My Expertise
Infectious disease, clinical microbiology, bacterial pathogenesis, host immune response, intracellular survival of bacteria in eukaryotic cells, host-microbe interaction, human gut microbiome, live cells imaging, in vivo experiments using rats/mice, culture of fastidious bacteria, molecular epidemiology of bacterial antimicrobial resistance (AMR) in resource-scarce settings, and public health interventions through one health lens. Evidence-based teaching practices, problem-based learning (PBL), curriculum and assessment design, and flipped classroom.
Fields of Research (FoR)
Medical microbiology, Infectious diseases, One healthBiography
Binod Rayamajhee is a postdoctoral research associate at Prof. Torsten's lab at UNSW since 2024. Binod completed his PhD (Infectious Disease and Clinical Microbiology) on 'Investigation of genotypes and intracellular microbiome composition of Acanthamoeba species and the effect of intracellular microbes on the pathogenesis of amoebal host' under the supervision of Prof. Mark Willcox, Assoc. Prof. Nicole Carnt, and Prof. Fiona L. Henriquez from...view more
Binod Rayamajhee is a postdoctoral research associate at Prof. Torsten's lab at UNSW since 2024. Binod completed his PhD (Infectious Disease and Clinical Microbiology) on 'Investigation of genotypes and intracellular microbiome composition of Acanthamoeba species and the effect of intracellular microbes on the pathogenesis of amoebal host' under the supervision of Prof. Mark Willcox, Assoc. Prof. Nicole Carnt, and Prof. Fiona L. Henriquez from the School of Optometry and Vision Science, UNSW. During his PhD, Binod investigated the prevalence of Acanthamoeba spp. in public lagoons water along the four coastal lagoons on the east coast of the greater Sydney region using a comprehensive metagenomic approach. Additionally, subsequent studies within his thesis assessed the impact of naturally acquired viable intracellular bacteria by Acanthamoeba on the development of Acanthamoeba keratitis in animal models. During his cross-disciplinary thesis project, Binod collaborated with clinicians, government institutions, water professionals, and keratitis patients.
Apart from ocular pathogens and host-microbe interaction, Binod has a special interest in infectious diseases such as Scrub Typhus, nosocomial infections, and the impact of climate change on vector-borne diseases, with further interests in investigating the burden of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) from One Health Perspective in resource-scarce settings.
My Grants
- Thomas Davies Research Grant for Marine, Soil & Plant Biology, Australian Academy of Science – 2023, role - CI-B (AUD 19,974)
- ‘HDR Development & Research Training Grant (DRTG)’, UNSW, Sydney - 2023 (AUD 3,000)
- Sub-Grants, ‘Promoting Sustainable Development in Ethics & Data Sharing to Support Public Health’, Public Health Alliance for Genomic Epidemiology (PHA4GE), South Africa - 2022, role - CI-B (USD 5,000)
- ‘Industry Network Seed Fund (INSF)’, Faculty of Science, UNSW, Sydney, 2021, role - CI-B (AUD 15,000)
- Collaborative research grant in response to COVID-19, University Grants Commission (UGC), Nepal for project - ‘COVID-19: Investigation on Secondary Metabolites from Natural Products through Computational Chemistry & Immunochemistry Approach’, 2020, role - CI-B (USD 75,000)
- ‘Public Engagement Grant’, Society for Applied Microbiology (SfAM), UK - 2018 (GBP 3,000)
My Qualifications
- 2020 – 2024: PhD, Optometry & Vision Science (Ocular & Molecular Microbiology)
School of Optometry & Vision Science (SOVS), Faculty of Medicine & Health, UNSW, Sydney
- 2013 – 2017: MSc by Research (Medical Microbiology )
Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal
My Awards
- ‘Tow Research Awards - Basic Science Division (Finalist)’, Randwick Health & Innovation Precinct - 2023
- ‘ASM Nancy Mills Student Award (Finalist)’, The Australia Society for Microbiology, NSW-ACT Branch - 2023
- ‘Joe & Janet Barr Cornea & Contact Lens Research Award’, American Academy of Optometry - 2022
- ‘Best Poster Award’, International Cornea & Contact Lens Congress (ICCLC) - 2022
- ‘Outstanding Student Award’, Arc PGC, UNSW, Sydney - 2021
- Conference Grant, Microbiology Society, UK - 2023
- Travel Grant, MDPI - Water, 2023
- Student Travel Award, The Australian Society for Parasitology (ASP) - 2022
- ASM Student & Postdoctoral Travel Award, American Society for Microbiology - 2021
- Annual Conference Studentship, Society for Applied Microbiology (SfAM), UK - 2018 & 2019
- ASM Student & Postdoctoral Travel Award, American Society for Microbiology - 2017
- Bill & Melinda Gates - Travel Award, American Society of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene (ASTMH) - 2017
My Research Supervision
Supervision keywords
Currently supervising
PhD Project: Development of novel antimicrobial peptides for the treatment of Pseudomonas aeruginosa associated keratitis.
Research project: Harnessing Acanthamoeba to control cyanobacteria blooms.
My Engagement
- ASM (Australian Society for Microbiology), Communication Ambassador, 2022-2024
- Committee Member, ASM NSW/ACT Branch committee, 2023-2024
- Global Ambassador, Applied Microbiology International (AMI), 2022-2024
- Elected Member, Australian Water Association Young Water Professionals Committee, 2022-2023
- Member, International Conference Committee (ICC), 7-11 June 2021, SfAM, UK
- Session Chair (Microbiome), MIcroSeq2021 & 2022
- Abstract Advisory Program (AAP), Consortium of Universities for Global Health (CUGH), 2021 & 2022
My Teaching
I'm tutoring courses: Molecules, Cells, and Genes (BABS1201), and BABS1202 (Applied Biomolecular Sciences) to undergraduate biology students, and courses MFAC2501 (Foundations), and MFAC1527 (Society and Health) to phase one undergraduate medical students at UNSW, Sydney.