Teams, Celebrations, Uncertainties

This image is the new “normal” - videoconferencing, microsoft teams, zoom… be it lab meetings, one-on-one meetings, or, as depicted here, our daily ‘social’ chat to keep us all sane.

But, maybe unsurprisingly, the work goes on - and there’s plenty to celebrate. While we don’t know what form it’ll take, two undergraduates will be rejoining us for the summer with prestigious scholarship support; Stephanie Scott with an NSERC USRA and Janice Tai with an IIDR Summer Studentship. Congratulations!

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Alexander Hynes
#PInotinthelab

Pulled the plug on Monday, last walkthrough today. Other PIs report melancholy - for me, just some anxiety. The usual, overwhelming job (good and bad!), but without the cornerstone that I can always count on to get me out of bed in the morning.

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Alexander Hynes
BBSRS

No, a cat didn’t just walk on my keyboard - I’m referring to the Biochemistry & Biomedical Sciences Research Symposium. A stellar inaugural event, kicked off by a timely talk on combatting the spread of misinformation online. It was also Tamina’s first academic poster, and I’d post a picture, but this shot of Kim’s look of understanding as Rabia explains her poster was too good to pass up on.

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Alexander Hynes
The "Ph" word...

I gave a research rounds talk on Wednesday, and despite it being carefully calibrated to drive a graduate student of mine up the wall, she still took this picture of me for the website. Thanks!

The talk was the first opportunity I’ve had to share a really fantastic (phantastic?) new phage detection tool, and having an audience of clinicans really forced me to craft this story carefully. Also, I used props. There’s nothing quite like seeing plaques first hand to realize this stuff actually works!

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Alexander Hynes
In the antiCRISPR jungle, only the weak thrive?

One of the easiest tasks that falls on my desk is when I’m asked to write a preview/news&views/feature for an article I loved. It’s a chance to highlight some amazing work and, from a writing perspective, it’s a very refreshing opportunity to write… a little differently.

Félix and I put together this Preview on the Westra/Van-Houte group’s excellent Cell Host & Microbe article highlighting unusual benefits to carrying ‘weak’ anti CRISPRs, and then Félix promptly put my twitter efforts to promote the original article to shame… proving I`ve still got a lot to learn.

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Alexander Hynes
And now for something completely different

Today, a trainee of mine met with great success. Not an academic trainee, but a trainee nonetheless. And boy did he work hard to get where he is! Francis Coté, one of the small group of Québec city who learned the game under my tutelage, just won the (final) World Championship of the Game of Throne Living Card Game. I often get questions about the warhammer in my office… well, here’s a picture of Francis earning his!

It was a tougher, larger field than my 2013 victory, and - in watching the last few games streamed live - he’s definitely a better player now than I have ever been. I love it. Congratulations, well deserved!

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Alexander Hynes
Cleanup Catharsis

The preview featured the work-in-progress of a cleanup day, but here’s the resulting catharsis.

Thrice a year, we shutdown the lab and everyone scrubs/does inventory/repairs/does maintenance. And while it’s a big undertaking, it’s always worth it.

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Alexander Hynes
A cool toy that *isn't* for Gayatri

What does it say that as soon as this fancy new plate reader got unboxed, the undergrads assumed it, too, was for Gayatri. Her lab bio does say she gets to play with all the coolest lab toys, but this one - this one is for you Ikram (*partly)!

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Alexander Hynes
Farncombe Trainee Awards

A year and a half into my role as Faculty coordinator for RIP, it was my great pleasure today to be involved in the inaugural Farncombe Trainee awards. These four great students (left to right: Jessica Breznik, Patrick Schenck, Alexandra Clarizio, and Mercedes di Bernardo) had truly exceptional presentations this year and showed us what scientific communication looks like at its best. Congratulations!

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Alexander Hynes
Solstice Celebration

Last year was the Hynes Holiday Hootenany, while this year the Solstice celebration. I’m a sucker for alliteration. Despite 6 members MIA due to a combination of illness, exams, travel and previous social committments, we still wound up with a potluck providing enough leftovers to last us until next year.

I’m glad someone thought to take a picture before the first few had to leave, although we’re not at our best! I think we had 3 camerapersons instead of the usual 1, and Janice was mid-critical phone call . But it’s authentic!

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Alexander Hynes
Crowning a new champion

My students sent me this, insisting it deserves to be on the lab website. Yes, yes it does. Breanna (right) is our new pipette tip filling champion, marking the first upset since the title's inauguration.

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Alexander Hynes
Secret Santa

Three people dared guess who their secret Santa was even before opening their present. One even got it right! And yes, that is me in an ugly blue christmas sweater, how nice of you to notice.

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Alexander Hynes
Phage Directory

Earlier this week, we were treated to a visit by Jessica and Jan from Phage Directory. Thank you to David Speicher for lining this up (and the photo credit), the Biochemistry Department for their help hosting, and most importantly, to Jan and Jessica for what wound up being some very engaging discussion on the future of phages!

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Alexander Hynes
More Presents!

This time, it’s like Christmas in Decem… right. Well, in keeping with my Belgian nationality, for St. Nicholas’s day, we got this marvel. Thank you to Emma Allen-Vercoe for assistance with setup and training, with any luck we’ll have this up and running, and pumped full of phages, in no time.

Alexander Hynes
Who did it best?

Both Felix and I recently got to present some version of this story - a story near and dear to my heart. Me at McGill (thanks to QCBS for the invitation!) and Felix at the Biochemistry Graduate Seminar Series. Who did it best? Well, there’s only photographic evidence (to my knowledge!) of Felix, so I suppose that means he did. He did a fantastic job. And I lifted slides wholesale from him, so he deserves credit for my version too.

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Alexander Hynes
Research in Progress, and an absentee supervisor

I’m posting this from Pearson, living vicariously through the pictures my students are sending me of Hiba Shareefdeen’s research-in-progress talk today. And, tantalizingly, there’s definitely some new data - I don’t recognize that plate picture! That’s what I get for not showing up…

Alexander Hynes
Not-a-lab-meeting meeting

This may look like a (snack infested) lab meeting, but it’s yet another board game evening. The main conclusion is that it’s not just me - Rabia is inherently suspicious. Or we seriously all have to talk some unconcious bias training - sorry Rabia!

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Alexander Hynes
Getting the gang back together!

At today NSERC USRA undergraduate research session, Kevin, Janice and Stephanie all got a chance to present their work - and Neeloufar joined them for this photo. Only missing Aaron from our summer undergraduate crew…

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Alexander Hynes
The sweet taste of victory (and candy)

Ok, so we didn`t beat the Li lab - but that was never in the cards. We DID take 3rd place. You can tell how happy we are from the look on Sadness’s face.

A seriously amazing effort from everyone.

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Alexander Hynes