Rajendra D. Patil
Indian Veterinary Research Institute
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Featured researches published by Rajendra D. Patil.
Mycopathologia | 2007
Manoj Kumar; P. Dwivedi; Anil Kumar Sharma; N.D. Singh; Rajendra D. Patil
In the present investigation, ochratoxin A (OTA) (0.75 mg/kg feed) and citrinin (CIT) (15 mg/kg feed) were fed alone and in combination to young growing New Zealand White rabbits for 60 days to evaluate renal ultrastructural alterations. The severity and intensity of renal ultrastructural changes varied with the type of the treatment, and predominant and consistent lesions were recorded in the proximal convoluted tubule (PCT) lining cells. The significant changes in mitochondria, the most affected cell organelle in all the treatment groups, included mitochondrial disintegration and distortion, pleomorphism, cluster formation and misshapen appearance such as signet ring, dumbbell, cup and U shapes. Intra-cisternal sequestrations of involuting mitochondria, and thickening of basal layer of PCT epithelial cells with partial detachment, were the characteristic features observed in OTA and combination treatments. CIT treatment revealed crenated nucleus, loss of nucleolus, depletion of cytoplasmic organelles, mitochondrial pleomorphism, nuclear fragmentation, uniform folding of cell membrane and cytoplasmic vacuolations in the PCTs. Focal thickening of the glomerular basement membrane and degeneration of endothelial cells were the prominent alterations in the glomeruli in OTA and combination treatments. Distal convoluted tubules were unaffected in CIT treatment, however, mild to moderate lesions were observed in OTA and combination treated rabbits. It may be concluded that on simultaneous exposure, CIT potentiated the toxic effects of OTA on renal ultrastructure.
Toxicology and Industrial Health | 2014
Manoj Kumar; P. Dwivedi; Anil Kumar Sharma; M. Sankar; Rajendra D. Patil; N.D. Singh
Ochratoxin A (OTA) and citrinin (CIT) are nephrotoxic mycotoxins produced mainly by fungal species Aspergillus ochraceus and Penicillium citrinum, respectively, which have been found to occur together in various food and feed commodities. In the present study, both OTA and CIT were evaluated for their potential to induce oxidative damage by determining lipid peroxidation (LPO) through malondialdehyde (MDA) assay and apoptosis by flow cytometry, gel electrophoresis and renal ultrastructural morphology in rabbits fed with diets containing OTA (0.75 mg/kg feed), CIT (15 mg/kg feed) and OTA + CIT (0.75 and 15 mg/kg feed, respectively) up to 60 days. The concentration of MDA was found significantly higher in OTA and combination-treated groups. OTA and combination-treated groups revealed more apoptotic cells in flow cytometry when compared with the CIT-treated group. Characteristic DNA fragmentation, as evidenced by ladder pattern in electrophoresis appeared in the toxin-treated groups. Ultrastructurally, interstitial cells showed nuclear fragmentation and cytoplasmic blebbing in OTA- and CIT-treated groups; whereas, proximal convoluted tubular epithelial cells, besides interstitial cells, showed nuclear fragmentation in the combined treatment group. The results suggested that low concentrations of OTA and CIT either alone or in combination induced apoptosis in a time-dependent manner and LPO in the rabbit kidney, which appeared to play a major role in the pathogenesis of nephrotoxicity. Furthermore, the interaction of these two nephrotoxic mycotoxins was found to be additive.
Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2008
N.D. Singh; Anil Kumar Sharma; P. Dwivedi; Rajendra D. Patil; Manoj Kumar
In the present investigation, citrinin (CIT) (10 mg kg−1 feed) and endosulfan (1 mg kg−1 body weight) were administered orally alone and in combination to pregnant Wistar rats from gestational day 6 to 20 and their fetuses were collected to evaluate the histopathological alterations in hepatic and renal tissues. In CIT‐fed group fetal liver, the changes were less marked, showing only sinusoidal dilation and mild vacuolar degeneration, whereas the consistent changes in the fetal kidney included tubular degeneration, medullary tubular necrosis, cystic dilatation of tubules, distortion of glomerulur capillary tuft and interstitial fibroblastic proliferation which separated clusters of tubules. In the endosulfan group, the liver was predominantly affected, showing vacuolar degeneration, karyomegaly and severe sinusoidal dilation, whereas the renal changes were mainly confined to tubular degeneration and varying degree of interstitial fibrosis. In the combination group, the hepatic and renal histopathological alterations in the fetus, though of similar nature to those of the individual groups, were more severe. Copyright
Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2007
N.D. Singh; Anil Kumar Sharma; P. Dwivedi; Rajendra D. Patil; Manoj Kumar
Reproductive Toxicology | 2006
Rajendra D. Patil; P. Dwivedi; Anil Kumar Sharma
Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2007
N.D. Singh; Anil Kumar Sharma; P. Dwivedi; Rajendra D. Patil; Manoj Kumar
Veterinarski Arhiv | 2011
N.D. Singh; Anil Kumar Sharma; P. Dwivedi; Manoj Kumar; Rajendra D. Patil
World Rabbit Science | 2010
Manoj Kumar; P. Dwivedi; Anil Kumar Sharma; A.G. Telang; Rajendra D. Patil; N.D. Singh
Indian Journal of Veterinary Pathology | 2006
N.D. Singh; Anil Kumar Sharma; P. Dwivedi; Rajendra D. Patil; Manoj Kumar; D. Basheer Ahamad
Indian Journal of Veterinary Pathology | 2007
Manoj Kumar; P. Dwivedi; Anil Kumar Sharma; A.G. Telang; Rajendra D. Patil; N.D. Singh; M. Sankar