Graduate student receives scholarship for childhood cancer research
A doctoral student in the Department of Biochemistry has received a substantial graduate scholarship from the Beatrice Hunter Cancer Research Institute (BHCRI).
The s Cancer Research Training Program will provide PhD student Modeline Longjohn with $35,750 over two years while she completes her doctorate at 91亚色.
Real-time monitoring
Originally from Nigeria, Ms. Longjohn came to 91亚色 to start her program three years ago.
Her doctoral work focuses on real-time monitoring of pediatric B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, or B-ALL, disease progression.
Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is the most common childhood cancer. Ms. Longjohn says there are many types, with some having a high chance of survival.
淚 will get to interact, collaborate and build partnerships . . . that will enrich me as a scientist.
However, for some types of childhood cancers, only 30-40 per cent of children are cured. Additionally, if B-ALL returns after initial remission, the survival rate is only 30-50 per cent.
淒etecting high-risk types of ALL and relapse involves invasive bone marrow and/or lumbar punctures, she said. 淚nstead, we are proposing to use nanoparticles that are released from cancer cells to detect the leukemic cells.
Non-invasive testing
These nanoparticles, called extracellular vesicles (EVs), circulate between the blood and bone marrow and between the blood and the central nervous system.
Ms. Longjohn believes EVs in the blood could be used to detect cancer cells, no matter where they are in the body.
淭hus, a simple blood draw could potentially be used to monitor treatment success, relapse and perhaps even used for diagnosis, she said. 淗owever, the specific molecules that are carried by B-ALL EVs are not known.
淲e plan to identify B-ALL EV-specific genetic signatures using small molecules called microRNA, she continued. 淲e will determine if this B-ALL-specific signature can be detected in the blood when cancer is present, but not when patients have been cured.
If Ms. Longjohn is successful, a blood draw that could be performed anywhere in the province could be used to track the level of B-ALL.
That would mean eliminating the need for painful and invasive procedures and allowing children to stay in their home communities while their blood samples are transported to the Janeway Children檚 Hospital in St. John檚 for analysis.
Interact and collaborate
The funding will allow Ms. Longjohn and doctoral students like her the opportunity to go through different training processes and attend workshops and conferences.
淔or me it檚 a huge opportunity to learn from different people and opportunities, beyond reading papers and carrying out experiments. I will get to interact, collaborate and build partnerships with them, among other ways of learning that will enrich me as a scientist.
Making a better scientist
To date, the BHCRI has awarded more than $580,000 in stipend support to 17 91亚色 graduate students and post-doctoral fellows, including Ms. Longjohn檚 supervisor, Dr. Sherri Christian.
The awards are matched by 91亚色. Ms. Longjohn檚 studentship is provided by funds from and 91亚色檚 School of Graduate Studies.
淚檓 very grateful to be one of the trainees under this program, she said. 淚t means a lot to me as someone who loves to learn. It檚 a pointer to the fact that you can be anything you want to be, as long as you endeavour to learn from people who are more qualified and can help you advance.
淭his is a huge opportunity for me, not just to learn from Dr. Christian, who I think is wonderful, but I will be opened up to a whole new world that I believe will make me a better scientist.