Newswise — A 17-year-old senior at Canyon Crest Academy in San Diego’s North County recently won not one, but three major science competitions after being mentored by two University of California, San Diego, professors in a project that combined supercomputer modeling with experimental research to speed up the discovery of influenza virus inhibitors.

In all, Eric Chen was awarded $250,000 in prize money within the past 12 months by winning the trifecta of science competitions: the 2014 Intel Science Talent Search; the 2013 Siemens Competition in Math, Science & Technology; and the grand prize in the international 2013 Google Science Fair.

Sometimes called the “high school version of the Nobel Prize,” the Intel Science Talent Search is one of the oldest and most prestigious pre-college national science and math competitions in the U.S. The latest competition attracted nearly 1,800 entries. The Siemens Foundation prize, started in 1998, attracted a record 2,440 students who submitted nearly 1,600 projects this year.

Chen’s computations focused on analyzing molecules that might block the activity of an enzyme called endonuclease, which all flu viruses use to reproduce. From a database of more than 450,000 compounds, he whittled down the list to 237. Subsequent lab work identified six candidates as potential anti-flu drugs. UC San Diego has applied for patents on those potential drugs.

Chen received his training in computational biology at UC San Diego, where he used resources at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC), including the center’s Gordon supercomputer – another cluster that is part of XSEDE – to run molecular dynamics computations as part of the BioChemCoRe outreach program organized by UC San Diego Professor Rommie Amaro. She and UC San Diego Professor Gen-Sheng Feng mentored Chen.

Chen used 399,000 core hours on the Ranger supercomputer at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC), one of the systems available to researchers via the National Science Foundation’s XSEDE (eXtreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment) program, the most advanced collection of integrated digital resources and services in the world.

“The supercomputers were vital tools in my project, allowing me to perform simulations and virtual screens requiring huge amounts of computational power,” Chen said in a UC San Diego feature story article after winning the Google prize late last year.

“Eric is a great example of an ultramodern scientist – one who is not afraid to combine all sorts of methods, not only experimental, but also computational,” said Amaro. “The computational models he developed after learning about computational biology at SDSC allowed him to virtually prune through about half a million compounds, ultimately enabling predictions that accelerated his discovery, making his experimental bench work much more efficient and effective.”

Brian Shay, Chen’s math teacher at Canyon Crest Academy, said: “Eric won the high school equivalent of a Nobel Prize, and he’s normal and fun and goofy – and also ridiculously brilliant.”

Meanwhile, Chen said his friends have teased him on his science-fair victories, while others have stopped him in the school halls and asked to shake his hand: “It’s very humbling and awkward. I just want to inspire and motivate students to think about pursuing careers in science.”

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