MBL Awards Whitman Center Fellowships to 29 Outstanding Investigators

The parasitic worm schistosoma mansoni imaged on a polarizing light microscope. S. mansoni is one of the many organisms that will be studied by the 2024 Whitman Fellows. Credit: MBL Biology of Parasitism Course and Michael Shribak

A diverse group of 29 scientists from 27 universities and research institutes worldwide have been named 2024Whitman Center Fellowsby the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL).These fellowshipsenable exceptional scientists, including Early Career Fellows, to conduct independent research at the ǧƵ and take advantage of its unique resources and highly collaborative scientific community.

Whitman Center Fellows are supported for up to 10 weeks to pursue research, particularly within these fields of strategic vision for MBL:

  • Evolutionary, genetic, and genomic approaches inregenerative and developmental biology, microbiomes, and neuroscience with an emphasis on marine organisms.
  • Integrated imaging and computational approachesto illuminate cellular function and biology emerging from the study of marine and other organisms.
  • Integrated approaches to the study ofmicrobial communities and marine organismsin coastal communities.
  • Research onglobal change and ecosystem ecologyincluding research that leverages the ǧƵ's Long-Term Ecological Research site at Plum Island, Massachusetts as well aslong-term study sites on Cape Cod.

“The Whitman Fellows are a talented and creative group of scientists and this year's cohort is no exception,” said Anne Sylvester, MBL director of research. “We look forward to welcoming this year's Fellows and can't wait to see how their research adds to the unique collaborative and innovative environment of MBL!”

The ǧƵ provides access to state-of-the-art instrumentation, innovative imaging technology and research, genome sequencing, marine and freshwater research organisms, and modern laboratory facilities. It also offers an exceptionally dynamic, interactive, and creative scientific environment. In addition to its resident research programs, the ǧƵ annually convenes hundreds of principal investigators, postdocs, graduate students, and research associates from around the world to participate in Whitman Center research, scientific discovery courses, lectures, and field studies.

This gallery shows just a few of the many organisms this year's Whitman Fellows will be researching.

Astrangia poculata credit: Loretta Roberson
Northern star coral (Astrangia poculata). Credit: Loretta Roberson
Hummingbird bobtail squid (Euprymna berryi).
Hummingbird bobtail squid (Euprymna berryi). Credit: Tim Briggs
Adult sea lamprey
Adult sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus). Credit: U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Zebrafish (Danio rerio) in a lab. Credit: Lynn Ketchum, OSU via CC license
Zebrafish (Danio rerio) in a lab. Credit: Lynn Ketchum, OSU via CC license
Clytia hemisphaerica,viewed from above. The round, transparent animal is about one centimeter across when fully mature, with a central mouth, and tentacles arranged uniformly around its outer edges like numbers on a clock. This jellyfish also has four oval-shaped gonads visible on its body.

Several of the 2024 Whitman Fellows are coming to the ǧƵ for the first time to launch a new project, while others will continue research programs they established in the Whitman Center in prior years. The fellows are:

Whitman Early Career Fellows

Teresa Attenborough, University of Glasgow
A Single Cell Atlas of the Cercaria, the Human-Infective Aquatic Larval Stage of Schistosoma mansoni

Kathryn Feller, Union College
Neurobiological Investigation of Loom-Responsive Descending Interneurons in the Control of Mantis Shrimp Ballistic Strikes

Takato Honda, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Investigation of Evolutionary Origin of Sleep States and State-Specific Neural Representations

Emily Junkins, University of California Santa Barbara
Evolution is Infectious: Phage Defense Mechanisms as a Driver of Diversification in Microbial Aggregates

James Lee, Rockerfeller University
Transgenic Analysis of the Novel, Arsenic-Resistant Nematode Tokorhabditis tufae

Duncan Leitch, University of California Los Angeles
Investigations of Sensory System Representation in the Midbrain

Heather Marlow, University of Chicago
Evolution of 3D Genome Folding Mechanisms and Gene Regulatory Strategies in Metazoans

Dragomir Milovanovic, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE)
Condensate Biology of Synaptic Vesicle Clusters in the Synaptic Boutons of Lamprey

Jacob Musser, Yale University
The Evolutionary Origin of Synaptic Transmission in Early Animals

Horst Obenhaus, Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience at Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)
Investigations of Active Sleep in Cuttlefish and Octopuses

Otakar Strunecky, University of South Bohemia
Unraveling the Significance of Plasmid-Coded Cyanobacterial Nitrogen Fixation in Oceans: A Focus on Pseudanabaenales

José Vargas-Muniz, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Identifying Marine Fungi-Bacterial Interactions and Developing Genetic Tools for Marine-Derived Yeasts

Jacob Warner, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Developing Astrangia poculata as a Novel Model Organism for Studying Evolution and Development of Hard Corals

Whitman Fellows

Michael Barresi, Smith College
Comparative Investigation of CNS Development Between Zebrafish and Pygmy Zebra Octopus

Mary Elting, North Carolina State University
Toward a Biophysical Understanding of Ultrafast Contraction by the Unicellular Ciiliate Spirostomum ambiguum

Loyal Goff, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Ultra-high Throughput Characterization of Cephalopod Brain Development at Single Cell Resolution

E.E. JUST FELLOW
Mandë Holford, The City University of New York (CUNY), Hunter College; American Museum of Natural History
Innervating Envenomation: Neuronal Control of Toxin Release in Cephalopods

Nicole King, University of California Berkeley
Darwin’s Origin of Species Viewed Through the Lens of Molecular and Cellular Biology

Peter Lenart, Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences
Translational Control of Oocyte Meiosis

Arthur Llobet, University of Barcelona
Use of Xenopus Tadpoles to Study the Role of Endolysosome Dynamics in Synaptic Remodeling

Emily Mace, Columbia University
Studying lymphocyte migration in 3D microenvironments using advanced and low phototoxicity imaging

NIKON FELLOW
Amy Maddox
, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Innovative Imaging of Cellular Dynamics

Jocelyn Malamy, University of Chicago
Abiotic and biotic signaling in the settlement of Clytia and Aurelia planula

Koenraad Martens, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences
Ostracods in a Changing World

Brian McDermott, Case Western Reserve University
The hair cell mechanotransduction apparatus of cephalopods

Tracy Quirk, Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College
Examining Salt Marsh Species Interactions and Vegetation Dynamics Across 50 years of Nutrient-Enrichment and Sea-level Rise

E.E. JUST FELLOW
Sally Seraphin, Trinity College
The Evolutionary Developmental (Evo-Devo) Neurobiology of Early Stress in Niche Shifting Red-Eyed Tree Frogs (Agalychnis callidryas) and Glass Frogs (Hyalinobatrachium fleischmanni)

Francois Spitz, University of Chicago
Evolution of vertebrate 3D genome regulatory architecture in cyclostomes chondrichthyes and osteichthyes after whole-genome duplications

Robert Zeller, San Diego State University
Generation of CRIPSR/Cas9 knockouts in Ascidian embryos

The Whitman Center awards are named after scientist Charles Otis Whitman, founding director of the ǧƵ in 1888 and later a faculty member at the University of Chicago.

Learn more about the Whitman Center