Browsing by Author "Kaur, J."
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Item In silico study of flavonoids as DPP-4 and α-glucosidase inhibitors(Bentham Science Publishers B.V., 2018) Kaur, J.; Singla, Ramit; Jaitak, VikasBackground: Diabetes being among the most prevalent disease is being studied widely to achieve most potent drug with lesser side-effects. Numerous targets have been explored and several drugs have been developed to combat type-2 diabetes. Worldwide scenario depicts an increase in the number of diabetics at an alarming rate. Due to this critical need in the current scenario, the focus has been shifted to natural products. Amongst which flavonoids have been extensively studied for their anti-diabetic potential. Among various targets inhibition of DPP-4, ?-glucosidase arose as an advantageous methodology for the management of type-2 diabetes. DPP-4 inhibitor helps to maintain the insulin levels in the body and ?-glucosidase inhibitor aids in the control of the postprandial glycemia. Methods: In the present study, the molecular modeling of 155 flavonoids has been performed using GLIDE against Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4 (DPP-4) (PDB ID:2ONC) and ?-glucosidase (PDB ID: 2QMJ) so as to achieve lead compounds that can be further used to develop a new drug. Results: Rutin and Theaflavin-3,3'-di-O-gallate were observed to possess the best docking score for ?-glucosidase and DPP-4 respectively. Conclusions: The top scoring flavonoids show promising results, but further studies are required to be carried out including the pharmacophore mapping, SAR and QSAR studies. The results illustrated that the hydrogen bonding plays a crucial role in the binding and positioning of the molecules into the active site. Further, the rescoring of the docking values mentioned as MMGB/SA also reconfirmed that these compounds show favorable results. ? 2018 Bentham Science Publishers.Item Isolation, Characterization, and Quantification of a New Anticancer Constituent from Leaves of Nyctanthes arbor-tristis(Springer, 2022-05-03T00:00:00) Grover, P.; Kaur, J.; Suri, K.A.; Kumar, R.; Bansal, G.A new compound, 1,1,2-tris(2?,4?-di-tert-butylphenyl)-4,4-dimethylpent-1-ene, was isolated and characterized from the leaves of Nyctanthes arbor-tristis L. The plant was subjected to bioactivity-guided fractionation, and a compound was isolated from chloroform extract that was found to have potent anticancer activity. The chloroform extract was further fractionated, and a pure compound was isolated that was found to be active against three cancer cell lines (HL-60, HCT-116, and A-549). An RP-HPLC method was developed for quantification of the isolated compound. The content of the isolated compound was 0.88% in the chloroform extract and 0.08% in N. arbor-tristis leaves. � 2022, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.Item On explicit exact solutions of variable-coefficient time-fractional generalized fifth-order Korteweg-de Vries equation(Springer, 2019) Gupta, R.K; Kaur, J.We investigate the variable-coefficient time-fractional generalized fifth-order Korteweg-de Vries equation for admissible forms of the variable coefficients under the condition of invariance, and derive certain explicit exact solutions for the reduced ordinary differential equations of fractional order. © 2019, Società Italiana di Fisica and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.Item On the flag curvature of a homogeneous Finsler space with generalized m-Kropina metric(Balkan Society of Geometers, 2022-03-01T00:00:00) Kaur, J.; Shanker, G.; Jangir, S.In this paper, first, we give an explicit formula for the flag curvature of a homogeneous Finsler space with generalized m-Kropina metric. Then, we show that, under a mild condition, the two definitions of naturally reductive homogeneous Finsler space are equivalent for aforesaid metric. Finally, we study the flag curvature of naturally reductive homogeneous Finsler spaces with generalized m-Kropina metric. � Balkan Society of Geometers, Geometry Balkan Press 2022.Item Screening of quorum quenching activity of the bacteria isolated from dairy industry waste activated sludge(Center for Environmental and Energy Research and Studies, 2018) Kaur, J.; Yogalakshmi, K.N.Intercellular bacterial communication process via