A profile of Dr. Lesley Weaver in celebration of Black History Month
Dr. Lesley Weaver, an alum of IU’s Department of Biology, has returned to campus as an Assistant Professor after her finishing her postdoctoral research at Johns Hopkins University. This past September, I had the opportunity to interview her about her experience as an early career researcher, setting up her lab, navigating IU in her new role as an Assistant Professor, and how the COVID-19 pandemic shift to online has simultaneously highlighted issues with and solutions to accessibility and diversity in academia.


What are your research interests?
The big question I’m interested in is how different organs talk to each other and what they talk about. Since I can’t look at all of the different organs and all of the different ‘conversations’ between organs happening in humans, my lab research uses Drosophila (fruit flies) and focuses on reproduction to understand inter-organ communication. This is important because many external factors, such as changes in diet, bacterial infections, and exposure to environmental toxins, alter an organism’s physiology through disruption of tissue homeostasis, which could result in infertility. By using the fruit fly as a model, we can gain insight into how some of these inter-organ communication networks possibly act in humans.
How does it feel to be back at IU? What differences are there between being a graduate student and a faculty member on campus?
I’m from Indiana, so that was a major factor for me coming back. I have always been a small town girl, so I love the fact that Bloomington is a small town with a big university. Here, you have the benefit of being in a small community, but you also have a large university for students.
One of the obvious differences between being a student here versus faculty is that as faculty, you get to experience Bloomington both when it’s flooded with students and during the breaks, when the students leave. Another difference I definitely feel is, since I was here last, I’m now considered an established investigator.









