Bradley biology student takes his research on the road

The work Richwoods High School grad Ryan Niemeier does would be impressive enough just on its face.

The biology student, now in his junior year at Bradley University, has spent the last three years working with nanofiber materials, trying to create "scaffold" systems to help concentrate the delivery of stem cells to help the body repair itself. It's research that could one day help facilitate repairs to damaged organs and lead to cures for conditions like Parkinson's disease.

And now he's taking the research on the road, with a prestigious nine-month fellowship to Galway, Ireland, to expand his work and come at it from a different perspective and with the advice of different scientists.

Niemeier stands out among students at Bradley, said mentor Craig Cady, a Bradley biology professor whose research is directed in similar areas.

"It's unusual for a student ... to see him advance that much at that age," he said. "Some students are intimidated at that age - a lot of research, a lot of stress. But Ryan was very much at ease. He can make decisions on his own," Cady said.

In fact, though still a student, he's frequently been the one in the driver's seat when it comes to determining where he wants to take his studies.

"Ryan basically was involved in implementing and creating a design to literally do the research" that led him to where he is today, Cady said.

"I've been able to set up and design all my experiments from the ground up," Niemeier said shortly before leaving last month for the Emerald Isle.

And that's precisely what he said he was looking for in choosing a course of study, first at Bradley and then with the fellowship: "Am I going to be able to get into a lab and am I going to be able to do meaningful research?"

The two share a student-mentor relationship, but because of the direction of their research and the amount of time they have spent together since the summer after Niemeier's junior year of high school, Cady said, they can also work as collaborators.

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Bradley biology student takes his research on the road

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