Assistant Professor, Department of Biological Sciences & Bioengineering (BSBE)
1. Dynamics of Chromatin Remodelling
The higher order organization of the chromatin governs and dictates the regulation of several cellular processes that deals with DNA. ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling complexes (CRCs) and modifying enzymes are important protein machineries that remodel or modify the higher order chromatin structure to sense and repair DNA damages. Chromatin constitutes a physical barrier to DNA repair machineries to reach the DNA. In order to deal with this impediment, transient chromatin structural changes are integral to different DNA repair pathways. The interactions between the DNA repair proteins and components of the CRCs, seems to be important for the regulation of DNA repair. However, the relation between CRCs and DNA repair proteins are not completely understood. Several studies show that INO80 CRC found in eukaryotes contains actin and several actin related proteins, play important roles in homologous recombination and DNA repair. Our laboratory is interested in examine the roles of Nuclear Actin and Actin Related Proteins (ARPs) in chromatin remodeling complex with the aim to understand their molecular mechanisms in chromatin targeting and remodeling. To fully understand the mechanism of action of chromatin remodeling complexes, it will be necessary to determine how their activities are regulated; how they are targeted to specific genes; how they interact with histone-modifying enzymes and other regulatory proteins to modulate chromatin. Our laboratory uses several model organisms such as, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and Ustilago maydis to address these important issues.
2. “SOS” response of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
In response to continuous DNA damage, the bacterial cells employ specific DNA repair systems that help maintain genome integrity. The first response towards DNA damage is the induction of SOS response, which involves expression of several genes, which participate in a variety of DNA metabolic activities such as replication, repair, recombination and mutagenesis. Under normal growth conditions the SOS genes are expressed at a basal level, which increases distinctly upon induction of the SOS response in many bacterial species including Mycobacterium tuberculosis. M. tuberculosis (Mtb) is a dreadful pathogen which survives within the hostile environment of macrophage; hence it is not surprising that it would employ a highly efficient DNA repair machinery to exist in such an environment. Mycobacterial genome contains several putative HNH nucleases, Toxin-Antitoxin module and Methyltransferases under the SOS regulon. Our laboratory is focused to understand the role of SOS regulated nucleases in DNA repair. Investigation of these nucleases will provide a new direction to our understanding of Mycobacterial DNA repair and also the strategy it adopts to survive within the macrophages. Further, our research will help us to answer the following long standing questions ‘How the bacteria escape the onslaught of macrophages?’ and How it adopts to survive within the hostile environment of the macrophages
Office
Lab 1
Chromatin Dynamic Laboratory
Biological Sciences and Bio Engineering
Indian Institute of Technology
Kanpur 208016
Uttar Pradesh, India
Chromatin dynamics and DNA repair
Ph.D, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore(2008)Thesis title: New Active Site Fold And The Role Of Metal Ions In Structure Function Relationship Of A Promiscuous Endonuclease - R.KpnIThesis supervisor: Prof. Valakunja Nagaraja
M.Sc., Madurai Kamaraj University, Madurai (2001)
B.Sc., University of Madras (1999)
Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Microbiology and Immunology
Modern Instrumental Methods in Biological Sciences Biochemistry
Graduate Students
1. Mr. Bhupender Verma
2. Ms. Shuchi Arora
3. Mr. Shantanu Sen
4. Ms. Prerana Singh
5. Mr. Quazi Tausif Ahmed
Master Students
1. Megha Jhanji
2. Vasvi Tripati
3. Monika Sharma
January-February 2008 – Visiting Scientist, ASIA LINK programme on 'Human resources Development in the Study of Nucleic Acids' Institute for Biochemistry, JL University, Giessen, Germany
April 2008 – September 2010: Prof. Dale Wigley' s group, CRUK Postdoctoral Fellow, EMBO fellow, Clare Hall Labs, London Research Institute, Cancer Research UK, Potters Bar, UK
October 2010 – February 2012: Prof. Dale Wigley' s group, EMBO fellow, The Institute of Cancer Research, London, UK
April 2012- November 2012: EMBL Interdisciplinary Postdoctoral Fellow (EIPOD-Marie Curie Fellowship), Cell Biology and Biophysics Unit, Structural Biology and Computation Biology Unit, EMBL, Heidelberg, Germany
November 2012- April 2013: Research associate , Microbiology and Cell Biology, Indian Institute of Science , Bangalore , India