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Virus Expert Carol Teschke Awarded Fulbright Scholarship to Study in the UK
Li’s team has computationally modeled nanoparticles that can be manipulated with a magnetic field. In a 2018 paper in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, they showed that even a small amount of magnetic force could nudge the nanoparticles out of the blood flow, leading to a far greater number of particles reaching the right destination.
Li’s work is powered by the Frontera supercomputer at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC), the ninth fastest in the world. Li was an early user of the system when it launched in 2019, and has used Frontera continuously “We’re building high-fidelity computational models on Frontera to understand the transport behavior of nanoparticles and nanoworms to see how they circulate in blood flow,” Li said. His largest models are more than 1,000 micrometers long and include thousands of red blood cells, totaling billions of independent ways that the system can move.
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“Advanced cyberinfrastructure resources, such as Frontera, enable researchers to experiment with novel frameworks and build innovative models that, in this example, help us understand the human circulatory system in a new way,” said Manish Parashar, Director of the NSF Office for Advanced Cyberinfrastructure.
Frontera allows Li not only to run computational experiments, but also to develop a new computational framework that combines fluid dynamics and molecular dynamics.
Virus Expert Carolyn Teschke Awarded Fulbright Scholarship to Study in the UK
from UConn Today
Carolyn Teschke, professor and department head of molecular and cell biology at UConn, has been awarded a Fulbright Scholar Award to study virus assembly and evolution at the University of York, in the United Kingdom.
Teschke applied for the scholarship after talking with colleagues at the University of York for months about a collaborative project working on the process of virus assembly. The Fulbright, which is awarded by the U.S. State Department and international sponsors, will allow her to conduct research in the U.K. for four months.
“I am so pleased and excited to receive this prestigious award to study in the U.K.,” says Teschke. “My hosts at the University of York, Professors Riedun Twarock, a mathematician who studies virus architecture, and Fred Antson, who studies large bacteriophages, will work with me to mathematically model how viruses assemble using experimental data generated in my lab.”
Teschke’s research focuses on understanding how a virus puts itself together inside an infected cell. Using a model system of bacteriophage P22, a well-known type of virus that infects bacteria, Teschke’s lab group models how a herpes virus would attack, assemble, and replicate inside a human cell.
“Rather than studying a herpes virus, growing cell cultures and risking getting infected, we use this simple model system,” Teschke says. “If we understand how our model system works, hopefully that information will assist scientists that study herpes viruses and help them develop antivirals.”
An antiviral for the herpes virus might prevent it from replicating once it attacks a cell, thus reducing the chances of someone getting sick.
Teschke hopes to use her lab’s data and Twarock’s mathematics expertise in the geometry of virus capsids, or its outer protein-based shell, to understand on a more detailed level how the different proteins of P22 assemble.
“It’s almost like a dance, the way the virus proteins have to come together in a specific order, with a particular affinity, or tightness, to make the capsid,” Teschke says. “If we have an idea how tight the interaction between the proteins must be, we can make an antiviral that interrupts that process in the early stages.” By collaborating with Antson, Teschke hopes to understand how a virus evolves to grow bigger over time, and whether she can change the proteins in her model virus to become bigger, like the ones Antson works with. This would help her understand the process of virus evolution, where a virus accumulates mutations that affect the viral capsid geometry.
Dr. Carolyn Teschke