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The Madireddy Lab

Research

The cells in the human body are constantly trying to overcome damage to their DNA that results from both exogenous (tobacco smoke, alcohol) and endogenous sources (Reactive aldehydes, ROS) of stress, to ensure normal cellular function. Dysregulation of critical cellular processes, such as DNA replication, repair or transcription, can lead to chromosomal aberrations that lead to malignancies and other debilitating diseases. The overarching goal of our research is to identify markers of replication stress that can help stratify patients in terms of prognosis and response to treatment measures.

Abstract image of Replication profiles depicting chromosomal breaks

Abstract image of Replication profiles depicting chromosomal breaks

Fragile site breaks in FA patient cells

Fragile site breaks in FA patient cells

CFS Sequences in Micronuclei

CFS Sequences in Micronuclei

Research in our lab largely focuses on elucidating the molecular mechanisms that underlie the pathogenesis of cancer-predisposition syndromes and hematological malignancies. In particular, we are exploring the contribution of defective replication, transcription and repair to genomic instability in disorders like Fanconi anemia and Adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma. In addition to our studies on determining the molecular basis of cancer-predisposition, we are also interested in understanding the primary mechanisms underlying clonal hematopoiesis, hematopoietic stem cell exhaustion/attrition and bone marrow failure using a human stem cell model.

Research Projects in the Madireddy Lab:

  1. Understanding the Mechanisms Driving (Pre)Malignant Hematological States in 9/11 World Trade Center Collapse First Responders

  2. Understanding the Mechanisms Driving Somatic Hypermutations at Genes Linked to Clonal Hematopoiesis

  3. Understanding the mechanistic crosstalk between Translesion Polymerase Eta, Fanconi anemia (FA) associated nuclease (FAN1) and FANCD2 during replication stress

  4. Implications of EP300 Dysregulation in Adult T-cell leukemia

  5. Identifying Novel Molecular Mechanisms Dysregulated in the Absence of the PHF6 Tumor Suppressor in T-cell Acute lymphoblastic Leukemia

All of our strategies and approaches are aimed at identifying key markers (proteins, secondary structures, genomic hotspots, chromatin conformation changes) that could directly help in tailoring therapeutic regimes for cancer patients. In addition, since our research investigates changes at the earliest stages of the disease, we have the power to identify changes (in molecular mechanisms) that are causal in disease manifestation, while eliminating confounding consequential changes that occur downstream.

Our Approach

We study changes in DNA replication at the single molecule level using fluorescent microscopy, we use genomics to study secondary structure formation and collisions between DNA replication and transcription machinery by a specialized ChIP-seq analysis, and we study changes in topologically associated domains that are strongly implicated in transcriptional changes that destabilize tumor suppressor genes or activate proto-oncogenes.

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Single molecule analysis of replicating DNA (SMARD)

Cells are sequentially pulsed with two halogenated nucleosides to label replicating DNA. Pulsed cells are lysed in agarose plugs and genomic DNA digested with a restriction endonuclease to produce 100 – 600 kb segments. The DNA is separated by pulsed field gel electrophoresis and the target segment identified by Southern blotting. A gel slice containing the target segment is excised and melted and the DNA in solution is stretched on silanized slides. Halogenated nucleosides are then detected by immunostaining. Biotinylated FISH probes identify the molecules of interest and are used to align the images of molecules to produce a composite replication profile. 

Our Team

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Advaitha Madireddy

Principal Investigator


Mrunmai Niljikar

Graduate Student - PhD Candidate

 

Ranran Zhang

Research Associate III

Jessica Van Horn

Former RUYES Intern - High School Teacher

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Kritika Sharma

Former Undergraduate Intern


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Angelica Barreto-Galvez

Graduate Student - PhD

 

Aastha Juwarwala

Technician/Former Undergraduate Student

Cecilia Bonilla Herrera

Former RUYES Intern - High School Student

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Vasudha Kumar

Former Undergraduate Intern and Laboratory Technician


Julia Gagliardi

Research Teaching Specialist IV


Archana Pradeep

Undergraduate Student Intern

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Priyanka Tiwari

Former Undergraduate Intern

Anam Shaikh

Former Undergraduate Student Intern

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Rohan Lattupally

Former Undergraduate Intern

News

The Madireddy lab is officially open!!!

