Ganesh Chandra Sahoo
Rajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences
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Featured researches published by Ganesh Chandra Sahoo.
Virology | 2008
Mukti Kant Nayak; Ganesh Balasubramanian; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Rittwika Bhattacharya; Jan Vinjé; Nobumichi Kobayashi; Mamta Chawla Sarkar; Bhattacharya Mk; Triveni Krishnan
Mutation and recombination are recognized as important driving forces of evolution among RNA viruses. An intergenogroup recombinant norovirus strain [Hu/Kol/NLV/L8775/AB290150/2006/India] was detected in the faecal specimen of a 17 year old male, who had suffered from acute watery diarrhea and severe dehydration. Sequence analysis confirmed that this novel recombinant strain had a polymerase gene fragment that closely resembled a Norovirus (NoV) genogroup-I genotype-3 virus (HuCV/NLV/GI.3/VA98115/AY038598/1998/USA) and a capsid gene resembling NoV genogroup-II genotype-4 virus (NoV/Hu/GII.4/Terneuzen70/EF126964/2006/NL). The crossing over and recombination was observed at nucleotide (nt) 790 of NoV GI VA98115 strain and nt808 of NoV GII Terneuzen70 strain. In both parent strains conserved nucleotide sequence and hairpin structure (DNA secondary structure) were reported at the junction point of ORF1 and ORF2, exhibiting the mechanism of recombination in these viruses. Thus this novel recombinant NoV is another step in evolution among NoVs, indicating that constant surveillance is important to successfully monitor emergence of these strains.
BioMed Research International | 2013
Rajiv Kumar Kar; Md. Yousuf Ansari; Priyanka Suryadevara; Bikash Ranjan Sahoo; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Manas Ranjan Dikhit; Pradeep Das
Enzyme adenosine kinase is responsible for phosphorylation of adenosine to AMP and is crucial for parasites which are purine auxotrophs. The present study describes development of robust homology model of Leishmania donovani adenosine kinase to forecast interaction phenomenon with inhibitory molecules using structure-based drug designing strategy. Docking calculation using reported organic small molecules and natural products revealed key active site residues such as Arg131 and Asp16 for ligand binding, which is consistent with previous studies. Molecular dynamics simulation of ligand protein complex revealed the importance of hydrogen bonding with active site residues and solvent molecules, which may be crucial for successful development of drug candidates. Precise role of Phe168 residue in the active site was elucidated in this report that provided stability to ligand-protein complex via aromatic-π contacts. Overall, the present study is believed to provide valuable information to design a new compound with improved activity for antileishmanial therapeutics development.
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules | 2012
Yousuf Ansari; Manas Ranjan Dikhit; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Pradeep Das
Hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRT; EC 2.4.2.8) is a central enzyme in the purine recycling pathway. Parasitic protozoa (Leishmania donovani) cannot synthesize purines de novo and utilize the salvage pathway to produce purine bases. Thus, this enzyme is targeted in drug discovery and development. The model of the monomeric L. donovani HGPRT showed that this enzyme is an α/β type protein with a PRTase type I folding pattern. Among all of the computationally screened compounds, pentamidine, 1,3-dinitroadamantane, acyclovir and analogs of acyclovir had higher binding affinities than the real substrate (guanosine monophosphate). Amino acids of HGPRT that are frequently involved in the binding of these compounds are Lys 66, Asp 74, Arg 77, Asp 81, Val 88, Tyr 182, Arg 192 and Arg 194. It is predicted that patients suffering from both HIV and visceral leishmaniasis (VL) may benefit if they are treated with acyclovir or pentamidine in conjunction with first-line antileishmanial therapies such as miltefosine and AmBisome.
Sar and Qsar in Environmental Research | 2013
R.K. Kar; P. Suryadevara; B.R. Sahoo; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Manas Ranjan Dikhit; Pradeep Das
Abstract Kinase-insert domain-containing receptor (KDR) is one of the important mediators of Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) function in endothelial cells. Inhibition of KDR can be therapeutically advantageous for treatment of a number of diseases. The present study focuses on exploring novel KDR inhibitors by means of pharmaco-informatics methodologies. Three-dimensional quantitative structure–activity relationship (3D-QSAR) analysis by atom-based pharmacophore mapping over a set of 85 molecules provides a proposition regarding the molecular fingerprint that can be optimized for designing more active inhibitors. The model was statistically validated with Q 2 = 0.865 for training and r 2 = 0.789, Pearson-r = 0.903 for test set molecules; r 2(0.925) by external validation suggests model robustness and indicates it as a strong query for screening any compound library. Virtual screening shows the importance of active site and hinge region residue for interaction with KDR inhibitors. Remarkably the retrieved hits contain a urea backbone, implicating urea derivatives as promising candidate for designing KDR inhibitors. The hydrophobicity of active site, which has until now been overlooked, has been raised into the picture by this study. This can impact on KDR drug development. The study thus quantifies crucial structural requirements necessary for a favourable interaction with the receptor binding site while the cooperative pattern provides important structural clues to chemists for framing potent medicinal agents in future.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2016
Manas Ranjan Dikhit; Md. Yousuf Ansari; Vijaymahantesh; Kalyani; Rani Mansuri; Bikash Ranjan Sahoo; Budheswar Dehury; Ajay Amit; Roshan Kamal Topno; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Vahab Ali; Sanjiva Bimal; Pradeep Das
The Zika virus disease is an Aedes mosquito-borne disease caused by the ZIKA virus. The unavailability of vaccines or proper chemotherapeutic treatment emphasizes the need for the development of preventive and therapeutic vaccines. T cell specific epitopes have been used as vaccine candidates to generate desired immune responses against a variety of viral pathogens. Herein, the immune-informatics approach was used for the screening of potential major histocompatibility complex class I restricted epitopes, which may be competent to generate a cell-mediated immune response in humans. A total of 63 epitopes were identified, which revealed a comprehensive binding affinity to the 42 different human leukocyte antigen class I supertypes: A01, A02, A08, A23, A24, A25, A26, A29, A30, A32, A66, A68, A69, A80, B07, B08, B14, B15, B27, B35, B39, B40, B42, B45, B46, B48, B51, B53, B54, B57, B58, B83, C12, C03, C04, C05, C06, C07, C08, C12, C14, and C15, and which had no homologs in humans. By combining the human leukocyte antigen binding specificity and population coverage, nine promiscuous epitopes located in Capsid 1 Protein (MVLAILAFL(P1)), Envelop Protein (RLKGVSYSL (P2) and RLITANPVI (P3)), NS2A (AILAALTPL (P4)), NS4B (LLVAHYMYL (P5) and LVAHYMYLI (P6)) and NS5 (SLINGVVRL (P7), ALNTFTNLV (P8) and YLSTQVRYL (P9)) were shortlisted. Most of these consensus epitopes revealed 100% conservancy in all Zika virus strains and were very less conserved against the human proteome. The combination of the selected epitopes accounted for an optimal coverage in the world wide population (>99%) independent of ethnicity. Structural analysis of these selected epitopes by the PatchDock web server showed their preferential mode of presentation to the T cell receptor. All these results recommended the possibility of a combined epitope vaccine strategy and can therefore be further investigated for their immunological relevance and usefulness as vaccine candidates.
