Pran Teelucksingh

Pran Teelucksingh recently received his BS in Chemistry and a BA in health and human biology from Brown University, Rhode Island. His research interests include bacterial metabolites and natural products. At Brown, Pran conducted research in the Kizer Lab, where he worked on optimizing the recombinant expression of glycan antigens in E. coli. He also served as a head tutor and teaching assistant for the organic chemistry sequence. He is especially interested in the intersection between public health and science. During his earlier years of college, he spent time in several student-led public health organizations and also co-published a research article on campus accessibility.

Outside of work, Pran enjoys hiking, baking, gardening, reading visual novels, and playing the trumpet and RPG video games.

Pran’s Fulbright-Nehru project is seeking to uncover novel antibiotic scaffolds and producers that can serve as the foundation for novel antimicrobial therapies. The research involves screening natural product extracts for bioactivity against Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria, identifying a bioactive extract, purifying the metabolite, and then characterizing the metabolite’s activity toward drug-resistant bacteria. The study is also mapping the biosynthetic gene cluster of such a metabolite by using the bioinformatic tool antiSMASH.