Many bacteria that could potentially make us sick normally live in us without doing so, in part because of the protective role that mucus plays in our bodies. This summer, MPC-CMSE Summer Scholar Gaetana Michelet studied how complex materials such as mucus influence bacterial behavior, while working in the Biogel Lab of Katharina Ribbeck, the Eugene Bell Career Development Professor of Tissue Engineering, at MIT.

Michelet, a mechanical engineering student at the University of Puerto Rico, worked with MIT Postdoctoral Associate Gerardo Cárcamo. “We are curious to understand how certain problematic pathogens can live on our body without causing infections. We try to understand the role of mucus in this process,” Cárcamo says. His own research focuses on bacterial interactions such as cell-to-cell communication and bacterial competition in a mucus environment.

During a visit to the lab, Michelet explains that she was working with microbes for her summer internship and learning different techniques used in microbiology, such as growing bacteria in different media, seeing how they interact with materials like mucus, and how they grow in different ways. “For this project, I have integrated my materials science knowledge with the microbiology I've learned here,” she says.