Chidozie Ojobor Emerges First Canadian University Student To Win MPOWER Financing Global Citizen Scholarship

Chidozie Ojobor has emerged the first Canadian University student to win the MPOWER Financing Global Citizen Scholarship valued at $5,000.

He was picked by MPOWER staff out of 1,121 eligible applications – which they cite as a record number of applicants.

The $5,000 scholarships were awarded on the strength of applicants’ essay submissions. Ojobor’s submission identified the need to address the threat of superbugs.

Growing up in Nigeria, one of Chidozie Ojobor’s most visceral memories was the death of his older sister, Ginika, who died of typhoid fever in 1999.

His curiosity about infectious diseases became a passion, studying microbiology at the University of Nigeria and his master’s education led to the study of phage therapy – using viruses to treat bacteria.

In particular, he uses “tailocins” – built from parts of viruses – to defeat the bugs. With tailocins, Ojobor has been able to kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the lab. Ojobor’s hope is that he can genetically engineer them to overpower superbugs as cases arise – with treatments in the form of pills and other therapies.

Chidozie Ojobor, is a PhD candidate in the lab of Alan Davidson, a professor of molecular genetics in the Faculty of Medicine.

According to Chidozie Ojobor:

“Her death caused me to want to understand what typhoid meant, the organism that caused the disease, how it was disseminated and so on.

Thinking that my sister may have been infected by a resistant strain that wouldn’t bow to antibiotics that were administered to her got me more interested in phage therapy.

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria, if left unchecked, would cause 10 million deaths yearly, worldwide, by 2050 [according to a CDC report]. So, there is great need to search for alternatives to the conventional antibiotics.

In the last 3 years of my PhD in Canada, I have identified novel bacteria-killing entities, called tailocins, which I have successfully used to kill resistant bacteria, in the laboratory. Interestingly, in any case that the bacteria then develop resistance, I can genetically engineer the tailocins to overpower the resistant superbugs.

That, for me, is a high point of the research – that we are able to keep up with that [antibiotic] resistance. The potential for the research is great and is, for me, really interesting.

I think about Alan Davidson as that person who is pivotal to my success. He’s led me in the right direction. We’ve had a great relationship.

I feel great and encouraged that I am contributing to this field and, one day, [will] prevent many young and promising Ginikas from dying from resistant bacteria.”

Chidozie Ojobor set out to understand the molecular processes of disease, with an interest in diagnosis and how diseases metabolize in the body.

His drive to combat infectious disease and, subsequently, superbugs, got the attention of MPOWER Financing, a Washington, D.C.-based company that offers loans to international students. Ojobor was named one of four winners of their Global Citizen scholarship.

According to Alan Davidson:

“Chidozie is a very motivated student with a strong drive to make a difference with his research. He is making important discoveries.

He also is a wonderfully warm and engaging person.”

As Ojobor’s education nears its end next year, he is thinking about what to do next with his research. He is leaning towards a public health focus, applying his work to developing countries like Nigeria. He is also considering starting a company “to see how we can take what we are already doing now in the lab and take it to the next level.”

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