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Environmental Factor

Environmental Factor

Your Online Source for NIEHS News

April 2022


NIEHS scientists help visiting fellow establish lab in Nigeria

Temitope Adedeji, Ph.D., received equipment that will help him continue his independent research and train students.

When Temitope 'Temi' Adedeji, Ph.D., came to NIEHS in October 2019, he brought with him the desire to learn as much as he could so that he could transfer that knowledge to students back home in Nigeria. Five months later, the global pandemic temporarily put a halt to his plans. He has since completed his research and received a National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant (see sidebars), and he will travel back to Nigeria with his own scientific equipment.

Temitope "Temi" Adedeji, Ph.D. Adedeji proudly stands in front of some of the equipment he will use to train the next generation of researchers at Federal University of Technology Akure in Nigeria. (Photo courtesy of Steve McCaw / NIEHS)

'It is wonderful that NIEHS intramural scientists have come together to donate critical scientific equipment to Dr. Adedeji,' said NIEHS Scientific Director Darryl Zeldin, M.D. 'It will certainly help him start an independent laboratory in Nigeria and ensure his continued productivity.'

When a plan comes together

Paul Wade, Ph.D. 'Our young trainees could use Adedeji’s journey as an example,' said Wade. 'Know what you want, figure out what you need, and execute your plan.' (Photo courtesy of Steve McCaw / NIEHS)

Before Adedeji came to the U.S., he was a senior lecturer at the Federal University of Technology Akure in Nigeria. Since Nigeria doesn’t have many career opportunities for researchers, many young men and women interested in science must change fields or take whatever jobs they can find to make a living. Adedeji knew he could help change the situation.

'I wanted to make a difference by giving students and trainees the opportunity to have a better training experience,' said Adedeji. 'If I could help two kids in the beginning, over time it could become the critical mass that snowballs into something special.'

He wanted up-to-date training in epigenetics, so he contacted Paul Wade, Ph.D., acting chief of the NIEHS Epigenetics and Stem Cell Biology Laboratory and head of the Eukaryotic Transcriptional Regulation Group. When Wade invited him to NIEHS as a visiting fellow, the first part of Adedeji’s plan was coming together.

Training in epigenetics

A major interest of Wade’s group is how the Western diet, which is high in fat, influences colon cancer risk. Wade’s hypothesis is the carbon content of high-fat diets is an influencer of the epigenome. One of the ways to test this hypothesis is to use a high-fat diet that does not induce obesity, such as the ketogenic diet, which is high in fat but low in sugar.

Equipment for Adedeji's new lab Because of the generosity of NIEHS researchers, this equipment and more will make the journey to Adedeji’s new research lab in Nigeria. (Photo courtesy of Steve McCaw / NIEHS)

Adedeji gladly took on the project and fed four groups of mice a specific dietary program: high fat diet, ketogenic diet, control chow diet, and a low-fat diet. He examined organ damage and took physiologic measurements such as weight and serum hormone levels of insulin. He also used Western blots to determine how histone modifications, particularly acylation, change as a function of diet throughout the genome.

Wade said before Adedeji leaves the lab, he’ll connect all the changes in the epigenome to the gene-specific level by doing an assay called 'cut and tag.' It will identify the type of histone modification in every point in the genome as a function of diet.

'Adedeji is using techniques that we have implemented in our lab in the last year and testing a hypothesis that is central to our research,' Wade said.

Equipment donations

Wade said that he knew it would be challenging for Adedeji to get scientific equipment in Nigeria, so he encouraged him to take smaller equipment from his lab that wasn’t being used. Wade then emailed all NIEHS research group leaders to ask whether they had older equipment headed for surplus, and several responded. NIEHS Immunity, Inflammation, and Disease Laboratory Chief Michael Fessler, M.D., was especially helpful since he had equipment designated for the institute’s warehouse that was no longer being used. NIEHS Inventory Management Officer Kim Jones gave Adedeji access to the surplus equipment and handled the paperwork to make sure the institute operated within the NIH Foreign Donation guidelines.

'We are delighted to have played our small part in helping Temi plant these exciting scientific seeds in Nigeria,' said Fessler. Jones added, 'It was an honor to have played a role in this process.'

The collaboration will continue

Adedeji is working on a research paper about his work and hopes he and NIEHS will work together in the future to improve the pipeline of Nigerian scientists. His long-term goal is to have Nigerian students come to NIEHS to take advantage of state-of-the-art training.

Forma Scientific water-jacketed incubator Adedeji’s Forma Scientific water-jacketed incubator (front) sits to the right of two boxes of equipment ready to be shipped. Standing behind them are two -20-degree freezers and a larger -80-degree freezer. (Photo courtesy of Steve McCaw / NIEHS)
Sorvall Evolution refrigerated high speed centrifuge This Sorvall Evolution refrigerated high speed centrifuge will play a big part in the experiments Adedeji’s students will perform. (Photo courtesy of Steve McCaw / NIEHS)

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