scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

National Dairy Research Institute

FacilityKarnāl, Himachal Pradesh, India
About: National Dairy Research Institute is a facility organization based out in Karnāl, Himachal Pradesh, India. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Sperm. The organization has 3228 authors who have published 3524 publications receiving 51151 citations. The organization is also known as: Imperial Institute of Animal Husbandry and Dairying & Imperial Dairy Institute.
Topics: Population, Sperm, Murrah buffalo, Gene, Semen


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicated that pumpkin can be processed to powder that can be utilized with guar gum for value addition and increased resistance to extension increased significantly by adding pumpkin powder.
Abstract: The present study was carried out to study the effect of incorporation of fibre rich pumpkin powder and guar gum on the farinographic characteristics of wheat flour. The flour and pumpkin powder were assessed for proximate composition, total dietary fibre, minerals and β-carotene. Pumpkin powder contained appreciable amount of fibre, minerals and β-carotene. The effects of incorporation of different levels of pumpkin powder and guar gum along with pumpkin powder on farinographic characteristics were studied. Dough development time, dough stability, time to break down and farinograph quality number increased whereas mixing tolerance index decreased with incorporation of pumpkin powder (> 5 %) and guar gum (1.0 and 1.5 %) along with pumpkin powder in the flour. Resistance to extension as well as extensibility of dough prepared increased significantly by adding pumpkin powder (5–15 %) whereas increase in resistance to extension only was noticed with inclusion of guar gum (0.5–1.5 %) to flour containing 5 % pumpkin powder. Results indicated that pumpkin can be processed to powder that can be utilized with guar gum for value addition.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that LaBb Dahi can be used as a potential nutraceutical intervention to combat UC related changes and may offer effective adjunctive treatment for management of UC.
Abstract: Conventional medical therapies for ulcerative colitis (UC) are still limited due to the adverse side effects like dose-dependent diarrhoea and insufficient potency to keep in remission for long-term periods. So, new alternatives that provide more effective and safe therapies for ulcerative colitis are constantly being sought. In the present study, probiotic LaBb Dahi was selected for investigation of its therapeutic effect on DSS-induced colitis model in mice. LaBb Dahi was prepared by co-culturing Dahi culture of Lactococci along with selected strain of Lactobacillus acidophilus LaVK2 and Bifidobacterium bifidum BbVK3 in buffalo milk. Four groups of mice (12 each) were fed for 17 d with buffalo milk (normal control), buffalo milk plus DSS (Colitis control), Dahi plus DSS, and LaBb Dahi plus DSS, respectively, with basal diet. The disease activity scores, weight loss, organ weight, colon length, myeloperoxidase (MPO) and β-glucoronidase activity was assessed, and the histopathological picture of the colon of mice was studied. All colitis control mice evidenced significant increase in MPO, β-glucoronidase activity and showed high disease activity scores along with histological damage to colonic tissue. Feeding with LaBb Dahi offered significant reduction in MPO activity, β-glucoronidase activity and improved disease activity scores. We found significant decline in length of colon, organ weight and body weight in colitis induced controls which were improved significantly by feeding LaBb Dahi. The present study suggests that LaBb Dahi can be used as a potential nutraceutical intervention to combat UC related changes and may offer effective adjunctive treatment for management of UC.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results of present study show the enhanced protective potential of Acidophilus-casei and wheat bran against DMH induced molecular alteration in colonic cells during carcinogenesis.
Abstract: An in vivo trial was conducted on seventy five rats allocated to three groups, first group was DMH control group, second group was Wheat bran-DMH group (WB-DMH) in which wheat bran was given along with DMH (1,2-dimethylhydrazine) injection, third group was Wheat bran-DMH-Ac Dahi group in which both wheat bran and Acidophilus-casei dahi (a probiotic microorganisms fermented dairy product) was given along with DMH injections. Animals received subcutaneous injections of DMH at a dose rate of 20 mg/kg body weight, once weekly for 15 weeks. The rats were dissected at 40th week of experiment and comet assay was done in colonic cells to assess the DNA damage. The c-myc and cox-2 expression was studied in rat tumour. A significant reduction in DNA damage (48.2%) was observed in WB-DMH-Ac Dahi group as compared to DMH control group (87.8%). The c-myc and cox-2 mRNA level was found highest in DMH control group as compared to WB-DMH and WB-DMH-Ac Dahi group. The results of present study show the enhanced protective potential of Acidophilus-casei and wheat bran against DMH induced molecular alteration in colonic cells during carcinogenesis.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The distribution of fatty acids among the TG species was found to be characteristic of each TG species.
Abstract: Buffalo milk fat was first separated by thin layer chromatography (t.l.c.) into high (HMT), medium(MMT) and low (LMT) molecular weight triacylglycerols. The triacylglycerol (TG) fractions thus obtained were further resolved by argentation t.l.c. int saturated, trans-monoene, cis-monoene, diene and polyene TG species. Whereas 18:1 was concentrated in HMT, 6:0, 8:0 and 10:0 tended to be located in MMT. LMT was unique in containing almost all 4: 0. HMT, MMT and LMT showed great variations in their levels of different TG species. The distribution of fatty acids among the TG species was found to be characteristic of each TG species.

