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Featured researches published by Prabhu Dutt.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

Evaluation of the Antimicrobial, Antioxidant, and Anti-Inflammatory Activities of Hydroxychavicol for Its Potential Use as an Oral Care Agent

Sandeep Sharma; Inshad Ali Khan; Intzar Ali; Furqan Ali; Manoj Kumar; Ashwani Kumar; Rakesh Kamal Johri; Sheikh Tasduq Abdullah; Sarang Bani; Anjali Pandey; Krishan Avtar Suri; Bishan Datt Gupta; Naresh Kumar Satti; Prabhu Dutt; Ghulam Nabi Qazi

ABSTRACT Hydroxychavicol isolated from the chloroform extraction of aqueous extract of Piper betle leaves showed inhibitory activity against oral cavity pathogens. It exhibited an inhibitory effect on all of the oral cavity pathogens tested (MICs of 62.5 to 500 μg/ml) with a minimal bactericidal concentration that was twofold greater than the inhibitory concentration. Hydroxychavicol exhibited concentration-dependent killing of Streptococcus mutans ATCC 25175 up to 4× MIC and also prevented the formation of water-insoluble glucan. Interestingly, hydroxychavicol exhibited an extended postantibiotic effect of 6 to 7 h and prevented the emergence of mutants of S. mutans ATCC 25175 and Actinomyces viscosus ATCC 15987 at 2× MIC. Furthermore, it also inhibited the growth of biofilms generated by S. mutans and A. viscosus and reduced the preformed biofilms by these bacteria. Increased uptake of propidium iodide by hydroxychavicol-treated cells of S. mutans and A. viscosus indicated that hydroxychavicol probably works through the disruption of the permeability barrier of microbial membrane structures. Hydroxychavicol also exhibited potent antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities. This was evident from its concentration-dependent inhibition of lipid peroxidation and significant suppression of tumor necrosis factor alpha expression in human neutrophils. Its efficacy against adherent cells of S. mutans in water-insoluble glucan in the presence of sucrose suggests that hydroxychavicol would be a useful compound for the development of antibacterial agents against oral pathogens and that it has great potential for use in mouthwash for preventing and treating oral infections.


Molecular Biology Reports | 2013

Dynamics of withanolide biosynthesis in relation to temporal expression pattern of metabolic genes in Withania somnifera (L.) Dunal: a comparative study in two morpho-chemovariants

Niha Dhar; Satiander Rana; Wajid Waheed Bhat; Sumeer Razdan; Shahzad A. Pandith; Shabnam Khan; Prabhu Dutt; Rekha S. Dhar; Samantha Vaishnavi; Ram A. Vishwakarma; Surrinder K. Lattoo

Withania somnifera (L.) Dunal synthesizes large array of pharmacologically active secondary metabolites known as withanolides. It has been extensively investigated in terms of chemistry and bioactivity profiling. However, there exists fragmentary information about the dynamics of withanolide biosynthesis at different phenophases in concert with the expression analysis of key pathway genes. In the present study, two morpho-chemovariants of W. somnifera were harvested at five developmental stages, dissected into leaf and root tissues and assayed for three major withanolides viz. withanolide-A (WS-1), withanone (WS-2) and withaferin A (WS-3) content using high performance liquid chromatography. The present investigation also analyzed the expression pattern of five withanolide biosynthetic pathway genes namely squalene synthase, squalene epoxidase, cycloartenol synthase, cytochrome P450 reductase 1, cytochrome P450 reductase 2 to corroborate with the metabolite flux at different developmental stages. The relative transcript profiles of identified genes at various ontogenetic stages illustrated significant variation in leaf and root tissues and were largely concurrent with the alteration in withanolide pool. Comparatively, the concentrations of withanolide A, withanone and withaferin A along with expression levels of all the five genes were appreciably higher in the leaves than in roots. Relative dynamics in terms of quantitative and qualitative profiles of withanolides in leaf and root tissues revealed least correspondence between the pattern of accumulation, possibly indicting towards de novo tissue-specific biosynthesis.


Steroids | 2011

A unique immuno-stimulant steroidal sapogenin acid from the roots of Asparagus racemosus

Punita Sharma; Prashant Singh Chauhan; Prabhu Dutt; Musarat Amina; Krishan Avtar Suri; Bishan Datt Gupta; Om Parkash Suri; K.L. Dhar; Deepak Sharma; Vivek K. Gupta; Naresh Kumar Satti

A new steroidal sapogenin molecule 1 having unique characteristics, 21-nor and unusual C19 carboxylic acid has been isolated from the roots of Asparagus racemosus. On the basis of chemical evidence, extensive spectroscopic analysis including two dimensional (2D) NMR and X-ray studies of single crystal, the structure of 1 was determined as (1S,2R,3S,8S,9S,10S,13S,14S,16S,17R,22R,25R)-21-nor-18β,27α-dimethyl-1β,2β,3β-trihydroxy-25-spirost-4-en-19β-oic acid. 1 crystallizes in monoclinic space group P2₁ with a=9.295(2), b=11.238(2), c=11.376(2) Å; β=91.993(4)°, Z=2, D(cal)=1.344 Mg/m³. The structure was solved by direct methods and refined by full-matrix least-squares procedure to a final R-value of 0.0561 for 4064 observed reflections. 1 was tested against the type of immune responses generated during treatment in normal and immune-suppressed animals and detailed biological activity evaluation suggests it to be a potent immunostimulator.


Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2011

In vitro antifungal activities of amphotericin B in combination with acteoside, a phenylethanoid glycoside from Colebrookea oppositifolia

Intzar Ali; Punita Sharma; Krishan Avtar Suri; Naresh Kumar Satti; Prabhu Dutt; Farhat Afrin; Inshad Ali Khan

This study was undertaken to investigate the synergistic interaction between amphotericin B (AmB) and acteoside, isolated from the aerial parts of the shrub Colebrookea oppositifolia (Lamiaceae). Acteoside alone exhibited no intrinsic antifungal activity but showed a potent synergism in combination with AmB against selected pathogenic species, with fractional inhibitory concentration indices in the range of 0.0312-0.1562. The combination of acteoside at 3.12 and 12.5 µg ml(-1) with subinhibitory concentrations of AmB resulted in a potent fungicidal effect and also exhibited a significantly extended post-antifungal effect. Furthermore, the combination also reduced the minimum biofilm reduction concentration values of AmB (2-16-fold) in preformed biofilms of Candida albicans, Cryptococcus neoformans and Aspergillus fumigatus. There was decreased viability of the cells, increased uptake of propidium iodide and enhanced leakage of 260 nm-absorbing material by Candida albicans cells when exposed to AmB in the presence of acteoside. The reason for potentiation is likely to be that the subinhibitory concentrations of AmB facilitated the uptake of acteoside, which resulted in increased killing of the fungal cells. Administration of acteoside in mice at up to 2000 mg (kg body weight)(-1) by the intraperitoneal or oral route produced no overt toxicity. The data presented here support synergism between acteoside and AmB, and it is therefore proposed that a prospective new management strategy for therapeutic application of this combination should be explored.


International Immunopharmacology | 2012

Immunomodulatory studies of a bioactive fraction from the fruit of Prunus cerasus in BALB/c mice

Sheikh Abid; Anamika Khajuria; Qazi Parvaiz; Tabasum Sidiq; Aruna Bhatia; Surjeet Singh; Shabir Ahmad; Mansimran Kaur Randhawa; Naresh Kumar Satti; Prabhu Dutt

In order to evaluate the role of ethyl acetate fraction (PNRS-EtOAC) obtained from the Prunus cerasus fruit in the modulation of immune responses, detailed studies were carried out using a panel of in vivo assays. Oral administration of PNRS-EtOAC (25-100 mg/kg) stimulated the IgM and IgG titre expressed in the form of hemagglutination antibody (HA) titre. Further, it elicited a dose related increase in the delayed type hypersensitivity reaction (DTH) after 24 and 48 h in BALB/c mice. Besides augmenting the humoral and cell mediated immune response, the concentration of cytokines (IFN-γ, IL-4, and TNF-α) in serum with respect to T cell interactions, i.e. the proliferation of lymphocytes were significantly increased at 50 mg/kg compared with the control. The results in these studies demonstrated the immunostimulatory effect of PNRS-EtOAC in a dose-dependent manner with respect to the macrophage activation possibly expressing the phagocytosis and nitrite production by the enhancement of TNF-α production as a mode of action.


Journal of Liquid Chromatography & Related Technologies | 2006

Evaluation of Asparagus racemosus on the Basis of Immunomodulating Sarsasapogenin Glycosides by HPTLC

Naresh Kumar Satti; K.A. Suri; Prabhu Dutt; Om Prakash Suri; Musarat Amina; G.N. Qazi; Abdul Rauf

Abstract The manuscript describes a HPTLC procedure for resolution of constituents, identification and quantification of selected sarsasapogenin glycosides in Asparagus racemosus plant extracts. Shatavarin‐IV and immunoside, new sarsasapogenin glycosides were employed as external standards. The analytical procedure will prove handy for identification and quality control of the Rasayana drug on the basis of immunomodulating sarsasapogenin glycoside content. *RRL Contribution No. 2415.


