Canadian medical microbiologist
Inna Sekirov is a Moldovan-born, Canadian medical microbiologist and physician-scientist at the University of British Columbia.[1]
Biography
Sekirov was born in Moldova and moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada in 1995. She attended the University of British Columbia (UBC) and graduated with a BS in Microbiology and Immunology in 2003.[2] Sekirov carried out her PhD work at the Brett Finlay lab as a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Senior Graduate Trainee.[3][4] She then went on to complete her medical microbiology residency graduating with her PhD, MD, and FRCPC at UBC in 2011.[2]
She remained at UBC after graduation and became the Program Head for Tuberculosis (TB)/Mycobacteriology at the British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, and a Clinical Assistant Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at UBC.[2] Her research focused on the public health-related aspects of medical microbiology, clinical applications of microbial genomics and TB/mycobacteriology diagnostic methods.[1]
She has also led COVID-19 research projects on ACEII,[5] antibody responses,[6] and seroprevalence using dried blood spots.[7]
Selected works
- Coburn, Bryan, Inna Sekirov, and B. Brett Finlay. "Type III secretion systems and disease." Clinical microbiology reviews 20, no. 4 (2007): 535-549.
- Sekirov, Inna, Nicola M. Tam, Maria Jogova, Marilyn L. Robertson, Yuling Li, Claudia Lupp, and B. Brett Finlay. "Antibiotic-induced perturbations of the intestinal microbiota alter host susceptibility to enteric infection." Infection and immunity 76, no. 10 (2008): 4726-4736.
- Sekirov, Inna, Shannon L. Russell, L. Caetano M. Antunes, and B. Brett Finlay. "Gut microbiota in health and disease." Physiological reviews (2010).
- Skowronski, Danuta M., Inna Sekirov, Suzana Sabaiduc, Macy Zou, Muhammad Morshed, David Lawrence, Kate Smolina et al. "Low SARS-CoV-2 sero-prevalence based on anonymized residual sero-survey before and after first wave measures in British Columbia, Canada, March-May 2020." MedRxiv (2020): 2020-07.
References