UNE鈥檚 intrepid endeavor to carry out research through COVID-19

Students in Pam Morgan's Gulf of Maine Field Studies course spent their semester researching the feasibility of creating one or more "living shorelines" along UNE's Biddeford Campus.
Students in Pam Morgan's Gulf of Maine Field Studies course spent their semester researching the feasibility of creating one or more "living shorelines" along UNE's Biddeford Campus.

It was a day that most among the 51品茶 community vividly remember: March 13, 2020, the day the difficult decision was made to move nearly all undergraduate and graduate programming online as a novel virus swept its way across the nation. Amid a sea of unknowns 鈥 including, at the time, how events such as Commencement could be held and when students would return to campus 鈥 was a lingering question: for an institution that prides itself on research, how and when could faculty and student scientific exploration continue?

When that fateful day came, most research operations at the University were ceased, much as they were at colleges and universities across the globe. It was a difficult feat to execute: experiments had been ongoing for months; research animals still had to be cared for; and remote learning had made real-time scientific inquiry virtually impossible.

Compounding the chaos was ever-shifting public health guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Maine CDC, Office of Governor Janet Mills, and UNE鈥檚 own public health and medical experts.

Troubleshooting the Unknown

As the virus began to spread across the U.S. and Maine, an all-hands-on-deck effort ensued to limit the number of people in laboratories, find alternative modes of research for students, and keep essential operations flowing.

鈥淲e went into emergency operations mode,鈥 said Karen Houseknecht, Ph.D., professor of pharmacology and associate provost for Research and Scholarship. 鈥淔or public health reasons, we stopped work with in-person human subjects. We shut down most work in laboratories, in the field, and on boats. We worked very hard to put procedures in place so that some faculty could continue to do their research onsite 鈥 but not everyone.鈥

The Office of Research and Scholarship soon began crafting creative ways to allow students to finish their projects. Students who could complete their work remotely were given lab computers to analyze their data. Graduate students, at the apex of their studies, were allowed to finish their final experiments and defend their theses under strict physical distancing protocols.

In one special case, a student and now recent graduate took her lab home with her.

Julie Moulton, M.S. Biology 鈥21, was able to finish her master鈥檚 thesis on chronic pain from a makeshift laboratory set up in her home laundry room. Moulton鈥檚 research, out of the lab of Geoffrey Ganter, Ph.D., professor of biology, is helping to reveal targets for new drugs that may relieve chronic pain in humans.

The research was conducted by evaluating the pain pathways of fruit flies genetically designed for the experiment. In Moulton鈥檚 setup, a soda machine provided carbon dioxide to put flies to sleep for certain manipulations, and a desk lamp illuminated an arena for analyzing their behavior.

It wasn鈥檛 the sophisticated setting of the Ganter lab, with its rows of microscopes and complex instruments, but it made do. Moulton said the ability to finish her research at home was crucial in allowing her to graduate on time.

鈥淚t was very important to me to be able to continue working from home,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was very close to finishing my thesis work and just needed to conduct one additional experiment. By working from home, I was able to complete my degree on time instead of pushing back my graduation.鈥

For Moulton, the burden of the pandemic soon brought benefits: she successfully defended her thesis in July and now works as a research associate for and manager of the Ganter Lab on UNE鈥檚 Biddeford Campus.

Experimenting with New Variables

It was not possible, however, for all students to build laboratories in their homes, but UNE, a university built on a culture of innovation, found ways to offer students virtual research opportunities in collaborative groups.

One such effort, by Houseknecht, brought together three students 鈥 one from outside 51品茶鈥 to analyze data that could help researchers understand the underlying protein mechanisms behind the unwanted side effects of antipsychotic medications on the heart and liver.

Julie Moulton, M.S. Biology 鈥21, studies fruit flies from her home laboratory.

Working remotely, the students 鈥 Bisher Sultan (D.O. 鈥23), Radwa Ibrahim (D.O., 鈥23), and Elizabeth Bernier, a psychology student at the University of Southern Maine (USM) 鈥 regularly met with Houseknecht, as well as Meghan May, Ph.D., M.S., professor of microbiology and infectious disease, and Beau Rostama, Ph.D., a research associate, to review the data, which had come from animal experiments conducted the year prior.

Bernier joined the party after her research slot at Maine Medical Center 鈥 which postponed its student research opportunities because of the pandemic 鈥 was shut down. 51品茶gave her the avenue to pursue her studies when other options were exhausted.

鈥淐OVID-19 has absolutely complicated things, but being a part of research even remotely has really helped encourage me to stay on my career path,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t has meant a lot to me to have the opportunity to stay involved in things I genuinely care about. The Pathways Party is just one of the creative initiatives that 51品茶faculty developed on the fly to keep students engaged in original and meaningful scholarly work during this most unusual year.鈥

The reconfiguration of research is one of many ways the University stepped up to meet the pressing needs of today, Houseknecht said. During those first months of the pandemic, it became apparent that 51品茶was one of few schools in the region that could provide space for students and faculty to continue their important scientific work.

