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Dive into the research topics where Raj Kumar Dutta is active.

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Featured researches published by Raj Kumar Dutta.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2012

Studies on antibacterial activity of ZnO nanoparticles by ROS induced lipid peroxidation.

Raj Kumar Dutta; Bhavani P. Nenavathu; Mahesh K. Gangishetty; A.V.R. Reddy

Recent studies indicated the role of ROS toward antibacterial activity. In our study we report ROS mediated membrane lipid oxidation of Escherichia coli treated with ZnO nanoparticles (NPs) as supported by detection and spectrophotometric measurement of malondialdehyde (MDA) by TBARS (thiobarbituric acid-reactive species) assay. The antibacterial effects of ZnO NPs were studied by measuring the growth curve of E. coli, which showed concentration dependent bacteriostatic and bacteriocidal effects of ZnO NPs. The antibacterial effects were characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Further, antibacterial effect of ZnO NPs was found to decrease by introducing histidine to the culture medium treated with ZnO NPs. The ROS scavenging action of histidine was confirmed by treating histidine to the batch of Escherichia coli+ZnO NPs at the end of the lag phase of the growth curve (Set-I) and during inoculation (Set-II). A moderate bacteriostatic effect (lag in the E. coli growth) was observed in Set-II batch while Set-I showed no bacteriostatic effect. From these evidences we confirmed that the antibacterial effect of bare as well as TG capped ZnO NPs were due to membrane lipid peroxidation caused by the ROS generated during ZnO NPs interaction in culture medium.


Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part B-pesticides Food Contaminants and Agricultural Wastes | 2010

Heavy metal bioaccumulation in selected medicinal plants collected from Khetri copper mines and comparison with those collected from fertile soil in Haridwar, India

R. S. Maharia; Raj Kumar Dutta; R. Acharya; A. V. R. Reddy

Heavy metal distribution in medicinal plants is gaining importance not only as an alternative medicine, but also for possible concern due to effects of metal toxicity. The present study has been focused on emphasizing the heavy metal status and bioaccumulation factors of V, Mn, Fe, Co, Cu, Zn, Se (essential metals) and Cr, Ni, Cd, As and Pb (potentially toxic metals) in medicinal plants grown under two different environmental conditions e.g., near to Khetri copper mine and those in fertile soils of Haridwar, both in India, using Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (relative method) and Atomic Absorption Spectrometry. The copper levels in the medicinal plants from Khetri were found to be 3-4 folds higher (31.6–76.5 mg kg−1) than those from Haridwar samples (7.40–15.3 mg kg−1), which is correlated with very high copper levels (763 mg kg−1) in Khetri soil. Among various heavy metals, Cr (2.60–5.92 mg kg−1), Cd (1.47–2.97 mg kg−1) and Pb (3.97–6.63 mg kg−1) are also higher in concentration in the medicinal plants from Khetri. The essential metals like Mn (36.4–69.3 mg kg−1), Fe (192–601 mg kg−1), Zn (24.9–49.9 mg kg−1) and Se (0.13–0.91 mg kg−1) and potentially toxic metals like Ni (3.09–9.01 mg kg−1) and As (0.41–2.09 mg kg−1) did not show much variations in concentration in the medicinal plants from both Khetri and Haridwar. The medicinal plants from Khetri, e.g., Ocimum sanctum, Cassia fistula, Withania somnifera and Azadirachta Indica were found rich in Ca and Mg contents while Aloe barbadensis showed moderately high Ca and Mg. Higher levels of Ca-Mg were found to correlate with Zn (except Azadirachta Indica). The bioaccumulation factors (BAFS) of the heavy metals were estimated to understand the soil-to-plant transfer pattern of the heavy metals. Significantly lower BAF values of Cu and Cr were found in the medicinal plants from Khetri, indicating majority fraction of these metals are precipitated and were immobilized species unsuitable for plant uptake. Overall, Withania somnifera (Ashwagandha) showed very high metal bioaccumulation.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2014

Anomalous antibacterial activity and dye degradation by selenium doped ZnO nanoparticles

