2B Wednesday, November 28, 2012 The Statement -- THE JUNK DRAWER 0 0. ..\ Wednesday, November 282012 The Statement 7B In vivo: How do students in biomedical research adjust to animal experimentation? by Jacob Axierad from last week: sleep & ads When do you usually go to sleep? random student interview Sleep is for the weak 10% 3 a.m. or later 10% 1 a.m. to 3 a.m. 42.5% 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. 12.5% 11 p.m. to 1 a.m. 25% by kaitlin williams Welcome to the Random Student Interview, where we didn't have time to draw you any fucking pictures this week. So I've got a confession to make. This interview isn't really "ran- dom." (Laughs) It's true. Actually, I usually wait outside of the Union, and try to find someone who looks friendly enough to talk to me, but it's way too fucking cold for that. Yeah. So today I wandered the Union and found you sitting here looking friendly. It's totally profiling. Legit. So I see your doing some sort of biology work there. What do you 'want to go into? I'm pre-dental. I actually find out on Monday if I got in here. Cool. I hope you do, but it might be productive to talk about back- up plans. Let's start brainstorm- ing. For you? For both of us. Alright. So, what are you going to do if you don't get into dental school? I would probably get a research position for a year until I could reapply so at least it would look like I was doing something in the field. It's the illusion of doing some- thing? Right. Right. But that's boring. These back- Are you susceptible to ads? Yes, I love them! 33.3% Yes, but I hate that I am 66.7% Online comments Some of the commercials are ok, but most just aggravate me. It's espe- cially nice when I KNOW the commercials are going to be well-funded, well thought-out ones at that, like during the Super Bowl and Olympics. I just got the Hopper from DISH however, and you haven't LIVED until you've watched TV without commercials -matt, regarding "Why I love ads" up plans are fake because we're both obviously going to be wildly successful individuals so we can get creative. OK then. I'd go develop an alter- nate personality in Las Vegas. Wow, you're really going for it now.- I'd become a card counter and win millions of dollars and retire early. I feel like with a job like that, you'd need a nickname. What would your nickname be? I would go for ... The Electric Pussycat. That's so great. I think you should use that in dental school as well. You could be Dr. Electric Pussycat. Not that you need to go to dental school anymore. You know, I think I could buy enough teeth whitening treat- ments to be happy for life with the kind of money I'll be making, so you know what? I don't need to go. I think I could just start a ring of blackjack card counters. Would you have room for me? Yeah. But I'm not very good at math. I can't count cards. You could be our accountant. Yeah, accountants don't use numbers. I could be the journal- ist who throws the police off your tail by printing misinfor- mation about your operations. I'd pretend to be scoping you guys out, but really I'd be on your side, protecting you from the media and the law. Sounds perfect. I'd print an article that you moved to Atlantic City, but really you'd still be in Vegas, living under another alias. That's a great idea. Smoke and mirrors. Damn, that got out there. So ... let's talk about Christmas. Oh wait, should Ihave said "the holidays" or whatever? How do you feel about people saying "Happy Holidays?" As opposed to "Merry Christmas?" Yeah. Like I'm Jewish and I don't care. It's kind of like the same senti- ment if someone says, "I'm pray- ing for you." I don't believe in that, but if it's something that means something to you then it's a nice gesture. That's nice. I wish everybody had that idea. So anyway, on to more important stuff: presents. Yeah. What about them? I kind of feel like this might be my last year to get some good stuff. Yeah, well what I started doing was going to the mall and taking pictures of things I want and send- ing them to my parents. Subtle. Real subtle. Yeah. So I have a photo journal of my wish list this year. See I was thinking about just posting things on Facebook like "Man, I could really use some money or an iPod." Yeah. You should. Do it. Or just be less subtle like me and text it. With a name like The Electric Pussycat, I wouldn't expect any- thing less. -Lauren is an LSA senior. nside a large white box there is an oper- ant chamber, housing a rat with black and white hair. As the rat scurries, it looks this way and that, a tourist observing foreign surround- ings, oblivious to the adjacent monitor track- ing electrical signals that emanate from the tips of wires inserted into its brain. The monitor, known as a bank of amplifi- ers, enhances the sound of distinct neurons, each of which makes a crackling sound as it appears on screen. Researchers listen to these neurons to test algorithms in the rat's brain circuitry that are used, according to Joshua Berke, an associate professor of psychology and neuroscience, in the service of "decid- ing." Results aid in the understanding of the core neural circuitry that underlies human diseases and disorders such as Parkinson's disease, Obsessive-compul- sive Disorder, Tourette syndrome and drug addiction. These experiments are common for the Berke Lab. And at the University, which as of September spends $1.24 billion annu- ally on research, professors and students alike devote countless hours to laborato- ries scattered across campus, from East Hall to the Biomedical Science Research Building. Initial shock Yet, when many labs require live animal subjects, which can range from mice to dogs to rabbits, what is the adjustment process like for a student unaccustomed to working with animals, some of whom are killed by the end of an experiment? According to Berke, those who choose to work with animals are self-selecting. "I think everyone findsthat they enjoy and are comfortable with some kinds of experi- ments and that you don't want to do other kinds of experiments," Berke said. "People find their natural niche." Moreover, students