Pardis Sabeti, the Rollerblading Rock Star Scientist of Harvard
The recipient of the Smithsonian American Ingenuity Award for natural sciences blazed a new view of how to treat infectious diseases via genetics
- By Seth Mnookin
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
By now an assistant professor at Harvard’s Center for Systems Biology, Sabeti spent some of her junior faculty startup funds as well as money from an $875,000, five-year science and engineering fellowship from the Packard Foundation setting up a collaboration with a medical facility in Nigeria, the Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital.
Sabeti’s decision to conduct fieldwork on a dreaded pathogen in a dangerous country 5,000 miles away was a bold move, especially considering she was best known as a computational geneticist. “I had tremendous challenges,” she says. “Universities are not always thrilled about having someone actively working with a deadly virus.”
Yet Sabeti’s holistic approach led to unexpected results. The financial support she provided to the Irrua hospital enabled caregivers to diagnose more patients and to offer treatment with the powerful antiviral drug ribavirin. “As the hospital got more and more proficient...we got more and more patients from a larger area,” Sabeti says. Soon the researchers had collected blood samples from more than a thousand people, including many plagued by fevers of unknown origin, and “every person with a fever was trying to get to this hospital” for treatment, Sabeti recalls. Based on the analyses of blood samples, and her reading of the literature, she began to suspect that many more people had been exposed to both Lassa and Ebola than had been previously believed.
Those data form the backbone of a provocative, just-published paper in Science, “Emerging Disease or Emerging Diagnosis?” She and her co-authors speculate that Ebola and Lassa might not be emerging diseases at all, but instead represent the “emerging diagnosis of a disease that has long been common but overlooked” and had “interacted with humans for far longer than generally thought.”
If this hypothesis is correct, it will have an enormous impact in how medical experts think about, and develop treatments and interventions for, diseases such as Lassa and Ebola: In addition to caring for those sick enough to end up in the hospital, researchers can study why some people are relatively unaffected by the virus. If the LARGE gene mutation common in West Africa was selected for because it helped humans resist infection with Lassa virus, mimicking changes caused by the gene could pave the way for treatments, or perhaps even a Lassa vaccine.
Thousands of patients in Nigeria have already benefited from Sabeti’s work, says Christian Happi, director of the Infectious Diseases Laboratory at the hospital in Irrua. “That simple action—to go out into the field, in a rural setting in Nigeria, to go down there to provide diagnostics and help with treatment in this rural community, very far away, with no infrastructure—it’s incredible,” Happi says. “Apart from being dedicated, generous with her time, generous with her knowledge—generous with everything, really—she just really wants to be involved. That type of generosity is a quality that not many people have.”
***
One Saturday night this past September, Sabeti, her family and members of her lab gathered at Lander’s house in Cambridge to celebrate her recent marriage to John Rinn, an assistant professor of stem cell and regenerative biology at Harvard. (Lander had also gotten ordained by an online ministry so he could preside at the actual wedding a few weeks earlier.) Sabeti and Rinn, a specialist in RNA genetic material, met at the Broad, and their profiles seem to mirror each other: Sabeti’s a rock musician, Rinn’s an avid snowboarder who once thought about going pro; Mental Floss magazine named Sabeti one of “eight trailblazing scientists about to change your life” in 2007, Popular Science named Rinn one of the “ten young geniuses shaking up science today” in 2009; Sabeti’s initial approach to computational genomics was assumed to be a waste of time, as was Rinn’s early work on large intervening non-coding RNAs, or LINCs.
During the party, one of Sabeti’s students jumped into the middle of the room and started to dance to the Swedish pop star Robyn’s 2010 hit “Dancing on My Own.” A handful of other people jumped in, and then a few more. By the time “Starships” by the Trinidadian rapper Nicki Minaj and “Gangnam Style” had finished playing, it was clear that members of the Sabeti Lab had been meeting after-hours to rehearse. “It was awesome,” Sabeti said the next morning in a coffee shop in Boston’s Kenmore Square. “My mom joined in, Eric joined in—just incredible.”
It’s not surprising that people who work with Sabeti are so devoted to her. Dyann Wirth, the chair of the Department of Immunology and Infectious Diseases at the Harvard School of Public Health, says that Sabeti is “brilliant—one of the smartest people I know,” but it’s her dedication to the people she works with that makes her unique. “She’s inspirational,” Wirth says. “She sets the bar very high and at the same time treats people with tremendous respect. That’s very hard to do.”
So Sabeti’s legacy may be defined as much by shaping the careers of the people around her as by her world-class contributions to science. And that’d be just fine with her. “My kind of, like, life goal is to help train students to be good people as well as good scientists,” she says. “That would be my dream.”
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Comments (5)
I'm so proud of her and all that she has and will accomplish!
Posted by on March 4,2013 | 09:48 AM
More than any other reading material, I am addicted to Smithsonian magazine. The stories about the Ingenuity Awards are all wonderful, but I was particularly struck by Pardis Sabeti. The story about this brilliant woman's scientific and interpersonal successes is educational and inspiring.
Posted by Judi Culver on January 11,2013 | 06:15 PM
Yes, commentator NT, the magazine is copyedited, and "pore through" is correct. Per Webster's, the verb "pore" means "to read or study carefully," and that is the meaning intended, though "pore over" is the more common phrasing. Thanks for the close reading.
Posted by Terence Monmaney on December 13,2012 | 10:10 AM
"developed a tool to pore through" Does nobody copyedit at the Smithsonian anymore? That should be "pour through."
Posted by NT on December 8,2012 | 12:03 PM
I was struck by the picture of Sabeti. Looks like a copy of Mona Lisa. Or is it that same enigmatic look? William
Posted by William Knottnerus on December 6,2012 | 02:32 PM