Moazur  Rahman has completed MSc in Chemistry from University of Agriculture,  Faisalabad, MPhil (Biotechnology) from NIBGE Faisalabad/Quaid-i-Azam  University, Islamabad, and PhD (Molecular Membrane/Structural Biology) from the  University of Leeds, UK. From 2012-2013, he worked as Fulbright Fellow at the  Harvard Medical School, Boston. Before joining School of Biological Sciences,  University of the Punjab, Prof. Rahman headed the structural biology research  at National Institute for Biotechnology & Genetic Engineering (NIBGE),  Faisalabad, and developed state-of-the-art structural biology laboratory which  is among the leading laboratories in Pakistan (
http://www.nibge.org/Profile.aspx?PID=56).
  Prof. Rahman has published many research articles  in international peer reviewed journals on structure and function of diverse  membrane- and viral proteins, highlighting important features of these proteins  which render them attractive for use as diagnostic antigens or as drug- and  vaccine targets. He has also filed patents in the US/Pakistan on development of diagnostic tools for infectious  bursal disease in poultry. On applied fronts, for the first time in Pakistan, he has successfully  developed recombinant vaccines and diagnostic tools for poultry  infectious bursal disease virus and Fowl adenovirus. He has also identified and  characterized a multidrug resistance pump, STY4874, in local isolates of 
Salmonella Typhi to combat antimicrobial  resistance in typhoid patients.
  To strengthen research in the fields of protein  structural biology, vaccine development and disease diagnostics, he has won 3  international and 15 national competitive research grants, amounting to >  312 million PKR from diverse funding agencies such as ICGEB (Italy), IAEA  (Austria), ALP-PARC (Pakistan), PSF (Pakistan), HEC (Pakistan).  Moreover, he has established collaborations with leading research groups  in China, Denmark, Australia, UK, Italy, USA, and with the Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science  and Applications in the Middle-East (SESAME) facility, Jordan, in the  field of protein crystallography, vaccine development and disease diagnostics. To  train the human resource in the field of structural biology, he has  organized/co-organized 4 international workshops on ‘‘X-ray Crystallography in  Structural Biology and Modeling/Simulation’’ in Pakistan, and Prof. Rahman is  an active member of the National  Committee of Crystallography / IUCr Adhering Body, Pakistan. He has also served  as a member of the Technical Committee of PAEC-International Nathiagali  Summer Colleges (2016 to 2017, 2020).
  During his career, Prof. Rahman has won several  research and fellowship awards (Islamic Development Bank (IsDB) PhD Scholarship  award (2002), IsDB excellent leadership award (2009), Fulbright Postdoctoral  fellowship (2012), SESAME and IAEA Fellowship awards (2010, 2011, 2015 and  2017), PAEC-NIBGE Gold Medal (2014), Research Productivity awards by the Government  of Pakistan (2011, 2012, 2013, 2015), and Pakistan Academy of Sciences  (Biotechnology) ZKS-Gold Medal award (2018). Moreover, Prof. Rahman is a member  of the scientific expert panels of IsDB, Fulbright-USEFP, HEC, MoPET, several national  Universities and a number of international scientific journals, and is a visiting  faculty member of HEJ, Karachi.
  
Research Interests:
  The research work of Prof Rahman is focused on:
  
Structure-function studies  of proteins: Membrane proteins including multidrug efflux  transporters
  
Vaccines and Diagnostics: Viral vector, virus-like particle, subunit and live-attenuated  vaccines, and rapid and on-site diagnostics
  
Enzyme inhibition: Proteases (HCV and Dengue)
  Prof. Rahman is interested in employing  structural biology techniques such as X-ray crystallography, electron microscopy,  circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, Fourier-transform infra-red and  Fluorescence spectroscopy for understanding structure-function relationships of  proteins relevant to human and animal diseases. The ultimate goal is to  generate knowledge by uncovering the molecular basis of drug resistance and  virulence of pathogens, and to utilize this knowledge for devising novel  preventive and therapeutic strategies, and diagnostics. In particular,  molecular mechanisms underlying the transport of various solutes through  multidrug efflux transporters of Gram negative bacteria such as 
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi are  being studied through the use of a battery of molecular biology techniques for  understanding the drug resistance mechanism.
  A major thrust of the research work is also on development  of modern recombinant vaccines (through prediction and validation of potent  epitopic regions on protein targets, protein engineering and production, and  development of viral vector vaccines) and diagnostics for diseases caused by Fowl  adenovirus (FAV)n infectious bursal disease virus (IBDV) and Newcastle disease  virus (NDV), which inflict significant damages to the poultry industry  worldwide, including Pakistan and more recently on development of viral vector  vaccine against SARS-CoV-2.
  
Research Profile Key Words:
  Membrane/Multidrug resistance transport proteins • Human and poultry viral proteins • Recombinant vaccine development • X-ray/protein crystallography • Structural Biology • Enzyme Biotechnology