Graduating undergraduates to present honors capstone projects

The Lee lab has three undergraduates graduating this spring 2024 and all will be presenting their honors capstone projects in June! Lola Lang will be presenting “Tets, Blots, and Ligases! Oh My! An undergraduate’s research journey” June 12th at 11am, Hannah Thorp will be presenting “Fem in STEM: a podcast series exploring the experiences of women in fem-dominated research labs” June 13th at 10am, and Toby Traudt will be presenting “Pond scum genome protection program” June 14th at 10am.

 

Alum Briar Jochim accepted to grad school!

We are excited to share that Lee Lab Alum Briar Jochim will be starting this coming academic year as a PhD Candidate in the M3D (Molecular Medicine and Mechanisms of Disease) Program at the University of Washington! Since his time in the Lee Lab, Briar has been a research assistant in Dana Miller’s lab at UW and Nic Lehrbach’s lab at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.

Lee Lab poster presenters as part of WWU Biology’s Summer Undergraduate Research Program (SURP)

Congratulations to Lee Lab members Lola Lang, Hannah Thorp, Alison Witwer, and Toby Traudt for all their work this summer as part of WWU Biology’s SURP, culminating in a poster session to present their research projects. The Western Today featured stories from all labs participating in the program including the Lee Lab in SURP’s Up: Worms, pond scum and fruit flies make for interesting summer research.

And shoutout to Lola for receiving a Hallson Stipend Award and Alison for receiving a Seagen Stipend Award.

The Lee Lab celebrates the end of summer

Last month the Lee Lab celebrated the end of summer with a potluck that included many current and former members, and even our very own Team Tetrahymena baby! We congratulated Courtney Yoshiyama on her graduation with a B.S. in Cellular and Molecular Biology and welcomed former lab member Maya Matsumoto back as a full-time Research Tech. It’s been a busy summer in the lab with many projects ongoing but we’re excited to see what we can get up to once classes start again!

Christina Mong recognized as Outstanding Graduate of Biology and Maya Matsumoto as co-recipient of 2021 Biology Undergraduate Research Award

Congratulations to two 2021 Lee Lab graduates, Christina Mong and Maya Matsumoto, who were recognized this Spring for their achievements during their undergraduate years at Western! Both graduates, along with several other members of the Lee Lab, contributed to the recent Lee Lab publication.

Outstanding Graduate of Biology, Christina, majored in Cellular and Molecular Biology. Outside of her time in the Lee Lab, where she conducted many experiments and presented research at a molecular biology conference, she was involved in various diversity efforts for the Biology Department and College of Science and Engineering. Christina represented the department as a Biology Ambassador with the Natasha Hessami Student Ambassador Program for two years. In this role, her leadership was evident as she acted as a liason between students and faculty and advocated for equity and diversity in biology and STEM.

Maya received the 2021 Biology Undergraduate Research Award for her work in the Lee Lab during the past year. She was recognized for her work and leadership as part of several projects with the lab and contributions to the lab’s science outreach. This included her presentation at the 2020 SACNAS conference on molecular visuals and science communication, and future presentation at the 2021 SACNAS conference on her work to improve a code used by the Lee Lab for quantifying extrusion bodies during image analysis.

Congrats to 2021 graduates!

Graduates Christina Mong, Erin Tessier, and Maya Matsumoto (left to right)

Congratulations to Erin Tessier, Christina Mong, and Maya Matsumoto for graduating this year! Through a full year of virtual learning, these three students all completed a BS in Cellular and Molecular Biology, with Maya also completing minors in German and STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Math).

Erin will be taking a gap year and looking for work in biotech or research before pursuing graduate school. Christina is currently studying to become a Dental Assistant in the future. Maya is selling science stickers and art on her Etsy @MWMLetters (check out her Instagram, too) and will be transitioning to Robin Kodner’s lab at Western to perform research with the Living Snow Project next year.

And to all Lee Lab members who have graduated previously, we congratulate you as well, especially those who finished their time with the lab at the beginning of the pandemic last year! Thank you to all students for the incredible work you do!

Lee Lab Paper Published

The Lee Lab manuscript titled Disruption of a ∼23-24 nucleotide small RNA pathway elevates DNA damage responses in Tetrahymena thermophilawas published online in Molecular Biology of the Cell this May. This is the first manuscript published by the Lee Lab, on which many current and former lab members assisted, and we hope that there will be many more to come! The manuscript covers our investigations into the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway that produces ~23-24 nucleotide small (s)RNAs in the ciliated eukaryote Tetrahymena thermophila. Specifically, we investigated phenotypic and gene expression impacts on cells when genes involved in the RNAi pathway are disrupted. Read our paper for more information!