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Institution

Aligarh Muslim University

EducationAligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India
About: Aligarh Muslim University is a education organization based out in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Adsorption. The organization has 8218 authors who have published 16416 publications receiving 289068 citations. The organization is also known as: AMU.


Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
09 Mar 2012
TL;DR: In this paper, a genuine attempt is made to address various aspects of metal contamination of soils, including the nutritive value of some metals for bacteria and plants, and how heavy metals risk to human health could be identified.
Abstract: Globally, rapidly increasing industrialization and urbanization have resulted in the accumulation of higher concentrations of heavy metals in soils. The highly contaminated soil has therefore become unsuitable for cultivation probably because of the deleterious metal effects on the fertility of soils among various other soil characteristics. In addition, the uptake of heavy metals by agronomic crops and later on consumption of contaminated agri-foods have caused a serious threat to vulnerable human health. Considering these, a genuine attempt is made to address various aspects of metal contamination of soils. In addition, the nutritive value of some metals for bacteria and plants is briefly discussed. Here, we have also tried to understand how heavy metals risk to human health could be identified. These pertinent and highly demanding discussions are likely help to strategize the management options by policy makers/public for metal toxicity caused to various agro-ecosystems and for human health program.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the photocatalytic degradation of two selected dye derivatives, CI Fast Green FCF (1) and CI Acid Blue 1 (2, Patent blue VF) has been investigated in aqueous suspensions of titanium dioxide under a variety of conditions.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Vitamin E and C individually and in combination were found to be more effective in restoring the endogenous antioxidant system than vitamin A, and combined vitamin (E + C) post-stress treatment was found to been effective but not additive in combating hepatic oxidative stress.
Abstract: Background and aim: Stress as a cofactor has been reported to affect the progression and severity of several diseases. The influence of stress on the liver is of interest from the clinical point of view because stress plays a potential role in aggravating liver diseases in general and hepatic inflammation in particular, probably through generation of reactive oxygen species. The present study was undertaken to investigate the potential of the antioxidant vitamins A (retinol), E (tocopherol) and C (ascorbic acid) individually and in combination (vitamin E + C) to modulate restraint stress-induced oxidative changes. These effects were determined by measuring changes in hepatic levels of free radical scavenging enzymes such as superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and catalase, as well as levels of total glutathione (GSH), malondialdehyde (MDA), aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT). Methods: Immobilisation was achieved by placing the animals in wire mesh cages of their size. The rats were orally administered vitamins A, E and C individually and in combination (E + C) prior to and after 6 hours of immobilisation stress exposure. The hepatic levels of SOD, GST, catalase, GSH and MDA were determined by spectrophotometric methods. Liver SOD activity was assayed by monitoring the amount of enzyme required to inhibit autoxidation of pyrogallol by 50%. Hepatic GST was monitored by following the increase in absorbance at 340nm of CDNB-GSH conjugate generated due to GST catalysis between GSH and CDNB. Catalase activity in liver tissues was determined using peroxidase as the substrate. Lipid peroxidation was measured by determining the level of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances. ALT and AST were determined by commercial kits. Results: Six hours of immobilisation stress caused a decrease in liver levels of SOD (p = 0.001), catalase (p = 0.031), GST (p = 0.021) and GSH (0.013), while levels of MDA (p = 0.0015), AST (p = 0.05) and ALT (p = 0.046) were increased compared with non-stressed control rats. Both pre-vitamin stress and post-vitamin stress treatments either alone or in combination were associated with increased normalisation of these parameters towards control values, with post-vitamin treatment being the more effective of the two. Vitamins E and C individually were found to be more effective in restoring the endogenous antioxidant system than vitamin A. The combined vitamin (E + C) post-stress treatment was found to be effective but not additive in combating hepatic oxidative stress. The beneficial effects of these vitamin treatments were also reflected in reversions of altered AST and ALT levels towards their control values. Conclusion: Vitamins E or C alone or in combination can be given as prophylactic/therapeutic supplements for combating scavenging free radicals generated in liver tissue. This approach may reduce oxidative stress caused by diseases such as cirrhosis.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study will be helpful to understand the binding mechanism of cytosine β-D arabinofuranoside with HSA and associated alterations and help understand the topology of protein in absence and presence of drug.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results obtained from far and near-UV CD, intrinsic fluorescence and ANS binding studies indicate that CaLB exhibits the characteristic properties of a molten globule in acidic (protonated) conditions at pH 1.4 as supported by spectroscopic data.
Abstract: The effect of pH on the conformational behavior of Candida antartica lipase B (CaLB) has been monitored by spectroscopic and calorimetric studies. The results obtained from far and near-UV CD, intrinsic fluorescence and ANS binding studies indicate that CaLB exhibits the characteristic properties of a molten globule in acidic (protonated) conditions at pH 1.4. The molten globule state retained about 67% of its secondary structure with a substantial loss of tertiary structure at pH 1.4. Moreover, equilibrium unfolding studies indicated that the ‘molten-globule-like’ state unfolds in a non-cooperative manner and is thermodynamically less stable than that of the native state. The molten globule possessed a slightly higher Rh than its native state. The DSC thermogram shows a high heat signal at pH 7.4, and a low heat signal at pH 2.6, and suggests that CaLB is likely to have undergone structural changes during the thermal unfolding. However partially unfolded CaLB at pH 1.4 does not produce a DSC peak which proves the existence of the molten globule state at pH 1.4 as supported by spectroscopic data. The Stokes radius of the MG state obtained by SEC experiments is found to be 33% larger than the native state, but essentially smaller than the denatured state.

130 citations


Authors

Showing all 8370 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Sandeep Kumar94156338652
Detlef W. Bahnemann8851748826
Gaurav Sharma82124431482
Sang Un Ahn8239122067
M. Irfan8024120154
M. Mohisin Khan7726617940
Nazeer Ahmad7414318305
Rajeev Kumar7229620848
Syed F. Ali7144618669
Ahmad Umar7174021014
Aamir Ahmad6325113404
Mohammad Athar6332914384
A. Ahmad Masoodi628012771
Shahid Husain6243714444
Mohd Danish Azmi6118613130
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202371
2022217
20211,668
20201,332
20191,208
20181,015