R
R. Shukla
Researcher at Indian Council of Agricultural Research
Publications - 15
Citations - 231
R. Shukla is an academic researcher from Indian Council of Agricultural Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Myostatin & Gene. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 14 publications receiving 117 citations.
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Microbial inoculation in rice regulates antioxidative reactions and defense related genes to mitigate drought stress.
Dhananjaya P. Singh,Vivek Singh,Vijai Kumar Gupta,R. Shukla,Ratna Prabha,Birinchi Kumar Sarma,Jai Singh Patel +6 more
TL;DR: The study demonstrated that microbial inoculants were successful in improving intrinsic biochemical and molecular capabilities of rice plants under stress and encouraged us to advocate that the practice of growing plants with microbial inoculate may find strategic place in raising crops under abiotic stressed environments.
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Microbial Pyrrolnitrin: Natural Metabolite with Immense Practical Utility.
TL;DR: Pyrrolnitrin (PRN) is a microbial pyrrole halometabolite of immense antimicrobial significance for agricultural, pharmaceutical and industrial implications as mentioned in this paper, which has been isolated from rhizospheric fluorescent or non-fluorescent pseudomonads, Serratia and Burkholderia.
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Stage-dependent concomitant microbial fortification improves soil nutrient status, plant growth, antioxidative defense system and gene expression in rice.
Dhananjaya P. Singh,Vivek Singh,R. Shukla,Pramod Kumar Sahu,Ratna Prabha,Amrita Gupta,Birinchi Kumar Sarma,Vijai Kumar Gupta +7 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that plant stage-wise concomitant fortification by microbial inoculants could play multi-pronged manifestations at physiological, biochemical and molecular level in rice to positively influence growth, development and defense attributes in plants.
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Comparative analysis of silencing expression of myostatin ( MSTN ) and its two receptors ( ACVR2A and ACVR2B ) genes affecting growth traits in knock down chicken
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the effect of knockdown of expression of myostatin, ACVR2A and ACVR 2B genes on growth traits in chicken and concluded that silencing of only one receptor of MSTN particularly, ACV2B may augment the highest growth in chicken during juvenile stage.
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Gene Expression and Polymorphism of Myostatin Gene and its Association with Growth Traits in Chicken.
K. Dushyanth,T. K. Bhattacharya,R. Shukla,R.N. Chatterjee,T. Sitaramamma,C. Paswan,P. Guru Vishnu +6 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that the coding region of myostatin gene was polymorphic, with varied levels of expression among lines and had significant effects on growth traits.