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Gamble Program for Clinical Studies

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Ramu A. Subbramanian, PhD

Title

Assistant Professor

Appointment

Assistant Professor, Pediatrics

Email

ramu.subbramanian@cchmc.org

Phone

513-636-8041

Fax

513-636-7655

Credentials

PhD: University of Montreal, Faculty of Medicine, 1998.

Fellowship: Research Fellow in Medicine, Harvard Medical School.

Research

Dr. Subbramanian's lab focuses on immunological mechanisms underlying the generation of optimal host responses against the mutable RNA viruses, influenza and HIV. Current paradigms of immune protection against mutable viral pathogens in general suggests that long-lived immune responses that are of broadest diversity and highest magnitude are likely to result in the optimal protection of the host.

This lab utilizes influenza and human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV) to assess the quality and quantity of antigen specific immune responses generated during infection and vaccination, emphasizing generation of memory pools and development of cross protection. A spectrum of current and emerging immunological technologies including neutralization assays, polychromatic flowcytometry and ELISPOT are used in the lab to assess immunogenicity of viral antigens.

Research projects include:

  • Novel influenza vaccination approaches geared toward generating optimal cross protection and long-lived memory pools
  • Characterization of candidate avian influenza vaccine immunogenicity in humans
  • Novel vaccine vector design and delivery modalities for the mutable Influenza and HIV viral models

Publications, Most Recent

Subbramanian, R.A.; Charini, W.A.; Kuroda, M.J.; Seman, M.: Expansion following epitope peptide exposure in vitro predicts CTL epitope dominance hierarchy in lymphocytes of vaccinated Mamu-A*01+ rhesus monkeys. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses, 2006; 22(5):445-52.

Sun, Y.; Schmitz, J.E.; Acierno, P.M.; Santra, S.; Subbramanian, R.A.: Dysfunction of simian immunodeficiency virus / simian human immunodeficiency virus-induced IL-2 expression by central memory CD4+ T lymphocytes. J Immunol, 2005; 174(8):4753-60.

Subbramanian, R.A.; Chikaya, M.; Martin, K.L.; Peyerl, F.W.: Engineered T-cell receptor tetramers bind MHC-peptide complexes with high affinity. Nature Biotechnol. 2004; 22:1429-34.

Subbramanian, R.A.; Kuroda, M.J.; Charini, W.A.; Barouch, D.H.; Costantino, C.: Magnitude and diversity of cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte responses elicited by multiepitope DNA vaccination in rhesus monkeys. J Virol, 2003; 77:10113-10118.

Professional Organization Memberships

Infectious Diseases Society of America

American Association of Immunologists

International AIDS Society

Canadian Society for Immunology

Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology

Special Interests

  • Mechanisms of CTL diversity generation
  • Vaccine immunology

Presentations, Most Recent

Subbramanian, R.A.: HIV Vaccines, Original Antigenic Sin and Prime Boost Vaccine Regimens. Presented at the Keystone Symposia; 2006.

Subbramanian, R.A.: Expansion Following Epitope Peptide Exposure in Vitro Predicts CTL Epitope Dominance Hierarchy in Lymphocytes of Vaccinated Mamu-A*01+ Rhesus Monkeys. Presented for the American Association of Immunologists; 2006; Boston, MA.

Professional Affiliation

Immunobiology Graduate Training Program

Related Areas

This person works in these other areas at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center: