Team Effort: Five 51³Ō¹Ļians Co-Author Paper on the Zebrafish Liver
Anika Jane Beamer ā22
Itās a big deal when an undergraduate student is the primary author of a research publication. Thatās why Pascal Lafontant, professor of biology, is proud to have his name listed after not one, but four, 51³Ō¹Ļ alums on a paper recently published in Zebrafish.
With Lafontant and his collaborator at Massachusetts General Hospital, Juan Manuel GonzĆ”lez-Rosa (now at Boston College), Hayden Bhavsar ā24, Zoe Robinson ā23, Matthew Benson ā22, and Feven Getachew ā24 co-authored the paper presenting new molecular tools for other scientists studying liver development and regeneration.
What began as a summer side project in 2020 grew into a yearslong collaborative study in the Lafontant laboratory. Now, in āLectins as Effective Tools in the Study of the Biliary Network and the Parenchymal Architecture of the Zebrafish (Danio rerio) Liver,ā these 51³Ō¹Ļ scientists are sharing their findings.
The Wide World of Zebrafish
When Lafontant first joined the faculty at 51³Ō¹Ļ, he didnāt just bring a new area of expertise as a regenerative biologist. He also introduced a new model organism to the department: zebrafish. At the time, a storage room in the Noyce Science Center was converted into an aquatic lab to house his hundreds of fish. The small, translucent larvae and colorful adults share many genes with humans, making them a powerful model for studying development and disease.
These days, the storage room-turned-lab sees a lot of foot traffic. Lafontant mentors nearly 10 students each year in cellular and developmental research with zebrafish. While his primary focus is heart degeneration and heart development, heās always encouraged his students to pursue the questions that interest them. āThis kind of openness has led to all sorts of projects,ā says Lafontant. āWeāve asked questions related to limb development, neuron development, and, most recently with Hayden, the zebrafish liver.ā
Bhavsar conducted a Mentored Advanced Project (MAP) student in the Lafontant laboratory between his first and second years. āWe were balancing all these different projects, and I was especially interested in this new side project with lectins and the liver,ā Bhavsar recalls. He would go on to work on that little āside projectā for the next three years.
Follow Your Heart (or Liver)
With Lafontant, Bhavsarās goal was to identify what ā if any ā lectin proteins might be useful for labeling tissues in the zebrafish liver and its adjoining ducts.
What are lectins? Theyāre a class of proteins that bind only to specific carbohydrates. There are many lectins in nature ā the Lafontant laboratory worked with tomato lectin and wheat germ lectin, for example. Because these naturally sourced proteins bind so precisely to only certain types of carbohydrates, they can also be a helpful laboratory tool.
About a decade ago, Lafontant and his students studied whether certain lectins might be useful in identifying types of zebrafish heart tissue. That project led to the development of better techniques for other researchers working with the zebrafish heart.
In 2020, Lafontantās colleagues at Massachusetts General Hospital reached out to ask him to explore lectins again ā this time, in the zebrafish liver. When Lafontant brought the project idea to his MAP students, Bhavsar was all in. āIt was very different work than what we had been doing in the lab,ā Bhavsar reflects. āAnd generally, in zebrafish, the heart is more studied than the liver, so this seemed like an area where we could make some real contributions.ā
A Collaborative Effort
Bhavsar continued his liver research with Lafontant the following academic year, and as other students joined the laboratory, the lectin project grew into a team effort. āThatās just how Professor Lafontantās laboratory is set up,ā explains Bhavsar. āItās very collaborative. Weāre constantly helping each other out with our projects.ā
Which is how Getachew found herself taking a break from research with the zebrafish pectoral fin to help Bhavsar capture images of fluorescent tomato lectins binding inside zebrafish bile ducts. Of the 12 plant-based lectins that the team had tested for affinity to liver tissues, tomato lectin was the most promising.
Soon, Bhavsar and Getachew began to shape their findings into a paper. The writing process was simultaneously difficult and gratifying. As the team drafted the paper, it was often necessary to run further experiments or gather additional snippets of data to support their findings. āWhat we do in the lab is so much fun, but if you canāt take the data and make it presentable, it doesnāt mean much,ā Getachew explains.
āA Welcome Challengeā
Students in the Lafontant laboratory spent nearly a year procuring the additional data and thinking proactively about what information reviewers of the paper might look for. āAnticipating the kinds of question that reviewers might ask, understanding who your audience is, trying to get at all of that early on ā it was a challenge,ā Getachew says. āBut it was a welcome challenge.ā
āIt is an amazing opportunity that we got to go through the paper review process as an undergraduate. Thatās an experience that lab reports and coursework canāt quite capture,ā Bhavsar adds.
Robinson and Benson completed MAPs in Lafontantās lab and contributed experiments to the project but graduated prior to the paperās publication. Robinson is currently pursuing her Master of Public Health degree at George Washington University, and Benson is in medical school at the University of Michigan. For Bhavsar and Getachew, who graduated from 51³Ō¹Ļ this spring, the paperās publication is the perfect finale to their years of research with Lafontant.
Bhavsar begins his training as a Ph.D. student at the University of Washington this fall, while Getachew will be working in an immunology lab at Boston Childrenās Hospital. Both say that Lafontant has set their expectations of mentors exceedingly high. āItās kind of scary to move to a different place and have a different mentor,ā says Getachew. āI hope to work with someone who is half as good as Professor Lafontant.ā
