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Vijeta Sharma

Researcher at Shiv Nadar University

Publications -  12
Citations -  112

Vijeta Sharma is an academic researcher from Shiv Nadar University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmodium falciparum & Malaria. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 12 publications receiving 86 citations. Previous affiliations of Vijeta Sharma include Jawaharlal Nehru University.

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Novel β-carboline-quinazolinone hybrids disrupt Leishmania donovani redox homeostasis and show promising antileishmanial activity

TL;DR: The serendipitous discovery of &bgr;‐carboline‐quinazolinone hybrids with enhanced antileishmanial activity along with the in‐depth structure‐activity relationships and mechanism of action of these analogues is reported.
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Natural Product Inspired Novel Indole based Chiral Scaffold Kills Human Malaria Parasites via Ionic Imbalance Mediated Cell Death.

TL;DR: It is shown that ionic imbalance caused by scaffold 7 induces autophagy that leads to onset of apoptosis in the parasite evident by the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm) and DNA degradation.
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Integrative natural medicine inspired graphene nanovehicle-benzoxazine derivatives as potent therapy for cancer.

TL;DR: Interestingly, the benzoxazine derivatives of eugenol with GO nanoparticle exhibited enhanced therapeutic potential in cancer cells and significant role of these derivatives on parasite suggesting its multi-pharmacological capability.
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Benzoxazine derivatives of phytophenols show anti-plasmodial activity via sodium homeostasis disruption.

TL;DR: A new class of compounds, 1,3-benzoxazine derivatives of pharmacologically active phytophenols eugenol and isoeugenol synthesised on the principles of green chemistry, as anti-malarials are described, which establish disruption of parasite sodium homeostasis as their mechanism of action.
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A natural product based DOS library of hybrid systems.

TL;DR: A systematic comparison of structural intricacy between the library members and a natural product dataset obtained from ZINC(®) revealed comparable complexity.