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When Steve Matheson
was applying to Calvin College for a job as biology professor his post-doctoral
advisor at Harvard Medical School thought the school's location in Grand
Rapids rang a bell.
"So he looked
in his datebook," says Matheson, "and he says: 'Art Alberts
is in Grand Rapids. He's at the VanAndel (Research Institute).' Which
got me excited because Alberts and my advisor are good friends. And
Art and I study the same protein. I figured if I was fortunate enought
to get the job at Calvin I'd be able to work with Art too."
As it turned out
Matheson did get the job at Calvin. And the first summer he was in town
he and two Calvin students spent 10 weeks conducting experiments with
Alberts at the VanAndel Research Institute.
Now the collaboration
is bearing further fruit. Matheson has just received a grant of $189,470
to continue his research on nerve cells, specifically the actions of
signaling proteins called diaphanous-related formins, or DRFs. The grant
comes from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
under the auspices of the Department of Health and Human Services.
DRFs are part of
Matheson's research on spinal cord injury - "think Christopher
Reeve," he says.
One of the key
research challenges right now as far as spinal cord injury is figuring
out if it's possible to get nerve cells to regrow. Matheson calls this
the holy grail of spinal cord research. DRFs, he says, are an unknown
in the whole nerve cell regeneration process.
"We do know,"
he says, "that Rho proteins are involved in nerve cell development.
And that Rho proteins turn on DRFs. But we know essentially nothing
about the roles of DRFs in the nervous system, at any stage of development.
The question is could they play a role in the regrowth of damaged nerve
cells. Nobody knows. We're hoping that our research will yield some
answers."
Most of the work
will take place at Calvin, where, Matheson says, the new DeVries Hall
make scientific research a pleasure. Indeed Matheson will make good
use of Calvin's new flow cytometer, a specialized instrument usually
found in hospitals, research labs and large, graduate-level universities,
that Calvin installed last fall thanks to a $225,000 National Science
Foundation grant. And some experiments will take place at Van Andel
Research Institute.
Matheson also anticipates
using two parttime students each school year and two fulltime student
assistants every summer, using the grant monies to pay their salaries.
He says the quality of Calvin's students makes using student help a
no-brainer.
"Our top students,"
he says, "compare to the top students at any college in the country.
The VanAndel Research Institute can't get enough of them. For me to
have their assistance is an easy decision."
Matheson has a
Ph.D. in neuroscience from the University of Arizona and hopes that
he is able to convey to his students the same excitement he felt the
first time he took a course on the human brain some two decades ago.
"The brain
still has a sort of frontier feel about it," he says. "There
is so ridiculously much about it we don't understand. In my research
I'm playing with cells and how they work and somehow it all adds up
to a brain that can move muscles and have conversations and do all kinds
of amazing things. It's exhilirating.
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