In the Spotlight—Early career researcher

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q3 DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY Journal of experimental zoology. Part B, Molecular and developmental evolution Pub Date : 2022-10-06 DOI:10.1002/jez.b.23179
Felipe Aguilera
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Felipe Aguilera was a BECAS CHILE–CONICYT recipient in 2010 to conduct his PhD studies in Australia. He is the current President-elect of the International Society of Invertebrate Morphology (ISIM).

Felipe is an Editor of Biochemical Genetics and in 2022 has joined the Editorial Board of JEZ-B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution.

Google Scholar page: https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?user=fUYk__wAAAAJ

With whom and where did you study?

After finishing my Bachelor's in Marine Biology at the University of Valparaiso (Chile), I earned my PhD degree under the supervision of Bernie Degnan from the University of Queensland (Australia). After that, I stayed as a postdoc in Bernie's lab for almost 2 years then I moved to Norway for another postdoc with Andreas Hejnol at the Sars Centre.

What got you interested in biology? When did you know evodevo was for you?

I grew up in a coastal city in the Central region of Chile, and thus went to the beach quite often. I loved (and still do) walking on the beach and rocky places looking for anything and everything animal. I think this curiosity triggers my interest in biology and pursue me to follow a scientific career. During college, I got fascinated by biochemistry and genetics, and during my PhD I learned about evolution, molecular biology, and bioinformatics to understand how molecular repertoires change over time to construct different kinds of molluscan shells. With very little experience in developmental biology but strong skills in bioinformatics, my focus was first restricted to comparative genomics/transcriptomics, but this changed during my time in Bernie's lab where I had the chance of working and seeing marine embryos of mollusks, ascidians, and sponges, but more profoundly in Andi's lab, during which I got immersed in embryonic development of several marine groups and comparative approaches. From then on, my goal has been to combine developmental biology, evolution, and bioinformatics to answer EvoDevo questions, using comparative approaches and different marine model systems.

What is your experience with setting up and running an evodevo lab?

It was a big change coming from overseas to setting up a lab in Chile. The step of building up a lab and managing a whole team has been a huge leap, with mentoring being the most challenging part of the job. I started my lab in March 2018, and at that time I spent a considerable piece of time writing grants to secure lab funding. Once I got research funds, I did not realize that it was to be difficult to get students to join the lab; then I got students, but the COVID-19 pandemic arrived, and everything got worse. In that specific grant, I had to perform most of the experiments by myself due to COVID-19. Nowadays things are going smoother with secure lab funding and several students in the lab. Therefore, I am more focused on writing scientific papers based on results from the lab and providing meaningful training for students. Indeed, I now invest most of my time in caring deeply for my trainees and their success, but also in being thoughtful and committed to continually improving as a mentor.

What strategies do you use to promote your research beyond your institution, possibly receiving attention from outside of academia?

I try to be active on Twitter to reach a broader community. The account is mine, not a lab account, which is intentional because the lab is made by people and my thoughts do not necessarily represent them. I use Twitter (@faguilgen) to share not only about research papers and scientific conferences that I think are cool but also to let followers get to know the person behind the scientist.

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焦点报道:早期职业研究者
Felipe Aguilera于2010年获得BECAS CHILE-CONICYT奖学金,前往澳大利亚进行博士研究。他是国际无脊椎动物形态学学会(ISIM)的现任当选人。菲利普是生物化学遗传学的编辑,并于2022年加入了JEZ-B:分子和发育进化的编辑委员会。谷歌学者页面:https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?user=fUYk__wAAAAJWith你在哪里学习谁?在智利瓦尔帕莱索大学(University of Valparaiso)完成海洋生物学学士学位后,我在澳大利亚昆士兰大学(University of Queensland)的Bernie Degnan指导下获得了博士学位。在那之后,我在Bernie的实验室做了两年的博士后然后我搬到挪威和Andreas Hejnol一起在Sars中心做博士后。是什么让你对生物学感兴趣的?你什么时候知道evoldevo是为你准备的?我在智利中部的一个沿海城市长大,因此经常去海滩。我喜欢(现在仍然喜欢)在海滩和多岩石的地方散步,寻找任何动物。我认为这种好奇心激发了我对生物学的兴趣,并促使我走上科学的道路。在大学期间,我对生物化学和遗传学着迷,在我的博士学位期间,我学习了进化,分子生物学和生物信息学,以了解分子库如何随着时间的推移而变化,以构建不同种类的软体动物外壳。由于在发育生物学方面的经验很少,但在生物信息学方面有很强的技能,我的重点首先局限于比较基因组学/转录组学,但在伯尼的实验室期间,我有机会工作并看到软体动物,海鞘和海绵的海洋胚胎,但在安迪的实验室中,我更深刻地沉浸在几个海洋群体的胚胎发育和比较方法中。从那时起,我的目标就是结合发育生物学、进化论和生物信息学来回答EvoDevo的问题,使用比较方法和不同的海洋模型系统。你在建立和运营进化实验室方面有什么经验?从海外来到智利建立实验室是一个很大的变化。建立实验室和管理整个团队的步骤是一个巨大的飞跃,指导是工作中最具挑战性的部分。我于2018年3月成立了我的实验室,当时我花了相当多的时间来申请资助以获得实验室资金。当我有了研究经费,我没有意识到让学生加入实验室是很困难的;然后我有了学生,但新冠疫情来了,一切都变得更糟了。在那次拨款中,由于COVID-19,我不得不自己完成大部分实验。如今,随着实验室资金的稳定和几名学生的加入,事情变得更加顺利了。因此,我更专注于根据实验结果撰写科学论文,并为学生提供有意义的培训。事实上,我现在把大部分时间都投入到深切关心我的学员和他们的成功上,但作为一名导师,我也会考虑周到,并致力于不断提高自己。你用什么策略将你的研究推广到你的机构之外,可能得到学术界以外的关注?我试着在Twitter上活跃起来,以接触到更广泛的社区。这个账户是我的,不是实验室账户,这是故意的,因为实验室是人做的,我的想法不一定代表他们。我使用Twitter (@faguilgen)不仅分享我认为很酷的研究论文和科学会议,而且让关注者了解科学家背后的人。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
63
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Developmental Evolution is a branch of evolutionary biology that integrates evidence and concepts from developmental biology, phylogenetics, comparative morphology, evolutionary genetics and increasingly also genomics, systems biology as well as synthetic biology to gain an understanding of the structure and evolution of organisms. The Journal of Experimental Zoology -B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution provides a forum where these fields are invited to bring together their insights to further a synthetic understanding of evolution from the molecular through the organismic level. Contributions from all these branches of science are welcome to JEZB. We particularly encourage submissions that apply the tools of genomics, as well as systems and synthetic biology to developmental evolution. At this time the impact of these emerging fields on developmental evolution has not been explored to its fullest extent and for this reason we are eager to foster the relationship of systems and synthetic biology with devo evo.
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