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2012
Sushmita Das; Mukta Rani; Krishna Pandey; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Vidya Nand Rabidas; Dharmendra Singh; Pradeep Das
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the in vitro activity of antileishmanial drugs, paromomycin and miltefosine, to generate Th-1-biased immunomodulation in hosts against intracellular Leishmania donovani. METHODS In silico protein-ligand interaction and in vitro drug-cell interaction assays were performed. Interaction assays of TLR4-deficient HEK293 cells and HEK293 cells engineered to express either TLR4 or TLR2 with different concentrations of miltefosine and/or paromomycin sulphate were performed for 48 h. Differentially transfected human peripheral blood monocyte-derived macrophages (PBMFs) were treated with the drugs, and nuclear factor (NF)-κB promoter activity was measured using a κB-luciferase reporter construct. PBMFs were infected with L. donovani. Cultures were incubated with miltefosine or paromomycin sulphate over different concentrations, as mono-treatment or combined. The in vitro antileishmanial effect of the drugs on macrophage-bound L. donovani amastigotes was measured in terms of parasite killing and production of tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and nitric oxide. RESULTS Computational studies reveal that paromomycin and miltefosine interact with TLR4. Both drugs, as monotherapy or in combination, induce release of TNF-α and nitric oxide in a TLR4-dependent manner. Interestingly, the TLR4-dependent action of the drugs leads to NF-κB promoter activation through MyD88. In vitro, both the drugs kill macrophage-bound L. donovani by inducing release of TNF-α and nitric oxide in a TLR4-dependent manner. CONCLUSIONS The in vitro activity of paromomycin and miltefosine against host cells is TLR4 dependent. This has implications for: (i) evaluation of in vitro activity of combinational antileishmanial therapy; (ii) the evaluation of drug susceptibility of clinical isolates; and (iii) the standardization of in vitro antileishmanial assays for determining toxicity in hosts.
Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2015
Manas Ranjan Dikhit; Santosh Kumar; Vijaymahantesh; Bikash Ranjan Sahoo; Rani Mansuri; Ajay Amit; Md. Yousuf Ansari; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Sanjiva Bimal; Pradeep Das
Cell-mediated immunity is important for the control of Ebola virus infection. We hypothesized that those HLA A0201 and HLA B40 restricted epitopes derived from Ebola virus proteins, would mount a good antigenic response. Here we employed an immunoinformatics approach to identify specific 9mer amino acid which may be capable of inducing a robust cell-mediated immune response in humans. We identified a set of 28 epitopes that had no homologs in humans. Specifically, the epitopes derived from NP, RdRp, GP and VP40 share population coverage of 93.40%, 84.15%, 74.94% and 77.12%, respectively. Based on the other HLA binding specificity and population coverage, seven novel promiscuous epitopes were identified. These 7 promiscuous epitopes from NP, RdRp and GP were found to have world-wide population coverage of more than 95% indicating their potential significance as useful candidates for vaccine design. Epitope conservancy analysis also suggested that most of the peptides are highly conserved (100%) in other virulent Ebola strain (Mayinga-76, Kikwit-95 and Makona-G3816- 2014) and can therefore be further investigated for their immunological relevance and usefulness as vaccine candidates.
Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics | 2017
Ajay Amit; Manas Ranjan Dikhit; Vijay Mahantesh; Rajesh Chaudhary; Ashish Kumar Singh; Ashu Singh; Shubhankar K. Singh; V. N. R. Das; Krishna Pandey; Vahab Ali; Shyam Narayan; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Pradeep Das; Sanjiva Bimal
Protein disulphide isomerase (PDI) is one of the key enzymes essential for the survival of Leishmania donovani in the host. Our study suggested that PDI is associated with the generation of Th1-type of cellular responses in treated Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) subjects. The stimulation of Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) with recombinant Protein Disulphide Isomerase upregulated the reactive oxygen species generation, Nitric oxide release, IL12 and IFN-γ production indicating its pivotal role in protective immune response. Further, a pre-stimulation of PBMCs with Protein disulphide isomerase induced a strong IFN-γ response through CD8+ T cells in treated VL subjects. These findings also supported through the evidence that this antigen was processed and presented by major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-1) dependent pathway and had an immunoprophylactic potential which can induce CD8+ T cell protective immune response in MHC class I dependent manner against VL. To find out the possible epitopes that might be responsible for CD8+ T cell specific IFN-γ response, computational approach was adopted. Six novel promiscuous epitopes were predicted to be highly immunogenic and can be presented by 32 different HLA allele to CD8+ T cells. Further investigation will explore more about their immunological relevance and usefulness as vaccine candidates.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Shadab Anwar; Manas Ranjan Dikhit; Krishn Pratap Singh; Rajiv Kumar Kar; Amir Zaidi; Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Awadh Kishore Roy; Tomoyoshi Nozaki; Pradeep Das; Vahab Ali