Flavour and Fragrance Journal | 1999

Essential oil composition of Mentha x piperita L. from different environments of north India

Ashok Kumar Shahi; Suresh Chandra; Prabhu Dutt; Brij Lal Kaul; Aldo Tava; Pinarosa Avato

The performance of Mentha x piperita L. in terms of essential oil production at different altitudes has been evaluated. Culture locations included Batote (altitude 1900 m) and Jammu (300 m) of Jammu & Kashmir State, and Palampur (1290 m) of Himachal Pradesh, in north India. All the sites showed variable thermal gradients and exhibited greater ecological amplitude. The yield of fresh material (>20 tonnes/ha) and the production of essential oils (>60 kg/ha) were satisfactory. All the three environments were found to be adequate for cultivation of peppermint with acceptable amounts of menthol. Compared to oils from Batote and Palampur, oil from Jammu was of superior quality due to the optimal concentration of menthol (64.0%) and menthyl acetate (9.2%) and the low amount of menthofuran (trace). Copyright


Medicinal Chemistry Research | 2013

Synthesis and biologic activities of some novel heterocyclic chalcone derivatives

Punita Sharma; Suresh Kumar; Furquan Ali; Sumati Anthal; Vivek K. Gupta; Inshad Ali Khan; Surjeet Singh; Payare L. Sangwan; Krishan Avtar Suri; Bishan Datt Gupta; Devinder Kumar Gupta; Prabhu Dutt; Ram A. Vishwakarma; Naresh Kumar Satti

We synthesized 36 chalcone-like (E)-3-(substitutedphenyl)-1-hetrylprop-2-en-1-ones by condensing 2-acetylfuran/2-acetylpyrrole with substituted benzaldehydes under basic conditions. Of the 36 molecules synthesized, 10 are new to the literature. Bio-evaluation studies of these molecules revealed that compounds 5, 9, 15, 25, and 29 were potent NorA efflux pump inhibitors against Staphylococcus aureus by reducing MIC of ciprofloxacin fourfold, while compounds 11, 21, 25, and 26 showed promising anticancer activity in all four tested cancer cell lines (HL-60, MOLT-4, PC-3, and HeLa). Compound 25 emerged as a very good potentiator of ciprofloxacin against multidrug resistant S. aureus and also showed promising anticancer activity. The present communication describes syntheses, bio-evaluation, and structure-related activity of the (E)-3-(substitutedphenyl)-1-hetrylprop-2-en-1-ones.


Cytokine | 2010

Modulation of Th1/Th2 cytokines and inflammatory mediators by hydroxychavicol in adjuvant induced arthritic tissues

Anjali Pandey; Sarang Bani; Prabhu Dutt; K.A. Suri

The present study was undertaken to investigate the anti-arthritic activity of hydroxychavicol (HC) a major phenolic compound isolated from the aqueous extract leaves of plant Piper betle (Piperaceae). The compound showed significant lowering of pro-inflammatory (Th1) cytokine levels in arthritic paw tissue homogenate supernatant viz. IL-2, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha with maximum inhibition at higher dose levels of 2 and 4 mg/kg p.o. and enhanced the production of anti-inflammatory (Th2) cytokines IL-4 and IL-5 estimated by cytometric bead array immunoassay. Cytometric bead array uses the sensitivity of amplified fluorescence detection by flowcytometer to measure soluble analytes in a particle based immune assay. This assay can accurately quantitate five cytokines in a 50-microl sample volume. The T-helper (Th1) deviated cells produce detectable level of tumor necrosis factor (TNF-alpha), interleukin-2 (IL-2), and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma), while the Th2 deviated cells produce significant amount of interleukin-4 (IL-4) and interleukin-5 (IL-5). HC at graded doses also significantly decreased the expression of IL-1beta, PGE(2), LTB(4), and nitric oxide levels showing significant inhibition of these parameters. Elevated levels of CD4(+) T cell specific interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) in splenocytes of arthritic animals was also inhibited in treated animals. The oral LD(0) in both mice and rats was more than 1000 mg/kg.


Journal of Essential Oil Research | 1996

Essential oil composition of Ageratum houstonianum Mill. from Jammu region of India

Suresh Chandra; Ashok Kumar Shahi; Prabhu Dutt; Aldo Tava

ABSTRACT The chemical composition of the essential oil of Ageratum houstonianum Mill. was investigated by GC and GC/MS. The essential oil was found to be a mixture of about 50 chemical compounds, of which precocene I (23.34%), precocene II (43.99%) and β-caryophyllene (9.18%) were identified as major constituents. Other chromene derivatives, present in lower concentration, have been identified and reported.

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Naresh Kumar Satti

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Krishan Avtar Suri

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Suresh Chandra

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Bishan Datt Gupta

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Ashok Kumar Shahi

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Ghulam Nabi Qazi

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Inshad Ali Khan

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Punita Sharma

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Musarat Amina

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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