Tolia Research Group

The Host-Pathogen Interactions and Structural Vaccinology Section (HPISV) seeks to uncover the fundamental phenomena necessary to develop the next generation of vaccines through structural vaccinology. Structure-guided design of immunogens to elicit well-defined immune responses will likely lead to significant improvements in vaccine efficacy and durability.

We pursue three areas of research:

  1. Host-pathogen interactions
    Pathogens must interact with the host for survival. We aim to uncover and exploit these interactions to prevent disease.
  2. Neutralizing Antibodies
    Antibodies play key roles in protection against infectious disease. We aim to determine the mechanisms of productive antibody neutralization of pathogens.
  3. Structural vaccinology for infectious diseases
    Producing antigens that focus the immune response to protective epitopes and result in durable protection is critical for future vaccines. We aim to design and engineer novel antigens with enhanced efficacy and durability.

We focus on the infectious diseases malaria and COVID-19. Malaria affects a third of the world`s population, leads to 200-300 million cases per year, and results in approximately half a million deaths annually. A majority of fatalities are suffered by children under the age of five. Most morbidity and mortality due to malaria are caused by the parasites Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax. Vaccines against these pathogens are likely to play key roles in malaria control efforts and are expected to be a central component for the eradication of malaria through an integrated program. COVID-19 has emerged as a significant global health priority and continuous development of vaccines is necessary to ensure protection against new variants. We aim to leverage structural vaccinology to develop potent and durable vaccines for malaria and COVID-19.

HPISV uses the tools of structural biology, biochemistry, biophysics, immunology, and microbiology to examine proteins and protein complexes associated with pathogenesis. Specific approaches include:

  • X-ray crystallography, Electron microscopy, Biophysical methods (SAXS, BLI, ITC, AUC)
  • Human monoclonal antibody isolation, characterization, and examination
  • Human-guided and computational protein design
  • In vitro functional assays and in vivo preclinical studies in rodents and non-human primates

Niraj Harish Tolia, Ph.D., FASTMH

Senior Investigator
Chief, Host-Pathogen Interactions and Structural Vaccinology Section

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Education:

Ph.D., 2004, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory School of Biological Sciences, NY

B.Sc., 1999, Imperial College, London

Dr. Tolia became the Chief of the Host-Pathogen Interactions and Structural Vaccinology section in the Laboratory of Malaria Immunology and Vaccinology in May 2018. He is a tenured Senior Investigator in the Division of Intramural Research, NIAID. He has pioneered the structural and biophysical studies of host-pathogen interactions, antibody neutralization and immunogen design for malaria.

Learn more about Niraj Harish Tolia, Ph.D., FASTMH

Photo of Niraj Harish Tolia, Ph.D.

Thayne Dickey, Ph.D.

Scientist

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Education:

University of Colorado Boulder; Ph.D.
Carleton College; B.A.

Dickey is working on developing and implementing a structure-based antigen design pipeline to create improved vaccine immunogens. His team has successfully improved the immunogenicity of malaria and SARS-CoV-2 antigens in animals and are now advancing promising candidates and expanding our scope of targets.

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Richi Gupta, Ph.D.

Scientist

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Education:

George Mason University; Ph.D.

Gupta is a scientist in the Host pathogen Interaction and Structural Vaccinology (HPSIV) section at Laboratory of Malaria Immunology & Vaccinology (LMIV). She is currently working on antibody neutralization and immunogen design for malaria vaccine candidates. Her research interests are vaccine development, bioinformatics, and microbiome.

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Ajay Kumar, Ph.D.

Visiting Fellow

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Education:

National Institute of Pharmaceutical Education and Research (SAS Nagar), India; Ph.D.

Guru Nanak Dev University Amritsar, India; M.Sc.

Ajay is dedicated to advancing structural vaccinology for malaria with a focus on the examination of crucial malaria immunogens. His research emphasizes a structural approach to design, aiming to empower and customize antigens for improved efficacy in combating malaria.

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Palak N. Patel, Ph.D.

Visiting Fellow

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Education:

Nirma University, India; Ph.D.

Saurashtra University, India; M.Sc.

Patel is a structural biologist with a focus on understanding the mechanisms of antibody neutralization of malaria parasites, and the design and engineering of novel immunogens.

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Nichole D. Salinas

Section Manager/Biologist

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Education:

Washington University in St. Louis; M.A.

Central Michigan University; B.Sc.

Salinas's training is in biochemistry with an emphasis on protein production and purification and biophysical characterization of proteins. She currently works on the development of nanoparticle-based vaccines utilizing structure-based vaccinology approaches.

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Shashank Shekhar, Ph.D.

Visiting Fellow

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Education:

Jawaharlal Nehru University, India; Ph.D.

Banaras Hindu University, India; M.Sc.

Shekhar is working on the structural vaccinology of malaria. His research interest lies in the structural study of key malaria immunogens and conducting structure-guided design of vaccines.

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Dashuang Shi, Ph.D.

Scientist

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Education:

University of Sydney, Ph.D.

Xiamen University, M.Sc.

Xiamen University, B.Sc.

Shi is working on the design and structural characterization of novel malaria vaccines to display antigens on nanoparticles. He is seeking to develop a next generation of malaria vaccine to be able to elicit both humoral and cell-mediated immunity for better protection.

Learn more about Dashuang Shi, Ph.D.

Wai Kwan (Candy) Tang, Ph.D.

Senior Scientist

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Education:

The Chinese University of Hong Kong; Ph.D.

Tang is a structural biologist and protein biochemist with a focus on host-pathogen interactions and the humoral immune response to infection.

Learn more about Wai Kwan (Candy) Tang, Ph.D.

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