exchange of signalling molecules acyl homoserine lactone results in various group activities like bioluminescence, antibiotic production, biofilm formation, sporulation, and virulence. The signalling molecules are targeted, and the communication is interrupted by a group of bacteria termed quorum quenching bacteria. The present study aims to isolate the quorum quenching bacteria from the waste activated sludge collected from the dairy industry effluent treatment plant and explore for its quorum quenching potential. The bacteria were cultured in the KG medium containing n-hexanoyl homoserine lactone as a sole source of carbon and nitrogen. The isolates were identified by the 16S ribosomal deoxyribonucleic acid analysis and subsequently were evaluated for its quorum quenching activity through Chromobacterium violaceum CV026 biosensor assay. The n-hexanoyl homoserine lactone degradation was quantified by GC–MS analysis. The 16S ribosomal deoxyribonucleic acid analysis revealed the isolated bacteria as Klebsiella pneumoniae (JYQ1 and JYQ5), Acinetobacter baumannii JYQ2, Pseudomonas nitroreducens JYQ3, and Pseudomonas JYQ4. The biosensor strain assay and GC–MS analysis indicated that all the isolates possessed an inherent ability to degrade N-hexanoyl homoserine lactone. The strain Pseudomonas JYQ4 exhibited the highest quorum quenching activity of 84 ± 3.3% within 6 h of incubation. The strain A. baumannii JYQ2 acted both as quorum sensing and as quorum quenching bacteria as evidenced by the decrease in quorum quenching from 79 ± 3.1 to 76.8 ± 2.5%.Item Temperature-stratified screening of chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) genetic resource collections reveals very limited reproductive chilling tolerance compared to its annual wild relatives(2012) Berger, J.D.; Kumar, Sanjeev; Nayyar, H.; Street, K. A.; Sandhu, J. S.; Henzell, J. M.; Kaur, J.; Clark, H.C.Low reproductive chilling tolerance in chickpea impairs ovule fertilization, delaying pod set, exposing the crop to terminal drought throughout much of its distribution range. Despite this realization, little progress has been made because of the limited genetic variation available to breeders. To address this issue a wide range of domesticated (n= 1762) and wild Cicer (n= 200) germplasm collected from sites stratified by flowering phase temperature was extensively field evaluated, and compared with Lupinus angustifolius, a well-adapted Mediterranean winter annual. Chilling tolerance was estimated by regressing the time interval between pod set and first flower against mean post-anthesis temperature. Field screening was augmented by smaller scale experiments evaluating the effects of contrasting post-anthesis temperature regimes on plant growth and productivity, pollen function and subsequent pod set in temperature-controlled cabinets.Chickpea was less chilling tolerant than its wild relatives, the flower-pod interval increasing curvi-linearly as sites became cooler, with a strong effects between 11 and 16. ?C, tailing off after 17.5. ?C, but remaining statistically significant. There is little useful variation for chilling tolerance within domesticated chickpea. Small, albeit statistically significant differences in pod set delay in chickpea collected from contrasting flowering phase habitats, were marginal compared to more tolerant species such as Cicer bijugum, Cicer judaicum and L. angustifolius, and to a lesser extent Cicer reticulatum, Cicer pinnatifidum, and Cicer echinospermum. No differences were observed between desi and kabuli types. Field screening identified robust chilling tolerance in a C. echinospermum accession that commenced podding earlier, at lower temperatures (10.0. ?C), and yielded 5 times more than Rupali, the most productive chickpea. Controlled temperature experiments confirmed that in contrast to chickpea, pollen germination, viability, frequency on the stigma surface and subsequent pod set were unaffected by low post-anthesis temperatures (13/7. ?C) in C. echinospermum and L. angustifolius. Our results indicate that chickpea is even more chilling sensitive than previously thought. Because C. echinospermum is inter-fertile with chickpea, it has considerable potential both as a donor of robust chilling tolerance and as an agent for investigating resistance mechanisms. ? 2011.