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Dive into the research topics where Aarthi Chandrasekaran is active.

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Featured researches published by Aarthi Chandrasekaran.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Quantitative biochemical rationale for differences in transmissibility of 1918 pandemic influenza A viruses

Aravind Srinivasan; Karthik Viswanathan; Rahul Raman; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; S. Raguram; Terrence M. Tumpey; V. Sasisekharan; Ram Sasisekharan

The human adaptation of influenza A viruses is critically governed by the binding specificity of the viral surface hemagglutinin (HA) to long (chain length) α2-6 sialylated glycan (α2-6) receptors on the human upper respiratory tissues. A recent study demonstrated that whereas the 1918 H1N1 pandemic virus, A/South Carolina/1/1918 (SC18), with α2-6 binding preference transmitted efficiently, a single amino acid mutation on HA resulted in a mixed α2-3 sialylated glycan (α2-3)/α2-6 binding virus (NY18) that transmitted inefficiently. To define the biochemical basis for the observed differences in virus transmission, in this study, we have developed an approach to quantify the multivalent HA–glycan interactions. Analysis of the molecular HA–glycan contacts showed subtle changes resulting from the single amino acid variations between SC18 and NY18. The effect of these changes on glycan binding is amplified by multivalency, resulting in quantitative differences in their long α2-6 glycan binding affinities. Furthermore, these differences are also reflected in the markedly distinct binding pattern of SC18 and NY18 HA to the physiological glycans present in human upper respiratory tissues. Thus, the dramatic lower binding affinity of NY18 to long α2-6 glycans, as against a mixed α2-3/6 binding, correlates with its inefficient transmission. In summary, this study establishes a quantitative biochemical correlate for influenza A virus transmission.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Receptor Specificity and Transmission of H2N2 Subtype Viruses Isolated from the Pandemic of 1957

Claudia Pappas; Karthik Viswanathan; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Rahul Raman; Jacqueline M. Katz; Ram Sasisekharan; Terrence M. Tumpey

Influenza viruses of the H2N2 subtype have not circulated among humans in over 40 years. The occasional isolation of avian H2 strains from swine and avian species coupled with waning population immunity to H2 hemagglutinin (HA) warrants investigation of this subtype due to its pandemic potential. In this study we examined the transmissibility of representative human H2N2 viruses, A/Albany/6/58 (Alb/58) and A/El Salvador/2/57 (ElSalv/57), isolated during the 1957/58 pandemic, in the ferret model. The receptor binding properties of these H2N2 viruses was analyzed using dose-dependent direct glycan array-binding assays. Alb/58 virus, which contains the 226L/228S amino acid combination in the HA and displayed dual binding to both alpha 2,6 and alpha 2,3 glycan receptors, transmitted efficiently to naïve ferrets by respiratory droplets. Inefficient transmission was observed with ElSalv/57 virus, which contains the 226Q/228G amino acid combination and preferentially binds alpha 2,3 over alpha 2,6 glycan receptors. However, a unique transmission event with the ElSalv/57 virus occurred which produced a 226L/228G H2N2 natural variant virus that displayed an increase in binding specificity to alpha 2,6 glycan receptors and enhanced respiratory droplet transmissibility. Our studies provide a correlation between binding affinity to glycan receptors with terminal alpha 2,6-linked sialic acid and the efficiency of respiratory droplet transmission for pandemic H2N2 influenza viruses.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Decoding the Distribution of Glycan Receptors for Human-Adapted Influenza A Viruses in Ferret Respiratory Tract

Akila Jayaraman; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Karthik Viswanathan; Rahul Raman; James G. Fox; Ram Sasisekharan

Ferrets are widely used as animal models for studying influenza A viral pathogenesis and transmissibility. Human-adapted influenza A viruses primarily target the upper respiratory tract in humans (infection of the lower respiratory tract is observed less frequently), while in ferrets, upon intranasal inoculation both upper and lower respiratory tract are targeted. Viral tropism is governed by distribution of complex sialylated glycan receptors in various cells/tissues of the host that are specifically recognized by influenza A virus hemagglutinin (HA), a glycoprotein on viral surface. It is generally known that upper respiratory tract of humans and ferrets predominantly express α2→6 sialylated glycan receptors. However much less is known about the fine structure of these glycan receptors and their distribution in different regions of the ferret respiratory tract. In this study, we characterize distribution of glycan receptors going beyond terminal sialic acid linkage in the cranial and caudal regions of the ferret trachea (upper respiratory tract) and lung hilar region (lower respiratory tract) by multiplexing use of various plant lectins and human-adapted HAs to stain these tissue sections. Our findings show that the sialylated glycan receptors recognized by human-adapted HAs are predominantly distributed in submucosal gland of lung hilar region as a part of O-linked glycans. Our study has implications in understanding influenza A viral pathogenesis in ferrets and also in employing ferrets as animal models for developing therapeutic strategies against influenza.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Determinants of Glycan Receptor Specificity of H2N2 Influenza A Virus Hemagglutinin