Raj Kumar Dutta; Bhavani P. Nenavathu; Soumita Talukdar

Selenium doped ZnO nanoparticles synthesized by mechanochemical method were spherically shaped of size distribution of 10.2±3.4 nm measured by transmission electron microscopy. Diffused reflectance spectroscopy revealed increase in the band gap, ranging between 3.47 eV and 3.63 eV due to Se doping in ZnO nanoparticles. The antibacterial activity of pristine and Se doped ZnO nanoparticles was attributed to ROS (reactive oxygen species) generation in culture media confirmed by TBARS assay. Compared to complete inhibition of growth by 0.45 mg/mL of pristine ZnO nanoparticles, the batches of 0.45 mg/mL of selenium doped ZnO nanoparticles exhibited only 51% inhibition of growth of Escherichia coli. The reduced antibacterial activity of selenium doped ZnO nanoparticles was attributed to two opposing factors, e.g., ROS generation for inhibition of growth, countered by sustaining growth of E. coli due to availability of Se micronutrients in culture media, confirmed by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer measurement. Higher ROS generation by selenium doped ZnO nanoparticles was attributed to creation of oxygen vacancies, confirmed from green emission peak observed at 565 nm. The impact of higher ROS generation by selenium doped ZnO nanoparticles was evident from enhanced photocatalytic degradation of trypan blue dye, than pristine ZnO nanoparticles.


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B-biology | 2013

Correlation between defects in capped ZnO nanoparticles and their antibacterial activity.

Raj Kumar Dutta; Bhavani P. Nenavathu; Mahesh K. Gangishetty

Antibacterial activity of ZnO nanoparticles (NPs) triggered by generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) depends on the fate of photoexcited charge carriers. Batches of wide band gap ZnO NPs of 7-9nm sizes, capped with polyethylene glycol (PEG), ascorbic acid (AsA), mercaptoacetic acid (MAA) and polysorbate 80 (T-80) were synthesized by precipitation method. These capped ZnO NPs exhibited ROS induced antibacterial activity, where the ROS was measured by TBARS assay. The PEG capped and AsA capped ZnO NPs exhibited weaker antibacterial activity and were correlated with strong and broad green emission peak owing to oxygen vacancies. The oxygen vacancies were trap sites of photoexcited electrons which inhibited interaction between the photoexcited electrons and oxygen on the surface of the ZnO NPs and accounted for lesser ROS generation and subsequently weaker antibacterial activity. Contrastingly MAA capped and T-80 capped ZnO NPs did not exhibit significant green emission peak, but exhibited 13% and 43% inhibition of growth of E. coli, respectively. The lack of oxygen vacancy defects in MAA capped and T-80 capped ZnO NPs perhaps led to lesser trapping of charge carriers, which is favorable for higher ROS generation and consequently higher antibacterial activity.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2012

Development of diclofenac sodium loaded magnetic nanocarriers of pectin interacted with chitosan for targeted and sustained drug delivery.

Raj Kumar Dutta; Saurabh Sahu

A novel spherical magnetic nanocarrier of 100-150 nm dimensions made of pectin interacted with chitosan (MPCh-DS0.05) resulted in 99.5% encapsulation efficiency of diclofenac sodium (DS) as a model drug. Similarly, magnetic nanocarrier made of only pectin crosslinked with Ca(2+) (MPDS-0.05) resulted in only 60.6% encapsulation efficiency of DS. The increase in drug encapsulation efficiency (%) in MPCh-DS0.05 batch was due to synergistic drug encapsulation properties of pectin and chitosan. The structural and morphological features of these magnetic nanocarriers were studied by X-ray diffractometry (XRD), Fourier transform infrared-spectrometry (FT-IR), thermogravimetry, electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering (DLS) measurements. The magnetic properties were measured by vibrating sample magnetometer (VSM) and superconducting quantum unit interference device measurements (SQUID). The in vitro drug release was pH sensitive and exhibited sustained release sequentially in simulated gastric fluid (negligible release in 0-2h), simulated intestinal fluid (~69% release in 2-5h), simulated colonic fluid (5-60 h) and also in phosphate buffer at pH 7.4 (0-48 h). The drug release profile in phosphate buffer solution at pH 7.4 was in good agreement with swelling controlled mechanism on the basis of Korsemeyer-Peppas model.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2015

A novel method of synthesis of small band gap SnS nanorods and its efficient photocatalytic dye degradation

