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Sarah Nyquist is a bioinformatics fellow in Barbara Engelhardt's lab, researching human mammary gland milk production to address the gap in understanding how disease, lifestyle, and genetics impact breast milk.
Sarah Nyquist, PhD, is a bioinformatics fellow working in the lab of Barbara Engelhardt. She studied computer science at Rice University and then received her PhD in computational and systems biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
I met Barbara while I was applying to graduate school and really enjoyed our conversations. When I was looking for a postdoc, I reached out to her to see if we still had shared research interests. When I heard she was considering moving to Gladstone, I was excited to join her in that move.
It’s such a privilege to be a part of a world-class research institution that feels like a small community. Everyone is so willing to help and support each other—it’s so refreshing.
Right now, I spend all my free time taking care of my 8-month-old daughter, Jane. Before she was born, I spent a lot of time running, hiking, skiing, sewing, and gardening. I’m excited to share these passions with her once she’s old enough to join me, but for now I’m trying to savor every moment of her childhood and enjoy what she likes (which right now, is mostly just putting everything in her mouth!).
I study how the human mammary gland produces milk. Despite its importance as the primary food source for the first 6 months of life, so much is unknown about the processes underlying milk production and how disease, lifestyle, and genetics impact the milk lactating people feed to their babies. I work on studies that aim to understand this fascinating fluid and how it’s made.
Conversations with study participants, other lactating parents, and my own experiences providing milk to my baby remind me how immediately applicable this work is to so many people. Moms are advised to provide milk to their babies for at least the first year of their lives, but there is so little guidance on how to maintain milk production in light of our complex modern lives.
Any time I speak to a person who is currently breastfeeding or has in the past, they bring up questions and struggles they faced in reaching their goals. I’m then reminded how my research could help provide more information and support to people in this critical time of their lives—the first year of parenthood.
Interdisciplinary collaboration is essential to lactation research. As a computational biologist, I collaborate with many experimental biologists to collect data and perform experiments. In addition, we collaborate with clinicians and lactation consultants to inform our research questions and recruit participants to the studies.
Since human milk is such a complex fluid—containing sugars, lipids, small molecules, and cells—I collaborate with experimental biologists with expertise in each of these areas to describe the many properties of human milk and how they change in health and disease.
I’ve been so lucky to have incredible mentors at every step of my career. I’m grateful to have been in the labs of supportive scientists who have made it possible for me to explore my research interests. But the people who have kept me excited and engaged in my work day-to-day have been the graduate student and postdoc mentors I learned from along the way.
I can sleep from wheels up to wheels down on any redeye flight.
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