Away from home: Blending in to stand out

Our ‘Away from home’ interactive map features 48 bright Indian postdocs from around the world. Write to us at npgindia@nature.com to suggest names of postdocs from countries and disciplines we haven’t covered yet.

Raj Rajeshwar Malinda, a post-doctoral cell and developmental biologist at the National Institute for Basic Biology (NIBB), Okazaki, Japan has visited close to 40 countries and worked in some of them. A PhD from the University of Copenhagen, Denmark and a biotechnology masters from the University of Rajasthan, Jaipur, India, Raj draws from his rich experiences from around the world to suggest it’s best to blend in to appreciate different cultures.

Raj Rajeshwar Malinda

Decoding the cellular language

Life on Earth began with a single cell and evolved into very complex organisms such as humans. The cell is the smallest functional unit of life – the “building block” that contains all necessary information for survival. Though cell biology studies got a boost in the late 17th century with the advent of the microscope, we still don’t have ample information on how life managed to survive on Earth. A lot more information is needed to decode the cellular language of life and this mystery led me into the world of cell biology.

I love getting even the tiniest bit of information on cells and their behavior. To understand complex cellular dynamics, I combined knowledge from my cell biology PhD with developmental biology for a joined up approach towards answering questions on how life survives during development.

My journey began from a small rural town in India called “Neem ka Thana” and got me to Okazaki, a small town in Japan via many metropolitan cities across the globe. While I was still a masters student of biotechnology at the University of Rajasthan in Jaipur, India, I got a chance to meet several Nobel Laureates at a conclave. This was one of the factors that motivated me to pursue a career in research, discovery and innovation.

During my PhD at the University of Copenhagen, I was mainly focused on cellular mechanisms regulating disassembly of primary cilia (a sensory organelle found on cell surface, important in embryonic development and homeostasis) using mammalian cultured cells as a model system. In my post-doctoral tenure at NIBB, Japan, I have been investigating the regulatory mechanisms responsible for collective cell behaviour during early development of vertebrates using Xenopus laevis as a model organism, with special focus on the mechanistic properties.

Japan: An incredible mix of tradition and advancement

Besides science, I am fascinated by the diversity of people – races, cultures, languages and religions – around the world. Moving to Japan was a big decision – from Denmark in the west to the east. However, this transition was pretty smooth for me, having assimilated experiences from my travel to more than 40 countries around the globe. Despite all that I have seen, Japan is very different, very unique, truly an incredible country blending tradition and scientific advancement beautifully. Discipline, attention to detail, dedication, politeness, hospitality, punctuality and respect for the past – these were the Japanese hallmarks that made me fall in love with the country instantly.

However, language was a big issue since people, especially in the countryside, hardly spoke other foreign languages. The language barrier could isolate you from the mainstream of Japanese culture. But foreigners usually find their way around this challenge. I especially love the Japanese festivals, with each prefecture celebrating different ones around the year.

Life becomes easier for foreigners when they embrace local culture and try blending in seamlessly. Indians do carry a lot of cultural baggage many times and often stick to Indian friends. I personally feel one could be true to one’s culture but should also try to appreciate local cultures. It’s also good to make friends outside the lab and outside one’s own community.

After all, a postdoc abroad is an intensive learning phase that teaches you many important survival skills.

