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April 10, 2026
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"We also have requests for samples from international biobanks."
"These technological developments allow us to be more efficient and attractive, even for young scientists."
"Last year we welcomed 284 trainees, including thirty doctoral students."
"These young researchers come not only from Côte d'Ivoire, but also from France, Canada, the United States, as well as from other countries in Africa."
"We have achieved some of our dreams to advance science in Africa."
"It is an example that things can change from the inside in Africa."
"Projects to build the biobank and the platform on high-risk pathogens have been financed to the tune of 8 billion CFA francs by the Ivorian government."
"We had 70 suspect patients but fortunately no confirmed cases."
"We were convinced that these projects were important and achievable here."
"More than 11,000 deaths. "Neighboring countries have been hit hard."
"I was an undergraduate, I was looking for a job on campus and saw an advertisement for an undergraduate assistant in the lab."
"I popped into her office very naively; I had no concept of what an interview was at this stage, and she took a chance on me, probably because I was very enthusiastic and told her I could start in the lab right away."
"I gained my first proper lab experience, doing bacterial cultures and minipreps to isolate bacterial DNA."
"At the time, my dad wanted me to be a medical doctor, but Dr Eichenbaum jokingly said that I would waste my brain in medical school and that she would make me a scientist"
"She really believed in me, which I am really grateful for."
"I would say that the transition was not too bad for me at first."
"I was quite lucky because when I was a postdoc."
"I was doing some teaching and working in the lab, back and forth between the two, so I already had experience in balancing research with teaching."
"The hardest part was doing all the things behind the scenes that you don't know about, all the paperwork."
"I remember when I first saw my lab space, and that feeling of excitement and dread simultaneously."
"I had been in labs that were pretty established."
"I started thinking ‘I'm going to have to pay for all these things’."
"I did have a startup package, but as East Bay is a teaching institution, it wasn't as high as you would expect compared to research-intensive institutions."
"I was teaching three courses, one of which I had to develop for 140 students."
"It was quite daunting; I was also sitting on departmental and college committees, advising student clubs, writing grants, mentoring students in the lab."
"As I became more established, I had more people in my lab to look after, more students to teach and more grants to write."
"It is learning to balance these responsibilities that is the biggest challenge, but it's what you need to do to be an effective teacher."
"The main question of my research program is ‘how does Toxoplasma initiate infection in a new host."
"Part of that is asking ‘what are the molecular mechanisms that the parasite uses to interact with the gastrointestinal tract."
"Toxoplasma can infect orally using two forms, the product of sexual reproduction (the oocyst) that eventually sporulate to produce infectious sporozoites."
"I am focusing on bradyzoites because sporozoites are highly infectious."
"With bradyzoites, we can look at them in vitro and in mice and they can be easily deactivated."
"We are tackling this main question from several different angles."
"By trying to identify novel virulence determinants that are required specifically for that first stage of infection."
"We want to understand how Toxoplasma goes from a metabolically fast form (tachyzoite, during the acute phase of infection) where it divides rapidly, to a ‘slow’ form (bradyzoite) that divides slowly and is present during chronic infection."
"During this lifecycle, Toxoplasma also undergoes transcriptional changes."
"I am also looking at the transcriptional regulation in the parasite and how this affects its metabolism and virulence."
"I am collaborating with Professor Scott Roy at San Francisco State, an evolutionary biologist, who is interested in alternative splicing, and he is trying to find unique splicing features of Toxoplasma."
"Another feature of Toxoplasma is the presence of specialized secretory organelles (micronemes, rhoptries and dense granules) found in the apical complex."
"How proteins are trafficked to these organelles is not known, and is something we also hope to uncover."
"We have become interested in understanding the interactions of Toxoplasma with mucus."
"When you ingest Toxoplasma, it has to get through the microbiota, cross the mucous layer, get to the epithelium, cross the epithelium, find its way into the blood."
"I never really paused and thought about the impact of mucus on that initial infection until I taught immunology."
"I'm interested in looking at the interaction of Toxoplasma with goblet cells."
"We just started this project, which I am very excited about."
"I am not very focused and have lots of questions, but I now have teams of undergraduate students working on each of these questions."
"Being at an undergraduate institution, I don't see my science as ‘I need to get data."
"I need to publish’ but more as an extension of my teaching."
"In a way the techniques we use are a bit more basic and the students need to learn how to perform them."
"If we need to make some knockout lines, I have to teach them about bacterial growth, aseptic technique, PCR, gel electrophoresis, CRISPR-Cas9."