Melanie Cushion holds down two jobs: she’s a research career scientist  at the Veterans Administration Medical Center in Cincinnati, Ohio, and  she’s also professor and associate chair for research in the department  of internal medicine at the University of Cincinnati College of  Medicine.  Dr. Cushion focuses her research on the fungus, Pneumocystis  carinii, which is a harmless commensal for most people, but a deadly  pathogen for others.  
 
 Pneumocystis  carinii was shrouded in obscurity for many years until its fifteen  minutes in the spotlight came in the 80’s, when, unfortunately, an  outbreak of Pneumocystis pneumonia prefigured the AIDS epidemic.  Large  numbers of previously healthy homosexual men in California became  deathly ill with Pneumocystis pneumonia, and doctors knew something  unusual (later found to be HIV) was going on.  Dr. Cushion says  Pneumocystis pneumonia is an opportunistic infection: it strikes  individuals with immune systems too weak to fend it off.  This explains  why it was – and still is – a well-known sign that the patient is  stricken with an active HIV infection or some other immune-suppressing  disorder.  
 
 Dr. Cushion heads up the Pneumocystis genome  project and she’s also looking into a new line of drugs called glucan  synthase inhibitors, which have a profound effect on Pneumocystis’s life  cycle and may offer new insights into managing the pathogen.
 
 In this interview, I talked with Dr. Cushion about some of the more  surprising results to come out of her genomics work, why Pneumocystis is  a tough nut to crack in the laboratory, and about why she’s not giving  her young investigator award back to the Society of Protozoologists any  time soon.