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Institution

Bharathiar University

EducationCoimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India
About: Bharathiar University is a education organization based out in Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Thin film & Adsorption. The organization has 5812 authors who have published 8628 publications receiving 143934 citations. The organization is also known as: BU.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the anti-radical, anti-diabetic and antimicrobial activities of different solvent extracts of Passiflora ligularis fruits were investigated, and the results indicated that the fruit pulp of P. ligularus can serve as a potential antioxidative and antimicrobacterial agent in food and pharmaceutical industries.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was found that darkness, (red 780-622 nm, blue 492-455 nm) and white light influenced pigment and biomass yield and growth of fungi in green and yellow wavelengths resulted in low biomass and pigment yield.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is provided in support of the hypothesis that the Austro-Asiatic speakers are the most ancient inhabitants of India and the earlier finding that some of the western Eurasian haplogroups found in India may have been present in India prior to the entry of Aryan speakers.
Abstract: There are various conflicting hypotheses regarding the origins of the tribal groups of India, who belong to three major language groups – Austro-Asiatic, Dravidian and Tibeto-Burman. To test some of the major hypotheses we designed a genetic study in which we sampled tribal populations belonging to all the three language groups. We used a set of autosomal DNA markers, mtDNA restriction-site polymorphisms (RSPs) and mtDNA hypervariable segment-1 (HVS-1) sequence polymorphisms in this study. Using the unlinked autosomal markers we found that there is a fair correspondence between linguistic and genomic affinities among the Indian tribal groups. We reconstructed mtDNA RSP haplotypes and found that there is extensive haplotype sharing among all tribal populations. However, there is very little sharing of mtDNA HVS-1 sequences across populations, and none across language groups. Haplogroup M is ubiquitous, and the subcluster U2i of haplogroup U occurs in a high frequency. Our analyses of haplogroup and HVS-1 sequence data provides evidence in support of the hypothesis that the Austro-Asiatic speakers are the most ancient inhabitants of India. Our data also support the earlier finding that some of the western Eurasian haplogroups found in India may have been present in India prior to the entry of Aryan speakers. However, we do not find compelling evidence to support the theory that haplogroup M was brought into India on an "out of Africa" wave of migration through a southern exit route from Ethiopia. On the contrary, our data raise the possibility that this haplogroup arose in India and was later carried to East Africa from India.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is recommended that more studies are required to unravel the possible mechanism of COVID-19 infection and the after-effects of it to understand the characteristics of the virus and to develop the necessary precautionary measures to prevent it.

114 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The oncogenic and tumor suppressor role played by PAX3 in different cancers is highlighted and the importance of precisely identifying tissue-specific role of PAX3 is underlined in order to determine its exact role in development of cancer.
Abstract: Metastasis is the most deadly aspect of cancer and results from acquired gene regulation abnormalities in tumor cells. Transcriptional regulation is an essential component of controlling of gene function and its failure could contribute to tumor progression and metastasis. During cancer progression, deregulation of oncogenic or tumor suppressive transcription factors, as well as master cell fate regulators, collectively influences multiple steps of the metastasis cascade, including local invasion and dissemination of the tumor to distant organs. Transcription factor PAX3/Pax3, which contributes to diverse cell lineages during embryonic development, plays a major role in tumorigenesis. Mutations in this gene can cause neurodevelopmental disease and the existing literature supports that there is a potential link between aberrant expression of PAX3 genes in adult tissues and a wide variety of cancers. PAX3 function is tissue-specific and could contribute to tumorigenesis either directly as oncogene or as a tumor suppressor by losing its function. In this review, we discuss comprehensively the differential role played by PAX3 in various tissues and how its aberrant expression is implicated in disease development. This review particularly highlights the oncogenic and tumor suppressor role played by PAX3 in different cancers and underlines the importance of precisely identifying tissue-specific role of PAX3 in order to determine its exact role in development of cancer.

114 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202321
2022113
2021807
2020694
2019792
2018813