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Dive into the research topics where Avinash Kaur Nagpal is active.

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Featured researches published by Avinash Kaur Nagpal.


Talanta | 2010

Analytical methods for estimation of organophosphorus pesticide residues in fruits and vegetables: a review.

Dipakshi Sharma; Avinash Kaur Nagpal; Yogesh B. Pakade; Jatinder Kaur Katnoria

Use of pesticides has turned out to be an obligatory input to agriculture and public health. Versatile use of pesticides had resulted in contamination of all basic necessities of life, i.e. air, water and food. Among various pesticides, organophosphorus pesticides (OPPs), derivative of phosphoric acid, are the most extensively used insecticides or acaricides in many crops. Due to low persistency and high killing efficiency of OPPs, many agriculturalists regularly use this group of pesticides for various vegetables and fruits crops. The continuous use of pesticides has caused the deleterious effects to ecosystem. In response to this, a number of methods have been developed by several regulatory agencies and private laboratories and are applied routinely for the quantification and monitoring of multi pesticide residues in vegetables and crops. The present review pertains to various extraction and quantification procedures used world wide to analyze OPPs residues in various vegetables and fruits.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 2003

CALLUS INDUCTION AND PLANTLET REGENERATION IN WITHANIA SOMNIFERA (L.) DUNAL

Gita Rani; G. S. Virk; Avinash Kaur Nagpal

SummaryCallus induction was observed from hypocotyl, root, and cotyledonary leaf segments, grown on Murashige and Skoog (MS) medium supplemented with various concentrations and combinations of 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) and kinetin (KN). Maximum callusing (100%) was obtained from root and cotyledonary leaf segments grown on MS medium supplemented with a combination of 2 mg l−1 (9.1 μM) 2,4-D and 0.2 mg l−1 (0.9 μM) KN. The calluses, when subcultured in the same medium, showed profuse callusing. However, these calluses remained recalcitrant to regenerate regardless of the quality and combinations of plant growth regulators in the nutrient pool. When hypocotyl segments were used as explants, callus induction was noticed in 91% of cultures which showed shoot regeneration on MS medium supplemented with 2 mg l−1 2,4-D and 0.2 mg l−1 KN. These shoots were transferred to fresh medium containing various concentrations and combinations of 6-benzyladenine (BA) and N6-(2-isopentenyl)adenosine (2-iP). Maximum shoot multiplication was observed after 60 d of the second subculture on MS medium containing 2 mg l−1 (8.9 μM) BA. These shoots were rooted best (87%) on MS medium containing 2 mg l−1 (9.9 μM) indole-3-butyric acid (IBA). The plantlets were transferred to the field after acclimatization and showed 60% survival.


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2002

Antimutagenic activities of acetone and methanol fractions of Terminalia arjuna

Kuljit Kaur; Saroj Arora; Shiv Kumar; Avinash Kaur Nagpal

The antimutagenic effect of benzene, chloroform, acetone and methanol fractions from Terminalia arjuna, a well-known medicinal plant, was determined against Acid Black dye, 2-aminofluorene (2AF) and 4-nitro-o-phenylenediamine (NPD) in TA98 Frameshift mutagen tester strain of Salmonella typhimurium. Among the different fractions, the antimutagenic effect of acetone and methanol fractions was more than that observed with other fractions. Co-incubation and pre-incubation modes of experimentation did not show much difference in the antimutagenic activity of the extracts. Moreover, these fractions inhibited the S9-dependent mutagens, 2AF and Acid Black dye more effectively than the direct-acting mutagens. Studies are under way to isolate and elucidate the nature of the antimutagenic factor in acetone and methanol fractions.


