Spotlight on Jesse Bloom

Insatiable Appetite for Knowledge

Jesse Bloom, Evolutionary and Computational Biologist


Back in his school days, science was a powerful magnet that kept pulling Dr. Jesse Bloom into many possible directions. It didn’t matter if it was math, computer sciences, biology, chemistry and physics. He loved them all.

At any other time, he may have been forced to choose one field alone, but Bloom came into science at the right time, as computers were becoming deeply integrated with biology. In one fell swoop, Bloom found his calling.

Today, Bloom carries dual appointments at Fred Hutch. He is an evolutionary biologist in the Basic Sciences Division. And his computational expertise also earned him a spot in the Public Health Sciences Division’s Herbold Computational Biology Program.

Jesse Bloom in his lab at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, Washington on May 22, 2018.
Jesse Bloom in his lab at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, Washington on May 22, 2018. Robert Hood / Fred Hutch

And yet, for Bloom, it is not about the titles. His background in chemistry, biology and computer sciences has allowed him to indulge his insatiable appetite for knowledge in a field that has major implications for our health.

The Bloom Lab’s research focuses on various aspects of the molecular evolution of proteins and viruses, particularly influenza. He is looking at the mechanisms that allow the flu to evolve its genes. So far, he has discovered that one of the flu genes built up a series of mutations in a particular order, and this is the only order in which the intermediate viruses were able to reproduce.

“In my lab, we use computers to understand and visualize evolutionary information,” he said. “The challenge for us is to make sense of all this information, which is telling us something about how a virus is changing in a significant way.

"We would like to better understand the constraints of evolution.”

“We don’t really understand why certain viruses—like HIV and influenza—are so good at escaping from our vaccines, while others, such as polio and measles, aren’t. We would like to better understand the constraints of evolution.”

Understanding how the flu builds resistance against such drugs as Tamiflu, Bloom said, could help us “get a step ahead of the virus. The challenge for us is how can we stop this resistance from evolving.”

And while he is currently focused on studying the influenza virus, he also considers questions about other diseases.

“How do viruses change through evolution? And what do these changes tell us about our own immune system? We could still be casting in the dark, but basic science has given us a rational basis to search for the answers,” Bloom said.

Video: Basically Amazing featuring Dr. Jesse Bloom


RELATED RESOURCES

Researcher News

More News
Getting a paw up in the cat-and-mouse game with the COVID-19 virus Fred Hutch researchers invent method to quickly and safely test thousands of mutations to predict which ones could help the virus escape our defenses July 3, 2024
Latest Fred Hutch research on COVID-19 How Hutch scientists have been tackling coronavirus in lab and clinic June 30, 2022
Team of top researchers prepares for endemic COVID-19 $15M Howard Hughes Medical Institute grant shared by 8 scientists at Fred Hutch and UW February 11, 2022
What Hutch coronavirus experts are saying about omicron Some answers, but many questions, about highly mutated new variant of COVID-19 virus February 11, 2022