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Falak Thakral

Researcher at Maharishi Markandeshwar University, Mullana

Publications -  5
Citations -  853

Falak Thakral is an academic researcher from Maharishi Markandeshwar University, Mullana. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tumor microenvironment & Hesperidin. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 404 citations.

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Role of Reactive Oxygen Species in Cancer Progression: Molecular Mechanisms and Recent Advancements.

TL;DR: The major issue is targeting the dual actions of ROS effectively with respect to the concentration bias, which needs to be monitored carefully to impede tumor angiogenesis and metastasis for ROS to serve as potential therapeutic targets exogenously/endogenously.
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Molecular Mechanisms of Action of Genistein in Cancer: Recent Advances

TL;DR: Various molecular interactions of genistein with various cellular targets in cancer models covers various molecular mechanisms prevention, treatment, in vivo, in vitro, and clinical studies to help the scientific community understand genisteIn and cancer biology and will provoke them to design novel therapeutic strategies.
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Molecular mechanisms of action of hesperidin in cancer: Recent trends and advancements.

TL;DR: This review highlights all the possible molecular targets affected by hesperidin in tumor cells on a single platform and completes the capsular package about cancer drug targets of Hesp and its role in modulating various important hallmarks of cancer.
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Zinc Oxide Nanoparticles: from Biosynthesis, Characterization, and Optimization to Synergistic Antibacterial Potential

TL;DR: In this article, a review describes the synthesis, analysis, optimization, and antibacterial applications of zinc oxide nanoparticles (ZnO NPs) and combinatorial effects with various antibiotics have also been discussed to overcome drug resistance issues.
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Synthesis, characterization and antibacterial activity of cuo nanoparticles

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of biologically synthesized CuO-NPs (Copperoxide nanoparticles) on the growth of bacterial strains was studied. And the results revealed that there may be possible utilization of biosynthesized CuNPs for the treatment of bacterial infectious disease in near future.