Biography:Shabaana Khader

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Shabaana A. Khader
Alma materBharathidasan University
Madurai Kamaraj University
University of Madras
Scientific career
InstitutionsTrudeau Institute
University of Pittsburgh
Washington University in St. Louis
University of Chicago

Shabaana A. Khader is an Indian-American microbiologist who is the Bernard and Betty Roizman Professor of Microbiology at the University of Chicago. She is also the Chair of the Department of Microbiology. In an effort to design new vaccines and therapeutic strategies, Khader studies host-pathogen interactions in infectious disease.

Early life and education

Khader grew up in India. She attended Bharathidasan University, where she earned an undergraduate degree in zoology in 1995.[1] She completed an undergraduate degree in biomedical genetics at the University of Madras.[1] She was a doctoral researcher in biotechnology at the Madurai Kamaraj University.[1] Her research considered host-pathogen interactions during leprosy, a disease caused by mycobacteria. After earning her doctorate in 2004, she was a postdoc at the Trudeau Institute under the mentorship of Dr. Andrea Cooper, working on host-immune responses in tuberculosis. At Trudeau, Khader demonstrated that the cytokine Interleukin-17 played a critical role in vaccine-induced immunity to the infectious disease tuberculosis. She studied and described the role Interleukin 12 (IL-12) cytokines play in tuberculosis infection.

Research and career

Khader joined the University of Pittsburgh in 2007 and studied Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Francisella tularensis as well as the role of cytokines in immunity. Khader moved her research team to Washington University School of Medicine in 2013.[2] In 2022, Khader moved to the University of Chicago, and was appointed chair of the Department of Microbiology.[3]


Awards and honors

Selected publications

References