Ramalingaswami Fellowship
Title: Investigating pneumococcal adaptation to intracellular survival within
the host and characterization of macrophage extracellular vesicles for novel vaccine development.
Department of Biotechnology [DBT]
Research Summary
The bacterial pathogen, Streptococcus pneumoniae colonizes the upper respiratory tract of healthy children and adults. Despite being a natural colonizer, pneumococci cause life-threatening diseases such as pneumonia, septicemia and meningitis killing over a million people worldwide and has been classified as a priority pathogen by the WHO in 2024. The major theme of my laboratory is to understand the molecular mechanisms of bacterial pathogenesis and host-pathogen interactions. We isolate and study the role of extracellular vesicles shed from host immune cells in response to infection using in-vitro cell cultures and in-vivo mouse models. Our lab also studies drugs targeting bacterial virulence factors as antimicrobials using computational and biochemical approaches for treating pneumococcal infections to combat anti-microbial resistance.
https://sites.google.com/view/hostpathorgcb
Research Programs
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are membrane-bound nanovesicles released by virtually all cell types across kingdoms and transport various biomolecules such as proteins, nucleic acids and lipids between cells. EVs play important roles in infectious diseases and have been shown to play important roles in mediating immune activation as well as immune evasion by bacterial-derived EVs. In this project, we aim to isolate and investigate the structure, protein composition and pathological function of EVs produced by human immune cells upon infection by the respiratory tract bacterial pathogen, Streptococcus pneumoniae and its pore-forming toxin, pneumolysin (PLY). We use in-vitro cell culture models, primary cells as well as mouse models to study the role of EVs shed during infection.
We recently discovered that pneumococcal bacteria can also survive intracellularly within dendritic cells and lung alveolar macrophages pneumococci by avoiding fusion with the bactericidal lysosomes and remain viable with the macrophages. In this manner, the macrophages serve as a "silent" persistent reservoir for the bacteria to reestablish colonization and thereby transmit itself to new hosts. Our lab is interested to study the mechanisms that promote bacterial survival within host cells and immunophenotype macrophages that are permissive to bacterial survival.
Current Research Grants
-
2026 2021
-
2026 2021
Disarming bacterial pathogens using novel peptides that target pore-forming toxins: from in silico to in vivo
Department of Science & Technology [DST]
Previous/ Completed Research Grants
-
Unravelling bacterial immunoevasion and host immune reprogramming strategies in invasive pneumococcal diseases.
DST-SERB Start-up Grant [SRG] 2021-2023Developing novel host-derived peptides to neutralize bacterial pore-forming toxins in bacteremic patients
Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden 2018-2020