Young Scientist Award

Venu Paritala
AGRI IT Solutions, United States

Venu Paritala
Affiliation AGRI IT Solutions
Country United States
Scopus ID 57782875500
Documents 3
Citations 8
h-index 1
Subject Area Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Event International Research Excellence Awards – Book of Award
ORCID 0000-0003-0385-5322

Venu Paritala is a researcher whose work spans computational biology, bioinformatics, molecular modeling, gastrointestinal disease informatics, and nanotoxicology. His publications demonstrate an interdisciplinary approach that combines biological data analysis with computational methods to investigate disease mechanisms and identify potential therapeutic targets. His contributions reflect the growing importance of integrative bioinformatics in modern biomedical research.[1]

Abstract

The research activities of Venu Paritala emphasize computational approaches for biological discovery. His publications integrate genomics, molecular docking, phylogenetic analysis, and multi-omics databases to support disease investigation and therapeutic research. These studies contribute to biomedical data science by improving analytical resources for gastrointestinal diseases, viral pathogens, and nanomaterial toxicology.[2]

Keywords

Bioinformatics, Multi-omics, Molecular Modeling, Gastrointestinal Diseases, Computational Biology, Phylogenetics, Nanotoxicology, Molecular Docking, Disease Databases, Biomedical Research.

Introduction

Advances in computational biology increasingly support biomedical discovery through large-scale data integration and predictive modeling. Venu Paritala’s work illustrates this interdisciplinary trend by combining biological datasets with computational tools to address clinically relevant research questions across several biomedical domains.[1]

Research Profile

His research interests include molecular biology, genetics, computational drug discovery, systems biology, and biomedical informatics. Through collaborative investigations, he has contributed to developing data resources and computational workflows that facilitate biological interpretation and translational research.[1]

Research Contributions

  • Developed a next-generation multi-omics gastrointestinal disease database supporting biomedical research.
  • Applied computational phylogenetics and molecular modeling to investigate Langya virus antiviral targets.
  • Studied nanoparticle-induced oxidative stress using computational structural biology approaches.

Publications

Research Impact

Although at an early stage of his research career, his publications demonstrate growing engagement with computational biomedical science. The creation of disease-oriented databases and computational analyses contributes valuable resources that may support future biological investigations and collaborative research initiatives.[2]

Award Suitability

The interdisciplinary character of Venu Paritala’s research, integrating bioinformatics, molecular biology, and computational analysis, aligns well with the objectives of the International Research Excellence Awards – Book of Award. His developing publication record reflects innovative application of computational methodologies to contemporary biomedical challenges.[3]

Conclusion

Venu Paritala represents an emerging researcher whose work bridges computational science and molecular biology. His contributions to biomedical databases, disease modeling, and molecular analysis demonstrate promising potential for continued scholarly development and interdisciplinary collaboration.

External Links

References

  1. Elsevier. Scopus Author Details: Venu Paritala, Author ID 57782875500.
    https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=57782875500
  2. Paritala V., Srikanth K. (2025). Gastrointestinal DB: A Next-Generation Multi-omics Resource for Gastrointestinal Disease and Molecular Research. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.microb.2025.100312
  3. International Research Excellence Awards – Book of Award.
    https://bookofaward.com/
Venu Paritala | Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology | Young Scientist Award

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