This summer, 麻豆视频 graduate students rolled up their sleeves in busy labs, learned their way around unfamiliar equipment, and even played a part in moving clinical trials forward, working with start-ups and biotech companies in the recently established Innovation District anchored by the university鈥檚 Science and Technology Campus.

It is part of a program George 麻豆视频鈥檚 rolled out two years ago that puts students right in the thick of active research. They work side by side with scientists and get a firsthand look at how research projects come together. Each participating George 麻豆视频 research institute accepts around 10 applications. The Institute for Biohealth Innovation leveraged this opportunity to connect five PhD students with life science industry mentors.
candidate Ahana Byne returned to Ceres Nanosciences for her second summer, drawn back by the promise of its Nanotrap庐 technology to catch illnesses before symptoms appear. Ceres Nanosciences is a Manassas, Virginia-based company that鈥檚 licensed the university鈥檚 proprietary Nanotrap庐 particle technology and incorporated it into a range of diagnostic and research use products and workflows.
In the lab, Byne moved quickly from planning experiments to reviewing results and fixing problems, a pace far beyond what she was used to in academic research. 鈥淚n academic settings, you鈥檙e usually focused on concocting new ideas and exploring them in depth,鈥 said Byne. 鈥淚n industry, it鈥檚 about clear processes and concrete results. Experiencing both has helped me see more clearly where I want to go next.鈥
Ben Lepene, Ceres Nanosciences director of research and development, served as Byne鈥檚 mentor. Lepene said Byne鈥檚 know-how and clear thinking helped the team gather data they rely on to support customers and answer questions about product performance. When asked for his best advice to Byne, Lepene said, 鈥淜eep good records and make sure results can be repeated, because in a commercial setting, consistency is everything.鈥

At another Innovation District partner company, Virongy Biosciences, which develops virus-based research tools and diagnostics, bioscience doctoral student Lorreta Opoku spent her internship assembling and cloning alpha pseudoviruses for virology research. Progress came through careful and steady work, with small changes that moved the experiments ahead until the results fell into place.
鈥淪uccessfully generating and validating my first batch of pseudoviruses was extremely satisfying,鈥 said Opoku. Outside the lab, she spoke with clients, packed orders, and got them ready to send, which helped her learn the practical side of a research company.
At Tracked Biotechnologies LLC, kinesiology PhD student Ahmadreza Souri worked alongside mentor Michael Petr, the company鈥檚 CEO and chief scientist. They split their summer days between pilot clinical trials, grant proposals, and Institutional Review Board paperwork. That same brisk rhythm drives the company as it develops AI tools that let scientists, clinicians, and consumers explore human and animal behavior with speed and accuracy.
鈥淢entorship creates a strong foundation for aspiring professionals,鈥 said Petr. 鈥淚 make it a priority to teach mentees to the best of my ability and share how we approach commercialization in the context of research.鈥