Tip for PhD and postdoc aspirants

  • PhD should be complemented by productive research papers — they help get good postdoc positions abroad.
  • Don’t be shy to ask for help from your PhD mentor. They are experienced in the field and have good network in the community.
  • Your research interest should always be key while choosing for a postdoc position because that’s what matters in the end. The lab matters too, since you have to spend a fair amount of time there doing research. Choosing a postdoc position abroad might be a turning point in your research career, so choose the lab and country wisely.
  • External sources of funding or fellowships always add an extra advantage. So try to secure one, for example, the JSPS postdoc fellowship in Japan, EMBO or Marie Curie fellowship for Europe, INSPIRE Faculty scheme in India (it gives you a chance to learn in foreign lab for a couple of years) and other country-specific postdoc fellowships.
  • Keep a good work-life balance, otherwise research could end up being stressful and depressing.
  • Don’t lose the enthusiasm and focus while doing your research abroad — it’s easy get derailed in a different working and living culture. If the data isn’t favouring your hypothesis, troubleshoot and ask your mentor or lab members.
  • Funding is a big issue among postdocs, so try to remain up to date with available resources and grants.
  • Don’t try to think of a long running postdoc (i.e. another postdoc after your postdoc), your post-postdoc priorities should be clear — academia or industry. At any point during your postdoc, if your choices are starting to shift from academics to industry, go ahead with the idea without delay and ask for a recommendation from your present mentor.
  • Try to network. In the end, these are the people you will see most often – through their research papers or in conferences and meetings.
  • Try writing grant applications because the skill will be really helpful after your postdoc. It becomes hard to survive in the research field without knowing how to write grant applications. It will also improve your scientific writing, which I personally find very difficult.
  • Push yourself a bit to acquire experiences beyond research. For example, participate in leadership seminars, try organising small institutional seminars or workshops, invite people from time to time to the lab and talk about your interests.

India: Unconditional love

India is a great country – diverse, culturally-rich, enthusiastic and warm – and that’s the reason every Indian misses the country in a foreign land. I miss my family and friends and the late summer-night conversations under an open sky over cups of tea. The sight and sound of kids screaming as they play in the muddy streets is something I deeply miss.

Being a foodie, I miss Indian street food from different parts of the country —the samosa and dahi-papdi from Rajasthan, pav-bhaji from Maharashtra, home-made lassi from Punjab, chaat from Delhi and masala-dosa from south India. Mangoes and rasgullas are always on my priority list, so wherever I get them I buy, even if at a premium.

[Raj Rajeshwar Malinda is also associated with the biomedical journal eLIFE and advises ASAPbio (Accelerating Science and Publication in Biology). He volunteers free career counselling and can be reached at therajsmile@gmail.com.]

Frugal innovation: India, France can lead the way

In this guest post, Navi Radjou draws from his experience at a hands-on education and problem-solving school in Mumbai. He points out that France’s strong science and engineering capabilities, combined with the Indian concept of jugaad, or frugal ingenuity, could help solve problems that threaten all of humanity.

Navi Radjou

A recent Gallup International Association poll rates French President Emmanuel Macron and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the two of the most favoured world leaders. They have a historic opportunity to use their huge popularity and goodwill at home and abroad to heal our fractured world. They can do so by bolstering co-innovation between India and France — through top-down R&D partnerships such as the International Solar Alliance as well as bottom-up collaborative initiatives like the STEAM School.

By bringing together Indian and French engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs, designers, artists and business leaders, the two countries can create solutions to what I call “problems without borders”: social inequality, global warming, chronic diseases, water and food scarcity.
In December 2017, I attended the Indo-French STEAM School in Mumbai — which shows how co-innovation can have a major positive impact worldwide. The 10-day programme was co-organized, like every year, by the French Embassy in India, the Paris-based Center for Research and Interdisciplinarity, and Maker’s Asylum, a community space in Mumbai. The programme enables STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Math) education through hands-on problem-solving based on the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

100 participants, mostly from France and India — architects, designers, artists, engineers, academics, and students — formed 19 teams to design a product each to tackle one of five specific SDGs in the Indian context: health, education, water/sanitation, energy, and sustainable cities. Over the course of the programme, the participants developed working prototypes of their products.

