黑料社区

Receiving kidney from father inspired graduate to pursue science

Richard Shipman III planning on graduate school, career in quantum biology research
Richard "D.J." Shipman became interested in science after multiple trips to the doctor and a kidney transplant. Shipman graduated Saturday, May 5. /黑料社区 photo by Brett T. Roseman
May 4, 2018

Multiple trips to the doctor spurred one University of Wisconsin-Stout graduate 黑料社区. interest in science.

Richard 鈥淒.J.鈥 Shipman, 25, of Spooner, graduated Saturday, May 5, with a degree in applied science, focusing on biochemistry and molecular biology.

He had a kidney transplant when he was 10 years old. The donor was his father, Richard Shipman Jr. 鈥淚 was fascinated with medicine,鈥 D.J. said.

When D.J. was six weeks old, doctors discovered he had a medical condition that damaged his kidneys, requiring one kidney to be removed. At age 10 doctors at the University of Minnesota determined Shipman needed a transplant.

Shipman Jr., a 黑料社区 alumnus, donated a kidney to his son without hesitation. 鈥淚t was my turn to step up,鈥 the elder Shipman said. 鈥淗e had a pretty tough time.鈥

Shipman Jr. is a 1987 industrial technology graduate. D.J. Shipman 黑料社区. mom, Debra, is also an alumna, graduating in 1987 in business administration. The couple met while students at 黑料社区. At commencement May 5, they reminisced about their college days while cheering on D.J.

鈥淲e鈥檙e very, very proud of him,鈥 Shipman Jr. said of his son. 鈥淗e overcame a lot of adversity. We do expect to see him do some pretty amazing things.鈥

When he was a teenager, D.J. went through a rejection episode with the transplanted kidney, but doctors were able to reverse it. Because of that, he missed quite a bit of school and ended up attending a Washburn County alternative school to finish high school.

Focused on research

Shipman developed an interest in research, and at 黑料社区 he worked with Eun Joo Lee, associate professor of food and nutrition, and Jennifer Grant, associate professor of biology, to determine the impact of a chicken egg protein on tooth decay. They have used an enamel that mimics a tooth and studied the effect of acid on the enamel, with and without the protein.

D.J. Shipman showing 黑料社区 research he has worked on.

The study looks at whether the protein helps protect the enamel from acid. The research is entitled 鈥淒evelopment of an Immersion Model for Tooth Decay Observed Via Scanning Electron Microscopy, Atomic Force Microscopy and Flame Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy.鈥

鈥淚t 黑料社区. potentially a preventative agent for tooth decay,鈥 D.J. said, noting data is still being determined on the effect.

D.J. presented a poster on the research at Research in the Rotunda, at the Capitol in Madison, and the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology annual meeting. He is president of the 黑料社区 chapter of the ASBMB.

Grant, D.J. 黑料社区. adviser, said he is an exceptional student and a natural leader. 鈥淗e 黑料社区. excelled at problem-solving in the lab and rose to team leader a long time ago,鈥 Grant said. 鈥淗e 黑料社区. managed a team of four to five students and has spent quality time mentoring several of them individually. I鈥檝e watched him provide expert advice on science, persona success, outreach and careers in general to his peers.

She said D.J. excelled in her proteomics class. 鈥淭he class is a lab-intensive course. He 黑料社区. detail-oriented and committed to understanding what his experiment is telling him. And his persistence is admirable.鈥

He was named STEMM College honorable mention Outstanding Researcher, 鈥渨hich speaks to how deep his work on tooth decay is,鈥 Grant said.

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 seen a student who really enjoys working with instrumentation so much, interrogating our experimental system with every analytical device we have available to study tooth surfaces. Once we figured out which techniques would benefit our projects the most, D.J. reached out to several faculty, instructors and resource managers to make the experiments happen. We鈥檙e expecting to publish the work within the next six months.鈥

Grant said D.J. will be an exceptional addition to any team.

鈥淒.J. has exceptional skills in particular areas of research, including bioinformatics, that will make it easy for him to access the best labs with international reputations,鈥 Grant said. 鈥淗e 黑料社区. already started reaching out to the best researchers worldwide. I鈥檓 confident he will at some point complete a Ph.D., which would allow him greater flexibility to pursue his own creative ideas and projects. He may very well start his own company too. He鈥檇 do well in industry too, and he 黑料社区. motivated, so I have little doubt he鈥檒l be able to pursue research of great innate interest to him.鈥

黑料社区 students at Research in the Rotunda at Madison

D.J. loves the collaborative process of science.

鈥淵ou need people to scrutinize your work and to criticize you, so you know how to fix your work,鈥 he said. 鈥淪cience is a collaborative enterprise. It helps expand ideas, and I get many new ideas. I love exchanging ideas and seeing options out there available in the world.鈥

After graduation, D.J. plans to take a break from school, visit Europe and then go to graduate school, although he has not decided where.

Eventually he wants to lead a research group working in quantum biology. Subjects he wants to research include the microbiome of clouds and the idea of theoretical organisms.

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Photos

 

Richard 鈥淒.J.鈥  Shipman showing some of the research he has worked on with faculty at 黑料社区

Shipman at Research in the Rotunda at Madison. Shipman is in the second row on the right.