Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Aabid Manzoor Shah is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Aabid Manzoor Shah.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2017

Discovery of anti-microbial and anti-tubercular molecules from Fusarium solani: an endophyte of Glycyrrhiza glabra

Aiyatullah Shah; Muzafar Ahmad Rather; Qazi Parvaiz Hassan; Mushtaq A. Aga; Saleem Mushtaq; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Aehtesham Hussain; S.A. Baba; Zahoor Ahmad

Glycyrrhiza glabra is a high‐value medicinal plant thriving in biodiversity rich Kashmir Himalaya. The present study was designed to explore the fungal endophytes from G. glabra as a source of bioactive molecules.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2016

Isolation, characterization and HPLC quantification of compounds from Aquilegia fragrans Benth: Their in vitro antibacterial activities against bovine mastitis pathogens

Saleem Mushtaq; Mushtaq A. Aga; Parvaiz H. Qazi; Md. Niamat Ali; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Sajad Ahmad Lone; Aiyatullah Shah; Aehtesham Hussain; Faheem Rasool; Hafizullah Dar; Zeeshan Hamid Shah; Shabir H. Lone

ETHNO-PHARMACOLOGICAL RELEVANCE The underground parts of Aquilegia fragrans are traditionally used for the treatment of wounds and various inflammatory diseases like bovine mastitis. However, there are no reports on the phytochemical characterization and antibacterial studies of A. fragrans. AIM OF THE STUDY To isolate compounds from the methanol extract of the underground parts of A. fragrans and determine their antibacterial activity against the pathogens of bovine mastitis. The study was undertaken in order to scientifically validate the traditional use of A. fragrans. MATERIALS AND METHODS Five compounds were isolated from the methanol extract of the underground parts of A. fragrans using silica gel column chromatography. Structural elucidation of the isolated compounds was done using spectral data analysis and comparison with literature. High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) was used for the qualitative and quantitative determination of isolated compounds in the crude methanol extract. The methanol extract and isolated compounds were evaluated for antibacterial activities against mastitis pathogens using broth micro-dilution technique. RESULTS The five isolated compounds were identified as (1) 2, 4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid methyl ester (2) β-sitosterol (3) Aquilegiolide (4) Glochidionolactone-A and (5) Magnoflorine. A quick and sensitive HPLC method was developed for the first time for qualitative and quantitative determination of four isolated marker compounds from A. fragrans. The crude methanol extract and compound 5 exhibited weak antibacterial activities that varied between the bacterial species (MIC=500-3000 µg/ml). CONCLUSIONS The above results show that the crude methanol extract and isolated compounds from A. fragrans exhibit weak antibacterial activities. Further phytochemical and pharmacological studies are required for proper scientific validation of the folk use of this plant species in the treatment of various inflammatory diseases like bovine mastitis.


Microbiological Research | 2018

Streptomyces puniceus strain AS13., Production, characterization and evaluation of bioactive metabolites: A new face of dinactin as an antitumor antibiotic

Aehtesham Hussain; Muzafar Ahmad Rather; Mohd Saleem Dar; Nisar A. Dangroo; Mushtaq A. Aga; Arem Qayum; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Zahoor Ahmad; Mohd Jamal Dar; Qazi Parvaiz Hassan

A highly active actinobacterial strain isolated from untapped areas of Northwestern Himalayas and characterised as Streptomyces puniceus strain AS13 by 16S rRNA gene sequencing was selected for production of bioactive metabolites. The bioassay-guided fractionation of microbial cultured ethyl acetate extract of the strain, led to isolation of macrotetrolide compound 1 (Dinactin) and compound 2 (1-(2,4-dihydroxy-6-methylphenyl)-ethanone). Structures of the isolated compounds were elucidated by [corrected] interpretation of NMR and other spectroscopic data including HR-ESI-MS, FT-IR. These compounds are reported for first time from Streptomyces Puniceus. Compound 1 exhibited strong anti-microbial activity against all tested bacterial pathogens including Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The MIC values of compound 1 against Gram negative and Gram positive bacterial pathogens ranged between 0.019 - 0.156μgml-1 and 1μgml-1 against Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv. Dinactin exhibited marked anti-tumor potential with IC50 of 1.1- 9.7μM in various human cancerous cell lines and showed least cytotoxicity (IC50∼80μM) in normal cells (HEK-293). Dinactin inhabited cellular proliferation in cancer cells, reduced their clonogenic survival as validated by clonogenic assay and also inhabited cell migration and invasion characteristics in colon cancer (HCT-116) cells. Our results expressed the antimicrobial potential of dinactin and also spotted its prospective as an antitumor antibiotic.


Microbial Pathogenesis | 2018

Bovine mastitis: An appraisal of its alternative herbal cure

Saleem Mushtaq; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Aiyatullah Shah; Sajad Ahmad Lone; Aehtesham Hussain; Qazi Parvaiz Hassan; Niamat Ali

Bovine mastitis is globally recognized as the most common and costly disease affecting dairy herds. The disease causes huge financial losses to dairy industries by reduced yield and milk quality, deaths and culling of affected cows and also by associated treatment costs. The disease occurs due to invasion of the mammary glands by pathogenic bacteria followed by their multiplication in the milk producing tissues. The most common treatment method available against bovine mastitis is the intra-mammary infusion of antibiotics. However, their use is associated with the problem of antimicrobial resistance. This scenario has made search for alternative treatment approaches necessary. Medicinal plants with their well-established history are an excellent natural product resource used as an alternative therapy. Antibacterial agents from plants can act as important sources of novel antibiotics, efflux pump inhibitors, compounds that target bacterial virulence or can be used in combination with existing drugs. The plants form an essential component of ethno-veterinary medicine used in the treatment of different diseases like bovine mastitis. This review article attempts to provide an overview of the different medicinal plants used in the treatment of bovine mastitis. Antimicrobial studies of these plant species and some of their isolated constituents have been reviewed in detail. It highlights the logic and precedence behind mining this important natural product resource. Our own research findings in this direction and future scope of research are also discussed briefly.


