It sounds like an old-fashioned horror movie: an ambitious young student spending her summer making mutants within the recesses of a laboratory.
DonĂt worry, these arenĂt some grotesque Hollywood creations that Ava Vila is working on Ă her mutants exist only in test tubs and Petri dishes. However, that hasnĂt stopped her friends from giving her fearful looks when she tells them that sheĂs working with viruses all summer (her friends have nothing to worry about Ă sheĂs not studying any human strains).
Thanks to a summer research grant from NSERC, Ms. Vila has been working this summer in the laboratory of Dr. Roy Duncan, professor of microbiology & immunology at ±«Óătv. This is her first time as a laboratory employee, an opportunity she welcomes as she prepares for her third year at ±«Óătv.
ĂHere, you can learn so many techniques,â says Ms. Vila, who is working towards a double major in biochemistry and microbiology & immunology. ĂThis takes so many of the concepts we learn and applies them in a real-world context.â
Much of her work this summer is with graduate student Trina Racine, studying avian reoviruses to determine the translational method of their genome. These viruses, which infect birds and other creatures, cause the bodyĂs cells to fuse when they infect. ĂWeĂre making mutants of these viruses so that we can determine what methods they use to fuse cells together to determine how one gene can express three different proteins Ă an unheard of process,â Ms. Vila explains.
A scholarship student, Ms. Vila has nothing but good things to say about university life thus far. ĂI love it,â she says proudly. ĂItĂs so different from high school, being able to really dive into the things you enjoy. I love being around such interesting people.â
SheĂs hoping to return to lab work next summer, and says that the experience has helped her realize the value of medical research as she moves on in her scholarly pursuits. ĂI want to go to medical school, but I also want to make sure that I donĂt lose the research side of things,â she explains. ĂThatĂs definitely the direction I want to head in.â