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Featured researches published by Prasenjit Paria.


Journal of Amino Acids | 2014

Amino Acid Compositions of 27 Food Fishes and Their Importance in Clinical Nutrition

Bimal Prasanna Mohanty; Arabinda Mahanty; Satabdi Ganguly; T.V. Sankar; Kajal Chakraborty; Anandan Rangasamy; Baidyanath Paul; Debajit Sarma; Suseela Mathew; K. K. Asha; Bijay Kumar Behera; Md. Aftabuddin; Dipesh Debnath; P Vijayagopal; N. Sridhar; M. S. Akhtar; Neetu Sahi; Tandrima Mitra; Sudeshna Banerjee; Prasenjit Paria; Debajeet Das; Pushpita Das; K. K. Vijayan; P. T. Laxmanan; A. P. Sharma

Proteins and amino acids are important biomolecules which regulate key metabolic pathways and serve as precursors for synthesis of biologically important substances; moreover, amino acids are building blocks of proteins. Fish is an important dietary source of quality animal proteins and amino acids and play important role in human nutrition. In the present investigation, crude protein content and amino acid compositions of important food fishes from different habitats have been studied. Crude protein content was determined by Kjeldahl method and amino acid composition was analyzed by high performance liquid chromatography and information on 27 food fishes was generated. The analysis showed that the cold water species are rich in lysine and aspartic acid, marine fishes in leucine, small indigenous fishes in histidine, and the carps and catfishes in glutamic acid and glycine. The enriched nutrition knowledge base would enhance the utility of fish as a source of quality animal proteins and amino acids and aid in their inclusion in dietary counseling and patient guidance for specific nutritional needs.


Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2013

Lipid Biomarkers of Lens Aging

Bimal Prasanna Mohanty; Soma Bhattacharjee; Prasenjit Paria; Arabinda Mahanty; A. P. Sharma

Lipids are important structural components of cell membranes and have profound effect on membrane fluidity. Lipid profiling and lipidomics have captured increased attention due to the well-recognized roles of lipids in numerous human diseases. Investigating lipid profiles not only provides insights into the specific roles of lipid molecular species in health and diseases, but can also help in identifying potential preventive or therapeutic biomarkers. Cataract, the loss of transparency of eye lens, is a disease of protein aggregation. There are several factors contributing to the stability in protein conformation. Age-related changes in lipid composition could be a contributing factor for altered protein–lipid interaction leading to protein aggregation and cataract. Keeping this in view, in the present study, fatty acid profiling from different age groups of lenses was carried out, using a freshwater catfish as the model. Total lipids were extracted from lenses of three different age groups of fishes (young, adult, and aged) and fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) were prepared and FAME analysis was carried out using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry. The results showed that three fatty acids viz. heneicosylic acid (C21), docosahexaenoic acid (C22:6), nervonic acid (C24:1) which were not present in the adult lens, appeared in the aged lens. On the other hand, eicosenoic acid (C20:1) present in the adult lens was found to be absent in the aged lens. The appearance or disappearance of these fatty acids can possibly serve as biomarkers of aging lens which is the most vulnerable stage for cataract development.


Mitochondrial DNA | 2016

Genetic stock structure of Osteobrama belangeri (Valenciennes, 1844) in Indian region

Nandeibam Samarjit Singh; Bijay Kumar Behera; Swaraj Priyaranjan Kunal; Priyanka Das; Prasenjit Paria; A. P. Sharma

Abstract Osteobrama belangeri is an important medium carp endemic to Manipur state in India Myanmar and Yunnan Province of China. Although the species is listed as Near Threatened species according to IUCN status with sizeable population available in Myanmar, it is Extinct in the Wild in Manipur. An 842 bp segment ATP synthase 6/8 region of mtDNA was sequenced and analysed for 56 O. belangeri individuals. Analysis of population differentiation showed no significant genetic differentiation between the four sampling localities (ΦST = −0.034, p = 0.819). Results were further corroborated by a non-significant nearest neighbour statistics (Snn = 0.223, p = 0.897) and exact test of population differentiation (p = 0.893). Phylogeographic analysis revealed two haplogroups, but there was no obvious phylogeographic pattern separating the sampling localities. The present study suggests a single panmictic population of O. belangeri in Indian region.


Mitochondrial DNA | 2015

Genetic differentiation in Indian Major Carp, Cirrhinus mrigala (Hamilton, 1822) from Indian Rivers, as revealed by direct sequencing analysis of mitochondrial Cytochrome b region

Bijay Kumar Behera; Swaraj Priyaranjan Kunal; Prasenjit Paria; Priyanka Das; Dharmendra Kumar Meena; Sudip Pakrashi; Amiya Kumar Sahoo; Debabrata Panda; Joykrushna Jena; A. P. Sharma

Abstract A 307 bp segment of Cytochrome b gene of mtDNA was sequenced and analyzed for 90 individuals of Cirrhinus mrigala collected across the three rivers, namely Ganges, Narmada and Brahmaputra. Analyses revealed the presence of 14 haplotypes with haplotype diversity (h) ranging from 0.304 to 0.692, and nucleotide diversity (π) 0.002–0.043. The majority of variation was found within the population (96.21%), and the FST value (0.035) as well as the value of exact test of population differentiation (0.893) were found to be insignificant (p < 0.05). Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) also indicated insignificant differentiation among sub-populations. Generally, low genetic differences were observed even though those populations were from different geographic locations. The present study suggests a single panmictic population of C. mrigala across the three rivers of India.


