Albuquerque Journal

‘Unintimida­ted by difficulty’

UNM alum Harshini Mukundan creates research career on her own terms

- UNM NEWS SERVICE

Harshini Mukundan, PhD, juggles a dizzying number of responsibi­lities — while somehow making it all look effortless. As an administra­tor in the Chemistry Division at Los Alamos National Laboratory, she serves as Deputy Group Leader for Physical Chemistry and Applied Spectrosco­py and Team Leader in Chemistry for Biomedical Applicatio­ns. The 2003 graduate from UNM’s Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program is also a teacher, as well as a devoted parent and spouse, who, in her spare time, participat­es in traditiona­l Indian dance.

But in her role as a research scientist, Mukundan is laser-focused on finding solutions to some of the most urgent health concerns facing humanity. At LANL she has developed diagnostic assays for tuberculos­is and helped create technology to detect breast cancer and influenza. Her current — highly ambitious — research agenda centers on finding a universal method for identifyin­g infectious disease.

Munkundan’s lab has unraveled some of the common methods by which disease-causing organisms interact with a human host in hopes of creating a mechanism to mimic what the body already does naturally.

“All pathogens support or secrete biomarkers that are recognized by our innate immune system,” she says, adding that many of these molecules are highly conserved. “The body recognizes conserved signatures. It looks at the commonalit­y and uses that to mount a response.”

These molecules are not easily detected in the bloodstrea­m, but they are carried throughout the body by hitchhikin­g on HDL and LDL cholestero­l proteins (“My buzzword for them is the ‘biological taxi service,’ ” she says).

Mukundan and her collaborat­ors are working on sensor technology that can liberate these biomarkers from their cholestero­l hosts and measure them, providing a rapid readout of what type of infection they’re signaling.

While the lab’s work has national defense applicatio­ns, it also has obvious relevance in clinical health care and is already being assessed for its use in diagnosing disease in the field. It has been tested in South Korea, Uganda and Kenya, Mukundan says, and could provide a quick way to distinguis­h a bacterial from a viral infection.

Mukundan’s path to a leadership role at the nation’s premier national laboratory started in a

small town in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, where her father was in banking and her mother was a teacher.

She earned her undergradu­ate degree in microbiolo­gy from the University of Delhi in 1995. “It seemed cool,” she says. “I liked biology, and I always wanted to do medicine or biology.” She went on to complete a master’s in microbiolo­gy at Barkatulla­h University in Bhopal, with her thesis research conducted at India’s National Institute of Immunology.

Her lab work there centered on drug-resistant cancer cell lines. “There were pretty awesome researcher­s working at NII,” Mukundan says. “I got to meet a lot of really cool people. Essentiall­y, it was just the exposure, and then I decided I wanted to do a Ph.D.”

She and her husband, LANL staff scientist Rangachary Mukundan, came to the U.S. for their doctoral work. He earned his Ph.D. in materials science at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and joined LANL as a postdoctor­al fellow in 1997.

Harshini was initially accepted at Penn for her Ph.D., but transferre­d to The University of New Mexico when her husband got his job at Los Alamos. As a late arrival in UNM’s Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program, she started by rotating through several labs, where she met Nancy Kanagy, Ph.D., now chair of the Department of Cell Biology & Physiology.

“I really liked Nancy,” Mukundan says. “I liked her work ethic and approach to balance. She has this way of making you feel very welcome.”

At the time, Kanagy was working on alpha adrenergic receptors and their role in cardiovasc­ular disease, which Mukundan found interestin­g. Mukundan started by exploring a hypothesis involving the movement of calcium ions in cells that soon turned out to be incorrect.

“I definitely proved that the hypothesis was wrong,” she says. “We got a paper out of it, but that research was at a dead end. We had to make a project change.”

With Kanagy and fellow Cell Biology professor Thomas Resta, Mukundan devised a new project. “It was looking at gender difference­s in hypertensi­on and the role of estrogen in erythropoi­etin regulation,” she says.

In putting together the research proposal that would lead to her dissertati­on on how estrogen regulates of erythropoi­etin gene expression during hypoxia. “Nan and Tom were heavily involved and helped a lot, obviously, and we got it,” she says, adding that the setback taught her a valuable lesson.

“It looks like a big bummer when your original project doesn’t work, but in retrospect, I learned how to write,” she says. “It made me altogether much more confident. Sometimes you have what appears to be a big tragedy, but it actually works out for the better.”

Mukundan says she experience­d some reactions when she first came to the U.S. that were “a little bit racist,” she sometimes felt she was treated differentl­y because she was a woman. But at UNM, she felt supported.

“In Nan and Tom’s team, I found acceptance,” Mukundan says. Kanagy, who was starting a family, became a friend and mentor. “I think it kind of subconscio­usly does teach you that women can be great scientists, good mothers – and perpetuall­y tired.”

Mukundan and her husband lived in Santa Fe while she was doing her lab research, requiring a daily commute to the UNM campus in Albuquerqu­e. “She stayed at my house,” Kanagy recalls. “Sometimes, it was really late to drive back to Santa Fe.”

Mukundan showed an aptitude for research, Kanagy says. “Harshini was unafraid of challenges,” she recalls. “Early on, she was not daunted by having a hard problem to solve and taking this on. She used very creative approaches.”

Mukundan was unflappabl­e in the face of the failure of her first research project, Kanagy says. “‘Courageous’ might be the right word — or at least unintimida­ted by difficulty,” she says. “When she had to switch gears, she was very resilient. She developed a whole bunch of new methods to answer this question.”

Kanagy also appreciate­s her friend’s ability to keep the many commitment­s in her life in balance.

“She’s very human and cared very deeply about her family and cared about my family,” she says. “Even then, she was doing traditiona­l Indian dance while commuting an hour each way. When I think of Harshini, she has a great smile and she just invites people in — she’s just a pleasure to have around.”

Although scientific careers can be incredibly demanding, Mukundan says she learned from her UNM colleagues “you can have a good career and have a family and have work-life balance. That makes people want to go into science.”

 ?? COURTESY OF LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY ?? Harshini Mukundan, an administra­tor in the Chemistry Division at Los Alamos National Laboratory, is conducting research hoping to find a universal method for identifyin­g infectious disease.
COURTESY OF LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY Harshini Mukundan, an administra­tor in the Chemistry Division at Los Alamos National Laboratory, is conducting research hoping to find a universal method for identifyin­g infectious disease.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States