Success Story

November 23, 2017

CBC’s mission of collaboration embraced through inter-institutional teaching and mentoring. Featuring Northwestern’s Chemistry of Life Processes Institute (CLP) Predoctoral Training Program.

One of the CBC’s mission goals is to: “Stimulate research and education that bridge institutional boundaries.” Over the years, CBC has organized a variety of educational events such as workshops, forums and seminars which were always open to the entire greater Chicago biomedical research community. The annual CBC symposia are signature CBC educational events bringing the three consortium schools together. The institutions alternate as host, on a rotating basis and feature speakers from all three schools. CBC is pleased to see its collaborative spirit spread to other educational programs—Northwestern’s Chemistry of Life Processes Institute (CLP) Predoctoral Training Program being a prime example. Enjoy the article below which highlights CBC researchers and awardees from NU and UChicago who have also played key roles at CBC events over the years. (See the list following the article.)


Research Institute’s Bold Approach To Discovery Matched By Teaching Mission

Rigorous CLP training program spans disciplines to help graduate students launch careers — in the lab and beyond

Northwestern Research News   |   By Roger Anderson   |   November 13, 2017


Jennifer Ferrer, NU

Jennifer Ferrer is a PhD student enrolled in Northwestern’s Interdisciplinary Biological Sciences Graduate Program (IBiS) and a trainee in the Chemistry of Life Processes Institute (CLP) Predoctoral Training Program. Photos by Tiffany Leighton Ozmina.

As a biologist in the lab of chemist Chad Mirkin, Jennifer Ferrer has learned the value of being “multilingual.”

“When I arrived four years ago, I realized there weren’t many people with biology backgrounds,” says Ferrer, a PhD student enrolled in Northwestern’s Interdisciplinary Biological Sciences Graduate Program (IBiS) and a trainee in the Chemistry of Life Processes Predoctoral Training Program. “I quickly learned that my ability to discuss biological systems in a relatable way could help guide how some of the more chemistry, materials science, and engineering-focused students think about designing nanomaterials for bio applications.”

That aspiration is a hallmark of Northwestern’s National Institute for General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)-sponsored Chemistry-Biology Interface training grant, launched in 2013. Open to rising second-year students in five graduate programs — chemistry, biomedical engineering, chemical and biological engineering, the Driskill Graduate Program in Life Sciences, and IBiS — the NIH-funded Chemistry of Life Processes Institute (CLP) curriculum requires students to integrate biology and chemistry through coursework, lab training, and student engagement.

Rick Betori and Karl Scheidt, NU

Rick Betori, left, and Professor Karl Scheidt, chemistry. Betori is a third-year graduate student conducting his primary research in the Scheidt Lab.

“Graduate education, in general, is often focused on individual projects, and the student is somewhat limited in his or her training experience,” says Richard Silverman, Chemistry-Biology Interface Predoctoral Training Grant Program director and the chemist who synthesized the small organic molecule now marketed by Pfizer Inc. under the name Lyrica. “This program requires each trainee to select two faculty mentors from two different areas of expertise and to carry out research in both laboratories.”

Ferrer’s secondary mentor is Jason Wertheim, the Edward G. Elcock Professor of Surgical Research and a transplant surgeon at Northwestern Medicine. Both Mirkin and Wertheim hold faculty appointments in multiple schools, a common attribute of CLP preceptors. Of the program’s 49 affiliated faculty, nearly half hold multiple appointments, spanning 11 departments within the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, McCormick School of Engineering, and Feinberg School of Medicine.

“The CLP Training Program is at the heart of the Institute’s mission of training the next wave of scientific leaders, particularly ones who fearlessly innovate and invent regardless of disciplinary boundaries to create the therapeutics and diagnostics of tomorrow,” says Tom O’Halloran, founding director of the CLP Institute and the Morrison Professor of Chemistry.

The program’s secondary mentors are meant to provide complementary training that will be essential for the successful completion of graduate research taking place in the primary mentor’s lab.

Rick Silverman, NU

Professor Richard Silverman, director of the Chemistry-Biology Interface Predoctoral Training Grant Program at Northwestern.

The focus of Ferrer’s study has been to develop and test a novel nanoparticle-based therapeutic (Mirkin lab) that can weaken inflammation and the immune response in the context of surgery, specifically liver transplantation (Wertheim lab).

