Narendra S. Yadav
DuPont
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Publication
Featured researches published by Narendra S. Yadav.
Nature Biotechnology | 2013
Zhixiong Xue; Pamela L. Sharpe; Seung-Pyo Hong; Narendra S. Yadav; Dongming Xie; David R. Short; Howard Glenn Damude; Ross Rupert; John E. Seip; Jamie Wang; Dana M. Walters Pollak; Michael W. Bostick; Melissa D. Bosak; Daniel Joseph Macool; Dieter Hollerbach; Hongxiang Zhang; Dennis M Arcilla; Sidney Bledsoe; Kevin Croker; Elizabeth F McCord; Bjorn D. Tyreus; Ethel N. Jackson; Quinn Qun Zhu
The availability of the omega-3 fatty acids eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is currently limited because they are produced mainly by marine fisheries that cannot keep pace with the demands of the growing market for these products. A sustainable non-animal source of EPA and DHA is needed. Metabolic engineering of the oleaginous yeast Yarrowia lipolytica resulted in a strain that produced EPA at 15% of dry cell weight. The engineered yeast lipid comprises EPA at 56.6% and saturated fatty acids at less than 5% by weight, which are the highest and the lowest percentages, respectively, among known EPA sources. Inactivation of the peroxisome biogenesis gene PEX10 was crucial in obtaining high EPA yields and may increase the yields of other commercially desirable lipid-related products. This technology platform enables the production of lipids with tailored fatty acid compositions and provides a sustainable source of EPA.
The Plant Cell | 2002
Wen Song; Harry Solimeo; Ross Rupert; Narendra S. Yadav; Qun Zhu
We characterized rice cDNA sequences for OsDr1 and OsDrAp1, which encode structural homologs of the eukaryotic general repressors Dr1 and DrAp1, respectively. OsDr1 and OsDrAp1 are nuclear proteins that interact with each other and with the TATA binding protein/DNA complex. In vitro and in vivo functional analyses showed that OsDrAp1 functions as a repressor, unlike its role in other eukaryotic systems, in which DrAp1 is a corepressor. OsDr1 and OsDrAp1 functioned together as a much stronger repressor than either one alone. Functional dissections revealed that the N-terminal histone-fold domains of OsDr1 and OsDrAp1 were necessary and sufficient for their repression and protein–protein interaction with each other. The unique glutamine- and proline-rich domain of OsDr1 had no repression activity. The basic amino acid–rich region and an arginine and glycine repeat domain of OsDrAp1 enhanced its repression activity. Thus, although OsDr1 and OsDrAp1 function as repressors, the functions of the two components are reversed compared with those of their nonplant counterparts.
Archive | 1987
John R. Bedbrook; Roy Scott Chaleff; Saverio Carl Falco; Barbara Jean Mazur; Chris Somerville; Narendra S. Yadav
Archive | 1992
John Browse; Luis Perez Grau; Anthony J. Kinney; John Pierce; Anna Wierzbicki; Narendra S. Yadav
Archive | 2005
Howard Glenn Damude; Peter J. Gillies; Daniel Joseph Macool; Stephen K. Picataggio; Dana M. Walters Pollak; James John Ragghianti; Zhixiong Xue; Narendra S. Yadav; Hongxiang Zhang; Quinn Qun Zhu
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Howard Glenn Damude; Hongxiang Zhang; Leonard Farrall; Kevin G. Ripp; Jean-Francois Tomb; Dieter Hollerbach; Narendra S. Yadav
Archive | 2004
Stephen K. Picataggio; Narendra S. Yadav; Quinn Qun Zhu
Archive | 1998
Jonathan E. Lightner; John Joseph Okuley; William D. Hitz; Anthony J. Kinney; Luis Perez-Grau; Narendra S. Yadav
Archive | 2004
Narendra S. Yadav; Hongxiang Zhang
Archive | 1991
William D. Hitz; Narendra S. Yadav; Luis Perez-Grau