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Dive into the research topics where S. Senani is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Senani.


Bioresource Technology | 2012

Enzymatic production of xylooligosaccharides from alkali solubilized xylan of natural grass (Sehima nervosum).

A.K. Samanta; Natasha Jayapal; Atul P. Kolte; S. Senani; Manpal Sridhar; K.P. Suresh; K.T. Sampath

In this study, a process for producing XOS from Sehima nervosum grass was developed. The grass contains 28.1% hemicellulose. NaOH and steam application yielded 98% of original xylan in contrast to 85% by KOH application. Hydrolysis of xylan with commercial xylanase caused breakdown into XOS comprising of xylobiose, xylotriose along with xylose. Response surface model (RSM) revealed highest xylobiose yield (11 g/100g xylan) at pH 5.03, temperature 45.19°C, reaction time 10.11h with enzyme dose 17.41 U. Similarly for maximizing xylotriose yield, ideal hydrolysis conditions were pH 5.11, temperature 40.33°C, reaction time 16.55 h with enzyme dose 13.20 U. A two step process encompassing xylan fractionation and enzymatic hydrolysis enabled XOS production from the S. nervosum grass.


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2013

Prebiotic inulin: Useful dietary adjuncts to manipulate the livestock gut microflora

A.K. Samanta; Natasha Jayapal; S. Senani; Atul P. Kolte; Manpal Sridhar

In recent years, there has been a growing appreciation on the relevance of gastrointestinal microflora in both ruminants and non-ruminants owing to revelation of their role in several physiological functions including digestion, nutrient utilization, pathogen exclusion, gastrointestinal development, immunity system, gut gene expression and quality of animal products. The ban imposed on the use of antibiotics and hormones in feed has compelled animal researchers in finding an alternative which could overcome the issues of conventional feed additives. Though the concept of prebiotic was evolved keeping in mind the gastrointestinal flora of human beings, presently animal researchers are exploring the efficiency of prebiotic (inulin) for modulating the gut ecosystem of both ruminants and non-ruminants. It was revealed that prebiotic inulin is found to exhibit desirable changes in the gut of non-ruminants like poultry, swine, rabbit etc for augmenting gut health and improvement of product quality. Similarly, in ruminants the prebiotic reduces rumen ammonia nitrogen, methane production, increase microbial protein synthesis and live weight gains in calves. Unlike other feed additives, prebiotic exhibits its effect in multipronged ways for overall increase in the performances of the animals. In coming days, it is expected that prebiotics could be the part of diets in both ruminants and non-ruminants for enabling modulation of gut microflora vis a vis animals productivity in ecological ways.


Veterinary World | 2017

Extraction of chitosan and its oligomers from shrimp shell waste, their characterization and antimicrobial effect

Tarun Kumar Varun; S. Senani; Natasha Jayapal; Jayaram Chikkerur; Sohini Roy; Vijay Bhasker Tekulapally; Mayank Gautam; Narender Kumar

Aim: The present study was performed to utilize the shrimp shell waste for chitin and chitosan production, characterization by Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) technique and to evaluate the antimicrobial effects of chitosan oligomers produced by depolymerization of chitosan by nitrous acid. Materials and Methods: Chitosan was extracted from the shrimp shell waste by the chemical method and characterized by FT-IR. Chitooligomers were produced by depolymerising chitosan using nitrous acid, and the chitooligomers were tested for antimicrobial effect against four gut pathogenic organisms, i.e., Enterobacter aerogen (National Collection of Dairy Culture [NCDC] 106), Enterococcus faecalis (NCDC 119), Escherichia coli (NCDC 134), and Staphylococcus aureus (NCDC 109) by well diffusion method using Muller-Hinton agar. A pure culture of pathogenic organisms was collected from NCDC, ICAR-National Dairy Research Institute, Karnal. Results: Extracted chitosan characterized by FT-IR and chitooligomers demonstrated antimicrobial effect against four gut pathogenic organisms used in this study. Zone of inhibitions (mm) were observed in E. faecalis (13±0.20), E. coli (11.5±0.4), S. aureus (10.7±0.2), and E. aerogen (10.7±0.3). E. faecalis showed larger inhibition zone as compared to all other organisms and inhibitions zones of E. aerogen and S. aureus were comparable to each other. Conclusion: Shrimp waste can be utilized for chitosan production, and the chitooligomers can be used as feed additive for gut health enhancement and have potential to replace antibiotics from the feed. Along with value addition pollutant load could be reduced by waste utilization.


Brazilian Archives of Biology and Technology | 2016

Value addition of corn husks through enzymatic production of xylooligosaccharides

A.K. Samanta; Atul P. Kolte; A.V. Elangovan; A. Dhali; S. Senani; Manpal Sridhar; K.P. Suresh; Natasha Jayapal; C. Jayaram; Sohini Roy

Corn husks are the major wastes of corn industries with meagre economic significance. The present study was planned for value addition of corn husk through extraction of xylan, followed by its enzymatic hydrolysis into xylooligosaccharides, a pentose based prebiotic. Compositional analysis of corn husks revealed neutral detergent fibre 68.87%, acid detergent fibre 31.48%, hemicelluloses 37.39%, cellulose 29.07% and crude protein 2.68%. Irrespective of the extraction conditions, sodium hydroxide was found to be more effective in maximizing the yield of xylan from corn husks than potassium hydroxide (84% vs. 66%). Application of xylanase over the xylan of corn husks resulted into production of xylooligosaccharides with different degree of polymerization namely, xylobiose and xylotriose in addition to xylose monomer. On the basis of response surface model analysis, the maximum yield of xylobiose (1.9 mg/ml) was achieved with the enzymatic hydrolysis conditions of pH 5.8, temperature 44°C, enzyme dose 5.7U/ml and hydrolysis time of 17.5h. Therefore, the corn husks could be used as raw material for xylan extraction vis a vis its translation into prebiotic xylooligosaccharides.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Assessment of Fecal Microflora Changes in Pigs Supplemented with Herbal Residue and Prebiotic

