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M. N. V. Prasad Gajula

Bio: M. N. V. Prasad Gajula is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Genome. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 73 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
26 Jan 2018
TL;DR: The primary goal of developing this database is to provide traditional, genomic, and chemical descriptions of the medicinal plants exclusively found in various regions of Uttarakhand.
Abstract: Medicinal plants are the main natural pools for the primary health care system, ethno-medicine, as well as traditional Indian system of several medicines. Uttarakhand also known as ‘Herbal State’, is a rich source of medicinal plants and traditional medicinal knowledge. A great deal of information about medicinal plants of Uttarakhand is scattered in different forms. Although many medicinal plant databases are available, currently there is no cohesive manually curated database of medicinal plants widely distributed in Uttarakhand state. A comprehensive database has been developed, known as the Uttarakhand Medicinal Plants Database (UMPDB). UMPDB provides extensive information on botanical name, common name, taxonomy, genomic taxonomy id, habit, habitat, location in Uttarakhand, part use, medicinal use, genomic information (including number of nucleotides, proteins, ESTs), chemical information, and scientific literature. Annotated medicinal plants integrated in the current version of the database were collected from the existing books, databases, and available literature. The current version of UMPDB contains the 1127 records of medicinal plants which belong to 153 plant families distributed across 13 districts of Uttarakhand. The primary goal of developing this database is to provide traditional, genomic, and chemical descriptions of the medicinal plants exclusively found in various regions of Uttarakhand. We anticipate that embedded information in the database would help users to readily obtain desired information.

30 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The modeled 3D structure of wheat SPX proteins shared high level of homology with template structures, providing information to understand their functions at proteomic level, and modeling 3D structures on 10 ns using molecular dynamics simulations for conformational stability was refined.

27 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The proposed 3D structure of wheat N and P nutrition proteins shared high level homology with known experimental structures providing information to understand their functions at the biochemical level as well as providing first-hand structural prospective towards development of wheat varieties resilient to N andP stress.

24 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study inferred the three-dimensional structural model of DREB1A using homology modelling and evaluated them using molecular dynamics simulations yielding refined modelled structures and suggested that the wheat DREb1A orthologs have similar biochemical functions and pathways to that of AtDREB 1A.

23 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2018
TL;DR: A 3D model of rice Urease is presented and helps understanding the molecular basis for the mechanism of urease interaction with substrate urea at atomic level and reveals the role of Ser324, Ala329 and Val385 of riceUrease enzyme in binding with the substrate Urea.
Abstract: Urease (EC 3.5.1.5) is an important member of most popular amidohydrolases superfamily that is well known for catalyzes the hydrolysis of urea into ammonia and carbon dioxide. Urease protein exclusively found in a wide range of living organisms including plant, algae, bacteria, fungi and some invertebrates. In plants, urease play an important role of recapturing the nitrogen from urea. Despite its critical interplay in plants the structural and functional aspects of urease in O. sativa are still unresolved. In the present study, a three-dimensional structure of rice urease was deduced by using homology modelling based approach. Molecular dynamics simulations were performed to gain further insight into the molecular mechanism and mode of action of urease of rice. Further, the possible binding interactions of modeled structure of urease with urea were assessed by using a geometry-based molecular docking algorithm. The study reveals the role of Ser324, Ala329 and Val385 of rice urease enzyme in binding with the substrate urea. In conclusion, this study presents a 3D model of rice urease and helps understanding the molecular basis for the mechanism of urease interaction with substrate urea at atomic level.

17 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Novel natural metabolites namely, ursolic acid, carvacrol and oleanolic acid are reported as the potential inhibitors against main protease (Mpro) of COVID-19 by using integrated molecular modeling approaches.
Abstract: Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) is a novel corona virus that causes corona virus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The COVID-19 rapidly spread across the nations with high mortality rate even as very little is known to contain the virus at present. In the current study, we report novel natural metabolites namely, ursolic acid, carvacrol and oleanolic acid as the potential inhibitors against main protease (Mpro) of COVID-19 by using integrated molecular modeling approaches. From a combination of molecular docking and molecular dynamic (MD) simulations, we found three ligands bound to protease during 50 ns of MD simulations. Furthermore, the molecular mechanic/generalized/Born/Poisson-Boltzmann surface area (MM/G/P/BSA) free energy calculations showed that these chemical molecules have stable and favourable energies causing strong binding with binding site of Mpro protein. All these three molecules, namely, ursolic acid, carvacrol and oleanolic acid, have passed the ADME (Absorption, Distribution, Metabolism, and Excretion) property as well as Lipinski's rule of five. The study provides a basic foundation and suggests that the three phytochemicals, viz. ursolic acid, carvacrol and oleanolic acid could serve as potential inhibitors in regulating the Mpro protein's function and controlling viral replication. Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma.

134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The recent appearance of COVID-19 virus has created a global crisis due to unavailability of any vaccine or drug that can effectively and deterministically work against it as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The recent appearance of COVID-19 virus has created a global crisis due to unavailability of any vaccine or drug that can effectively and deterministically work against it. Naturally, different pos...

