B
Birbal Singh
Researcher at Indian Veterinary Research Institute
Publications - 132
Citations - 1576
Birbal Singh is an academic researcher from Indian Veterinary Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: TEC & Stem cell. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 124 publications receiving 1149 citations.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cholesterol-Lowering Probiotics as Potential Biotherapeutics for Metabolic Diseases
Manoj Kumar,Ravinder Nagpal,Rajesh Kumar,Rajkumar Hemalatha,Vinod Verma,Ashok Kumar,Chaitali Chakraborty,Birbal Singh,Francesco Marotta,Shalini Jain,Hariom Yadav +10 more
TL;DR: The present paper reviews the mechanisms of action of anti-cholesterolemic potential of probiotic microorganisms and probiotic food products, with the aim of lowering the risks of cardiovascular and coronary heart diseases.
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Potential therapeutic applications of some antinutritional plant secondary metabolites.
TL;DR: The recent upsurge of interest in this area of research and advances made therein indicate that the impact of a number of diseases affecting humans and animals may be lessened, if not prevented, by simple dietary intake of PSMs with putative therapeutic properties.
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Futuristic Non-antibiotic Therapies to Combat Antibiotic Resistance: A Review.
Manoj Kumar,Devojit Kumar Sarma,Swasti Shubham,Manoj Kumawat,Vinod Verma,Praveen Balabaskaran Nina,Devraj Jp,Santosh Kumar,Birbal Singh,Rajnarayan R Tiwari +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight the present scenario of increasing antimicrobial-resistance in pathogenic bacteria and the clinical importance of unconventional or non-antibiotic therapies to thwart the infectious pathogenic microorganisms.
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Purification and characterization of tannin acyl hydrolase from Aspergillus niger MTCC 2425
TL;DR: The present investigation was carried out for increasing the yield of tannase of Aspergillus niger and the physico‐chemical characterization of this enzyme, and tannic acid was the best substrate for three substrates tested, followed by methyl gallate and propyl gallate.
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Value Addition of Feed and Fodder by Alleviating the Antinutritional Effects of Tannins
TL;DR: A cohesive and an integrated detanninification strategy is required for alleviating the antinutritional effects of tannins in animals and upgrading the feeding value of tANNiniferous biomass.