Talanta | 2014

Analytical techniques for estimation of heavy metals in soil ecosystem: A tabulated review

Rajneet Kour Soodan; Yogesh B. Pakade; Avinash Kaur Nagpal; Jatinder Kaur Katnoria

Soil, an important environmental medium, is exposed to a number of pollutants including toxic heavy metals by various natural and anthropogenic activities. Consequently heavy metal contaminated soil has the potential to pose severe health risks and hazards to humans as well as other living creatures of the ecosystem through various routes of exposure such as direct ingestion, contaminated drinking ground water, food crops, contact with contaminated soil and through food chain. Therefore, it is mandatory to explore various techniques that could efficiently determine the occurrence of heavy metals in soil. A number of methods have been developed by several regulatory agencies and private laboratories and are applied routinely for the quantification and monitoring of soil matrices. The present review is an initiative to summarize the work on pollution levels of soil ecosystem and thus pertains to various extraction and quantification procedures used worldwide to analyze heavy metals in soil.


Biologia Plantarum | 2006

Micropropagation of coleus blumei from nodal segments and shoot tips

Gita Rani; D. Talwar; Avinash Kaur Nagpal; G. S. Virk

A rapid and highly-effective method for micropropagation from nodal segment and shoot tip explants was established for Coleus blumei Benth. Nodal segments and shoot tips were inoculated on MS medium containing 0.7 % agar, 3 % commercial sugar, and different combinations of 6-benzyladenine (BA) with indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), indole-3-butyric acid (IBA) or α-naphthaleneacetic acid (NAA). Hundred percent shoot induction from both explants was achieved on the medium containing BA (2 mg dm−3) and NAA (1 mg dm−3). Shoot tips were proved to be the better explant in comparison to nodal segments in having high rate of shoot induction and more number of shoots. The same media conditions were found suitable for shoot multiplication. Multiplied shoots rooted best on MS medium supplemented with IBA (2 mg dm−3). Micropropagated plants were successfully established in soil after hardening, with 100 % survival rate.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Animal | 2000

GROWTH SUPPRESSION OF HUMAN TRANSFORMED CELLS BY TREATMENT WITH BARK EXTRACTS FROM A MEDICINAL PLANT, TERMINALIA ARJUNA

Avinash Kaur Nagpal; Laxhman Singh Meena; Satwinderjeet Kaur; I.S. Grover; Renu Wadhwa; Sunil C. Kaul

SummaryWe have investigated the effects of acetone and methanol extracts of a medicinal plant, Terminalia arjuna, on the growth of human normal fibroblasts (WI-38), osteosarcoma (U2OS), and glioblastoma (U251) cells in vitro. We found that both extracts at 30 μg and 60 μg/ml concentrations inhibit the growth of transformed cells; the growth of normal cells was least affected. Although the transformed cells appeared to have fragmented nucleus by Hoechst staining, no deoxyribonucleic acid laddering effect was observed. In response to the extract treatment, the tumor suppressor protein, p53, was induced in U2OS but not in U251 and WI-38 cells. A cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor, p21WAF1, was induced in transformed cells only. The study suggests that the bark extract of medicinal plant, T. arjuna, has components that can induce growth arrest of transformed cells by p53-dependent and-independent pathways.


Environmental Monitoring and Assessment | 2016

Erratum to: Quantitative assessment of possible human health risk associated with consumption of arsenic contaminated groundwater and wheat grains from Ropar Wetland and its environs

Sakshi Sharma; Jagdeep Kaur; Avinash Kaur Nagpal; Inderpreet Kaur

Arsenic (As) is a carcinogenic metalloid that enters food chain through food and water and poses health risk to living beings. It is important to assess the As status in the environment and risks associated with it. Hence, a risk assessment study was conducted across Ropar wetland, Punjab, India and its environs in pre-monsoon season of 2013, to estimate the risk posed to adults and children via daily consumption of As contaminated groundwater and wheat grains. Arsenic concentrations determined in groundwater, soil and wheat grain samples using atomic absorption spectrometer ranged from 2.90 to 10.56 μg L−1, 0.06 to 0.12 mg kg−1 and 0.03 to 0.21 mg kg−1, respectively. Arsenic in wheat grains showed significant negative correlation with phosphate content in soil indicating a competitive uptake of arsenate and phosphate ions by plants. Principal component analysis and cluster analysis suggested that both natural and anthropogenic factors contribute to variation in As content and other variables studied in soil and groundwater samples. Total cancer risk and hazard index were higher than the USEPA safety limits of 1.00 × 10−6 and 1, respectively, for both adults and children indicating a high risk of cancer and other health disorders. Consumption of As contaminated wheat grains was found to pose higher risk of cancer and non-cancer health disorders as compared to intake of As contaminated groundwater by both adults and children. Moreover, children were found to be more prone to cancer and other heath disorders due to As exposure via wheat grains and groundwater as compared to adults.


