Chandra Kant Katiyar
International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chandra Kant Katiyar.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2010
Anil Kanaujia; Rajeev Duggar; Steve Thomas Pannakal; Satyapal Singh Yadav; Chandra Kant Katiyar; Vinay S. Bansal; S. Anand; Sundaresan Sujatha; Baddireddi Subhadra Lakshmi
Bioassay guided fractionation of the hydro-alcoholic extract of the fruits of Capparis moonii, led to the isolation of two new chebulinic acid derivatives. The compounds 1 and 2 displayed significant glucose uptake effect of 223% and 219% over the control at the 10ng/ml and 100ng/ml concentration, respectively. The increased glucose uptake effects of the compounds were associated with significant IR and IRS-1 phosphorylation, GLUT4 and PI3-kinase mRNA expression in the L6 cells.
Planta Medica | 2008
Rashmi Kulshrestha; Chandra Prakash Gupta; Gyanesh Shukla; Madan Gopal Kundu; Satyendra Prasad Bhatnagar; Chandra Kant Katiyar
The quality control of medicinal herbs post harvesting or after collection becomes very critical because of susceptibility to fungal invasion during storage depending on the temperature and humidity of the storage area. The information on moisture equilibrium is important on the process and storage of foods which can be extended to medicinal herbs. In the present study, the growth of Aspergillus flavus was observed on selected ten medicinal herbs with water activity aw above 0.81 when stored at 25 +/- 2 degrees C, 30 +/- 2 degrees C and 40 +/- 2 degrees C except for Picrorhiza kurrooa and Alpinia galanga which were found to have anti-fungal properties. Aspergillus flavus did not grow in any samples of medicinal herbs with water activity aw below 0.81 at temperatures of 25 +/- 2 degrees C, 30 +/- 2 degrees C and 40 +/- 2 degrees C. Also Aspergillus flavus did not grow in any samples of medicinal herbs with water activity aw above 0.81 when stored below 10 +/- 2 degrees C. Therefore it can be concluded that the contamination of medicinal herbs with aflatoxins can be minimized by controlling water activity and storage temperature. Sorption isotherms (desorption) can be interpreted to determine the optimum drying which can lower the water activity to the level required for preventing growth of Aspergillus flavus and also for ensuring quality of medicinal herbs which may get destroyed upon over drying. Furthermore, it also saves incremental cost in prolonged drying over the optimum drying.
PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015
Ruchi Sood; Rajendra Raut; Poornima Tyagi; Pawan Kumar Pareek; Tarani Kanta Barman; Smita Singhal; Raj Kumar Shirumalla; Vijay Kanoje; Ramesh Subbarayan; Ravisankar Rajerethinam; Navin Kumar Sharma; Anil Kanaujia; Gyanesh Shukla; Y. K. Gupta; Chandra Kant Katiyar; Pradip Kumar Bhatnagar; Dilip J. Upadhyay; Sathyamangalam Swaminathan; Navin Khanna
Background Dengue, a mosquito-borne viral disease, poses a significant global public health risk. In tropical countries such as India where periodic dengue outbreaks can be correlated to the high prevalence of the mosquito vector, circulation of all four dengue viruses (DENVs) and the high population density, a drug for dengue is being increasingly recognized as an unmet public health need. Methodology/Principal findings Using the knowledge of traditional Indian medicine, Ayurveda, we developed a systematic bioassay-guided screening approach to explore the indigenous herbal bio-resource to identify plants with pan-DENV inhibitory activity. Our results show that the alcoholic extract of Cissampelos pariera Linn (Cipa extract) was a potent inhibitor of all four DENVs in cell-based assays, assessed in terms of viral NS1 antigen secretion using ELISA, as well as viral replication, based on plaque assays. Virus yield reduction assays showed that Cipa extract could decrease viral titers by an order of magnitude. The extract conferred statistically significant protection against DENV infection using the AG129 mouse model. A preliminary evaluation of the clinical relevance of Cipa extract showed that it had no adverse effects on platelet counts and RBC viability. In addition to inherent antipyretic activity in Wistar rats, it possessed the ability to down-regulate the production of TNF-α, a cytokine implicated in severe dengue disease. Importantly, it showed no evidence of toxicity in Wistar rats, when administered at doses as high as 2g/Kg body weight for up to 1 week. Conclusions/Significance Our findings above, taken in the context of the human safety of Cipa, based on its use in Indian traditional medicine, warrant further work to explore Cipa as a source for the development of an inexpensive herbal formulation for dengue therapy. This may be of practical relevance to a dengue-endemic resource-poor country such as India.
