US
Upasana Singh
PhD Student (Phylogeny and comparative analysis; Biological sciences; Evolutionary biology)
University of Manchester
Publications
- Predictive Perspectives of Disease—Transformed Protein Biomarkers
- Paradigm Shift in Transmission of Vector Borne Diseases
- Can mixed parasite infection thwart targeted malaria elimination program in India
- DNA sequence monimorphism of Indian spiny-tailed lizard Saara hardwickii suggests urgent conservation
- Malaria diagnosis by PCR revealed differential distribution of mono and mixed species infections by Plasmodium falciparum and P. viva in India
- Molecular epidemiology and evolution of drug-resistant genes in the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum in southwestern Nigeria
- Status of artemisinin resistance in malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum from molecular analyses of the Kelch13 gene in southwestern Nigeria
- DNA sequence monomorphism of Indian spiny-tailed lizard Saara hardwickii suggests urgent conservation
- Evolutionary interplay of single nucleotide polymorphisms at the promoter region of TNF-α gene in different clinical outcomes of malaria in India
- Unravelling the trends of research on malaria in India through bibliometric analysis
- Vector-borne diseases: Mosquito holobiont and novel methods for vector control
- Presence of additional Plasmodium vivax malaria in Duffy negative individuals from Southwestern Nigeria
- Presence of additional Plasmodium vivax malaria in Duffy negative individuals from Southwestern Nigeria
- Presence of additional P. vivax malaria in Duffy negative individuals from Southwestern Nigeria
- Spatial and temporal village-level prevalence of Plasmodium infection and associated risk factors in two districts of Meghalaya, India
- Characterisation of Anopheles species composition and genetic diversity in Meghalaya, northeast India, using molecular identification tools
- Early hominin arrival in Southeast Asia triggered the evolution of major human malaria vectors
- Genome resequencing and genome-wide polymorphisms in mosquito vectors Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus from south India