Phytochemistry Reviews | 2011

Anticancer potential of Himalayan plants

Anjana Bhatia; Saroj Arora; Bikram Singh; Gurveen Kaur; Avinash Kaur Nagpal

Plants used in traditional medicine have stood up to the test of time and contributed many novel compounds for preventive and curative medicine to modern science. India is sitting on a gold mine of well recorded and traditionally well practiced knowledge of herbal medicine. Specially, plants growing at high altitude in Himalayan pastures are time-honored sources of health and general well being of local inhabitants. As of today, Himalayan plants are a major contributor to the herbal pharmaceutical industry both of India and other countries. Plants growing at higher altitudes are subjected to an assault of diverse testing situations including higher doses of mutagenic UV-radiation, physiological drought, desiccation and strong winds. Plants interact with stressful environments by physiological adaptation and altering the biochemical profile of plant tissues and producing a spectrum of secondary metabolites. Secondary metabolites are of special interest to scientists because of their unique pharmacophores and medicinal properties. Secondary metabolites like polyphenols, terpenes and alkaloids have been reported to possess antimutagenic and anticancer properties in many studies. The fundamental aspiration of the current review is to divulge the antimutagenic/anticancer potential of five alpine plants used as food or medicine by the populations living at high altitudes.


Journal of Herbs, Spices & Medicinal Plants | 2008

Direct Rhizogenesis from in vitro Leaves of Withania somnifera (L.) Dunal

Gita Rani; Saroj Arora; Avinash Kaur Nagpal

ABSTRACT Direct rooting was induced in Withania somnifera leaf segments using an IBA dip treatment. The segments dipped in IBA formed roots along the midrib region of the abaxial surface when placed on Murashige and Skoogs (MS) basal medium containing no plant growth regulators. The length of the dip treatments (10, 20 and 30 min) and strength of the MS media (¼, ½, and full-strength) treatments had no apparent effect on rooting, although maximum rooting (85.3 percent of the cultures) occurred when the leaf segments were placed on ½-strength MS medium after a dip treatment with 100 mg/liter IBA solution for 20 min. The average number and length of roots were 32.3 per culture and 5.6 cm, respectively. Only 20 percent of the cultures produced roots if explants were grown on full-strength MS medium supplemented with IBA.


SpringerPlus | 2016

Heavy metals bioaccumulation in Berseem (Trifolium alexandrinum) cultivated in areas under intensive agriculture, Punjab, India

Sandip Singh Bhatti; Vasudha Sambyal; Avinash Kaur Nagpal

Berseem (Trifolium alexandrinum) is one of the main fodder crops of Punjab, India. But due to the heavy metal contamination of agricultural soils by anthropogenic activities, there is rise in metal bioaccumulation in crops like Berseem. In addition to human influence, heavy metal contents in soil are highly dependent on soil characteristics also. Therefore a study was conducted in areas having intensive agricultural practices to analyze physico-chemical characteristics of soils under Berseem cultivation and heavy metal bioaccumulation in Berseem. The studied soils were alkaline, sandy in texture and low in soil organic matter. Among the studied heavy metals (Cr, Cu, Cd, Co and Pb) in soil and Berseem, Cr content in Berseem was found to be above maximum permissible limits. Soil to Berseem metal bioaccmulation factor (BAF) was above 1 for Cr, Cu, Cd and Co in many samples and highest BAF was found for Co (4.625). Hence it can be concluded that Berseem from studied areas was unsafe for animal consumption.

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G. S. Virk

Guru Nanak Dev University

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Gita Rani

Guru Nanak Dev University

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Mandeep Kaur

Guru Nanak Dev University

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Ashita Sharma

Guru Nanak Dev University

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Saroj Arora

Guru Nanak Dev University

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Vasudha Sambyal

Guru Nanak Dev University

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A. A. Zaidi

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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