| Sarah
Kimmins – Science Applied to Teaching
Sarah Kimmins credits her success as a scientist to
her education at NSAC and to the NSAC Vice President Academic, Dr.
Leslie MacLaren. “Leslie taught me how to write research papers,
apply for grants and present research findings, but most of all
she taught me how to study science with integrity,” says Sarah.
“She basically taught me everything I know about being a scientist.”
Sarah,
a native of Halifax, Nova Scotia, graduated with her Bachelor of
Science degree from Dalhousie in 1996. She then pursued her Master’s
degree at NSAC under the supervision of Dr. Leslie MacLaren. Dr.
MacLaren was interested in molecular and hormonal mechanisms regulating
bovine reproduction.
“I wanted Leslie as a supervisor because she
studied reproduction and it was a research area that I was attracted
to,” says Sarah. For her Master’s degree, Sarah studied
the role of the bovine estrous cycle in the regulation of adhesion
proteins on the uterine surface that had been implicated in embryo
attachment. The goal of her research was to gain insight into what
makes the uterus receptive.
“The work was important because it identified
molecular markers of pregnancy as early as day 16 following breeding,
which is very early and also a critical time for embryo survival,
” says MacLaren. Sarah graduated with her Master’s degree
from NSAC in 1999. After that, she stayed in MacLaren's lab to work
on her Ph.D. Her Ph.D thesis was an extension of her Master’s
work. She studied what specific hormonal factors regulated the timing
of expression in the family of adhesion proteins involved in uterine
receptivity. Sarah received her Ph.D from Dalhousie University in
2003.
“During her MSc and PhD, Sarah identified a
number of protein receptors expressed at the interface between the
bovine embryo and its mother's uterus,” says MacLaren. “She
explored the possible roles of these receptors in the fetomaternal
communication process by examining how their expression patterns
change in relation to key events happening during pregnancy recognition.”
After receiving her Ph.D., Sarah undertook her Post-Doctoral training
at the University of Louis Pasteur in Strasbourg, France.
In September of 2005, Sarah became a member of the
faculty at McGill University in Montreal, Quebec. She is an Assistant
Professor in the university’s Department of Animal Science.
“Sarah has always been an enthusiastic animal-lover and biologist,”
says MacLaren. “And among her many strengths is a keen interest
in 'connecting the dots' between cell regulatory molecules and
function using pictorial models.” Sarah is also an Associate
Member of the Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics at McGill
University.
Sarah chose to study at NSAC because of its environment.
“At NSAC, the environment is very collegial and there is a
real sense of community,” she says. She feels that the small
class sizes at NSAC allow students to receive the individual attention
they need. “I think NSAC has better communication because
it is a small school. Students really get to know their classmates
and can discuss their interests with them,” she says. She
was also impressed by the strong programs at NSAC and the great
opportunities available for students to learn applied science in
the topics of plants and animals.
Currently, Sarah lives in Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue
with her husband, Jean Paul Parkhill, and their two-year-old son,
Eric. Her husband has a Ph.D. in oceanography and teaches biology
at John Abbot College in Montreal. Sarah enjoys being active in
her spare time by playing with her son, biking, walking her dog,
skiing and riding horses.
|