How One Tweet of Encouragement Can Impact a Career
Cara August, Trinity Communications
Duke postdoc Lauren Green wasn’t expecting to make a revolutionary brain cell discovery as a second-year graduate student. But that’s exactly what happened.
“I was really considering leaving science,” Green said.
It wasn’t that Green wanted to quit, but she was plagued by self-doubt, experiencing a common stage for many budding scientists working toward their Ph.D. She felt overwhelmed: greatly invested in her research, TAing, completing qualifying exams, and constantly questioning if she was good enough.
“In science, you get a ton of negative data from your research,” Green said. “There’s a lot more failures than there are wins.”
But a big win did come. In the form of a zebrafish and a tweet.
As a graduate student at Notre Dame University, Green studied zebrafish, an important non-mammal species commonly used in scientific research because of their similar genetic structure to humans and ability to experience equivalent diseases. Green was particularly interested in a very small part of these fish: microglia.
Microglia, also called glia, are a type of immune cell in the brain. They’re like tiny spiders hunting for debris, keeping the brain clean and healthy — but they reside only in the brain.
That was the science. Until Green’s research.
Green observed zebrafish glia day in and day out. She loved the work and was fascinated by the vibrant imagery. “You can actually see the cells move in real time,” she said. “I just love the science.”
Working in the lab of her Notre Dame mentor, Cody Smith, Green’s glia experiments mimicked injuries to the zebrafish. Her work was to monitor how the zebrafish cells responded to damage, in contrast to a normal, healthy state.
One day, as one microglia in the zebrafish was responding — bloop, it popped out of the brain.
It was a revelation.
Green immediately contacted Smith. “Is this normal?,” she asked.