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| Giselle Sylvester and Dr. Kelly Bidle |
Giselle Sylvester, a junior biochemistry
major at Rider University, has won a competitive Microbiology
Undergraduate Research Fellowship that includes a $3,500 stipend
for summer research.
The fellowship, which targets minority students who have strong
potential for a post-baccalaureate career in research, is very
competitive and only about 20 percent of applications are approved
for funding.
“I am extremely excited about winning this fellowship,”
Sylvester said. “It's a great feeling to see my hard work
pay off in some way, a great feeling of accomplishment.”
Sylvester has assisted Dr. Kelly Bidle, an assistant
professor of biology, with her research for a year and a half.
A resident of Christiansted in the Virgin Islands, Sylvester
emphasized how much she liked working with Bidle. “The research
I am working on with Dr. Bidle involves the reaction of certain
bacteria to particular cancer drugs,” she said. “Working
with Dr. Bidle is really fun and laid back. She is a great person
and professor.”
Sylvester’s fellowship is to do research for ten weeks
in the summer. She will receive a $3,500 stipend for her work,
as well as some funds from Rider’s Marvin Talmadge Fellowship
Fund. Marvin Talmadge was a long-time biology faculty member and
microbiologist at Rider who retired in 1991. Following his passing
in 2001, his daughter, Mary Talmadge-Grebenar, donated $10,000
in her father’s name as fellowship money to award students
interested in microbiology.
“Giselle will examine the effect of chemotherapeutic drugs
on enteric bacteria,” said Dr. Bidle. “Enteric bacteria
are the bacteria naturally found in your guts and intestines.”
Sylvester’s work with Dr. Bidle will continue beyond this
summer and carry on throughout her senior year.
“We are doing this work in collaboration with Jonathan
Karp (associate professor of biology). His area of expertise
and research focuses on the effects of chemotherapeutic drugs
on the immune system and health,” explained Dr. Bidle. “We
want to add in the component about how they are affecting your
gut bacteria because that will also affect your immune system
and health.
“We are taking the micro angle to look at this topic,”
said Dr. Bidle. “The idea is that Dr. Karp will take our
findings and apply them to his models on the effects of drugs.”
After graduation in May 2007, Sylvester plans to attend graduate
school for biomedical engineering.