“The trainees emerge with a more well-rounded view of the interface between chemistry and biology,” says Neil Kelleher, chemistry, molecular biosciences, medicine and Predoctoral Training Grant Program associate director. “The NIGMS training grant allows a student’s graduate career to complement the depth of traditional doctoral training programs with a unique breadth of cross-disciplinary training.”

This is reinforced through their completion of courses like Chem/IBiS 416, “Practical Training in Chemical Biology Methods and Experimental Design,” which provides hands-on experience with instruments and methods in a range of analytical, imaging, and life sciences core facilities. The course was specifically designed by Kelleher in 2015 to meet the program’s goals for providing experiential training by leveraging the expertise of PhD level staff in Chemistry of Life Processes Institute core facilities.

In addition to CLP-hosted seminars that explore science-related career options outside of research — like patent law, consulting, journalism, and entrepreneurship — trainees invite several distinguished speakers to campus each year and act as their hosts. Trainees also have an opportunity to interact with CLP Institute Executive Advisory Board members, who are leaders in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and other industries.

Neil Kelleher, NU

Professor Neil Kelleher, associate director of the Predoctoral Training Grant Program at Northwestern.

“The student-hosted seminars are one of the best components of the CLP program,” says Rick Betori a third-year graduate student doing his primary research in the lab of Karl Scheidt, chemistry. “These seminars give us an amazing opportunity to interact with speakers and talk with them about their labs, their views on science and the scientific landscape, and really get insight into new cutting-edge areas of scientific research.”

Betori’s research is focused on the development of small-molecule chemical tools to study the protein telomerase, a molecule implicated nearly universally in cancer. Betori recalls sitting down with Scheidt in 2016 to discuss the research direction Betori wanted to take.

“This was the first time in my professional career that I was expected to generate my own research project and we talked for more than two hours,” says Betori. “I remember leaving that conversation feeling empowered to go do the science and pursue ideas and projects that I thought were truly interesting, all the while knowing that my adviser would be there to provide guidance and training along the way.”

Steve Kron, UChicago

Professor Stephen Kron, molecular genetics and cell biology at the University of Chicago, is Betori’s secondary mentor. Betori spent the summer working in Steve’s laboratory learning and applying biological approaches to studying the metabolism and stability of his compounds in cancer models. Photo courtesy of Steve Kron.

Betori spent the summer working in the laboratory of his secondary mentor, Stephen Kron, molecular genetics and cell biology at the University of Chicago, learning and applying biological approaches to studying the metabolism and stability of his compounds in cancer models. Betori’s research has already led to a first author publication on chemical synthesis of new tools for targeting telomeres. The cross-institutional mentorship was born out of an existing collaboration between Kron and Scheidt.

In the lab, CLP trainees also become mentors in their own right, helping Lambert Fellows — a program designed to provide multi-year funding for hands-on laboratory research to rising sophomores and juniors — pursue careers in research. In total, the CLP graduate program has awarded 28 National Institutes of Health predoctoral training appointments and 10 University fellowships over the past five years. The highly successful program has resulted in trainees obtaining multiple National Institutes of Health predoctoral fellowships, two American Chemical Society predoctoral fellowships, and one Howard Hughes Medical Institute Gilliam Fellowship. CLP trainees have gone on to become postdoctoral fellows at the Scripps Institute, senior scientists at Abbvie and Merck, patent experts, and one is preparing to enter law school.

“Although there are many similar training programs throughout the country, I believe this program is unique in its emphasis on collaboration and interdisciplinarity and on the varied experiences trainees have that will help shape their careers,” says Silverman.

One recurring theme in talking to trainees is their sense of belonging.

“For me, it’s the human component that stands out,” says Ferrer. “I feel there’s such a sense of community, inclusion. That feeling definitely stems from the wonderfully supportive CLP leaders and administrators who manage the program and constantly ask trainees for their input on how to grow it and make it an even more rewarding experience.”

The CLP Institute was created to empower a new paradigm of scientific discovery that converges and integrates the current molecular approach with another layer of information that describes the impact of chemical and physical forces on the shape of molecules and their interactions. Institute faculty are renowned leaders in nanoscale imaging, top-down proteomics, theranostics, epigenetics, computational modeling, and inorganic physiology.