A.K. Samanta; C. Jayaram; Natasha Jayapal; N. Sondhi; Atul P. Kolte; S. Senani; Manpal Sridhar; A. Dhali

Antibiotic usage in animals as a growth promoter is considered as public health issue due to its negative impact on consumer health and environment. The present study aimed to evaluate effectiveness of herbal residue (ginger, Zingiber officinale, dried rhizome powder) and prebiotic (inulin) as an alternative to antibiotics by comparing fecal microflora composition using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism. The grower pigs were offered feed containing antibiotic (tetracycline), ginger and inulin separately and un-supplemented group served as control. The study revealed significant changes in the microbial abundance based on operational taxonomic units (OTUs) among the groups. Presumptive identification of organisms was established based on the fragment length of OTUs generated with three restriction enzymes (MspI, Sau3AI and BsuRI). The abundance of OTUs representing Bacteroides intestinalis, Eubacterium oxidoreducens, Selonomonas sp., Methylobacterium sp. and Denitrobacter sp. was found significantly greater in inulin supplemented pigs. Similarly, the abundance of OTUs representing Bacteroides intestinalis, Selonomonas sp., and Phascolarcobacterium faecium was found significantly greater in ginger supplemented pigs. In contrast, the abundance of OTUs representing pathogenic microorganisms Atopostipes suicloacalis and Bartonella quintana str. Toulouse was significantly reduced in ginger and inulin supplemented pigs. The OTUs were found to be clustered under two major phylotypes; ginger-inulin and control-tetracycline. Additionally, the abundance of OTUs was similar in ginger and inulin supplemented pigs. The results suggest the potential of ginger and prebioticsto replace antibiotics in the diet of grower pig.


IOSR Journal of Agriculture and Veterinary Science | 2016

Effect of Lignin Peroxidases Obtained From White Rot Fungi in Delignification of Cereal Crop Residues for Ruminant Feeding : Changes in Chemical Composition And in Vitro Digestibility.

Vandana Thammiaha; Ramya G.Rao; A.K. Samanta; S. Senani; Manpal Sridhar

Crop residues are renewable sources of energy for ruminants. Pre-digestion of such materials with ligninases from white rot fungi may transform the lignocellulosic substrate into a feed with greater digestibility and higher quality for ruminants. This study has evaluated the effect of crude (T1) and purified(T2) lignin peroxidase (LiP) obtained from immobilized white rot fungi (LPS1) on chemical composition and in vitro digestibility of nine cereal crop residues commonly used for feeding ruminants. Untreated straw served as control(C). Each straw was hand chaffed into 2.3 to 3.0 cm bit length and treated with the enzyme by spraying at a ratio of 1:2.5 and left for 24 h before analysis. Significant P and F values at 99% CI respectively were obtained in case of ADF, NDF and ADL with both T1 and T2. Also in vitro digestibility of dry matter (IVDMD) increased significantly in both T1 and T2. Highest increase of 20 % in IVDMD was obtained upon treatment of BRM, FXM and PRM with purified lignin peroxidase (T2) while LM showed the lowest of 12.34 % . T2 thus showed higher digestibility than T1 for all the crops as shown by LS means. Correlation graph with digestibility on Y-axis and lignin degradation on X-axis showed a strong negative correlation for all the crop residues used with increase in digestibility giving a linear decrease in lignin content or vice versa. Also digestibility and lignin degradation differed for each type of straw evaluated. BRM and LM showed a very strong negative correlation (correlation coefficient r= -98.54 and -98.07) with FXM (r = -92.43) being the next in line followed by FMS (r=-87.67) and BA (r=-87.39). PRM, MS and PS followed with JR (r= -66.54) at the end. High yield of LiP obtained through immobilization on PUF cubes was effective in delignification and could be employed for enhancing the digestibility of crop residues.


Bioactive Carbohydrates and Dietary Fibre | 2015

Xylooligosaccharides as prebiotics from agricultural by-products: Production and applications

A.K. Samanta; Natasha Jayapal; C. Jayaram; Sohini Roy; Atul P. Kolte; S. Senani; Manpal Sridhar


Food and Bioproducts Processing | 2012

Production and in vitro evaluation of xylooligosaccharides generated from corn cobs

A.K. Samanta; S. Senani; Atul P. Kolte; Manpal Sridhar; K.T. Sampath; Natasha Jayapal; Anusuya Devi


Industrial Crops and Products | 2013

Value addition to sugarcane bagasse: Xylan extraction and its process optimization for xylooligosaccharides production

Natasha Jayapal; A.K. Samanta; Atul P. Kolte; S. Senani; Manpal Sridhar; K.P. Suresh; K.T. Sampath


Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2013

Application of Pigeon Pea (Cajanus cajan) Stalks as Raw Material for Xylooligosaccharides Production

A.K. Samanta; Natasha Jayapal; Atul P. Kolte; S. Senani; Manpal Sridhar; Sukriti Mishra; Cadaba S Prasad; K.P. Suresh

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A.K. Samanta

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Atul P. Kolte

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Manpal Sridhar

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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A. Dhali

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Natasha Jayapal

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Sohini Roy

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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C. Jayaram

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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K.T. Sampath

National Dairy Research Institute

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Narender Kumar

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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Raghavendra Bhatta

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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