Iron-Sulfur (Fe-S) proteins are involved in many biological functions such as electron transport, photosynthesis, regulation of gene expression and enzymatic activities. Biosynthesis and transfer of Fe-S clusters depend on Fe-S clusters assembly processes such as ISC, SUF, NIF, and CIA systems. Unlike other eukaryotes which possess ISC and CIA systems, amitochondriate Entamoeba histolytica has retained NIF & CIA systems for Fe-S cluster assembly in the cytosol. In the present study, we have elucidated interaction between two proteins of E. histolytica CIA system, Cytosolic Fe-S cluster deficient 1 (Cfd1) protein and Nucleotide binding protein 35 (Nbp35). In-silico analysis showed that structural regions ranging from amino acid residues (P33-K35, G131-V135 and I147-E151) of Nbp35 and (G5-V6, M34-D39 and G46-A52) of Cfd1 are involved in the formation of protein-protein complex. Furthermore, Molecular dynamic (MD) simulations study suggested that hydrophobic forces surpass over hydrophilic forces between Nbp35 and Cfd1 and Van-der-Waal interaction plays crucial role in the formation of stable complex. Both proteins were separately cloned, expressed as recombinant fusion proteins in E. coli and purified to homogeneity by affinity column chromatography. Physical interaction between Nbp35 and Cfd1 proteins was confirmed in vitro by co-purification of recombinant Nbp35 with thrombin digested Cfd1 and in vivo by pull down assay and immunoprecipitation. The insilico, in vitro as well as in vivo results prove a stable interaction between these two proteins, supporting the possibility of its involvement in Fe-S cluster transfer to target apo-proteins through CIA machinery in E. histolytica. Our study indicates that initial synthesis of a Fe-S precursor in mitochondria is not necessary for the formation of Cfd1-Nbp35 complex. Thus, Cfd1 and Nbp35 with the help of cytosolic NifS and NifU proteins can participate in the maturation of non-mitosomal Fe-S proteins without any apparent assistance of mitosomes.
Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics | 2014
Ganesh Chandra Sahoo; Md. Yousuf Ansari; Manas Ranjan Dikhit; M. Kannan; Sindhuprava Rana; Pradeep Das
Visceral leishmaniasis (Kala-azar) is a fatal disease caused by the obligate intracellular parasite Leishmania donovani and the available drugs for the treatment are few, and are frequently associated with side effects and toxicity. RNA editing is one of the essential metabolic processes in the kinetoplastids, where the pre-mRNAs are edited post-transcriptionally by the guide RNAs with the addition or deletion of uridine residues. The aim is to block the gBP21 protein involved in RNA editing process thereby other direct and indirect protein activity is reduced and ultimately the editing process in L. donovani is disturbed and it will inhibit the growth. RNA editing factors are RNA-linked proteins essential for in vivo editing i.e. mitochondrial RNA binding protein1 (MRP 1) originally called as gBP21. The model of L. donovani gBP21 (gBP21Ldv) showed that this protein bears an anti-parallel ß sheet (segregated α and ß regions) with ß-ß-ß-ß-α-ß-ß-ß-ß-α-type topology (“whirly” transcription-factor fold). Each of the four ß strands within a given ß-ß-ß-ß-α repeats and form a curved anti-parallel ß-sheet that packs perpendicularly against the sheet from the other repeat. Among all of the computationally screened compounds by the GLIDE program (Schrödinger) and GOLD program hyperoside1a, posaconazole, quercetin, and pentanediol, 427 exhibited higher binding affinities with the modeled gBP21 protein of L. donovani. Ligandfit program (DSv2.5) revealed that DNA, RNA polymerase inhibitors acyclovir, mitomycin C, and daunorubicin have better binding affinity towards gBP21Ldv. These compounds may be given in combination with miltefosine (first line therapy) against patients with VL and other associated disorders like anemia.
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Rajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences
View shared research outputsRajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences
View shared research outputsRajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences
View shared research outputsRajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences
View shared research outputsRajendra Memorial Research Institute of Medical Sciences
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