CLP is one of more than 50-plus Northwestern University Research Centers and Institutes (URIC), cross-disciplinary knowledge hubs designed to bring together talent from across the University’s schools. The Office for Research provides business and administrative support for the URICs.


Source:

Adapted (with modifications) from Northwestern University Research News, posted by Roger Anderson on November 13, 2017.


See also:

Listed below are CBC Awards and CBC events that the researchers featured in the article above received and/or participated in, respectively.

 
CBC Awards:

CBC HTS Award (2016):
PIs: Jason Wertheim (NU) and Jeffrey Hubbell (UChicago) for the project:
▸ Restoring the Renal Extracellular Matrix Using Engineered Growth Factors

CBC HTS Award (2015):
PIs: Richard Silverman and Gary Schiltz (NU) for the project:
▸ Identification of protein sequestration inhibitors for treating ALS

CBC Postdoctoral Research Award (2015):
PIs: Joseph Uzarski and Jason Wertheim (NU) for the project:
▸ Advanced Imaging of Decellularized Kidney Matrices Repopulated with Human Epithelial Cells

CBC Postdoctoral Research Award (2014):
PIs: Bin Jiang, Guillermo A. Ameer & Jason A. Wertheim (NU) for the project:
▸ Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Derived Endothelial Cells in Vascular Tissue Engineering

CBC HTS Award (2013):
PIs: Raymond Bergan, Karl Scheidt and Sankar Krishna (NU) for the project:
▸ A high-throughput screening strategy to identify and validate inhibitors of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 4 (MEK4)

CBC Catalyst Award (2013):
PIs: Stephen J. Kron (UChicago) and Preston T. Snee (UIC) for the project:
▸ Radiation-guided delivery of quantum dot theranostic nanoparticles

CBC Catalyst Award (2012):
PIs: Richard Ye (UIC) and Neil Kelleher (NU) for the project:
▸ Phosphoproteomic analysis of NADPH oxidase activation

CBC Lever Award (2010):
PIs: Chad Mirkin and Milan Mrksich (NU), David Eddington (UIC) and Joel Collier (UChicago) for project:
▸ Nanomaterials for Cancer Diagnostics and Therapeutics

CBC Recruitment Resources Award (CBC Senior Investigator Award, 2010):
▸ CBC Welcomes Newest “CBC Investigator” Neil Kelleher to NU

CBC Spark Award (2009):
PIs: Thomas O’Halloran and Vinayak Dravid (NU) and Jonathan Silverstein (UChicago) for the project:
▸ Support for an Innovative CryoSTEM for Element Specific Imaging of Cells and Tissue

CBC Lever Award (2008):
PIs: Sergey Kozmin (UChicago), Karl Scheidt (NU) and Jie Liang (UIC) for the project:
▸ Chicago Tri-Institutional Center of Excellence in Chemical Methodologies & Library Development

CBC Spark Award (2008):
PIs: Robert Goldman and Jonathan Widom (NU), Stephen Kron, Harindar Sighn and Elizabeth McNally (UChicago) for the project:
▸ The Chicago Laminome Project

CBC Catalyst Award (2008):
PIs: Stephen Kron and Stephen Kent (UChicago), and Brian Kay (UIC) for the project:
▸ Proteolysis-inducing Peptides as Tools for Chemical Genetics

 
CBC Events:

15th Annual CBC Symposium (2017):
▸ “Small Molecule Discovery”
Richard SilvermanInvited speaker
Rick BetoriPoster presenter

▸ CBCAN meeting (July 20, 2017):
Thomas O’HalloranPanelist

11th Annual CBC Symposium (2013):
▸ “Exploring Human Biology with Small Molecules”
Richard Silverman and Stephen KronInvited speakers
Karl ScheidtCo-organizer

▸ The CBC Exploratory Workshop on Cellular Heterogeneity (2013):
Neil Kelleher Co-organizer

CBC Tech Day (2012):
▸ “Small Molecule Discovery in Academia”
Richard SilvermanInvited speaker
Karl ScheidtPanelist

▸ CBC Science Day (2011):
Thomas O’Halloran and Neil KelleherInvited speakers

The Translational Technologies and Resources Core Seminar (2010):
▸ “Top Down Mass Spectrometry: Has Its Decade Now Come?”
Neil KelleherInvited speaker