Karthik Viswanathan; Xiaoying Koh; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Claudia Pappas; Rahul Raman; Aravind Srinivasan; Zachary Shriver; Terrence M. Tumpey; Ram Sasisekharan

The H2N2 subtype of influenza A virus was responsible for the Asian pandemic of 1957-58. However, unlike other subtypes that have caused pandemics such as H1N1 and H3N2, which continue to circulate among humans, H2N2 stopped circulating in the human population in 1968. Strains of H2 subtype still continue to circulate in birds and occasionally pigs and could be reintroduced into the human population through antigenic drift or shift. Such an event is a potential global health concern because of the waning population immunity to H2 hemagglutinin (HA). The first step in such a cross-species transmission and human adaptation of influenza A virus is the ability for its surface glycoprotein HA to bind to glycan receptors expressed in the human upper respiratory epithelia. Recent structural and biochemical studies have focused on understanding the glycan receptor binding specificity of the 1957-58 pandemic H2N2 HA. However, there has been considerable HA sequence divergence in the recent avian-adapted H2 strains from the pandemic H2N2 strain. Using a combination of structural modeling, quantitative glycan binding and human respiratory tissue binding methods, we systematically identify mutations in the HA from a recent avian-adapted H2N2 strain (A/Chicken/PA/2004) that make its quantitative glycan receptor binding affinity (defined using an apparent binding constant) comparable to that of a prototypic pandemic H2N2 (A/Albany/6/58) HA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Monitoring of heparin and its low-molecular-weight analogs by silicon field effect.

Nebojsa Milovic; Jonathan R. Behr; Michel Godin; Chih-Sheng Johnson Hou; Kristofor Robert Payer; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Peter R. Russo; Ram Sasisekharan; Scott R. Manalis

Heparin is a highly sulfated glycosaminoglycan that is used as an important clinical anticoagulant. Monitoring and control of the heparin level in a patients blood during and after surgery is essential, but current clinical methods are limited to indirect and off-line assays. We have developed a silicon field-effect sensor for direct detection of heparin by its intrinsic negative charge. The sensor consists of a simple microfabricated electrolyte-insulator-silicon structure encapsulated within microfluidic channels. As heparin-specific surface probes the clinical heparin antagonist protamine or the physiological partner antithrombin III were used. The dose–response curves in 10% PBS revealed a detection limit of 0.001 units/ml, which is orders of magnitude lower than clinically relevant concentrations. We also detected heparin-based drugs such as the low-molecular-weight heparin enoxaparin (Lovenox) and the synthetic pentasaccharide heparin analog fondaparinux (Arixtra), which cannot be monitored by the existing near-patient clinical methods. We demonstrated the specificity of the antithrombin III functionalized sensor for the physiologically active pentasaccharide sequence. As a validation, we showed correlation of our measurements to those from a colorimetric assay for heparin-mediated anti-Xa activity. These results demonstrate that silicon field-effect sensors could be used in the clinic for routine monitoring and maintenance of therapeutic levels of heparin and heparin-based drugs and in the laboratory for quantitation of total amount and specific epitopes of heparin and other glycosaminoglycans.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Glycan topology determines human adaptation of avian H5N1 virus hemagglutinin

Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Aravind Srinivasan; Rahul Raman; Karthik Viswanathan; S. Raguram; Terrence M. Tumpey; V. Sasisekharan; Ram Sasisekharan


Archive | 2005

Methods and compositions related to the modulation of intercellular junctions

Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Shiladitya Sengupta; David Berry; Kristine Holley; Ganlin Zhao; Ram Sasisekharan


Archive | 2006

Methods and compositions related to modulating the extracellular stem cell environment

Shiladitya Sengupta; Ram Sasisekharan; Nishla Keiser; David Eavarone; Tanyel Kiziltepe Bilgicer; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; David Berry; Kristine Holley


Archive | 2007

Hemagglutinin polypeptides, and reagents and methods relating thereto

Ram Sasisekharan; Karthik Viswanathan; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Rahul Raman; Aravind Srinivasan; S. Raguram; V. Sasisekharan


Archive | 2009

Decoy influenza therapies

Ram Sasisekharan; Karthik Viswanathan; Aarthi Chandrasekaran; Rahul Raman; Aravind Srinivasan; S. Raguram; V. Sasisekharan

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Ram Sasisekharan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Karthik Viswanathan

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Rahul Raman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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V. Sasisekharan

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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David Berry

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Kristine Holley

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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S. Raguram

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Terrence M. Tumpey

National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases

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