Supply Chain Forum: An International Journal | 2007
Rashmi Kulshrestha; Manoj Kulshrestha; S. P. Bhatnagar; Chandra Kant Katiyar
Raw materials are the most important component of many production processes. Finding the right raw materials, procured from the right source, at the right price, with the right quality, at the right time can be the key to the success of a production process. Selecting the right source of the raw materials for production of herbal medicinal products poses problems because of the large number of alternatives available, the presence of multiple and conflicting selection criteria, and an increasingly turbulent decision environment. This article presents the appropriateness of the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP), a modeling technique of Multiple Criteria Decision Making (MCDM), in supporting the evaluation and selection of suppliers in this industry. The article outlines the complete AHP technique from source selection through supplier rating for herbal drugs.
Indian Journal of Chemistry Section B-organic Chemistry Including Medicinal Chemistry | 2008
P. Steve Thomas; Anil Kanaujia; Dipankar Ghosh; Rajeev Duggar; Chandra Kant Katiyar
Archive | 2008
Chandra Kant Katiyar; Anil Kanaujia; Rajeev Duggar; Satyapal Singh Yadav; Navin Kumar Sharma; Abhijit Ray; Rajkumar Shirumalla; Malini Bajpai; Gyanesh Shukla; Baddireddi Subhadra Lakshmi; Kontham Sanathkumar Vinaykumar
Archive | 2007
Chandra Kant Katiyar; Anil Kanaujia; Yogendra Singh; Steve Thomas Pannakal; Rajeev Duggar; Manjree Aggarwal; Kona S Srinivas; Vinay S. Bansal; Suchitra Sharma; Shivani Mittra; Satyapal Singh Yadav; Abhijit Ray; Baddireddi Subhadra Lakshmi; Sundaresan Sujatha; Gyanesh Shukla
Archive | 2010
Pradip Kumar Bhatnagar; Chandra Kant Katiyar; Navin Khanna; Dilip Jatashankar Upadhyay; Sathyamangalam Swaminathan; Kona Srinivas; Navin Kumar Sharma; Anil Kanaujia; Ruchi Sood; Smita Singhal; Gyanesh Shukla; Rajeev Duggar; Pawan Kumar Pareek; Yogendra Singh; Seema Khan; Rajendra Raut
Archive | 2005
Chandra Kant Katiyar; Aravind Padiyar; Rahul Singh; Roopak Kumar; Anil Kanaujia; Navin Kumar Sharma
Archive | 2016
Pradip Kumar Bhatnagar; Chandra Kant Katiyar; Navin Khanna; Poornima Tyagi; Dilip Jatashankar Upadhyay; Sathyamangalam Swaminathan; Kona Srinivas; Navin Kumar Sharma; Anil Kanaujia; Ruchi Sood; Tarani Kanta Barman; Smita Singhal; Gyanesh Shukla; Rajeev Duggar; Pawan Kumar Pareek; Yatendra Kumar Gupta; Yogendra Singh; Seema Khan; Rajendra Raut; Raj Kumar Shirumalla; Vijay Kanoje; Ramesh Subbarayan; Ravisankar Rajerethinam
Collaboration
Dive into the Chandra Kant Katiyar's collaboration.
International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
View shared research outputsInternational Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
View shared research outputsInternational Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
View shared research outputsInternational Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
View shared research outputsInternational Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
View shared research outputsInternational Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
View shared research outputsInternational Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
View shared research outputs