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Home » Speakers » Harmit Malik
Harmit Malik

Harmit Malik

Fred Hutchison Cancer Research Center & Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Harmit Malik received his undergraduate degree in chemical engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay and his PhD from the University of Rochester. He moved to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle for post-doctoral work and decided to stay, starting his own lab in the Division of Basic Sciences in 2003. Malik is interested in the evolution of genetic conflict. To this end, his lab studies transposable elements and viruses, as both of these genomic elements are interested only in their own evolutionary success. He also studies the strategies used by primates to defend themselves against attack by viruses. Another part of his lab is interested in understanding how these conflicts between and within genomes shape essential cellular processes, with a special focus on chromosome segregation.

Malik has been awarded numerous prizes for his research including the 2010 Vilcek Prize for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science, a Presidential Early Career Award and a HHMI Early Career Scientist award.

Talks with this Speaker

Host and Viral Evolution: Molecular Evolutionary Arms Race Between Primate and Viral Genomes

Host virus interactions result in a constant evolutionary arms race. Harmit Malik finds that many of the genes that have mutated the most are in the host immune system. (Talk recorded in March 2012)

  • Part 1: Host evolution
    Part 1: Host evolution
    Audience:
    • Student
    • Researcher
    • Educators of H. School / Intro Undergrad
    • Educators of Adv. Undergrad / Grad
    Duration: 32:50
  • Part 2: Viral evolution
    Part 2: Viral evolution
    Audience:
    • Researcher
    • Educators of Adv. Undergrad / Grad
    Duration: 22:46

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This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences under Grant No. 2122350 and 1 R25 GM139147. Any opinion, finding, conclusion, or recommendation expressed in these videos are solely those of the speakers and do not necessarily represent the views of the Science Communication Lab/iBiology, the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, or other Science Communication Lab funders.

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