Medicinal Chemistry Research | 2017

Isolation and characterization of Streptomyces tauricus from Thajiwas glacier—a new source of actinomycin-D

Shabir Ahmad Rather; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Sheikh Abid Ali; Refaz Ahmad Dar; Bilal Rah; Asif Ali; Qazi Parvaiz Hassan

The aim of the present study was to isolate potent anticancer compound from actinomycetes strain SRP18 isolated from soil of high altitude region of Thajiwas glacier, Sonamarg Kashmir—India. The potential isolate SRP18 was identified as Streptomyces tauricus on the basis of 16S rDNA sequence technique. The large scale cultivation of potent strain, Streptomyces tauricus SRP18 and subsequent isolation and purification by a series of chromatographic techniques resulted in isolation of potent anticancer compound. Structure elucidation of potent compound by using various spectroscopic techniques including NMR was confirmed to be actinomycin–D. As such, this is the first report of a strain of S. tauricus capable of producing this bioactive compound. The isolated compound was evaluated for its cytotoxicity potential against four human cancer cell lines like HeLa, PC-3, THP-1, and Caco-2 and showed a potent activity with IC50 range of 4.91–7.25 µM.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2017

Antituberculotic activity of actinobacteria isolated from the rare habitats

Aehtesham Hussain; Muzafar Ahmad Rather; Aiyatullah Shah; Zubair Shanib Bhat; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Zahoor Ahmad; Q. Parvaiz Hassan

A distinctive screening procedure resulted in the isolation and identification of antituberculotic actinobacteria. In this course, a total of 125 actinobacteria were isolated from various soil samples from untapped areas in Northwestern Himalayas, India. The antibacterial screening showed that 26 isolates inhibited the growth of at least one of the tested bacterial pathogens including Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC 25923), Staphylococcus epidermidis (ATCC 12228), Bacillus subtilis (ATCC 11774), Micrococcus luteus (ATCC 10240), Escherichia coli (10536), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC 10145) and Klebsiella pneumonia (ATCC BAA‐2146). The production media was optimized for the active strains by estimation of their extract value by the quantification of the ethyl acetate extract. The screening of fermentation products from the selected 26 bioactive isolates revealed that 10 strains have metabolites antagonistic against the standard H37Rv strain of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The characterization by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and phylogenetic analysis demonstrated the diverse nature of these antituberculosis strains. The secondary metabolites of potent, rare strain, Lentzea violacea AS08 exhibited promising antituberculosis activity with minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 3·9 μg ml−1. The metabolites identified by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) included, Phenol, 2,5‐bis (1, 1‐dimethylethyl), n‐Hexadecanoic acid, Hexadecanoic acid methyl‐ester, Hexadecanoic acid ethyl‐ester and, 9,12‐Octadecadienoyl chloride(Z,Z) are biologically significant molecules.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2016

Isolation and characterization of alborixin from Streptomyces scabrisporus: A potent cytotoxic agent against human colon (HCT-116) cancer cells.

Aabid Manzoor Shah; Abubakar Wani; Parvaiz H. Qazi; Shakeel-u Rehman; Saleem Mushtaq; Shiekh Abid Ali; Aehtesham Hussain; Aiyatullah Shah; Asif Khurshid Qazi; Ubaid Makhdoomi; Abid Hamid; Ajay Kumar


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 2016

Isolation and characterization of three benzylisoquinoline alkaloids from Thalictrum minus L. and their antibacterial activity against bovine mastitis

Saleem Mushtaq; Muzafar Ahmad Rather; Parvaiz H. Qazi; Mushtaq A. Aga; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Aiyatullah Shah; Md. Niamat Ali


Microbial Pathogenesis | 2017

Antimicrobial investigation of selected soil actinomycetes isolated from unexplored regions of Kashmir Himalayas, India

Aabid Manzoor Shah; Shakeel-u-Rehman; Aehtesham Hussain; Saleem Mushtaq; Muzafar Ahmad Rather; Aiyatullah Shah; Zahoor Ahmad; Inshad Ali Khan; Khursheed A. Bhat; Qazi Parvaiz Hassan


Microbiological Research | 2018

Corrigendum to “Streptomyces puniceus strain AS13., Production, characterization and evaluation of bioactive metabolites: A new face of dinactin as an antitumor antibiotic” [Microbiological Research 207, (2018)196-202]

Aehtesham Hussain; Muzafar Ahmad Rather; Mohd Saleem Dar; Nisar A. Dangroo; Mushtaq A. Aga; Arem Qayum; Aabid Manzoor Shah; Zahoor Ahmad; Mohd Jamal Dar; Qazi Parvaiz Hassan

Collaboration


Dive into the Aabid Manzoor Shah's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aehtesham Hussain

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Aiyatullah Shah

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Saleem Mushtaq

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Muzafar Ahmad Rather

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Qazi Parvaiz Hassan

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mushtaq A. Aga

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zahoor Ahmad

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Parvaiz H. Qazi

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arem Qayum

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge