OTTAWA–It's not the long-sought cure for the common cold but a 17-year-old Ottawa high school student won a national science competition today by developing a novel way of identifying and perhaps even fighting flu infections.
Maria Merziotis, a Grade 12 student at Hillcrest High School, won a $5,000 first prize and a chance to take her discovery to an international competition in San Diego next month.
A team of three Toronto Grade 10 students, Jonathan Schneider, Josh Alman and Norman Yau from the University of Toronto School, won the $4,000 second prize for identifying genes that help a plant thrive in salty soil.
They will also go to San Diego.
Vandana Rawal, a 15-year-old from Montreal's Centennial Regional High School, won third place and $3,000 for discovering a human gene variation that may help in dealing with bipolar disorder.
Health Canada is already looking at Merziotis's work, which offers a new way of identifying, and perhaps even fighting different influenza strains.
The flu virus attacks human cells by binding to a compound called sialic acid, or sialyllactose, on the cell surface. Merziotis synthesized a floating form of the acid, which dupes the virus with an alternative attachment site.
She said her process can help with both diagnosis and treatment.
"It can be used to detect what strain of influenza is responsible for a specific infection," she said. "It can differentiate between human and avian strains.
"It may also be possible to interfere with the infection process by administering the floating sialyllactose through injection, nasal spray or lungs with a pump. The flu virus would attach to the artificial receptor rather than the human cell."
The teens were competing in the Sanofi-Aventis BioTalent Challenge, a competition jointly sponsored two leading drug companies, the National Research Council and several other government agencies.
"The students in this competition represent some of the brightest young scientists in Canada," said Roman Szumski, vice-president of life sciences at the NRC.
The Toronto team's work with the plant gene offers insights into developing crops resistant to salty soils.
Rawal's work found a human gene variation which may explain why lithium is effective for some but not all bipolar patients.
The competition, now in its 15th year, involved 14 regional winners, both individuals and teams, from across the country.
Their projects ranged from an investigation of the role that mercury-polluted snow may play in northern community cancer rates, to methods of improving the survival of frozen stem cells and a study of herbal medicines.
Go Canadia, eh?!
Posted by: Rick | May 08, 2008 at 03:01 AM
wow.
thats sick
Posted by: JoblessPunk | May 08, 2008 at 05:20 AM
hoax
Posted by: GFYM | May 08, 2008 at 07:09 AM
I agree; hoax. 15-17 year old students happen to make DNA-level breakthroughs with school lab equipment? Yeah right.
Posted by: James | May 08, 2008 at 07:53 AM
It's not a hoax, it's in Ottawa's leading newspapper: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=400d5a6f-1b05-4351-a5da-2e6dbd9f6b52
Posted by: Dustin | May 08, 2008 at 08:22 AM
Same story from a national news site. It's real. http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2008/05/07/ot-flu-080507.html
Posted by: George K. | May 08, 2008 at 08:23 AM
Wow. That is absolutely amazing. I didn't believe this at first either but that's just the American school system in me talking.
Maple leaves, hoooooooo!
Posted by: Philip | May 08, 2008 at 08:36 AM
These kinds of procedures aren't incredibly hard. They do take a bit of knowledge and some expensive equipment.
Of course, none of the projects will probably change our lives. I really doubt the first prize will become any kind of useful treatment unless they use it target the virus rather than do damage on its own.
Posted by: Cappy | May 08, 2008 at 10:33 AM
Same story from a national news site. It's real. http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2008/05/07/ot-flu-080507.html
Posted by: bilim haberleri | May 08, 2008 at 10:36 AM
Students all the time from regional competitions come out with really amazing ideas. The high school i went a kid won 5,000 as well for his study on cancer. It is just that the regional competitions usually just get the kid started because they are usually good ideas. Doesnt mean they will work or havent already been tried. Because when that kid from my high school made it to the international competition the Doctors there shot him down within the first five minutes of his presentation. He was a really smart kid though.
Posted by: Justin | May 08, 2008 at 11:33 AM
It doesn't take a lot of technology to mess around with DNA. I believe this story.
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