UoH faculty invited for a presentation at SciTalk

HYDERABAD: An assistant professor from University of Hyderabad (UoH) presented her work on SARS-CoV-2 vaccine design as a SciTalk at the Keystone eSymposia entitled ‘Antibodies and vaccines as drugs for Covid19.’
Seema Mishra, assistant professor at Department of Biochemistry, School of Life Sciences, participated in the virtual conference held between January 13 and January 14. This conference with a small set of participants (total 323 participants) is centered around privileged experts at the top of their fields.
Prominent among these speakers who talked about their work in this conference are frontrunners in vaccine development: Dr. Andrea Carfi, Moderna; Prof. Sarah Gilbert, University of Oxford; Trevor R. Smith, Inovio; Dr. Alexander Muik, BioNTech Pfizer; Liise-anne Pirofski, MD, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center and Dr. Davide Corti, Humabs BioMed SA, to name a few.
The major part of the questions to the speakers centered around the mRNA and DNA-based vaccines, their efficacy and their delivery systems, and whether there is a possibility of integration of these vaccine constructs into the human DNA.
Seema Mishra, assistant professor at Department of Biochemistry, School of Life Sciences, participated in the virtual conference held between January 13 and January 14. This conference with a small set of participants (total 323 participants) is centered around privileged experts at the top of their fields.
Prominent among these speakers who talked about their work in this conference are frontrunners in vaccine development: Dr. Andrea Carfi, Moderna; Prof. Sarah Gilbert, University of Oxford; Trevor R. Smith, Inovio; Dr. Alexander Muik, BioNTech Pfizer; Liise-anne Pirofski, MD, Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Medical Center and Dr. Davide Corti, Humabs BioMed SA, to name a few.
The major part of the questions to the speakers centered around the mRNA and DNA-based vaccines, their efficacy and their delivery systems, and whether there is a possibility of integration of these vaccine constructs into the human DNA.
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