At our December 3, 2024 general membership meeting, we enjoyed a fascinating presentation from UCSF ARCS Scholar Christine Boutros, who talked about her research into San Joaquin Valley Fever, a disease that in a rare 1% of cases disseminates to the nervous system causing lifelong impacts. Christine, a California native, attended Northeastern University in Boston and graduated in 2017 with a BS in Behavioral Neuroscience. During her time in Boston, Christine worked at Boston Children’s Hospital studying the neuroscience of motivation and later studied novel therapeutics for HIV treatment at Massachusetts General Hospital. Christine is now an MD-PhD candidate in UCSF’s Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP). She is combining her interests in neuroscience and infectious diseases by studying coccidioidomycosis (aka “Valley Fever”) to better understand the factors that influence dissemination to the central nervous system as a means of improving patient outcomes and clinical care. Christine is looking at why some people develop this form of the disease versus others and is hoping that her research will reveal antigens that might lead to the development of therapies to treat the disease.