Dipika Das; Raj Kumar Dutta

A facile one pot method has been developed for synthesis of stable (ξ=-37.5 mV), orthorhombic structured SnS nanorods capped with mercaptoacetic acid by precipitation method. The SnS nanorods were measured to be about 45 nm long with a diameter of 20 nm, as studied by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The band gap of the MAA capped SnS nanorods was 1.81 eV, measured by diffused reflectance spectroscopy and was larger than the bulk SnS. The relative positions of highest valence band and lowest conduction band were determined from theoretical band structure calculation as 1.58 eV and -0.23 eV, respectively. The UV-Visible-NIR fluorescence emission spectrum of the SnS nanorods revealed intense emission peak at 1000 nm (1.239 eV) and weaker peaks at 935 nm, 1080 nm, 1160 nm which is likely to be due to Sn(2+) vacancies. The as-synthesized SnS nanorods exhibited more than 95% sunlight induced photocatalytic degradation of trypan blue in 4 h, following first order kinetics with high rate of degradation (k) (0.0124 min(-1)). The observed dye degradation is attributable to generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), confirmed from terephthalic acid assay. The ROS generation has been explained on the basis of interaction between photoexcited electrons from conduction band with molecular oxygen adhered to the surface of nanorods owing to favourable redox potentials of O2/O2(-) (-0.20 eV) in normal hydrogen electrode (NHE) scale.


European Journal of Pharmaceutics and Biopharmaceutics | 2012

Development of a novel probe sonication assisted enhanced loading of 5-FU in SPION encapsulated pectin nanocarriers for magnetic targeted drug delivery system

Raj Kumar Dutta; Saurabh Sahu

A novel probe sonication method is developed to enhance loading of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in SPION encalsulated pectin nanocarriers of 100-150 nm size (referred here as MP-5FU nanocarriers). Probe sonication at 20 kHz for 60 min resulted in 5-FU loading efficiency of 33.2 ± 2.5%w/w and corresponding drug loading content of 18.2 ± 1.1 wt%. These are two folds higher than literature report of 5-FU loading in pectin. The enhanced loading is attributed to increase in the rate of dissolution of 5-FU in pectin due to transmission of kHz order sonic waves which increases temperature and pressure in the medium due to formation and collapsing of cavitation bubbles. The fabricated MP-5FU nanocarriers with saturation magnetization (43.13 emu/g) exhibited pH responsive, swelling controlled in vitro release of 5-FU in simulated gastric fluid at pH 1.2, in simulated intestinal fluid at pH 6.8, in simulated colonic fluid at pH 5.5, and in phosphate buffer solution at pH 7.4. The cytotoxicity of MP-5FU was measured by sulforhodamine B (SRB) assay and its GI(50) was more than 5mg/mL for cancer cells of HT-29 (colon) and Hep G2 (liver), while it was 3.7 mg/mL for cancer cells of MIA-PaCa-2 (Pancreas).


RSC Advances | 2015

A facile method of synthesizing ammonia modified graphene oxide for efficient removal of uranyl ions from aqueous medium

Swati Verma; Raj Kumar Dutta

Graphene oxide has recently emerged as an efficient adsorbent for removal of heavy metals including radionuclides from contaminated ground water. Here we demonstrate very high adsorption capacity (qe = 72.2 mg g−1) of graphene oxide for adsorption of uranyl ions. However, in the presence of common interfering cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, K+, Na+, Pb2+, Fe2+ and Zn2+) and anions (CO32−, HCO3−, Cl− and SO42−) that are expected in ground water, the adsorption capacity of uranyl ions on graphene oxide decreased drastically owing to poor selectivity. Here we also report a strategy for significantly improving selective adsorption of uranyl ions in the presence of the above interfering species. The graphene oxide is modified by liquid ammonia in the presence of a dehydrating agent (the material obtained is referred to as NH3-GO adsorbent) and thoroughly characterized by zeta potential measurement, Raman spectroscopy, Fourier transformed infrared spectroscopy, transmission electron microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. The suitability of NH3-GO as an adsorbent of uranyl ions has been studied in batch mode as a function of pH, temperature, adsorbent dose and initial concentration of uranyl ions. The maximum experimental adsorption capacity at equilibrium conditions is found to be 40.1 mg g−1 at pH 6 at 298 K, which is not affected by the presence of most of the cations and anions. This marked improvement in the selectivity of uranyl ion adsorption is attributed to amidation of graphene oxide, rendering improved selectivity as compared to carboxylic acid groups. The maximum monolayer coverage (qmax) was deduced as 80.13 mg g−1, indicating it to be an excellent adsorbent. The mechanism of adsorption is studied in terms of adsorption isotherm models, kinetic models and thermodynamic studies, which indicated a dual mechanism of chemisorption and physisorption owing to more than one type of binding site in NH3-GO. It is concluded that the ammonia modified graphene oxide exhibited a highly selective adsorption property for uranyl ions at neutral pH.