Participants at the STEAM School 2017

These four products I liked best harnessed frugal innovation to devise simple and cost-effective solutions to major socio-economic and ecological problems:

  • BAT:  a low-cost wrist-wearable to aid the visually impaired. According to a Lancet study, 36 million people in the world are blind, a number set to increase to 115 million by 2050. In India alone, 8.8 million citizens suffer from blindness and nearly 48 million have moderate and severe vision impairment, the largest number for any country. BAT, fitted with a Six Axis feedback mechanism, can make life easier for such people while they navigate public spaces, by vibrating to alert them of obstacles.
  • The SADA Kit:  A portable solution to prevent water-borne health epidemics caused by open-air defecation in rural India. 2.5 billion in the world still lack access to toilets. 300 million Indian women and girls are affected by it. The kit aims to improve the health, safety, and dignity of these women. It comprises of a lightweight portable toilet with a pop-up privacy shield, a waste disposal bag, a small wearable light and whistle, soap, and sanitary pads for women.
  • BIJLI:  a low-cost energy generation device that can be retrofitted to bicycles. It transforms kinetic energy from the wheels into electric energy that can be stored in a battery pack or can be used to charge small electronic gadgets like mobile phones. The device can be used on the go or while the bicycle is stationary. Distributed energy solutions like BIJLI can be a boon for the 300 million Indians who live with little or no electricity today.
  • WASTED: a smart waste segregation bin that helps spread awareness of how much waste we generate. By turning the process of segregation into a game and connecting sensors in the actual bin to an app, it enables users to track and compare waste statistics with friends and neighbors. The idea is to “nudge” people and societies towards zero waste. India generates over 100,000 metric tons of solid waste each day, higher than any other country. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation estimates that by adopting the circular economy principles—through reuse and recycling of waste and resources—India could reap $624 billion in annual benefits in 2050 and cut greenhouse gas emissions by 44%.

“The goal of STEAM School isn’t to solve the SDGs in 10 days, but to teach how to solve them,” says Vaibhav Chhabra, founder of Maker’s Asylum. “STEAM also teaches empathy and tolerance to participants. They learn to transcend their differences, respect each other, and find unity in a shared purpose. They become globally-conscious problem-solvers.”

Vaibhav is right. I interacted with French students from CRI, EM Lyon Business School, and Institut Mines-Télécom at STEAM School, who had developed greater respect for India and its culture by working together with Indians. A Hindi saying captures the power of such synergies: Ek Aur Ek Gyarah Hote Hain, or One and One Equals Eleven. France’s strong science and engineering capabilities, combined with the Indian concept of jugaad, or frugal ingenuity, could help us solve problems that threaten all of humanity.

As a French-Indian, I am thrilled to be part of this process. I left India in 1989 to study in France. During the 80s and 90s, France and India were relatively closed to the outside world. Cooperation between both countries was also limited. I long dreamed of a day when India and France would team up to create solutions without borders. Now my dream is finally coming true.

The theme of the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2018 in Davos was “Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World.” You can’t fix a fractured and conflict-ridden world with the competitive zero-sum mindset that has long dominated world affairs. Instead, it’s time to adopt the cooperative “1+1=11” formula. Macron and Modi can show the way.

[A longer version of this piece was first published by the World Economic Forum. Navi Radjou is a fellow at Cambridge University’s Judge Business School. He is the coauthor of Jugaad Innovation (2012), From Smart to Wise (2013), and Frugal Innovation (2015).]

Nature India Photo Story: Aqua Tales

In our visual storytelling blog series titled the ‘Nature India Photo Story’, we feature artfully told stories that explore the realms of science, wildlife, environment, health or anything else that smells of science.

In today’s photo story, we feature experimental physical chemist Mohammad Tariq from the Faculty of Science and Technology, New University of Lisbon, Caparica, Portugal. The theme of his story is something that touches all life on Earth — water.

Tariq traces his journey with water through ‘Aqua Tales’ — a nuanced narration that looks at water not just as the most bountiful resource of Nature, but also as his passionate research interest, and as the metaphorical wave that keeps propelling him to newer shores.

Water is a complex, wondrous fluid, essential for life on Earth. It is the most abundant chemical in nature. Apart from the interest it generates among scientists and academics, water has been the most important element for the survival of many civilizations that thrived on banks of rivers. Water is also the reason flora and fauna flourish on Earth.

