are available to you鈥擨 don鈥檛 think there are too many places like that," he says, surrounded by carefully marked beakers and a rainbow of Post-it notes in Leung鈥檚 lab.

In fact, the School鈥檚 collaborative culture played a role in the chikungunya discovery.

鈥淭he 鈥 research with [Professor] lab in the is able to take advantage of the powerful synergy between the frontier of molecular biology and emerging infectious diseases,鈥 Leung observes.

Moving forward, McPherson will be doing more molecular digging to advance the chikungunya findings.

鈥淭he best science is like playing ping pong,鈥 Leung says. 鈥淎s a mentor, I really enjoy working with students like Lyle who can bounce back and forth with thoughtful ideas while doing a great job of execution on bench.鈥

- Lindsay Smith Rogers