Nov. 4, 2015
Two globally minded postdocs supported by Banting fellowships
Both Manuel Kleiner, left, and Angela Alberga have been awarded the Banting Postdoctoral Fellowships
Riley Brandt, University of Calgary
Two University of Calgary postdoctoral scholars were awarded Banting Postdoctoral Fellowships by the Government of Canada this week.
Angela Alberga and Manuel Kleiner are both Eyes High postdoctoral scholars among the group of 70 top-ranked Canadian scholars to receive this prestigious fellowship. Alberga鈥檚 research explores weight bias in the health and education sectors, while Kleiner is examining the biochemistry of biological carbon capture.
鈥淭he Banting Fellowships recognize exceptionally talented recent PhD graduates 鈥 and the contributions that Manuel Kleiner and Angela Alberga are making to global issues like lowering our carbon footprint and ensuring social justice, shows very clearly the value the program brings to our university,鈥 says Ed McCauley, vice-president (research).
鈥淲e are grateful to have earned the support from this competitive federal funding program that supports University of Calgary postdocs through the Bantings and graduate students through the Vanier Scholarships.鈥
The Banting Postdoctoral Fellowships program, named for Canadian Nobel Peace Prize winner Sir Frederick Banting, aims to attract and retain top-tier talent and position them for success as the research leaders of tomorrow. For Alberga and Kleiner, this translates to two years of funding, which will enable them to pursue international collaborations and position their innovative research on a global stage.
Kleiner is exploring how to speed up the process of capturing carbon dioxide to make biofuels.
Riley Brandt, University of Calgary
Improving metabolic pathway could speed up biological carbon capture process
Kleiner is attempting to forge an improved biochemical pathway that could speed up the process of capturing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and using it to make biofuels.
鈥淚鈥檓 investigating the metabolic pathway that occurs in microbes, plants, and algae, that is used to fix carbon dioxide into biomass,鈥 says Kleiner. 鈥淏iomass is anything that grows 鈥 plants, algae, bacteria 鈥 and through carbon fixation, carbon dioxide ultimately solidifies and becomes those biological entities.鈥
Many people know carbon fixation by its textbook name, the Calvin cycle. "Carbon fixation is the basic process that everything needs 鈥 without carbon fixation there would be no biology,鈥 says Kleiner.
Kleiner鈥檚 research has tremendous potential because of the key role carbon fixation plays in biology. 鈥淚鈥檓 looking for a pathway which is more energy efficient for carbon fixation than the known pathway, with the hope to actually improve the carbon fixation process,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f we find that this more efficient pathway works the way that we think it works, and it could be integrated, it would be a major breakthrough in all kinds of fields.鈥
Kleiner鈥檚 life-long concern with global climate change led him to pursue basic science that could have widespread impact. 鈥淚 wanted to do something where I鈥檓 trying to contribute to solving a global problem,鈥 he says.
Microbiologist and chemical engineer Marc Strous showed Kleiner that his lab at the University of Calgary would be the ideal place for Kleiner to make his contribution.
鈥淲e discussed the advantages of the Eyes High goals, and the research theme,鈥 Kleiner says. 鈥淭here is a major effort going on and people are really invested. It鈥檚 a cross-campus approach.鈥
The cutting-edge infrastructure in Strous鈥 lab also helps advance Kleiner鈥檚 research. He is in charge of the lab鈥檚 proteomics mass spectrometer, which identifies the mass of proteins in a cell with extremely high accuracy. 鈥淥ften mass spectrometers are only found in a core facility, but we have one right in our own laboratory. I鈥檓 hoping to develop collaborations on campus with others interested in using it,鈥 he says.
Alberga is examining weight stigma and discrimination with the goal of implementing change in policy
Riley Brandt, University of Calgary