C
Chandraiah Godugu
Researcher at Florida A&M University
Publications - 158
Citations - 4602
Chandraiah Godugu is an academic researcher from Florida A&M University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 126 publications receiving 2933 citations.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Therapeutic applications of selenium nanoparticles
TL;DR: The significance of nanosizing on the pharmacological activity of Se has been discussed and the role of SeNPs in pharmacological protection against various inflammatory and oxidative stress mediated conditions is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI
AlgiMatrix™ Based 3D Cell Culture System as an In-Vitro Tumor Model for Anticancer Studies
Chandraiah Godugu,Apurva R. Patel,Utkarsh S. Desai,Terrick Andey,Alexandria Sams,Mandip Singh +5 more
TL;DR: The cytotoxicity, spheroid size distribution, immunohistochemistry, RT-PCR and nanoparticle penetration data suggested that in vitro tumor models show higher resistance to anticancer drugs and supporting the fact that 3D culture is a better model for the cytotoxic evaluation of antic cancer drugs in vitro.
Journal ArticleDOI
The effect of the oral administration of polymeric nanoparticles on the efficacy and toxicity of tamoxifen.
TL;DR: Tmx-NPs showed the marked reduction in hepatotoxicty when compared with free Tmx citrate as evidenced by histopathological examination of liver tissue as well as AST, ALT and MDA levels, and could have the significant value for the oral chronic breast cancer therapy with reduced hepatotoxicity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Toxicity of multiwalled carbon nanotubes with end defects critically depends on their functionalization density
Sanyog Jain,Vivek Thakare,Manasmita Das,Chandraiah Godugu,Amit K. Jain,Rashi Mathur,Krishna Chuttani,Anil Mishra +7 more
TL;DR: Toxicity of MWCNTs systematically decreased with the increased functionalization density, and acid-oxidized carboxylated CNTs with shorter lengths, hydrophilic surfaces, and high aqueous dispersibility proved to be less toxic and more biocompatible than their pristine counterparts.
Journal ArticleDOI
A Review on Pharmacological Properties of Coumarins.
TL;DR: Synthetic routes have led to interesting analogues of coumarins which possess pharmacological activities like anti-HIV, antimicrobial, antiinflammatory, anticancer, anti-TB, anticonvulsant and MAO inhibitory properties.