18 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the differences in sperm functional attributes and transcriptomic profile between high- and low-fertile buffalo bulls were compared and the results of the study open up new avenues for understanding the etiology for poor fertility in buffalo bulls and to identify fertility biomarkers.
Abstract: Although, it is known that spermatozoa harbor a variety of RNAs that may influence embryonic development, little is understood about sperm transcriptomic differences in relation to fertility, especially in buffaloes. In the present study, we compared the differences in sperm functional attributes and transcriptomic profile between high- and low-fertile buffalo bulls. Sperm membrane and acrosomal integrity were lower (P 1) between high- and low-fertile bulls. Majority of the dysregulated transcripts were related to binding activity, transcription, translation, and metabolic processes with primary localization in the cell nucleus, nucleoplasm, and in cytosol. Pathways related to MAPK signaling, ribosome pathway, and oxidative phosphorylation were dysregulated in low-fertile bull spermatozoa. Using bioinformatics analysis, we observed that several genes related to sperm functional attributes were significantly downregulated in low-fertile bull spermatozoa. Validation of the results of microarray analysis was carried out using real-time qPCR expression analysis of selected genes (YBX1, ORAI3, and TFAP2C). The relative expression of these genes followed the same trend in both the techniques. Collectively, this is the first study to report the transcriptomic profile of buffalo spermatozoa and to demonstrate the dysregulation of functionally relevant transcripts in low-fertile bull spermatozoa. The results of the present study open up new avenues for understanding the etiology for poor fertility in buffalo bulls and to identify fertility biomarkers.

18 citations


Authors

Showing all 3289 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Vivek Sharma1503030136228
Rajesh Kumar1494439140830
Sanjay Kumar120205282620
Don C. Des Jarlais101657110906
Anil Kumar99212464825
Gaurav Sharma82124431482
Samuel R. Friedman7442722142
Ashwani Kumar6670318099
Ashutosh Sharma6657016100
Manoj Kumar6540816838
Tim Stockwell6038214797
Pankaj Gupta5760915251
Jyoti S. Choudhary4916313060
Bhupinder Singh474259643
Ashutosh Kumar452538751
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Teagasc
7.3K papers, 270.9K citations

85% related

Institut national de la recherche agronomique
68.3K papers, 3.2M citations

82% related

Norwegian University of Life Sciences
13.5K papers, 442.2K citations

82% related

Nanjing Agricultural University
27.3K papers, 546.5K citations

82% related

University of Agriculture, Faisalabad
22.2K papers, 400K citations

82% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202317
202284
2021325
2020265
2019191
2018223