In conversation with this young woman who chooses her words carefully, it is only gradually possible to sense the passion and determination with which Rebekka Wild pursues her life's goal. The desire to become a researcher first emerged during her schooldays. She ended up studying proteins more or less "by ruling everything else out", after various internships, one of which was in a hospital. She explains the continuing fascination of structural biology by the fact that you can "really see something" at a fundamental level. And that the structures allow conclusions to be drawn about how biological processes work in detail. She closes with a smile: "I just like to look at protein structures."
Luckily for Wild, there is still a lot to be looked at and explained. Her still-young career has already followed a somewhat zigzag path. In her doctoral thesis at the University of Geneva, which was awarded the Prix Schläfli, she showed - in close cooperation with plant biologists - how the amount of phosphate in cells is regulated. Specifically, she has elucidated the structure of what is known as the SPX domain, which appears in various proteins (enzymes, transport or signalling proteins) and interacts with a phosphate-specific signalling molecule. Recently, she has been working intensively at ETH Zurich on the enzyme that attaches sugar chains to proteins. In other words, a completely different department of the big biochemical cell factory.
And so she familiarised herself with a completely new biochemical field, read and studied, let herself be swept away by the flood of research results. Of course, you can't read every paper. But that doesn't cause her any anxiety or feeling of being overwhelmed: "I think of it more positively: you know you'll always find the information you need."
More than mere success and the competition to publish
Yes, the complexity of the field is becoming ever greater, but it can also be mastered, with computers becoming increasingly important. She is convinced that human researchers will still be needed in the future. She sees herself leading a "contented, happy" group in 30 years' time. So it's really about more than mere success and the competition to publish ever more, ever faster. It would also be nice if the gender ratio in this group were more balanced than it is today, especially at higher levels of the career ladder. She wishes "that it would no longer matter whether you are pursuing a research career as a woman or as a man". She knows the structures still stand in the way of that. "Politics should perhaps do more there," Wild suggests.