My journey and interaction with various water bodies started from my native town Bijnor in Uttar Pradesh, India. It is in Bijnor that I had the rare privilege of befriending the mighty river Ganga. The deep stream of the river flows throughout the western boundary of Bijnor.

 

Ganga in Bijnor.

 

The Ganga flows quiet under this barrage in Bijnor.

My doctoral research at Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi was focused on the characterization of thermophysical properties of liquids and liquid mixtures including aqueous solutions at different concentrations and temperatures. In the final years of PhD, my research interest started to shift towards the properties of a novel
class of exotic salts known as “ionic liquids”. Sea and salt have a long known relationship.

After finishing PhD, I moved for a postdoc assignment to the Institute of Chemical and Biological Technology (acronym ITQB in Portuguese) in Portugal — the land of great explorers and navigators. Apart from its excellent research facilities, what makes ITQB remarkable is its location in the beautiful town of Oeiras, around 17 Kilometers away from the capital of Lisbon. My office faced the Atlantic Ocean. Out of the several interesting projects at ITQB, the most appealing to me was the detailed study of the effect of structurally diverse ionic liquids on the density anomaly of water. This also laid the foundation of my future research.

 

The beautiful Santo Amaro beach near Oeiras with a scenic view of a very old lighthouse (bugio) situated in the estuary of the Tagus river.

 

The pavement across the Santo Amaro beach lends itself to a nice stroll.

I got an opportunity to work at the University of Vigo, Spain in 2012, where I witnessed the immense beauty of one of the best and most eco-friendly beaches of the world at Islas Cies — a group of three islands. At the University of Vigo we used the speed of sound and density measurements on solutions of a series of ionic liquids to characterise their self-assembling process in water.

The beautiful Samil beach in Vigo, Spain.

 

A breathtaking summer sunset at Cies Island, Spain.

After spending almost 6 years in Europe, I moved to Qatar and got introduced to the Persian Gulf. The pleasant view of the corniche in Doha, which brought the shallow water of the Persian Gulf to the middle of the city, was always a sight. An hour’s drive from Doha city took one to the sand dunes and in-land sea (Khor-al-adaid) at the border of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

At Qatar University, my passion for the peculiar properties of water continued and I studied a distinct form of structured water known as “gas hydrates”, hydrogen bonded water molecules in which the guest gas molecules are trapped in cavities. Formation of gas hydrates within gas pipelines is a persistent problem faced by the oil and gas industry worldwide, including in Qatar. Gas processing from the deep-sea, where temperatures are low and pressures are high, provides suitable conditions for the formation of gas hydrates.

The inland sea (Khor-al-adaid), Qatar.

 

In the pursuit of a work-life balance, I moved back to Portugal in 2016 but this time to the other side of the river Tagus where I now work at the New University of Lisbon. The university is situated near Costa da Caparica, a tiny, breathtakingly beautiful coastal town. Here, I am engaged in the in-depth study of clathrate-hydrates, specially the role of hydrogen bonding and water structure in their formation and dissociation.

Juan G Beltran wrote the following in an article in the Journal of  Chemical Thermodynamics (117, 2018) and I think it aptly sums up my passion for hydrates:  “A snowflake is a letter from heaven (U. Nakaya), a diamond is a letter from the depth (F.C. Frank). What then is a gas hydrate?”

The 25th April Bridge on the river Tagus connecting Lisbon to the municipality of Almada, Portugal.

 

High tides in the coast of Caparica, Portugal, attract many surfers.

During this decade-long scientific journey across cultures, languages and continents, I have observed a change in my research interests. However, they have always centered around the properties of liquids and aqueous solutions. Now I am eagerly waiting to see if water will allow me to settle down or another wave will sail me towards a new destination.

Mohammad Tariq can be contacted at tariq@fct.unl.pt