Swati Agrawal

Assistant Professor

  • Fredericksburg VA UNITED STATES
  • Biology Department

Dr. Agrawal's research focuses on protozoan pathogens that cause serious diseases like African sleeping sickness and Toxoplasmosis.

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Biography

Dr. Agrawal's research focuses on protozoan pathogens that cause serious diseases like African sleeping sickness, Chagas disease, Leishmaniasis and Toxoplasmosis. Her work in molecular pathogenesis uses molecular techniques like CRISPR-cas9 to identify and characterize new determinants of pathogenicity in these parasites.

She is also interested in studying bacteriophages as possible cure for the rising antibiotic resistance problems in food borne pathogen Bacillus cereus and Bacillus anthracis. This work is an expansion of original research work that freshman Biology student participate in her Phage Hunters course as part of Howard Hughes medical institute initiative to provide new and engaging research experiences to undergraduate classrooms. Freshman biology student engage in two semesters of authentic research isolating and characterizing novel bacteriophages that can be used in phage therapy.

She has developed classroom interventions aimed at improving biomolecular visual literacy in students. These active learning tools use Augmented reality to illustrate three dimensional structures of proteins and nucleic acids helping students better understand and retain structure and function concepts in Cell biology, biochemistry and molecular biology. Her ongoing research focuses on creating accurate and compelling molecular and cellular visualizations that will support research, learning and scientific communication.

Areas of Expertise

Molecular Biology (CRISPR-cas9 gene editing)
Microscopy (Fluorescence, Scanning and Transmission Electron Microscopy)
Biochemistry
Bioinformatics
Biomolecular Visualization (PyMOL, MolStar, Augmented Reality and Virtual Reality)

Accomplishments

2022-2023 Jepson Fellowship

for research on Characterization of cell death pathways in Kineoplastid parasites to create a new tool kit for understanding apoptosis pathway in C. fasticulata parasites

Supplemental Faculty Development Award

UMW CAS, for attending the annual conference for ASBMB and NCUR

External Grant Application Award

for writing the ABLE grant

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Education

Washington College, Chestertown, MD

Visiting Assistant Professor

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Postdoctoral Fellowship

University of Georgia, Athens

Ph.D.

Cell Biology

Advisor Dr. Boris Striepen

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Media Appearances

Biomolecular visualization tools cross paths, join hands at an ASBMB meeting

ASBMB Today  online

2024-01-22

A shared enthusiasm for biochemistry education using tools such as 3D printed models and AR models catalyzed a student-led collaboration between our students at the University of Mary Washington and Grand View.

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Biology student wins prize for work on parasite Toxoplasma gondii

Beyond the Classroom  online

2023-04-19

Biomedical Science senior Abigail Delapenha recently attended the American Society for Southeastern Biologists conference to present her research on “Calcium signalling in Toxoplasma gondii”. She received the prestigious Lafayette Frederick Scholarship ($1200) which is awarded to only one outstanding undergraduate student each year. Abby, who graduates UMW this May, is headed to George Washington University Medical School.

The work Abby presented is part of a new collaboration between University of Mary Washington and the Center for Emerging and Global Tropical diseases (CTEGD) at University of Georgia that her UMW faculty mentor, Assistant Professor of Biology Dr. Swati Agrawal, started last the summer at CTEGD.

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Hands-On Introductory Bio Course Phage Hunters Propels Students into Research

Beyond the Classroom  online

2022-11-17

Students who have been through the Phage Hunters course sequence often continue their research with biology faculty for their honors capstone projects or independent research. Currently senior Jay Boudreau is working on a project titled “Counteracting Antibiotic Resistance in Bacillus Bacteria with Phage Therapy.” Working with Assistant Professor of Biology Swati Agrawal, Jay is characterizing a novel Phage “JackRabbit” which Jay isolated during their freshman year exploring its potential for phage therapy against pathogenic Bacillus strains like Bacillus cereus (causative agent of gastrointestinal infection) and Bacillus anthracis (potential weapon for bioterrorism).

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Event Appearances

Lecture: Phage Therapy

Undergraduate STEM Research Society  Georgia State University

Lecture: CRISPR-cas9 Gene-editing Technology

Life after Covid  UMW Elder Studies Group

Lecture: Improving Visual Literacy Using PyMOL, Augmented Reality

6th Catalyst Conversation  ASBMB Student Chapters

Articles

Toxoplasma gondii Toxolysin 4 Contributes to Efficient Parasite Egress from Host Cells

Msphere

2021

Egress from host cells is an essential step in the lytic cycle of T. gondii and other apicomplexan parasites; however, only a few parasite secretory proteins are known to affect this process. The putative metalloproteinase toxolysin 4 (TLN4) was previously shown to be an extensively processed microneme protein, but further characterization was impeded by the inability to genetically ablate TLN4.

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Whole body glucoregulation and tissue-specific glucose uptake in a novel Akt substrate of 160 kDa knockout rat model

PLoS One

2019

Akt substrate of 160 kDa (also called AS160 or TBC1D4) is a Rab GTPase activating protein and key regulator of insulin-stimulated glucose uptake which is expressed by multiple tissues, including skeletal muscle, white adipose tissue (WAT) and the heart.

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Toxoplasma gondii Toc75 Functions in Import of Stromal but not Peripheral Apicoplast Proteins

Traffic

2015

Apicomplexa are unicellular parasites causing important human and animal diseases, including malaria and toxoplasmosis. Most of these pathogens possess a relict but essential plastid, the apicoplast. The apicoplast was acquired by secondary endosymbiosis between a red alga and a flagellated eukaryotic protist.

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