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Sumita Jha

Researcher at University of Calcutta

Publications -  133
Citations -  2393

Sumita Jha is an academic researcher from University of Calcutta. The author has contributed to research in topics: Callus & Explant culture. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 128 publications receiving 2035 citations. Previous affiliations of Sumita Jha include Presidency University, Kolkata.

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Variation in content of taxol and related taxanes in Eastern Himalayan populations of Taxus wallichiana.

TL;DR: Extraction and analysis of paclitaxel and other taxanes in bark, needle leaves and stem segments of male and female plants of Taxus wallichiana, representing several populations, indicate that significant variation in taxane content exists within the population.
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Biotechnological Approaches for Production of Anti-Cancerous Compounds Resveratrol, Podophyllotoxin and Zerumbone.

TL;DR: This review focuses on the recent developments in the field of secondary metabolites from numerous plant sources, highlighting the use of micropropagation, cell suspension cultures, callus cultures, hairy root cultures, recombinant microbes and genetically modified higher plants.
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Genetic transformation of Artemisia annua by Agrobacterium tumefaciens and artemisinin synthesis in transformed cultures

TL;DR: Transformed organ cultures of Artemisia annua were established following infection with two wild type nopaline strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens: Parameters like explant type, strain type, age of the plant source for explants, affected the tumorigenesis frequency significantly.
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Improved taxol yield in cell suspension culture of Taxus wallichiana (Himalayan yew)

TL;DR: Using three different cell lines with different taxol-producing capacities, it has been demonstrated that 2,4-D and IAA-phenylalanine when present alone favour growth and taxol production but when combined enhance biomass to a maximum (six-fold in NC110) without enhancing taxol accumulation, suggesting that a two-stage culture may be beneficial for optimising taxol collection in cell culture of T. wallichiana.