Dr. Joseph Sriyal Malik Peiris (born 1949)

Wikipedia 🌐 Malik Peiris 

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Dr. Joseph Sriyal Malik Peiris (born 1949) 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malik_Peiris

2023-02-23-wikipedia-org-malik-peiris.pdf

Malik Peiris

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Malik Peiris

SBS, FRS, FRCP, FRCPath, FFPH, FAAM, International Member (NAS), Founding Member (ASHK), FHKCPath, FHKAM[1]


මලික් පීරිස්


Born

Joseph Sriyal Malik Peiris[2]

10 November 1949 (age 73)[3]

Kandy, Ceylon

Nationality

British and Sri Lankan (dual national)

Permanent resident of Hong Kong, China

Other names

Joseph Sriyal Malik Peiris

Joseph Peiris

JSM Peiris[4]

Alma mater

University of Ceylon (MBBS)

University of Oxford (DPhil)[1][5]

Spouse

Sharmini Arseculeratne

Children

Shalini (d)

Shehan (s)

Relatives

Sarathnanda "Chubby" Arsecularatne (father-in-law)[6]

Awards

John Dirks Canada Gairdner Global Health Award

Silver Bauhinia Star

Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur[7][8]

Scientific career


Fields

Virology

Institutions

University of Hong Kong

Royal Victoria Infirmary

University of Peradeniya[9]

Thesis

Enhancement by antiviral antibody of the replication of togaviridae in mononuclear phagocytes (1980)

Doctoral advisor

James S. Porterfield

Joseph Sriyal Malik Peiris SBS FRS FRCP FRCPath FFPH (Sinhala: ජෝසප් ශ්‍රියාල් මලික් පීරිස්, born 10 November 1949) is a Hong Kong-based British and Sri Lankan virologist, most notable for being the first person to isolate the SARS virus.[8]He is the current Tam Wah-Ching Professor in Medical Science, and Chair Professor of Virology at the Division of Public Health Laboratory Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Hong Kong.[2] He was a member of the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization of the World Health Organization from 2009 to 2010.[10]

Early life and education[edit]

Peiris was born on 10 November 1949[3] in Kandy, Sri Lanka. He attended school at St. Anthony's College, Kandy,[11] and entered the University of Ceylon, Peradeniya in 1967,[9][12] obtaining his MBBS in 1972.[1]

After a year with the National Health Department at the General Hospital in Matale,[9] Peiris joined the Department of Microbiology at his alma mater, where Sarathnanda "Chubby" Arseculeratne, Peiris's future father-in-law, worked at the time. Despite his interest in immunology, Peiris started working on virology at the urge of Arseculeratne.[13] He was awarded a Commonwealth Scholarship in 1977[14] and went to the University of Oxford for a DPhil at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology,[9] graduating in 1981.[1] A major aspect of his DPhil study was the paradoxical role that antibodies may play in facilitating rather than blocking the entry of viruses, such as the West Nile virus and the dengue virus, into macrophages, a type of white blood cell.[15] He underwent his training in clinical pathology at the Public Health Laboratory at Birmingham and Newcastle University,[16] and completed his pathologist examination in 1982.[5]

Career and research[edit]

After his DPhil, Peiris returned to Sri Lanka as a senior lecturer and set up a virology department at the University of Peradeniya, which was created after the split-up of the University of Sri Lanka (formerly the University of Ceylon).[6]

In 1988, because of the Sri Lankan Civil War,[13] Peiris went back to Newcastle upon Tyne to become a consultant virologist at the Royal Victoria Infirmary.[5][16] He moved to Hong Kong in 1995, tasked with setting up a clinical virology unit at Queen Mary Hospital and the University of Hong Kong.[13]

Peiris's research interest is in emerging viral diseases, especially those passed from animals to humans, using a multidisciplinary approach termed "One-Health", which Peiris has defined as a "collaboration between the animal health, environmental health, human health, and laboratory sectors."[13]

Currently at HKU, Malik is the Tam Wah-Ching Professor in Medical Science and Chair Professor of Virology at the Division of Public health Laboratory Sciences, School of Public Health.[2] Since 2021, he has been working part time. He is also a Co-Director of the WHO H5 Reference Laboratory and the WHO SARS-CoV-2 reference laboratory,[2] the Director of Centre of Influenza Research[17] and the Managing Director of the Centre for Immunology and Infection.[18] He retired from the position of Co-Director of the HKU-Pasteur Research Pole, jointly created in 2000 by HKU and the Pasteur Institute in France,[19] and became an Honorary Director.[17]

Peiris has been an editor of Current Opinion in Virology since 2011[4][20] and of mBio since 2016.[4][21]

Peiris has held a number of roles at the Hong Kong government, including a member of the Advisory panel on Emerging Infectious Diseases of the Hong Kong Centre for Health Protection (CHP)[22] and the Hong Kong Research Grants Council between 2007 and 2009.[23] He currently sits on the CHP Scientific Committee on Emerging and Zoonotic Diseases[24] and Scientific Committee on Vector-borne Diseases.[25]

Notable findings[edit]

In 1997, after the first human outbreak of the avian influenza H5N1 virus in Hong Kong, Peiris turned his attention to the virus, which claimed the lives of a third of its victims. Research in his group showed that the virus induces a high level of cytokines when a type of white blood cell called macrophage is infected.[26] This so-called "cytokine storm" is now recognized as a major mechanism of avian influenza virus pathogenesis.[27][28]

In 2003, Hong Kong suffered another viral disease outbreak, this time an unknown respiratory disease, termed severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS.[29] Peiris became known worldwide when his group became the first to isolate the virus that causes this disease,[30] a novel coronavirus now known as SARS-CoV-1.[31][32] By June 2003, Peiris, together with his long-time collaborators Leo Poon and Guan Yi, has developed a rapid diagnostic test for SARS-CoV-1 using real-time polymerase chain reaction.[33]

In February 2020, Peiris published an article in Nature Medicine, presaging the outbreak of a new coronavirus.[34] Peiris reported the next month that a Pomeranian dog was infected with COVID-19.[35] This was later substantiated by other COVID-19 animal infection cases across the world, including a tiger at the Bronx Zoo[36] and a pug dog in North Carolina.[37]

He and collaborators also developed a diagnostic test for 2019-nCoV (later renamed to SARS-CoV-2), again using real-time polymerase chain reaction,[38] and found that SARS-CoV-2 survives well on smooth surfaces and is susceptible to disinfectants such as household bleach, ethanol and benzalkonium chloride.[39]

Honours and awards[edit]

Personal life[edit]

Peiris is married to Sharmini Arseculeratne and they have a daughter, Shalini and a son, Shehan.

Sarathnanda "Chubby" Arseculeratne, an Emeritus Professor at the Faculty of Medicine, University of Peradeniya,[51] is Peiris's father-in-law and his early mentor.[6]

References[edit]