Monday, 7 September 2015

Arvon Poetry Course


When I was a teenager, English homework was an agonising affair because I could never think what to write about. It seems hard to believe that the same person has just returned from an Arvon poetry course at The Hurst where a morning session involved writing seven poems in three hours! There’s no doubt that Peter and Ann Sansom, our tutors, are magic but at the same time there must be some benefit from age and experience. I didn’t quite manage seven every morning but I did write poems about many things from
  1. what happened at the weekend to memories of childhood,
  2. being in a man’s world as a female birder in the 1990s to a dinosaur discoverer in C18th (Mary Anning),
  3. showing fund raisers around our lab as a PhD student to the misery of skin disease and
  4. being crazy about moths to not so crazy about dogs.
Others are still to be finished including two on Taekwondo.

Intense creativity was just part of it; I also got to know some wonderful people.
I had a brief break from poetry drawing a design in AI based on this wonderful chair beside the lake that became the front cover of our course anthology.    

Monday, 27 July 2015

The Genomics Era


The Genomics Era

The BADGEM session at last year’s British Association of Dermatologists conference inspired me to undertake a free online FutureLearn course ‘The Genomics Era’ ( St Georges, University London) to make sure I’m up to date with the technology being used now to study the genome. This had several purposes though; I also wanted to see how online courses work. Although I’ve prepared material for online courses, I had never actually taken part in one. This also gave me an opportunity to see the kind of problems students encounter learning about genes, genomes and the genetic code.

The latest technology, including genome wide association studies (GWAS) and next generation sequencing, make it possible to crack complicated disorders that arise due to defects in multiple genes. A highlight at this year’s BAD conference was hearing Angela Christiano talking about research using GWAS that has revealed new genes associated with alopecia areata, a common hair-loss disorder that can even affect young people. The discovery of these genes has led to treatment that looks extremely promising.

Also this month I’ve gone back in time and learnt about the origins of cell culture. ‘The immortal life of Henrietta Lacks’ by Rebecca Skloot is partly a biography of the patient whose cancer cells became HeLa, one of the most commonly used cell lines used in research. But it also tells, all too painfully, the reason why we now have informed consent since the taking of cancer cells from Henrietta Lacks had considerable consequences for her family subsequently. Other shocking revelations in this book were the early experiments that were carried out using HeLa in ignorance.

We have come a long way since the cell culture revolution began with huge discoveries of benefit to mankind but many lessons have been learnt the hard way. We are now in the genomics era which is the next exciting revolution with lots of potential but also lots of ethical issues regarding the sequencing of peoples’ genomes. Let’s hope we can manage it better, with fewer mistakes this time. 

Sunday, 28 June 2015

Puddletown Forest Walks

Puddletown forest doesn't have any way marked routes so, during 10 months of walking the puppy, we have come up with a short (brown) and long (blue) walk. The long walk is sometimes extended to include the pond near Thomas Hardy's cottage. The map below I drew for the purposes of recording so I know which 1km square we are in at any one point. I send dragonfly and moth records to Living record and butterflies to the Dorset butterfly conservation website.


Sunday, 7 June 2015

Birding, recording and tweeting

Work has been slow coming in this year so I have invested some time in learning how to submit records of moths and dragonflies and how to use twitter to find out what others are seeing locally. White winged black tern is a rare migrant in the UK and one I missed years ago when living in Dundee because I refused to be distracted from my work. This week I finally got to see one in Wareham.


More Meetings in 2014

The other two meetings of 2014 provided me with an update on another previous research field. The British Association of Dermatologists meeting was held in Glasgow and included a new session dedicated to genetic disorders. Key researchers in the field gave updates on the novel therapies that are being tried for these often devastating disorders. Back in the 1990s, when I was doing research into one of the keratin disorders, it seemed a long way in the future before therapy would be possible but now there are promising clinical trials underway. Another breakthrough is in the identification of underlying genes causing some of the remaining disorders that had been tricky back in the 1990s. Thanks to next generation sequencing, a new technology that has revolutionised the way we can look at the genome, it is now possible to find the gene, a vital first step towards understanding what is going wrong with the skin in a genetically inherited disorder.
I was also invited to an Ichthyosis Support Group meeting in Newcastle which was an opportunity to meet patients and their families and understand better what it is like to live with these disorders.

These two meetings were timely, helping me update my lectures on human genetic disorders of the skin that I was due to give in October 2014, for the first time in 6 years. 

Sunday, 10 May 2015

Keep wearing the sunscreen

I was fortunate to be able to attend four conferences in 2014. The World Congress on Cancers of the Skin, held in Edinburgh last year was the last one I attended. The talks on the first day covered prevention and seemed rather repetitive as the problems encountered in each country were rather similar.

The next day was on what are generally referred to as non-melanoma skin cancers. This I found much more interesting. The scientific sessions approached the understanding of initiation, progression and spread of these cancers from many angles. I tried to summarize the diversity of the talks I attended in a diagram below. The most fascinating developing area extends beyond the tumour cells themselves. Skin cancer cells require changes to occur in their surroundings as well, providing a permissive stromal (extracellular matrix) and immunological environment to progress. 

The malignant melanoma day followed and was really new to me but equally fascinating especially regarding the progress that has been made with new drugs that inhibit BRAF. However, it is very concerning how many ways the BRAF inhibitors can be evaded and unclear what combination of drugs might be used in the future that will work for every case of malignant melanoma. At the end of the day I was exhausted with the complexity of the disease and really began to think prevention might not be exciting but it is definitely better than any drug combination.

The diagram is based on the talks from the Molecular Science track and plenary sessions. A full list of speakers can be found in the programme at http://www.wccs2014.org/welcome/