New Baker Institute director inspired by Cornell
By Merry R. Buckley
When he accepted the position as director of the Baker Institute for Animal Health in Cornell’s College of Veterinary Medicine, Luis M. Schang had a tenured faculty position at one of Canada’s most prestigious universities, a thriving research program and a fulfilling role in educating the next generation of scientists.
So why make the move to Cornell? Schang says it’s because Cornell and the Institute inspire him.
“It took me five minutes at the interview to decide that’s where I wanted to be,” said Schang, professor of biochemistry and medical immunology at the University of Alberta. “Also, I have been doing research for more than 25 years, and I can publish in journals, get patents, raise money, get grants, collaborate, and I can train people in the lab to be successful, but it’s becoming a bit of a routine. I’m looking forward to new challenges, to having an impact on more people.”
Schang will also assume directorship of the Cornell Feline Health Center in the College of Veterinary Medicine, which provides cat health information to owners and veterinarians and funds research at the college.
When he starts his new position at Cornell in September, Schang will bring with him his research program, which focuses on exploring the ways biologically active “small chemicals” affect viral replication.
“We look for molecules that have an impact on multiple viruses,” Schang says. “We use them as a way to test what the virus needs to replicate or what the virus does to cells.”
This research is productive on two levels, says Schang: It answers fundamental questions about viruses at a minute, detailed level, and it helps to usher potentially life-saving pharmaceuticals to market.
Schang calls this research approach “discovery science” – a way of exploring scientific questions that delivers results that serve science, animals and humanity in the near and long terms. Schang rejects the dogmatic opposition of “basic” scientific research, which seeks knowledge for its own sake, and “applied” research, which seeks answers to serve a purpose, in favor of this concept of discovery science, which can fluidly accomplish both these objectives.
“I never liked the opposition of ‘basic’ to ‘applied’ – they’re not two separate processes,” he said. “ When we do science, we are looking for the unknown; we don’t know what we are going to find. However, all along the process we think, how can it be useful?”
Schang brings this philosophy to the Baker Institute, a veterinary research center with a long history of transformative discoveries, including breakthroughs in infectious disease and vaccines, reproduction and genetics. Schang says he will seek to connect with the faculty, staff and trainees in the Baker Institute, the Feline Health Center and the College of Veterinary Medicine to develop a vision for the future together.
“I don’t come to impose a vision; I come to develop a vision that we all agree upon and make happen,” Schang said.
He says at this point in the institute’s development, when research funding has become extremely competitive and state support is uncertain, it’s important that a new director from outside the institute sees challenges and opportunities with fresh eyes.
Like many current and former Baker Institute faculty members, Schang has a veterinary degree, which he sees as an asset in biomedical research.
“I want to be involved in training veterinary researchers,” he said. “Vets are perfectly trained in systems biology, and I want to do my part to help younger veterinary researchers to fully develop and reach their potential and bring out all that they have to offer.”
Merry R. Buckley, Ph.D., is education and outreach program manager for the Baker Institute for Animal Health and the Cornell Feline Health Center.
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