are given full warn- ing about what they're getting into during the interview process, Berke said. He added that if a studentwas uncomfortable or unable to deal with animals, there are always other positions available in the lab. But no matter how mentally prepared you are, the first time you watch an animal die can be shocking. "You just kind of have to deal with it," said University alum Steven Kiss, who induced heart attacks in dogs and rabbits while work- ing in a cardiovascular pharmacology lab that tested new drugs for people with heart conditions. "Definitely the first few times were really surprising." In 2010, statistics from the United States Department of Agriculture showed that about 1.1 million animals were used in labora- tory settings, excluding animals such as rats, mice, birds and fisl that are not covered by the Animal Welfare Act, though these same statistics estimated that 25 million of such animals are used annually, comprising 95 percent of all animals used in U.S. research. Kiss's lab observed dogs and rabbits that had been given an oral medication. Some animals were given the drug for a seven-day period, while others for a 14-day period. The goal, Kiss said, is to determine how well a drug protects the animal from a heart attack, similar to how a person taking heart medi- said. Before students ever handle animals they are required to take a series of courses through the Unit for - Laboratory Animal Medicine to meet standards set by the Uni- versity Committee on Use and Care of Ani- mals and the Department of Occupational Safety & Environmental Health. While all students go through ULAM before beginning lab work, each lab has its own set of protocols it submits to ULAM for approval. As a result, ULAM can tailor its instructions to ensure that each student's training is animal-specific to his or her lab. For Kiss, this meant being trained with she has taken at the University. "It's always frightening coming from no experience and then having someone watch ' what you do," Buttigieg said. "But I think it's the best way to learn." Being ethical The University's Office of the Vice Presi- dent for Research states on its website that the University is "committed to the humane and ethical treatment of all animals used in research and training." Yet there are naysayers, notably the Peo- ple for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, which deems animal research unnecessary. On its website, PETA cites an article from The Journal of the American Medi- cal Association: "Patients and physicians should remain cautious about extrapolating the finding of prominent animal research to the care of human disease ... poor replication of even high-quality animal studies should be expected by those who conduct clinical research." Berke said this is not the case. "The reason why we're funded by the fed- eral government is because we're trying to understand how we can intervene to allevi- ate horrible diseases," he said. Furthermore, as Berke views it, animal treatment has only improved over the years since he started in research. "It's now increasingly standard to give even rats and mice enriched environments with toys to play with," he said. "Ten, 15 years ago, only monkeys might have gotten that." Kiss agreed. "(The animals) have 24-hour access to a vet," he said. "I would say three (to) five times a day someone's checking in on them. So they're living pretty well." For Rackham student Daniel Castro, who studies biopsychology in the Kent Berridge Lab and looks at mice and rats to understand aberrant motivational systems in the brain, ethical treatment is a form of giving back. "We want to make sure that the animals experience the least amount of suffering possible," Castro said. "We're using these animals to do research to help people and even to help animals. So we want them to have the best experience we can give them." Despite better conditions, many animal subjects have limited life spans. For new- comers to lab work, the transition process continues, each student overcoming his or her personal obstacles one test at a time. "It takes a while to get used to," said LSA senior Lily Zhang, who studies mice to learn how synapses in the brain are formed. "Actu- ally getting in and getting your hands in on it, it's another experience." cine might react. He explained the initial difficulty of see- ing an animal being put to death. "Some of the dogs are so nice," he said. "You'd be with them for two weeks and you'd have to walk them and play with them, and then on that fourteenth day it's like, damn.". Yet Kiss emphasized he never dwelt on this aspect. "You've got to understand that you're doing it for a good cause," he said. "It feels worth it." Animal training LSA senior Emily Buttigieg's hands were shaking the first time she dissected a mouse during her freshmanyear at the University. Her work in the Kalantry Lab examines chromosome X-inactivation in mice embry- os. Having learned from science textbooks all through high school, this skill was dif- ferent; it was hands-on and could only be learned through trial and error, Buttigieg canines and New Zealand white rabbits prior to starting lab work. "They go over how to handle the animal, ways to hold it ... who to call if there's a prob- lem," Kiss said. "They just go over every sin- gle situation you would need." For example, Buttigieg employs a tech-. nique known as cervical dislocation to remove mice embryos from the mother. "We can't use the (traditional) gas because that harms the embryos. So we use cervical dislocation, which is a little difficult to learn at first," she said. She noted, however, that she was fortunate tobe trained directly by Sundeep Kalantry, the lab's principal investigator. This close atten- tion made Buttigieg feel more comfortable with the experiments when first starting out, especially since she could have been trained by an overworked graduate student with little spare time to dedicate to undergraduates. She said Kalantry's careful guidance was key to her success in the lab, which she says has taught her more than any science class