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Dive into the research topics where Gunjan Pandey is active.

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Featured researches published by Gunjan Pandey.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2003

Phytoremediation: an overview of metallic ion decontamination from soil

Om V. Singh; Sumeet Labana; Gunjan Pandey; R Budhiraja; Rakesh K. Jain

Abstract In recent years, phytoremediation has emerged as a promising ecoremediation technology, particularly for soil and water cleanup of large volumes of contaminated sites. The exploitation of plants to remediate soils contaminated with trace elements could provide a cheap and sustainable technology for bioremediation. Many modern tools and analytical devices have provided insight into the selection and optimization of the remediation process by plant species. This review describes certain factors for the phytoremediation of metal ion decontamination and various aspects of plant metabolism during metallic decontamination. Metal-hyperaccumulating plants, desirable for heavily polluted environments, can be developed by the introduction of novel traits into high biomass plants in a transgenic approach, which is a promising strategy for the development of effective phytoremediation technology. The genetic manipulation of a phytoremediator plant needs a number of optimization processes, including mobilization of trace elements/metal ions, their uptake into the root, stem and other viable parts of the plant and their detoxification and allocation within the plant. This upcoming science is expanding as technology continues to offer new, low-cost remediation options.


Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews | 2010

Biochemistry of Microbial Degradation of Hexachlorocyclohexane and Prospects for Bioremediation

Rup Lal; Gunjan Pandey; Pooja Sharma; Kirti Kumari; Shweta Malhotra; Rinku Pandey; Vishakha Raina; Hans-Peter E. Kohler; Christof Holliger; Colin J. Jackson; John G. Oakeshott

SUMMARY Lindane, the γ-isomer of hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH), is a potent insecticide. Purified lindane or unpurified mixtures of this and α-, β-, and δ-isomers of HCH were widely used as commercial insecticides in the last half of the 20th century. Large dumps of unused HCH isomers now constitute a major hazard because of their long residence times in soil and high nontarget toxicities. The major pathway for the aerobic degradation of HCH isomers in soil is the Lin pathway, and variants of this pathway will degrade all four of the HCH isomers although only slowly. Sequence differences in the primary LinA and LinB enzymes in the pathway play a key role in determining their ability to degrade the different isomers. LinA is a dehydrochlorinase, but little is known of its biochemistry. LinB is a hydrolytic dechlorinase that has been heterologously expressed and crystallized, and there is some understanding of the sequence-structure-function relationships underlying its substrate specificity and kinetics, although there are also some significant anomalies. The kinetics of some LinB variants are reported to be slow even for their preferred isomers. It is important to develop a better understanding of the biochemistries of the LinA and LinB variants and to use that knowledge to build better variants, because field trials of some bioremediation strategies based on the Lin pathway have yielded promising results but would not yet achieve economic levels of remediation.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002

Bacterial Chemotaxis toward Environmental Pollutants: Role in Bioremediation

Gunjan Pandey; Rakesh K. Jain

The increasing release of organic pollutants by industries cause many health-related problems. However, increased awareness of the harmful effects of environmental pollution has led to a dramatic increase in research on various strategies that may be employed to clean up the environment. It is now realized that microbial metabolism provides a safer, more efficient, and less expensive alternative to physicochemical methods for pollution abatement (27). In the past few decades, a vast range of xenobiotic compounds have been found to be susceptible to microbial mineralization. In most instances where mineralization has been demonstrated, the catabolic pathway and its regulation have also been determined. Bacterial chemotaxis, movement under the influence of a chemical gradient, either toward (positive chemotaxis) or away (negative chemotaxis) from the gradient helps bacteria to find optimum conditions for their growth and survival. However, this aspect has received little attention, even though some microorganisms with the chemotactic ability toward different xenobiotic compounds have been isolated and characterized (8, 19, 23, 41, 53). In many cases, the chemoattractant is a compound that serves as carbon and energy source, whereas a chemorepellent is toxic for the bacteria. We describe here recent discoveries in bacterial chemotaxis toward pollutants and how they may be explored and exploited for bioremediation applications.


Indian Journal of Microbiology | 2008

The enzymatic basis for pesticide bioremediation.

Colin Scott; Gunjan Pandey; Carol J. Hartley; Colin J. Jackson; Matthew J. Cheesman; Matthew C. Taylor; Rinku Pandey; Jeevan Khurana; Mark Teese; Christopher W. Coppin; Khali Weir; Rakesh K. Jain; Rup Lal; Robyn J. Russell; John G. Oakeshott

Enzymes are central to the biology of many pesticides, influencing their modes of action, environmental fates and mechanisms of target species resistance. Since the introduction of synthetic xenobiotic pesticides, enzymes responsible for pesticide turnover have evolved rapidly, in both the target organisms and incidentally exposed biota. Such enzymes are a source of significant biotechnological potential and form the basis of several bioremediation strategies intended to reduce the environmental impacts of pesticide residues. This review describes examples of enzymes possessing the major activities employed in the bioremediation of pesticide residues, and some of the strategies by which they are employed. In addition, several examples of specific achievements in enzyme engineering are considered, highlighting the growing trend in tailoring enzymatic activity to a specific biotechnologically relevant function.


