Biomedical scientist · Food as medicine
Your body is a machine of a million molecules. The right food keeps it running.
Dr. Srinivasa K. Rao is a biomedical scientist — PhD in molecular genetics from the University of Paris, with research at Columbia and Albert Einstein, 30+ peer-reviewed papers, and 3 U.S. patents. After four decades at the lab bench, he turned to a simpler question: can everyday food prevent disease? Today he makes evidence-based nutrition accessible — and mentors students into published authors through Path to Nobel.
Dr. Srinivasa K. Rao
Food as medicine, backed by evidence.
For 35 years Dr. Rao worked where biology gets technical — molecular genetics, protease biology, vaccine science, consultations with the World Health Organization. Powerful tools, but reactive ones: they treat disease after it arrives. The harder problem is preventing it. His answer is food as medicine — using whole foods, dietary diversity, and nutritional biochemistry to protect health before medicine is ever needed, and to extend not just lifespan, but health span.
Protect health before medicine is ever needed — and extend not just lifespan, but health span.
A lesson he never forgot.
In 1982, as a young fellow at the Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology in Hyderabad, Dr. Rao isolated the first active fraction of an enzyme that recycles the body's own proteins. He was told to purify it completely before publishing. He did — and the moment it was pure, it stopped working. The "contaminant" he had been ordered to strip away turned out to be essential to the reaction. The pathway he had glimpsed was later mapped by others and recognised with the 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
Take a living system apart into perfect, isolated pieces, and it dies. Health lives in the whole.
It is why he trusts whole foods over isolated supplements — and why he built Path to Nobel, to mentor young scientists past the very gates that once stopped him.
From the lab bench to the kitchen table.
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Where it began
Bobbili, Andhra Pradesh
Where it began. -
Early studies
AVN College & Andhra University
B.Sc., then M.Sc. in Marine Biology. -
1981 – 1983
CCMB Hyderabad
Junior Research Fellow. -
1983 – 1988
University of Paris
PhD in molecular genetics, as a French Government Scholar. -
1988 – 1993
Columbia & Albert Einstein
Molecular genetics and gene expression. -
1993 – 2007
Faculty & vaccine science
Albert Einstein / LIJ, CUNY; WHO consultations; Shantha Biotech. -
2000 – present
Food as medicine
Quinoa, edible-plant science, and nutrition education. -
Ongoing
Path to Nobel
Mentoring the next generation of authors.
Path to Nobel.
A publishing program that turns students into published co-authors. Volumes 1 and 2 chronicled Nobel laureates — fourteen student co-authors each, from the USA, Qatar, and India. Volume 3, 108 Pioneers: Food as Medicine, is on its way to print.
pathtonobel.orgEvery cover carries a mirror — so a student opening a book about Nobel winners sees their own face looking back.
The work.
Quinoa, brought to India.
Through his Dr. Quinoa brand he partnered with farmers in India and Bolivia and put complete-protein quinoa on South-Indian supermarket shelves at about half the price of imports.
A library of 1,000+ edible plants.
His Poshak database maps overlooked, climate-resilient species, pushing everyday diets past the usual hundred-odd foods.
Green Salt.
A plant-derived salt that keeps the flavour and loses the cardiovascular risk.
8 books, 15+ learning tools.
From 100 Food Rules for Health & Longevity to the 365 Food Rhymes for children — plus 100+ popular articles on food, nutrition, and Ayurveda.
Recognition & speaking.
- "Food as Medicine Using Metabolomics" — webinar, Society of Indian Academics in America, 2022
- "Debunking Anti-Aging Myths" — 34th NIAASC Conference, Florida, 2023
- 39 global diets — Barcelona · Precision Food Nutrition — Sweden
- Consultant Scientist, Nutrishiksha Academy · Member, SIAA & the Association of Food Scientists & Technologists (India)
Connect.
For collaborations, talks, and student-mentorship inquiries — reach out and start a conversation about food as medicine.