Ranjan Sen obtained his Ph. D. degree (1996) in Biophysics and Molecular
Biology from Calcutta University. He worked on conformational changes
of E.coli RNA polymerase during transcription initiation in the laboratory
of Dipak Dasgupta, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Calcutta. He
then moved to National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan to work in
the laboratory of Nobuo Shimamoto as a postdoctoral fellow. There
he worked (1995-1998) on kinetics of abortive transcription in prokaryotes
and established a concept of branched pathway during transcription initiation
process. He subsequently moved to National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, MD, USA for his second postdoctoral work in the laboratory of
Robert Weisberg. Here he worked (1998-2001) on the mechanism of transcription
antitermination by an antiterminator RNA, the PUT RNA. He showed
the direct and persistent interaction of the nascent RNA (the PUT RNA)
with the elongating RNA polymerse which leads to the stabilization RNA/DNA
hybrid at the active site of the enzyme.
He has joined CDFD on December 2001 as a Staff Scientist.