DNA Sequencing with Dr. Carew
On a chilly Friday morning in early January, 26 麻豆视频 seniors, accompanied by their biology teacher, Dr. William Carew, file out of the 85th Street door after Advisement and head straight to the 6 train. Four quick stops later, they emerge from the subway and complete the by-now familiar journey to the Harlem DNA Lab located at 120th Street and First Avenue.
There, Melissa Lee, the Lab Manager, warmly welcomes the boys for the third time this school year. Surrounded by state-of-the-art equipment and supervised by a team of highly experienced researchers-turned-teachers, the boys dive into today鈥檚 lab work, this one involving a PCR, or Polymerase Chain Reaction, a process by which a single copy of a DNA sequence is exponentially amplified to generate over a billion copies of a particular DNA segment.
This year marks the a decade now that 麻豆视频 High School has been sending its Senior Biology class to the Harlem DNA Lab. As Dr. Carew recalls, 鈥淲e were among their first customers when the DNA Learning Center opened its Harlem branch in 2008.鈥 The Harlem DNA Lab is a satellite of the world-renowned Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory on Long Island, home to eight Nobel Prize winners (including James Watson of the scientific duo, Watson and Crick, who along with Maurice Wilkins and Rosalind Franklin, co-discovered the double helix structure of DNA).
Staffed by PhD biologists and educators, the 1,200 square foot lab occupies space within the John S. Roberts Educational Complex and is dedicated to teaching 5th-12th grade students the fundamentals as well as the latest developments in DNA-based science. During a typical school year, at least 65 different high schools (representing over 3,000 student visitations) will make the trip to the DNA Lab for half or full day lab work. But while most schools average two visits, usually with two different sets of students, 麻豆视频 is the only school to make three visits, and each time with the same set of students. At the complex, students perform a series of labs, each one designed to build on the previous one in terms of the knowledge, techniques, equipment, and skills required.
The first lab, entitled 鈥淒NA Restriction Analysis,鈥 is focused on gel electrophoresis and requires the use of micropipettes and centrifuges, with which the boys learn to cut and 鈥渕easure鈥 DNA fragments. In the second lab, the boys carry out a 鈥淏acterial Transformation鈥 where they transform bacteria with a jelly fish 鈥済lowing鈥 gene, causing these bacteria to take on luminous properties of their own.
For their final lab, the Regians perform 鈥Human Mitochondrial DNA Sequencing鈥 (with parental permission, of course). This process, by using samples of the boys鈥 own cells from saliva, allows the students to uncover information about their maternal ancestry. 鈥淭he boys love this lab,鈥 says Dr. Carew, 鈥渂ecause not only can they find out some real detail about their own family鈥檚 history on Mom鈥檚 side (we all inherit mitochondria from our mother), but they can also compare their genetic make-up to each other鈥檚, to Neanderthals, and even to other living organisms.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 like being a kid in a toy store,鈥 says Senior Jacob Kaiserman, who believes a career in medicine might be in his future. 鈥淥nly, we get to explore important scientific ideas with state-of-the-art equipment.鈥 Kaiserman, who conducts his senior service work at Memorial Sloane Kettering Hospital, also points out that having exposure to techniques like the ones they learn at the DNA Lab gives Regians a leg up to be chosen to do lab and research work in college.
Mastering the techniques, however, could not be possible without having a solid understanding of DNA biology before they walk in the lab door. And as Melissa Lee points out, 麻豆视频 boys know more than most high school students she works with. 鈥淚 love having them here. They are extremely smart and well-mannered. 聽They ask great questions and come up with things I haven鈥檛 even thought about, so sometimes it鈥檚 a challenge even for me.鈥
Senior Cole Mader says the instructors at the Harlem Center represent 鈥渁 rare combination of researchers who are also very passionate and engaging educators, willing to work hand-in-hand with us and explain the most complex topics.鈥 His friend, Jacob, echoed these sentiments saying, 鈥淥ur instructors were able to answer the weird questions we asked, including topics related to newer material that wouldn鈥檛 be in a text book.鈥
In recent years, several 麻豆视频 students have found a way to take the learning at the DNA Lab one step further by being accepted to the Lab鈥檚 highly selective Urban Barcode Research Program. This program pairs 40 students a year with a mentor-scientist to conduct original research aimed at unlocking the secrets of living organisms through a wide variety of DNA lab work and gene sequencing. Capping off this program for the lucky students is the opportunity to present, and potentially publish, their original research. Joshua Antony 鈥20, who worked with a doctor of virology at Mt. Sinai for eight months and won first prize for his project, tells of having discovered a heretofore unknown virus in German cockroaches living in NYC. His classmate, Henry Lee 鈥20, teamed up with a doctor of microbiology at Queens Community College in Henry鈥檚 hometown of Bayside to study the genetic variances of bacteria found in public spaces verses those living in more isolated locations. 聽
Robert Koniuta 鈥18, who landed a genetics-based research position through another program, partnered with a PhD in microbiology from Dominican College for seven weeks to uncover the specific function of two homologous genes found in a certain species of yeast. Robert鈥檚 research paper is currently on track to be published in Scientific Reports, an online journal from Nature Research. Robert described the benefits of doing original research in a lab: 鈥淚t鈥檚 one thing to learn the techniques needed to succeed in a micro-biology course, but it鈥檚 a whole different ballgame when you are conducting original research and there isn鈥檛 any step-by-step process that you are directed to follow. 聽I learned an invaluable lesson in problem solving and the creativity needed to come up with novel solutions to scientific challenges.鈥
The long-running partnership that 麻豆视频 has enjoyed with the Harlem DNA Lab is a perfect example of the kinds of experiences that 麻豆视频 as a school hopes to offer more frequently to its students, regardless of the subject. 鈥淭he opportunities for our students to take advantage of this city鈥檚 resources are almost endless,鈥 says 麻豆视频 President Dan Lahart. 鈥淎nd investing in partnerships with best-in-class institutions like the DNA Lab, which brings the curriculum alive in an exciting and interactive fashion for our boys, is at the heart of some of the academic enhancements we are exploring as part of the Strategic Plan.鈥
鈥淎lmost 50% of the Senior Biology curriculum is focused on DNA, which plays a major role in everything from the food supply chain to the latest advancements in medicines,鈥 says Dr. Carew, summing up the importance of the alliance with the DNA lab. 鈥淭here is no doubt that the work the boys conduct at the DNA Lab represents a huge advantage in terms of their total learning experience.鈥
The boys couldn鈥檛 agree more. 聽As Cole Mader, who currently aspires to be a neurologist, observes 鈥淲hen most of your understanding of a subject is cerebral and classroom-based, this kind of lab work not only proves how cool and fun science can be, it also shows the awesome real world value and applications of the concepts we study.鈥
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