Evolutionary Applications | 2011

The evolution of new enzyme function: lessons from xenobiotic metabolizing bacteria versus insecticide-resistant insects.

Robyn J. Russell; Colin Scott; Colin J. Jackson; Rinku Pandey; Gunjan Pandey; Matthew C. Taylor; Christopher W. Coppin; Jian-Wei Liu; John G. Oakeshott

Here, we compare the evolutionary routes by which bacteria and insects have evolved enzymatic processes for the degradation of four classes of synthetic chemical insecticide. For insects, the selective advantage of such degradative activities is survival on exposure to the insecticide, whereas for the bacteria the advantage is simply a matter of access to additional sources of nutrients. Nevertheless, bacteria have evolved highly efficient enzymes from a wide variety of enzyme families, whereas insects have relied upon generalist esterase‐, cytochrome P450‐ and glutathione‐S‐transferase‐dependent detoxification systems. Moreover, the mutant insect enzymes are less efficient kinetically and less diverged in sequence from their putative ancestors than their bacterial counterparts. This presumably reflects several advantages that bacteria have over insects in the acquisition of new enzymatic functions, such as a broad biochemical repertoire from which new functions can be evolved, large population sizes, high effective mutation rates, very short generation times and access to genetic diversity through horizontal gene transfer. Both the insect and bacterial systems support recent theory proposing that new biochemical functions often evolve from ‘promiscuous’ activities in existing enzymes, with subsequent mutations then enhancing those activities. Study of the insect enzymes will help in resistance management, while the bacterial enzymes are potential bioremediants of insecticide residues in a range of contaminated environments.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Structure and function of an insect α-carboxylesterase (αEsterase7) associated with insecticide resistance

Colin J. Jackson; Jian-Wei Liu; Paul D. Carr; Faisal Younus; Chris Coppin; Tamara Meirelles; Mathilde Lethier; Gunjan Pandey; David L. Ollis; Robyn J. Russell; Martin Weik; John G. Oakeshott

Insect carboxylesterases from the αEsterase gene cluster, such as αE7 (also known as E3) from the Australian sheep blowfly Lucilia cuprina (LcαE7), play an important physiological role in lipid metabolism and are implicated in the detoxification of organophosphate (OP) insecticides. Despite the importance of OPs to agriculture and the spread of insect-borne diseases, the molecular basis for the ability of α-carboxylesterases to confer OP resistance to insects is poorly understood. In this work, we used laboratory evolution to increase the thermal stability of LcαE7, allowing its overexpression in Escherichia coli and structure determination. The crystal structure reveals a canonical α/β-hydrolase fold that is very similar to the primary target of OPs (acetylcholinesterase) and a unique N-terminal α-helix that serves as a membrane anchor. Soaking of LcαE7 crystals in OPs led to the capture of a crystallographic snapshot of LcαE7 in its phosphorylated state, which allowed comparison with acetylcholinesterase and rationalization of its ability to protect insects against the effects of OPs. Finally, inspection of the active site of LcαE7 reveals an asymmetric and hydrophobic substrate binding cavity that is well-suited to fatty acid methyl esters, which are hydrolyzed by the enzyme with specificity constants (∼106 M−1 s−1) indicative of a natural substrate.


Biochemical Journal | 2009

Characterization of the phenylurea hydrolases A and B: founding members of a novel amidohydrolase subgroup.

Jeevan Khurana; Colin J. Jackson; Colin Scott; Gunjan Pandey; Irene Horne; Robyn J. Russell; Anthony J. Herlt; Christopher J. Easton; John G. Oakeshott

Mycobacterium brisbanense strain JK1, a bacterium capable of degrading the herbicide diuron, was isolated from herbicide-exposed soil. A gene/enzyme system with diuron hydrolase activity was isolated from this strain and named PUH (phenylurea hydrolase) B (puhB/PuhB) because of its close similarity to the previously characterized PUH A (puhA/PuhA). Both PUHs were heterologously expressed, purified and characterized. The PUHs were found to oligomerize as hexamers in solution, with each monomer containing a mononuclear Zn2+ active site. Sequence analysis showed that these enzymes belong to the metal-dependent amidohydrolase superfamily, although they contain a hitherto unreported Asn-X-His metal-binding motif and appear to form a novel sub-group within this superfamily. The effects of temperature and solvent on the enzymes were characterized. Determination of the kinetic parameters of the PUHs was used alongside Brønsted plots to develop a plausible catalytic mechanism, which is similar to that used by urease. In addition to the primary PUH activity, both enzymes are catalytically promiscuous, efficiently hydrolysing esters, carbamates and phosphotriesters. In fact, an analogue of diuron, in which the C-N bond was replaced by a C-O bond, was found to be turned over as efficiently as diuron, suggesting that the substrate specificity is predominantly determined by steric factors. The discovery of PuhA and PuhB on separate continents, and the absence of any other close homologues in the available sequence databases, poses a challenging question regarding the evolutionary origins of these enzymes.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2014

