Prof. Nita Parekh has witnessed IIIT Hyderabad’s evolving avatars, from its fledgling years to the smart connected and buzzing research hub that it is today. With over two decades at IIITH’s CCNSB, her core expertise in computational biology and bioinformatics delves into next generation sequencing and multi-omics data analysis, developing ML-based tools and databases for biological problems like cancer detection.
“When I joined the iGenomics division at iLabs, I did not know the B of Bioinformatics. I loved Math, hated biology and the thought of dissecting frogs horrified me”, laughs the physicist who clocked six years of diverse post-doctoral research in computational methods in physical, chemical and biological systems. “Even during my post-doc tenure at the Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), my work was mostly in non-linear dynamics”. Nita and her husband Shrish Tiwari returned home from USA when her husband joined CSIR Lab at CCMB as a scientist. This was during the Boom of biological data; when the genome was sequenced and there was a lot of talk about precision medicine. She joined iGenomics division of iLABS, as they needed a scholar who understood algorithms for biological data analysis to help their coders. While at iLABS , the Genomics specialist gave guest lectures in bioinformatics to MSIT students at IIIT Hyderabad and found the research environment invigorating. She joined the Institute in 2003, the year that the human genome was sequenced. Within a year, the M. Tech, MS by Research and Ph.D in Bioinformatics programs commenced. The erstwhile Bioinformatics Research Center with its skeletal faculty and CCMB’s visiting scientists would eventually evolve into CCNSB. The things that I do Advancements in biotechnology have led to different types of data being generated for different omics, like genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics, explains the professor. When the study of biology became quantitative, the need arose for cross-disciplinary experts who understood biology and could write algorithms or build models. The development of tools, databases and analysis was happening and somebody had to do the lab testing. “My work in computational biology was somewhere in that interface. Being a Ph. D in physics, well-versed in computational physics, I wrote models and equations and solved them on computers. I was thus a good fit in this new area that had just come up in biology”, explains Dr. Parekh. “It was fun in the early days on campus, when everybody knew everybody. My room was on the third floor of the old main building. Lunches in the canteens, a quick walk around campus or catching up at the small tea stall at the basketball court before heading back to our labs and lessons, were great memories. We had a makeshift tea stall under the staircase and one had to just call out, ‘Babu Chai dena’ and he would bring us our tea”, she reminisces fondly.



February 2025