92 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Light is shed on the importance of studying the role of osmotic stress tolerance in wheat plants and molecular mechanisms of TFs belonging to several classes, including DREB, NAC, MYB, WRKY and bHLH are deciphered to clarify challenges and problems for devising potential strategies to improve complex regulatory events involved in plant tolerance to osmosis stress adaptive pathways in wheat.
Abstract: The current review provides an updated, new insights into the regulation of transcription mediated underlying mechanisms of wheat plants to osmotic stress perturbations. Osmotic stress tolerance mechanisms being complex are governed by multiple factors at physiological, biochemical and at the molecular level, hence approaches like “OMICS” that can underpin mechanisms behind osmotic tolerance in wheat is of paramount importance. The transcription factors (TFs) are a class of molecular proteins, which are involved in regulation, modulation and orchestrating the responses of plants to a variety of environmental stresses. Recent reports have provided novel insights on the role of TFs in osmotic stress tolerance via direct molecular links. However, our knowledge on the regulatory role TFs during osmotic stress tolerance in wheat remains limited. The present review in its first part sheds light on the importance of studying the role of osmotic stress tolerance in wheat plants and second aims to decipher molecular mechanisms of TFs belonging to several classes, including DREB, NAC, MYB, WRKY and bHLH, which have been reported to engage in osmotic stress mediated gene expression in wheat and third part covers the systems biology approaches to understand the transcriptional regulation of osmotic stress and the role of long non-coding RNAs in response to osmotic stress with special emphasis on wheat. The current concept may lead to an understanding in molecular regulation and signalling interaction of TFs under osmotic stress to clarify challenges and problems for devising potential strategies to improve complex regulatory events involved in plant tolerance to osmotic stress adaptive pathways in wheat.

62 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Insight is provided into the functional role of TaSWEETs in biotic and abiotic stresses, which may further help in planning strategies to develop high yielding wheat varieties tolerant to environmental stresses.
Abstract: SWEET proteins represent one of the largest sugar transporter family in the plant kingdom and play crucial roles in plant development and stress responses. In the present study, a total of 108 TaSWEET genes distributed on all the 21 wheat chromosomes were identified using the latest whole genome sequence (as against 59 genes reported in an earlier report). These 108 genes included 14 of the 17 types reported in Arabidopsis and also included three novel types. Tandem duplications (22) and segmental duplications (5) played a significant role in the expansion of TaSWEET family. A number of cis-elements were also identified in the promoter regions of TaSWEET genes, indicating response of TaSWEET genes during development and also during biotic/abiotic stresses. The TaSWEET proteins carried 4–7 trans-membrane helices (TMHs) showing diversity in structure. Phylogenetic analysis using SWEET proteins of wheat and 8 other species gave four well-known clusters. Expression analysis involving both in silico and in planta indicated relatively higher expression of TaSWEET genes in water/heat sensitive and leaf rust resistant genotypes. The results provided insights into the functional role of TaSWEETs in biotic and abiotic stresses, which may further help in planning strategies to develop high yielding wheat varieties tolerant to environmental stresses.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
12 Dec 2018-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The TaNLP7 gene showed significant up-regulation in the roots and shoots of HUW468 (with higher NUE) during N-starvation; this gene has already been characterized in Arabidopsis and tobacco, and is known to be involved in nitrate-signal transduction pathway.
Abstract: RWP-RKs represent a small family of transcription factors (TFs) that are unique to plants and function particularly under conditions of nitrogen starvation. These RWP-RKs have been classified in two sub-families, NLPs (NIN-like proteins) and RKDs (RWP-RK domain proteins). NLPs regulate tissue-specific expression of genes involved in nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) and RKDs regulate expression of genes involved in gametogenesis/embryogenesis. During the present study, using in silico approach, 37 wheat RWP-RK genes were identified, which included 18 TaNLPs (2865 to 7340 bp with 4/5 exons), distributed on 15 chromosomes from 5 homoeologous groups (with two genes each on 4B,4D and 5A) and 19 TaRKDs (1064 to 5768 bp with 1 to 6 exons) distributed on 12 chromosomes from 4 homoeologous groups (except groups 1, 4 and 5); 2-3 splice variants were also available in 9 of the 37 genes. Sixteen (16) of these genes also carried 24 SSRs (simple sequence repeats), while 11 genes had targets for 13 different miRNAs. At the protein level, MD simulation analysis suggested their interaction with nitrate-ions. Significant differences were observed in the expression of only two (TaNLP1 and TaNLP2) of the nine representative genes that were used for in silico expression analysis under varying levels of N at post-anthesis stage (data for other genes was not available for in silico expression analysis). Differences in expression were also observed during qRT-PCR, when expression of four representative genes (TaNLP2, TaNLP7, TaRKD6 and TaRKD9) was examined in roots and shoots of seedlings (under different conditions of N supply) in two contrasting genotypes which differed in NUE (C306 with low NUE and HUW468 with high NUE). These four genes for qRT-PCR were selected on the basis of previous literature, level of homology and the level of expression (in silico study). In particular, the TaNLP7 gene showed significant up-regulation in the roots and shoots of HUW468 (with higher NUE) during N-starvation; this gene has already been characterized in Arabidopsis and tobacco, and is known to be involved in nitrate-signal transduction pathway.

42 citations