Identification of candidate odorant degrading gene/enzyme systems in the antennal transcriptome of Drosophila melanogaster

Faisal Younus; Thomas Chertemps; Stephen L. Pearce; Gunjan Pandey; Françoise Bozzolan; Christopher W. Coppin; Robyn J. Russell; Martine Maïbèche-Coisne; John G. Oakeshott

The metabolism of volatile signal molecules by odorant degrading enzymes (ODEs) is crucial to the ongoing sensitivity and specificity of chemoreception in various insects, and a few specific esterases, cytochrome P450s, glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) and UDP-glycosyltransferases (UGTs) have previously been implicated in this process. Significant progress has been made in characterizing ODEs in Lepidoptera but very little is known about them in Diptera, including in Drosophila melanogaster, a major insect model. We have therefore carried out a transcriptomic analysis of the antennae of D. melanogaster in order to identify candidate ODEs. Virgin male and female and mated female antennal transcriptomes were determined by RNAseq. As with the Lepidoptera, we found that many esterases, cytochrome P450 enzymes, GSTs and UGTs are expressed in D. melanogaster antennae. As olfactory genes generally show selective expression in the antennae, a comparison to previously published transcriptomes for other tissues has been performed, showing preferential expression in the antennae for one esterase, JHEdup, one cytochrome P450, CYP308a1, and one GST, GSTE4. These largely uncharacterized enzymes are now prime candidates for ODE functions. JHEdup was expressed heterologously and found to have high catalytic activity against a chemically diverse group of known ester odorants for this species. This is a finding consistent with an ODE although it might suggest a general role in clearing several odorants rather than a specific role in clearing a particular odorant. Our findings do not preclude the possibility of odorant degrading functions for other antennally expressed esterases, P450s, GSTs and UGTs but, if so, they suggest that these enzymes also have additional functions in other tissues.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2005

Desulphurization of dibenzothiophene and diesel oils by bacteria.

Sumeet Labana; Gunjan Pandey; Rakesh K. Jain

Aims:  To study the desulphurization of dibenzothiophene (DBT), a recalcitrant thiophenic component of fossil fuels, by two bacteria namely Rhodococcus sp. and Arthrobacter sulfureus isolated from oil‐contaminated soil/sludge in order to use them for reducing the sulphur content of diesel oil in compliance with environmental regulations.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2010

p-Nitrophenol degradation via 4-nitrocatechol in Burkholderia sp. SJ98 and cloning of some of the lower pathway genes.

Archana Chauhan; Gunjan Pandey; Narinder K. Sharma; Debarati Paul; Janmejay Pandey; Rakesh K. Jain

Microbial degradation studies have pointed toward the occurrence of two distinct PNP catabolic pathways in Gram positive and Gram negative bacteria. The former involves 4-nitrocatechol (4-NC), 1,2,4-benzenetriol (BT), and maleylacetate (MA) as major degradation intermediates, whereas the later proceeds via formation of 1,4-benzoquinone (BQ) and hydroquinone (HQ). In the present study we identified a Gram negative organism viz. Burkholderia sp. strain SJ98 that degrades PNP via 4NC, BT, and MA. A 6.89 Kb genomic DNA fragment of strain SJ98 that encompasses seven putatively identified ORFs (orfA, pnpD, pnpC, orfB, orfC, orfD, and orfE) was cloned. PnpC is benzenetriol dioxygenase belonging to the intradiol dioxygenase superfamily, whereas PnpD is identified as maleylacetate reductase, a member of the Fe-ADH superfamily showing NADH dependent reductase activity. The in vitro activity assays carried out with purified pnpC and pnpD (btd and mar) gene products transformed BT to MA and MA to beta-ketoadipate, respectively. The cloning, sequencing, and characterization of these genes along with the functional PNP degradation studies ascertained the involvement of 4-NC, BT, and MA as degradation intermediates of PNP pathway in this strain. This is one of the first conclusive reports for 4-NC and BT mediated degradation of PNP in a Gram negative organism.

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John G. Oakeshott

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Robyn J. Russell

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Colin J. Jackson

Australian National University

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Rinku Pandey

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Debarati Paul

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Matthew C. Taylor

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Stephen L. Pearce

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Janmejay Pandey

Central University of Rajasthan

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Andrew C. Warden

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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