Teaching molecular science through mechanism, evidence, and inquiry.
My teaching experience spans nearly nine years of university-level instruction in molecular biology, biochemistry, protein science, bioinformatics, computational biology, molecular pathogenesis, and laboratory-based research training. I aim to help students connect molecular mechanisms with experimental evidence and quantitative interpretation.
Teaching across interconnected levels of modern biology
My courses have connected foundational cellular processes with advanced protein science, molecular pathogenesis, structural analysis, computation, and experimental laboratory practice.
Molecular and cellular biology
Foundational and advanced instruction in cell organization, genetics, molecular mechanisms, gene regulation, and genetic engineering.
- Cell Biology
- Advanced Molecular Biology
- Genetics
- Genetic Engineering
Protein science and structural biology
Protein structure, folding, engineering, biophysics, molecular interactions, and structure–function relationships.
- Protein Engineering
- Structural Biology
- Biophysics
Bioinformatics and computational biology
Sequence analysis, structural bioinformatics, biological databases, computational modeling, and data-driven investigation.
- Bioinformatics
- Computational Biology
- Computational Analysis of Biological Molecules
Molecular pathogenesis
Mechanistic study of host–pathogen interactions, disease pathways, virulence, signaling, and therapeutic targets.
- Molecular Pathogenesis
- Advanced Molecular Pathogenesis
Omics and systems biology
Integration of genome-scale data, networks, computational interpretation, and systems-level biological models.
- Advanced Technologies in Omics Sciences
- Systems Biology workshops
Laboratory and research training
Practical instruction in molecular biology, genetic engineering, bioinformatics, experimental design, and research presentation.
- Molecular Biology Laboratory
- Genetic Engineering Laboratory
- Bioinformatics Laboratory
Undergraduate, postgraduate, doctoral, and value-added instruction
Courses were taught across BTech, MTech, and doctoral programs in biotechnology and related life-science disciplines.
Core biological and biotechnology courses
Cell Biology, Bioinformatics, Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, Protein Engineering, Molecular Pathogenesis, and associated molecular biology, genetic engineering, and bioinformatics laboratories.
Advanced molecular and computational courses
Advanced Molecular Biology and Genetic Engineering, Advanced Molecular Pathogenesis, Advanced Technologies in Omics Sciences, and postgraduate research supervision.
Computational biology and research-oriented instruction
Computational Biology, bioinformatics resource sessions, systems-biology seminars, research-methodology discussions, and interdisciplinary training in large-scale biological data analysis.
Computational Analysis of Biological Molecules
A focused course introducing students to biological databases, molecular sequence analysis, protein structure visualization, and computational approaches to biological questions.
Understanding begins when students can connect a molecular model to an observable result.
I teach biology as an evidence-driven discipline in which concepts are developed through experimental questions, quantitative reasoning, and interpretation of real data. Rather than treating pathways and molecular structures as isolated facts, I encourage students to ask how a conclusion was reached, what assumptions underlie it, and how an alternative experiment might test it.
My classroom approach integrates foundational explanation, research literature, visual molecular models, computational tools, and problem-based exercises. This allows students with different levels of prior preparation to develop confidence while moving toward independent scientific thinking.
Guiding students from structured exercises to independent inquiry
Mentoring has included project selection, literature review, experimental planning, computational analysis, interpretation, thesis writing, and oral presentation.
Mentoring philosophy
I view research mentoring as a gradual transfer of intellectual ownership. Early guidance focuses on defining a tractable question and understanding the relevant methods. As a project develops, students are encouraged to interpret unexpected results, evaluate limitations, and propose the next experiment or computational analysis.
My aim is not only to help students complete a thesis but also to help them understand how scientific arguments are built from evidence.
Supervision record
Building courses, laboratories, and academic systems
Beyond classroom instruction, I contributed to syllabus development, laboratory management, online learning, student advising, and institutional academic processes.
Curriculum development
- Contributed to restructuring biotechnology curricula under multiple academic regulations.
- Designed or substantially revised approximately 15 undergraduate and postgraduate courses.
- Participated in autonomous syllabus framing and academic discussion panels.
- Served on question-paper preparation and scrutiny committees.
Laboratory leadership
- Facility in-charge for the Gene Expression and Animal Tissue Culture Laboratory.
- Facility in-charge for the Bioinformatics and Computer Laboratory.
- Coordinated laboratory resources, teaching aids, and practical instruction.
- Supported experimental and computational student research.
Student advising
- Academic adviser for undergraduate and postgraduate student cohorts.
- Coordinator for student higher-studies guidance.
- Supported project selection, graduate applications, and research career planning.
Institutional academic roles
- Institutional Web Committee
- Institutional Animal Ethics Committee
- Placement Advisory Committee
- Entrepreneurship, Development, and Innovation Council
- External examiner for theory and laboratory courses
Integrating computation into life-science education
My formal bioinformatics training and programming experience support a teaching approach that combines biological reasoning with reproducible computational analysis.
Computational teaching profile
I am formally trained in bioinformatics through the Advanced Diploma in Bioinformatics at Jawaharlal Nehru University, with specialization in protein structure analysis. I have used this foundation to teach sequence analysis, structural bioinformatics, biological databases, computational biology, and data visualization.
Subsequent training in Python, databases, systems biology, data science, and whole-genome analysis has been used as targeted upskilling to modernize computational teaching workflows.
Selected seminars and workshops organized
Organized interdisciplinary events to expose students and faculty to systems biology, large-scale data analysis, protein technology, and bioinformatics.
Computational Biology Seminar 2021
Systems Biology: Data, Model and Dynamics.
Computational Biology Seminar 2018
Understanding Biology Through Large Data Analysis.
Protein Technology Seminar 2015
Current Research and Future Products in Protein Technology.
Omix-17 Faculty Development Program
Resource instruction in genomics, proteomics, and bioinformatics.
Nano-biotechnology Conference Session
Chaired a session on current trends in nano-biotechnology.
BioQuest Research Presentation
Laboratory research presentation at the University of Hyderabad.
Courses I am prepared to teach and develop
Future teaching would connect rigorous biochemical foundations with drug metabolism, structural biology, quantitative analysis, and modern computational workflows.
Courses prepared to teach
- General and Advanced Biochemistry
- Molecular Biology
- Cell Biology
- Protein Structure and Function
- Enzyme Kinetics
- Pharmacology and Drug Metabolism
- Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
- Research Methods in Molecular Biosciences
Courses proposed for development
- Cytochrome P450 Biology and Human Drug Metabolism
- Quantitative Enzymology and Biological Data Interpretation
- Structural Bioinformatics for Experimental Biologists
- Computational Workflows in Molecular Pharmacology
- Protein Interactions in Cellular Systems
Explore research, publications, and the complete academic profile
Additional information is available through the research profile, publication record, and full curriculum vitae.