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Pradhyumna Kumar Singh

Researcher at National Botanical Research Institute

Publications -  59
Citations -  2201

Pradhyumna Kumar Singh is an academic researcher from National Botanical Research Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Helicoverpa armigera. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 58 publications receiving 1849 citations. Previous affiliations of Pradhyumna Kumar Singh include Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research & Council of Scientific and Industrial Research.

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RNA interference for the control of whiteflies (Bemisia tabaci) by oral route

TL;DR: Phloem-specific expression of dsRNAs of RPL9 and V-ATPase A in transgenic plants for the protection against whiteflies might be an interesting application of this technology.
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Modulation of Transcriptome and Metabolome of Tobacco by Arabidopsis Transcription Factor, AtMYB12, Leads to Insect Resistance

TL;DR: The study suggests that AtMYB12 can be strategically used for developing safer insect pest-resistant transgenic plants and flux availability for the phenylpropanoid pathway in general and flavonol biosynthesis in particular.
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Plants as bioreactors for the production of vaccine antigens.

TL;DR: Estimates suggest that it may become possible to obtain antigen sufficient for vaccinating millions of individuals from one acre crop by expressing the antigen in seeds of an edible legume, like peanut or soybean.
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Enhanced whitefly resistance in transgenic tobacco plants expressing double stranded RNA of v-ATPase A gene.

TL;DR: The effectiveness of transgenic tobacco plants expressing siRNA to silence v-ATPaseA gene expression for the control of whitefly infestation is reported, mounting a significant silencing response, leading to their mortality.
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Universal plant DNA barcode loci may not work in complex groups: a case study with Indian berberis species.

TL;DR: Morphological, geographical and molecular data analyses of Indian species of Berberis suggest probable reticulate evolution and thus barcode markers may not work in this case, reconfirm the earlier reports that the concept of universal barcode in plants may not working in a number of genera.