91亚色传媒

Contest

Part 1: 鈥楢ha moments鈥 essay contest honorable mentions

Miguel A. Contreras Hidalgo Danielle Guarracino
By Miguel A. Contreras Hidalgo and Danielle Guarracino
May 6, 2021

To celebrate our three journals going open access, we invited readers to share their moments of discovery in science. Here are two honorable mentions.
 

Fringe inspiration

By Miguel A. Contreras Hidalgo

When I was a junior faculty member, my only break from research was to have dinner with my family and, from time to time, enjoy a science fiction TV show and then get back to the lab.

Black-mouse-445x308.jpg

Back in September 2008, I sat down to enjoy the second episode of a new show called "Fringe." The show follows the adventures of FBI agent Olivia Dunham (assigned to the bureau's Fringe Division); junior FBI agent and sidekick Astrid Farnsworth; fringe science researcher Dr. Walter Bishop; and his son, Peter.

In this particular episode, a pregnant woman delivers a newborn that ages rapidly in minutes and soon dies, having aged into an 80-year-old man. Olivia and her associates are called to investigate. Eventually, Dr. Bishop makes a connection to the pituitary gland, which controls growth in humans.

I literally jumped from the couch. For the past three years, I had been using the twitcher mouse model to study the molecular mechanism of Krabbe disease, an inherited lysosomal disorder in which galactosylsphingosine (psychosine) accumulates mainly in the central nervous system. The mouse recapitulates genetic and enzymatic aspects of the disease and is characterized by its small size. It has been a valuable tool to advance our understanding of the development/progression of the disease's inflammatory process in the CNS.

It never had occurred to me before to investigate the molecular mechanism by which the toxic accumulation of psychosine in peripheral organs was responsible for the until this moment — my aha moment — and to understand the pathobiological and translational consequences of psychosine accumulation outside the CNS.

(In memory of Maria Leticia Sanchez Ortiz, a teacher and a mentor.)

 

A life filled with aha moments

By Danielle Guarracino

A life dedicated to science is filled with aha moments. For me, a few noteworthy ones define my trajectory.

Guarracino-daughter-445x591.jpg
Danielle Guarracino
Danielle Guarracino's daughter enjoys an aha moment, discovering principles
of science first-hand.

In seventh grade, I had an inspirational female teacher who delved into biology with a memorable gusto. We did dissections, talked to marine biologists via satellite and had many hands-on activities. I remember one night, when studying, I realized that science offers an answer to every "why." My first aha.

Later, in high school, when I lost a close friend to what seemed like a medical mystery, I was empowered to want answers: in science, in medicine, in life.

Fast-forward through my doctoral program, where late-night incremental gains celebrated over a few hours of sleep and the whir of the laboratory instruments were punctuated with the aha of innovation.

Now I have been a professor for 10 years at a small college and am lucky to see aha moments for a living. Recently, a student, camera not on, stayed after our remote class in need of validation. When I assured her she understood a concept, she switched her camera on, doing a dance in excitement — the aha moment of a connection made.

As I bridge teaching remotely while caring for my toddler, I love introducing my daughter to science. One day we stabbed pencils through Ziploc bags filled with water, amazed they did not leak. When I asked her later about "science time," her face lit up as she remembered the pencils — her aha became mine, setting no age limits on science engagement.

Perhaps one of the most poignant aha moments in my career came to me unexpectedly this past summer. After muddling through several months of isolating at home, navigating issues with work and home life, I received an email from a former student who was about to start medical school after years in the service, including several tours in Afghanistan. He wrote to thank me for recommendation letters and for the materials from my class, which he was using to prepare for this new phase of life. I was humbled and proud to know I had played a small part in his path.

Some of us are heroes, but others get the unique opportunity to educate them. For me, that was the aha moment that speaks to me most and that I return to whenever I am in doubt of what I do and who I am.

Enjoy reading 91亚色传媒 Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition weekly.

Learn more
Miguel A. Contreras Hidalgo
Miguel A. Contreras Hidalgo

Miguel A. Contreras Hidalgo is a program officer at the National Institutes of Health. He earned his Ph.D. in molecular and cellular biology and pathobiology at the Medical University of South Carolina. This essay was prepared by the author in their personal capacity and does not reflect the view of the NIH.

Danielle Guarracino

Danielle Guarracino is a professor of chemistry at the College of New Jersey and a member of the 91亚色传媒 Today editorial advisory board.

Get the latest from 91亚色传媒 Today

Enter your email address, and we鈥檒l send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Opinions

Opinions highlights or most popular articles

Our top 10 articles of 2024
Editor's Note

Our top 10 articles of 2024

Dec. 25, 2024

91亚色传媒 Today posted more than 400 original articles this year. The ones that were most read covered research, society news, policy, mental health, careers and more.

From curiosity to conversation: My first science café
Essay

From curiosity to conversation: My first science café

Dec. 18, 2024

鈥淲hy was I so nervous? I鈥檇 spoken in hundreds of seminars and classes, in front of large audiences.鈥 But this was the first time Ed Eisenstein was explaining his research 鈥渢o a crowd of nonscientists relaxing over food and drink at a local tavern.鈥

鈥極ne word or less鈥
Essay

鈥極ne word or less鈥

Dec. 18, 2024

For a long time, Howard Steinman thought this phrase was a joke: 鈥淟ess than one word is no words, and you can't answer a question without words.鈥

Can we make grad school more welcoming for all?
Essay

Can we make grad school more welcoming for all?

Dec. 11, 2024

The students and faculty at most of the institutions training the next generation of STEM professionals do not reflect the country鈥檚 diversifying demographics, leaving a gap in experience and cultural understanding.

I am not a fake. I am authentically me
Essay

I am not a fake. I am authentically me

Dec. 5, 2024

Camellia Moses Okpodu explains why she believes the term 鈥渋mposter syndrome鈥 is inaccurate and should be replaced.

Where do we search for the fundamental stuff of life?
Essay

Where do we search for the fundamental stuff of life?

Dec. 1, 2024

Recent books by Thomas Cech and Sara Imari Walker offer two perspectives on where to look for the basic properties that define living things.