Past Seminars

Here is the list of our past seminars:


Arup K. Chakraborty (MIT, USA). Biophysics seminar ESPCI-ENS

From 11 May at 13:00 to 18 May 2018 at 14:00 - ENS Conf IV (24 rue Lhomond, 2nd floor)

How to hit HIV where it hurts

Vaccination has saved more lives than any other medical procedure. But, some pathogens have evolved which have defied successful vaccination using the empirical paradigms pioneered by Pasteur and Jenner. I will describe how bringing together theoretical/computational approaches from statistical physics, with immunology is beginning to confront this challenge by developing some of the principles necessary for rational design of vaccines that may eliminate these scourges. One characteristic of many pathogens for which successful vaccines do not exist is that they present themselves in various guises. HIV is an extreme example because of its high mutability, and it continues to wreak havoc, especially in developing countries. I will describe how we developed models to translate data on HIV protein sequences to knowledge of the HIV fitness landscape, and tested the resulting predictions against in vitro and clinical data (with collaborators). Based on these studies, a therapeutic T cell-based vaccine was designed, which is now being advanced to pre-clinical studies in monkeys. I will also describe work pertinent to how vaccination may induce broadly neutralizing antibodies that can neutralize diverse HIV strains – this work lies at a crossroad of immunology, evolutionary biology, and statistical physics. If time permits, I may also mention important differences between the fitness landscapes of polio and HIV.






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Arup K. Chakraborty (MIT, USA). Biophysics seminar ESPCI-ENS

From 11 May at 13:00 to 18 May 2018 at 14:00 - ENS Conf IV (24 rue Lhomond, 2nd floor)

How to hit HIV where it hurts

Vaccination has saved more lives than any other medical procedure. But, some pathogens have evolved which have defied successful vaccination using the empirical paradigms pioneered by Pasteur and Jenner. I will describe how bringing together theoretical/computational approaches from statistical physics, with immunology is beginning to confront this challenge by developing some of the principles necessary for rational design of vaccines that may eliminate these scourges. One characteristic of many pathogens for which successful vaccines do not exist is that they present themselves in various guises. HIV is an extreme example because of its high mutability, and it continues to wreak havoc, especially in developing countries. I will describe how we developed models to translate data on HIV protein sequences to knowledge of the HIV fitness landscape, and tested the resulting predictions against in vitro and clinical data (with collaborators). Based on these studies, a therapeutic T cell-based vaccine was designed, which is now being advanced to pre-clinical studies in monkeys. I will also describe work pertinent to how vaccination may induce broadly neutralizing antibodies that can neutralize diverse HIV strains – this work lies at a crossroad of immunology, evolutionary biology, and statistical physics. If time permits, I may also mention important differences between the fitness landscapes of polio and HIV.






Seminar archive  (219)


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