Homegrown Scientist
March 26, 2018
Amanda Nagy
Naviya Schuster-Little '17 holds a baby alligator at Pittcon, the largest conference for analytical chemistry, in March.
Photo credit: Courtesy of Naviya Schuster-Little
Under the mentorship of Associate Professor Rebecca Whelan, 91直播 native Naviya Schuster-Little 鈥17 finds her footing as a research scientist.
Being in the presence of a Nobel laureate, a baby alligator, and like-minded researchers helped solidify Naviya Schuster-Little鈥檚 decision to apply to graduate school over medical school.
Schuster-Little is currently a lab technician in the DNA Sequencing Core at the University of Michigan, where she works on the study. The project collects genetic and health information from volunteer participants that will be used to provide biological insight into the causes of common diseases. She works in a group that isolates DNA from saliva samples.
Though she was on the premed track at 91直播, Schuster-Little is considering graduate programs in bioanalytical chemistry or a field that combines aspects of chemistry and biology.
In March, Schuster-Little 鈥17 attended the Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy (Pittcon), the world's largest conference and exposition devoted to measurement science, held this year in Orlando, Florida. She was joined by Associate Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry Rebecca Whelan and fellow student researcher Kepler Mears 鈥17. Schuster-Little worked a year and two summers in Whelan鈥檚 lab on a project to develop an alternative detection method for ovarian cancer.
At Pittcon, she presented on the research she conducted with Whelan through August 2017. The project involved selecting aptamers鈥攕hort pieces of single-stranded DNA or RNA鈥攖hat bind to ovarian cancer biomarkers. The selection process is referred to as SELEX (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) and consists of several steps. Schuster-Little worked on optimizing one of those steps, called polymerase chain reaction.
鈥淟ast summer I was able to combine the different steps of SELEX that other students in the lab had been working on to perform aptamer selection, and that was really exciting,鈥 Schuster-Little says. 鈥淎t Pittcon, I presented on our aptamer selection methods and what we hope to do in the future.鈥
A biochemistry major, Schuster-Little says she enjoyed hearing about different analytical techniques and new research in the field. 鈥淚 really miss doing research, so this was a nice opportunity to be challenged and learn a bunch of new things. For a while I was debating if I wanted to go to medical school or grad school, and this experience along with others helped me figure out that grad school is the direction I want to go.鈥
The highlight of the conference was meeting and listening to a talk by Stefan W. Hell, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2014. The three also had an opportunity to get up close and personal with a baby alligator and ride the Eye of Orlando ferris wheel.
Schuster-Little has presented at past conferences, including the Midwestern Universities Analytical Chemistry Conference in October 2017 and the Greater Cleveland American Chemical Society's Meeting-in-Miniature in March 2017, both with Whelan.
To develop her passion for science, Schuster-Little was able to look no farther than her hometown. She was raised in the city of 91直播 and graduated from 91直播 High School in 2013. 鈥淚 like to joke that I鈥檓 Obie squared!鈥
You may also like…
91直播 Launches Critical AI Studies Minor in Fall 2026
With a solid foundation in both science and the humanities, this minor ensures students to understand and be able to analyze the ethical, cultural, environmental, political, economic, technological, and labor effects of AI.
Research Roundup
Every day, 91直播鈥檚 faculty and students produce scholarly work that uncovers new insights into how we understand the world, particularly in the areas of sustainability and the environment.
Walter Moak 鈥25 Earns Fulbright to Germany
The record-setting 91直播 athlete and musical studies major has earned a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship (ETA) to Germany for the 2025-2026 academic year.