Analytical Chemistry | 2016

Highly Sensitive and Selective Method for Detecting Ultratrace Levels of Aqueous Uranyl Ions by Strongly Photoluminescent-Responsive Amine-Modified Cadmium Sulfide Quantum Dots

Raj Kumar Dutta; Ambika Kumar

Detection of ultratrace levels of aqueous uranyl ions without using sophisticated analytical instrumentation and a tedious sample preparation method is a challenge for environmental monitoring and mitigation. Here we present a novel yet simple analytical method for highly sensitive and specific detection of uranyl ions via photoluminescence quenching of CdS quantum dots. We have demonstrated a new approach for synthesizing highly water-soluble and strong photoluminescence-emitting CdS quantum dots (i.e., CdS-MAA and CdS-MAA-TU) of sizes less than 3 nm. The structural, morphological, and optical properties of both the batches of CdS quantum dots were thoroughly characterized by XRD, high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM), zeta potential, UV-visible absorption, and photoluminescence spectroscopy. Compared to the batch of CdS quantum dots prepared by capping with only mercaptoacetic acid (CdS-MAA), the batch prepared by capping with mercaptoacetic acid and thiourea in tandem (CdS-MAA-TU) exhibited higher quantum yield= 16.64 ± 1.02%, and more importantly, CdS-MAA-TU exhibited significantly a higher order of photoluminescence quenching responses when treated with ultratrace concentrations of uranyl ions. Under the optimized conditions, the sensitivity of detecting uranyl ion by CdS-MAA-TU was several folds better (0.316 L/ μg) than that of CdS-MAA (0.0053 (L/μg/), as determined from their respective Stern-Volmer plots. Qualitatively, CdS-MAA-TU probe can be used for visual detection of uranyl ions of concentration greater than 5 μg/L. However, the instrumental method of analysis based on photoluminescence spectroscopy confirmed the feasibility for quantitative analysis of ultratrace concentrations of uranyl ions as implied from a very low limit of detection (LoD = 0.07 μg/L) and limit of quantification (LoQ = and 0.231 μg/L). Systematic studies revealed very high selectivity for uranyl ion detection, though minor interference from Cu(2+), Pb(2+), Hg(2+), CO3(2-), and SO4(2-) was found. The recovery analysis performed by spiking uranyl ions (0.5 μg/L to 10.0 μg/L) in groundwater and river water samples, confirmed the robustness of the as-developed CdS-MAA-TU QDs for detecting ultratrace levels of uranyl ions in real water sample matrix. The very simple and effective strategy reported here should facilitate developing reliable sensors for detecting uranyl ion contamination in drinking water.


Journal of Environmental Science and Health Part A-toxic\/hazardous Substances & Environmental Engineering | 2013

Antibacterial effect of chronic exposure of low concentration ZnO nanoparticles on E. coli

Raj Kumar Dutta; Bhavani P. Nenavathu; Mahesh K. Gangishetty; A. V. R. Reddy

The toxicity effect due to chronic exposure of ZnO nanoparticles (NPs) was systematically studied by repeatedly treating different lower concentrations of ZnO nanoparticles with culture media of E. coli strain. The chronic exposure of ZnO NPs of concentrations below minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) exhibited higher toxicity than the single exposure of higher concentrations. Most striking result was 57% inhibition of growth corresponding to chronic exposure of 0.06 mg/mL of ZnO NPs which was two folds more than that exhibited by single exposure of 0.30 mg/mL ZnO NPs. The toxicity of ZnO NPs in E. coli was studied in the light of formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), measured as malondialdehyde (MDA) equivalent by thiobarbituric acid-ROS (TBARS) assay, and effect of Zn dissolution from ZnO NPs. Higher inhibition of growth for the chronic exposure batches were correlated with higher ROS generation, which subsequently contributed to cause membrane lipid peroxidation, confirmed from observation of cell wall deformation by scanning electron microscopy study and energy dispersive X-ray analysis showed adherence of ZnO NPs on cell wall. The possibility of membrane lipid peroxidation was addressed by revealing in vitro oxidation of oleic acid, which is a monounsaturated fatty acid. Further in this study we have shown that the dissolution of ZnO NPs at pH 7.4 was not significant to cause Zn-induced toxicity.

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Dive into the Raj Kumar Dutta's collaboration.

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Bhavani P. Nenavathu

Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

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Saurabh Sahu

Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

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A. V. R. Reddy

Bhabha Atomic Research Centre

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Aarti Sharma

Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

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Ambika Kumar

Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

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Mahesh K. Gangishetty

Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

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R. Acharya

Bhabha Atomic Research Centre

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Swati Verma

Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee

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Anshu Goyal

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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Ashok K. Kapoor

Solid State Physics Laboratory

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