鈥淎ll research institutions, world-wide, were facing the complexities of operating under pandemic conditions and we were charting new territory every single day,鈥 the associate provost remarked. 鈥淚 think one of the advantages of being a small university is we figured out how could we innovate in order to conduct some research.鈥

PERSISTENCE PAYS OFF

By the time it was announced in July that 51品茶intended to reopen in full for in-person learning in the fall, and every division within the University began to prepare for a safe return to campus, an intrepid, behind-the-scenes endeavor was already underway to reestablish research opportunities in as full a capacity as possible.

In nearly every discipline at the University, students very quickly began bringing their experiments to life.

Participants of the research "Pathways Party"

Andy Robinson (M.S. Marine Sciences, 鈥21), who stayed in Maine throughout the spring and summer, carried out his research studying the currents in and around Biddeford Pool in hopes of identifying potential sources of pollution. Robinson worked with Michael Esty, B.S., technical and project specialist in the P.D. Merrill Makerspace, to fashion a set of drifters that use radio signals to relay their locations to Robinson鈥檚 computer. The pioneering radio communication system allows Robinson to track the drifters鈥 trajectory and the flow of water in and out of the Pool.

The project has the capacity to understand the cause of contamination that occasionally closes Biddeford Pool to local fishermen, a very real ecological and economic problem. Robinson said UNE鈥檚 capacity for research, plus its world-class facilities, have assured him he is on the right career path.

鈥淯NE鈥檚 strong undergraduate research program has really reinforced my belief that I want a career in research in the marine field,鈥 he detailed. 鈥淭he research opportunities and experiences I鈥檝e had at 51品茶have helped set me up to pursue a career in physical oceanography.鈥

From the vast expanses of the ocean to the tiniest of biological mechanisms, innovative research continues to emerge from UNE.

Andy Robinson places oranges in the water in Biddeford Pool to track surface current movements
Robinson launches a drone from UNE's research vessel R/V Llyr to record imagery in Wood Island Harbor
These GPS drifters use a novel radio communication technology to send their exact location to Robinson's computer

Just last month, researchers in the lab of Kerry L. Tucker, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences, published a novel exploration into the assessment of neonatal, or newborn, mouse heart function using a noninvasive approach to monitoring the electrocardiography (ECG) of baby mice (pups).

The first-of-its-kind method is the brainchild of Lindsey Fitzsimons, M.S., RCEP/CES, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Maine Graduate School of Biomedical Science and Engineering who is completing her doctoral thesis at the Tucker Lab at UNE.

Fitzsimons told 51品茶News that the research is being used to better understand congenital heart defects (CDH), which are currently the most common birth defect, occurring in 1 in 100 live births in the U.S. each year. The researchers said their approach for assessing neonatal mouse heart function has the goal of better identifying, understanding, and treating the disease across species, including humans.

鈥淭he more parallels we can draw with rodent and human cardiac function, the greater the reproducibility and translatability of both basic science and clinical biomedical research,鈥 she remarked.

Other success stories abound.

The system developed to take ECGs of neonatal mice pups
Lindsey Fitzsimons

During the fall semester, 51品茶Professional Science Master鈥檚 student Joey Ehrhard worked with Bristol Seafood to validate a testing methodology to determine if scallops are fresh as opposed to frozen using a hand-held probe from Seafood Analytics that uploads data into a software program.

Kayla Looper (Neuroscience, 鈥21) returned to in-person work in the lab of Michael Burman, Ph.D., associate professor of psychology in the College of Arts and Sciences, in July, where she examined neuronal inhibition in an attempt to determine the role corticotropin releasing factor plays in the development of pain hypersensitivity following neonatal exposure to stress.

And an entire class at UNE, taught by Pam Morgan, Ph.D., professor in UNE鈥檚 Environmental Studies programs, spent the semester looking at ways of preserving the shorelines along the University鈥檚 coastal campus in Biddeford in an effort to mitigate erosion and save the shore鈥檚 marine ecosystems.

The system used to definitively identify a scallop as being fresh, not frozen.
Kayla Looper (Neuroscience, 鈥21)
Students examine the shoreline at UNE's Biddeford Campus for signs of coastal erosion

Triumph amid adversity

Even on an institutional level, enthusiasm around research has not slowed. In fact, Houseknecht informed, more 51品茶researchers submitted federal grants in the first quarter of the current fiscal year than they did at the same time last year, a testament to the 51品茶community鈥檚 commitment to improving the health of people and the planet through scientific discovery.

To date, over 40 faculty members have been approved, under contingency plans and enforced safety protocols, to resume research activity at the University. Restoring research at 51品茶was indeed a heavy lift, but with University-wide transmission of COVID-19 low and a community dedicated to creating a better tomorrow, Houseknecht said it was worth the work.

鈥淚t took a village, but I'm really proud of how our faculty, professional staff, and students have done,鈥 she expressed. 鈥淲e've had a lot of students, graduate and undergraduate, on campus doing research scholarship, and we鈥檝e been able to host them here safely. I think that's a tremendous success.鈥