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Amanda Cabral da Silva
Amanda is a PhD student in the Faculty of Health Sciences at Simon Fraser University and a student research assistant at the BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS under the supervision of Dr. Zabrina Brumme. She is currently studying transcriptionally and translationally competent proviruses that persist during antiretroviral therapy.
Before her PhD, Amanda completed a Master’s degree in the Allergy and Immunopathology Program at the University of São Paulo, Brazil, where she studied the potential mechanisms of human operational tolerance in kidney transplantation. During her Master’s, she also participated in Immunology in School, a volunteer science-education project in Brazilian public schools.
Following her Master’s, Amanda joined Medical Investigation Laboratory 60 (LIM-60) at the University of São Paulo’s School of Medicine, under the supervision of Dr. Esper Kallás, working as a flow cytometrist. She contributed to projects investigating immune responses to arboviruses such as dengue and yellow fever, and later supported COVID-19 research during the pandemic.
From 2021 to 2024, she worked as a research assistant at Emory University’s Pathology Advanced Translational Research Unit (PATRU) in Atlanta, USA, under Dr. Souheil Younes and Dr. Rafick-Pierre Sekaly, studying how microbiota-derived metabolites shape immune cell function in the context of chronic HIV infection.