Prestigious scholarship award ​ensures continued successes ​for Meg Lemons

By Amy H. Carter

Margaret “Meg” Lemons (DVM, 2024) was shocked to learn she was a winner of a ​$75,000 scholarship through the Foundation for the Horse, but her future colleagues ​were not.

“Meg is just a superstar, and so deserving of this ​prestigious award,” says Dr. Kelsey Hart, associate ​professor of Large Animal Internal Medicine in the ​College of Veterinary Medicine and Lemons’ research ​mentor. Lemons recalls Hart’s “very emotional” ​reaction when she heard the news. “She started ​bawling,” Lemons says.


The scholarship is sponsored by the Coyote Rock ​Ranch, a breeding operation for cutting horses in ​Oregon. Lemons was one of four fourth-year students ​selected from a field of 47 applicants nationwide to ​receive the scholarship. The announcement was made ​in November 2023 during the annual convention of the ​American Association of Equine Practitioners in San ​Diego.

(Photo by Lawton Harris)

Both Hart and Dr. Michelle Henry-Barton, assistant dean of Clinical Academic Affairs for ​CVM, describe Lemons as “the total package” – a smart and highly professional student ​with a strong work ethic.

(Meg) is a wonderful team player, highly ​respected, and is an absolute pleasure to be ​around,” Henry-Barton says. “I am looking ​forward to the day that she will become a colleague ​in large animal internal medicine.

Lemons aspires to the dual role of large animal care provider and researcher in the field of ​equine medicine. Her love for horses began in middle school – a little late by most ​standards, she says – but what she lacked for in timing she made up for with skill and ​enthusiasm.

Riding competitively through high school and her ​undergraduate studies in Biological Sciences at ​UGA, Lemons was a member of the UGA Equestrian ​team. Since her home state of Utah does not have ​its own vet school, Lemons applied to various ​colleges and interviewed in person at 13 schools ​before the Covid lockdown.

“During Covid I realized how good a community ​I had here,” she says. She ultimately chose UGA ​CVM for her graduate work. She applied and was ​accepted to CVM’s Veterinary Medical Scientist ​Training Program to earn dual DVM/Ph.D. ​degrees.

Large animal internal medicine is my dream job,” she says, “and hopefully back in ​academia because I love teaching, the research and the clinical aspect as well.

(Photo by Lawton Harris)

She got her first intro to UGA research as a sophomore in the theriogenology lab of Dr. Roberto ​Palomares. Wearing her equine team shirt to the labs one day led to an introduction to Hart, whose ​lab looks at endocrine, immunology interactions between horses and their foals.

Her Ph.D. thesis began to take shape the summer before vet school when Lemons reached out to a ​pediatric hematologist/oncologist, Dr. Josh Schiffman at the University of Utah, who translates ​animal studies of immunology into human medicine.

Specifically, Lemons is interested in equine neonatal sepsis. “Foals get really sick ​when they’re born and become septic and it’s a big problem that we still don’t fully ​understand to this day,” she says. “I translated a lot of (Schiffman’s) work into the ​horses and foals here, so my project is on neutrophil disfunction and equine neonatal ​sepsis and specially looking at neutrophil extracellular traps.”

In the letter she wrote to the American Association of Equine Practitioners ​recommending Lemons for the Coyote Rock Ranch Scholarship, Hart says the work ​Lemons has done thus far will have far-reaching benefits for both veterinary and ​human medicine. “While Meg’s ultimate goal is to use her research and clinical ​training to save the lives of critically ill horses and foals, her research has already ​shown key similarities between equine and human NETosis and reinforces the ​importance of large mammalian models for bridging translational gaps between in ​vitro and rodent studies and clinical medicine.”

Microscope Science Doodle Composition

(Photo by Lawton Harris)

As has been her habit throughout her academic ​career, Lemons has found a way to marry her ​interests in a way that will benefit not only ​herself but the patients she serves.

“I’m in a unique position now where I still do ​research but I’m also in the clinical side of ​things, so in the hospital helping with cases,” ​Lemons says. “You see all these sick patients ​and you get really connected to them and you ​want to figure out what you can do to help and ​unfortunately there’s a lot of things in ​medicine we don’t know so kind of witnessing ​that frustration firsthand and being able to ​figure out a way in research to make a ​difference … is what keeps me motivated.”

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