1. Lalita Ramakrishnan was born on 1959 and is an Indian-born American microbiologist who is known for her contributions to the understanding of the biological mechanism of tuberculosis.

1. Lalita Ramakrishnan was born on 1959 and is an Indian-born American microbiologist who is known for her contributions to the understanding of the biological mechanism of tuberculosis.
Lalita Ramakrishnan's research is conducted at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, where she serves as the Head of the Molecular Immunity Unit of the Department of Medicine embedded at the MRC LMB.
Lalita Ramakrishnan's work has appeared in a number of journals, including Science, Nature, and Cell.
Lalita Ramakrishnan is married to Mark Troll, a physical chemist.
Lalita Ramakrishnan was born in 1959 in Baroda and grew up there.
Lalita Ramakrishnan's parents were both scientists as is her brother, Nobel laureate Venki Ramakrishnan.
When Lalita Ramakrishnan was a child, her mother had three bouts of spinal tuberculosis.
Lalita Ramakrishnan then became the first foreign graduate of the medical residency program at Tufts-New England Medical Center.
In 2001, Lalita Ramakrishnan joined the faculty of the University of Washington, where she worked both as a basic scientist and infectious diseases physician.
In 2010, Lalita Ramakrishnan was the senior author of a study which was published as the cover story of Cell.
In 2014, Lalita Ramakrishnan joined the faculty of the University of Cambridge as a principal research fellow for the Wellcome Trust and Professor of Immunology and Infectious Diseases.
Lalita Ramakrishnan found that the bacteria then stimulate the formation of granulomas that provide them a safe harbour, in contrast to the normal role of granulomas in protecting the host from the bacteria.
Lalita Ramakrishnan later exploited the zebrafish to study leprosy, another devastating disease with morbid neurological consequences.
Lalita Ramakrishnan showed that a Mycobacterium leprae lipid causes nerve damage by inciting abnormal responses in the macrophages.
Lalita Ramakrishnan was elected a Member of the US National Academy of Sciences in 2015.
Lalita Ramakrishnan has received a number of other awards, including a National Institutes of Health Director's Pioneer Award and a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Investigators in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Disease Award.
Lalita Ramakrishnan served on the Life Sciences jury for the Infosys Prize in 2016.
Lalita Ramakrishnan was made a member of the European Molecular Biology Organization in 2019.