Mitochondrial DNA | 2018

Population structure and genetic diversity of Indian Major Carp, Labeo rohita (Hamilton, 1822) from three phylo-geographically isolated riverine ecosystems of India as revealed by mtDNA cytochrome b region sequences

Bijay Kumar Behera; Vishwamitra Singh Baisvar; Swaraj Priyaranjan Kunal; Dharmendra Kumar Meena; Debarata Panda; Sudip Pakrashi; Prasenjit Paria; Pronob Das; Dibakar Bhakta; Dipesh Debnath; Suvra Roy; V. R. Suresh; J. K. Jena

Abstract The population structure and genetic diversity of Rohu (Labeo rohita Hamilton, 1822) was studied by analysis of the partial sequences of mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b region. We examined 133 samples collected from six locations in three geographically isolated rivers of India. Analysis of 11 haplotypes showed low haplotype diversity (0.00150), nucleotide diversity (π) (0.02884) and low heterogeneity value (0.00374). Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed the genetic diversity of L. rohita within population is very high than between the populations. The Fst scores (−0.07479 to 0.07022) were the indication of low genetic structure of L. rohita populations of three rivers of India. Conspicuously, Farakka-Bharuch population pair Fst score of 0.0000, although the sampling sites are from different rivers. The phylogenetic reconstruction of unique haplotypes revealed sharing of a single central haplotype (Hap_1) by all the six populations with a point mutations ranging from 1–25 nucleotides.


Mitochondrial DNA | 2018

Genetic variation in wild and hatchery population of Catla catla (Hamilton, 1822) analyzed through mtDNA cytochrome b region

Bijay Kumar Behera; Swaraj Priyaranjan Kunal; Vishwamitra Singh Baisvar; Dharmendra Kumar Meena; Debarata Panda; Sudip Pakrashi; Prasenjit Paria; Pronob Das; Dipesh Debnath; Pranaya Kumar Parida; Basanta Kumar Das; Joykrushna Jena

Abstract Catla (Catla catla) is a one of the most harvested Indian major carps and is widely cultured fish species in Indian subcontinent. In the present study, genetic variability between hatchery and wild stocks of Catla was surveyed using sequence data of mitochondrial DNA of partial 307 bp of cytochrome b region. A total of 174 Catla individuals were examined from three different river basins and hatcheries. Significant genetic heterogeneity was observed for the sequence data (FST = 0.308, p ≤ 0.001). However, analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) resulted in insignificant genetic differentiation among the samples of three rivers and culture zones (FCT = −0.10, p = 0.44). The result suggested a significant genetic variation within different riverine system, low genetic differentiation among samples from river basins and a lack of genetic variation in hatchery populations.


Genome Announcements | 2015

Draft Genome Sequence of the Extremely Halophilic Bacterium Halomonas salina Strain CIFRI1, Isolated from the East Coast of India

Bijay Kumar Behera; Priyanka Das; Jitendra Maharana; Prasenjit Paria; Shambhu Nath Mandal; Dharmendra Kumar Meena; A. P. Sharma; Rijith Jayarajan; Vishal Dixit; Ankit Verma; Shamsudheen Karuthedath Vellarikkal; Vinod Scaria; Sridhar Sivasubbu; A. R. Rao; T. Mohapatra

ABSTRACT Halomonas salina strain CIFRI1 is an extremely salt-stress-tolerant bacterium isolated from the salt crystals of the east coast of India. Here we report the annotated 3.45-Mb draft genome sequence of strain CIFRI1 having 86 contigs with 3,139 protein coding loci, including 62 RNA genes.


Genome Announcements | 2015

Erratum for Behera et al., Draft Genome Sequence of the Extremely Halophilic Bacterium Halomonas salina Strain CIFRI1, Isolated from the East Coast of India

Bijay Kumar Behera; Priyanka Das; Jitendra Maharana; Prasenjit Paria; Shambhu Nath Mandal; Dharmendra Kumar Meena; A. P. Sharma; Rijith Jayarajan; Vishal Dixit; Ankit Verma; Shamsudheen Karuthedath Vellarikkal; Vinod Scaria; Sridhar Sivasubbu; A. R. Rao; T. Mohapatra

Volume 3, no. 1, [e01321-14][1], 2015. Page 1: The affiliation line should read as given above. [1]: /lookup/doi/10.1128/genomeA.01321-14


National Academy Science Letters-india | 2012

Nutrient Profile of Giant River-Catfish Sperata seenghala (Sykes)

Bimal Prasanna Mohanty; Prasenjit Paria; Debajeet Das; Satabdi Ganguly; Priyanka Mitra; Anjali Verma; Shilpa Sahoo; Arabinda Mahanty; Aftabuddin; Bijaya Kumar Behera; T.V. Sankar; A. P. Sharma


Aquaculture | 2018

Emergence of Tilapia Lake Virus associated with mortalities of farmed Nile Tilapia Oreochromis niloticus (Linnaeus 1758) in India

Bijay Kumar Behera; Pravata Kumar Pradhan; T.R. Swaminathan; Neeraj Sood; Prasenjit Paria; Abhishek Das; D.K. Verma; Raj Kumar; M.K. Yadav; A.K. Dev; Pranaya Kumar Parida; Basanta Kumar Das; Kuldeep K. Lal; Joykrushna Jena

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Bijay Kumar Behera

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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A. P. Sharma

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Arabinda Mahanty

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Basanta Kumar Das

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Bimal Prasanna Mohanty

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Dharmendra Kumar Meena

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Abhishek Das

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Priyanka Das

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Dipesh Debnath

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Joykrushna Jena

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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