10/11/2018


The National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute has funded the Madireddy Lab’s R00 application

10/25/2018


A warm welcome to Sourabh Prakash Mudakannaver and Priyanka Tiwari, the newest members of our lab.

11/01/2018


The lab is now funded by the American Cancer Society Pilot Grant.

01/11/2019


A very warm welcome to Angelica Barreto, a new graduate student who is doing her PhD rotation in our lab.

02/11/2019


Welcome to Anam Shaikh, our newest undergraduate intern

02/11/2019


The Madireddy Lab is growing, we have now recruited our very first Postdoctoral Fellow. A warm welcome to Dr. Angelo Mandarino.

03/05/2019


A truly special moment… Our very first Graduate Student, Angelica Barreto-Galvez, has joined the lab to pursue her doctorate in Biomedical Sciences!

04/05/2019


A very warm welcome to our new Graduate Rotation Student, Thushara Nethramangalath!

04/08/2019


Welcome Kritika Sharma, our new Undergraduate Intern

05/20/2019


A warm welcome to Aris Magoulas who will be joining us for the summer . He is an undergraduate student at the Catholic University in Washington DC.

06/01/2019


Congratulations Angelica on successfully clearing your Pre-Qualifying Exam!

07/03/2019


A warm welcome to our new Undergraduate interns, Vasudha Kumar and Rohan Lattupally.

09/12/2019


Congrats to Angelica Galvez-Barreto for receiving a Graduate Student Supplement from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute

09/20/2019

 

Congratulations to Anam and Priyanka for getting into Medical School.

05/01/2020


A warm welcome to Imelda Saintilma and Vasudha Kumar, our new technical assistants in the lab.

10/01/2020

 

Congrats to Angelica Galvez-Barreto for successfully passing her qualifying exam.

02/19/2021

 

Congratulations to Vasudha Kumar for getting into NYU dental School

04/15/2021

 

The Department of Defense has funded the Madireddy Lab’s Idea Award application

06/01/ 2021

 

A warm welcome to Julia Gagliardi, our new technician, who is also pursuing her Master’s thesis in the lab

10/11/2021

 

Very happy to announce that our first paper is out in PNAS

11/30/2021

 

A warm welcome to Mrunmai Niljikar, who is pursuing her Master’s thesis in the lab.

12/01/2021

 

A very warm welcome to our new Graduate Rotation Student, Nikita Amin

12/05/2021

 

A warm welcome to our new Undergraduate intern, Aastha Juwarwala.

12/02/2021

 
 

Funding

 
 
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NIH - National heart, lung and blood institute 2017-2022


American Cancer Society 2019

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Department of Defense - 2021-2024

Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

 
 
 
 
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Open Positions

 
 

Postdoctoral Fellow

 
 
 

We are always looking for scientists who are passionate about research. If you are interested in joining the Madireddy Lab, please send us an application with your cover letter (describing your interests), your CV, and contact information for 2-3 reference providers.


Research Associate/Lab Technician

We are looking for a lab manager/lab technician for the lab. Please contact us directly using the contact form.


Graduate Students

We invite enthusiastic graduate students from the Molecular Biosciences Graduate program for a lab rotation. Refer to the following website for faculty information:

https://molbiosci.rutgers.edu/faculty-research/faculty/faculty-detail/85-m-n/703-madireddy-advaitha

Contact Us

 

Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey

195, Little Albany Street
New Brunswick, NJ 08901

https://www.cinj.org/research/madireddy-laboratory