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Moupriya Nag

Researcher at University of Engineering & Management

Publications -  85
Citations -  837

Moupriya Nag is an academic researcher from University of Engineering & Management. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biofilm & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 47 publications receiving 291 citations. Previous affiliations of Moupriya Nag include Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics.

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Development of a Rhodamine–Rhodanine-Based Fluorescent Mercury Sensor and Its Use to Monitor Real-Time Uptake and Distribution of Inorganic Mercury in Live Zebrafish Larvae

TL;DR: Results of experiments with mammalian cells and zebra fish show that RR1 is cell and organism permeable and that it responds selectively to mercury ions over other metal ions, and real-time monitoring of inorganic mercury ion uptake by cells and live zebrafish using this chemosensor shows that saturation of mercury ions uptake occurs within 20-30 min in cells and organisms.
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Microbiologically-Synthesized Nanoparticles and Their Role in Silencing the Biofilm Signaling Cascade.

TL;DR: In this article, a review on the microbial nano-techniques that were used to produce various metallic and non-metallic nanoparticles and their "signal jamming effects" to inhibit biofilm formation is presented.
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Elucidating the effect of anti-biofilm activity of bioactive compounds extracted from plants

TL;DR: The various biofilm-forming bacteria and the bioactive compounds being produced from the aerial parts of plants having antibiofilm activity are listed and evaluated them against differentBiofilm-producing bacterial strains.
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Antibiofilm Activity of α-Amylase from Bacillus subtilis and Prediction of the Optimized Conditions for Biofilm Removal by Response Surface Methodology (RSM) and Artificial Neural Network (ANN)

TL;DR: In this paper, a combination of experimental and computational approach showing the naturally extracted α-amylase from B. subtilis having the potency of removing the biofilms of harmful bacterial strains involved in causing various nosocomial infections.
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Catechin as the Most Efficient Bioactive Compound from Azadirachta indica with Antibiofilm and Anti-quorum Sensing Activities Against Dental Biofilm: an In Vitro and In Silico Study

TL;DR: In this article, it was observed that phytocompounds like catechin showed maximum eradication of biofilm along with the degradation of EPS structural components like carbohydrates and proteins compared to quercetin, nimbolide, nimbin, and azardirachtin.