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Dive into the research topics where Sithes Logendra is active.

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Featured researches published by Sithes Logendra.


Nature Biotechnology | 1999

Production of recombinant proteins in plant root exudates.

Nikolai Borisjuk; Ludmyla G. Borisjuk; Sithes Logendra; Frank Petersen; Yuri Y. Gleba; Ilya Raskin

The large-scale production of recombinant proteins in plants is limited by relatively low yields and difficulties in extraction and purification. These problems were addressed by engineering tobacco plants to continuously secrete recombinant proteins from their roots into a simple hydroponic medium. Three heterologous proteins of diverse origins (green fluorescent protein of jellyfish, human placental alkaline phosphatase [SEAP], and bacterial xylanase) were produced using the root secretion method (rhizosecretion). Protein secretion was dependent on the presence of the endoplasmic reticulum signal peptide fused to the recombinant protein sequence. All three secreted proteins retained their biological activity and, as shown for SEAP, accumulated in much higher amounts in the medium than in the root tissue.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2008

A natural history of botanical therapeutics

Barbara Schmidt; David M. Ribnicky; Alexander Poulev; Sithes Logendra; William T. Cefalu; Ilya Raskin

Plants have been used as a source of medicine throughout history and continue to serve as the basis for many pharmaceuticals used today. Although the modern pharmaceutical industry was born from botanical medicine, synthetic approaches to drug discovery have become standard. However, this modern approach has led to a decline in new drug development in recent years and a growing market for botanical therapeutics that are currently available as dietary supplements, drugs, or botanical drugs. Most botanical therapeutics are derived from medicinal plants that have been cultivated for increased yields of bioactive components. The phytochemical composition of many plants has changed over time, with domestication of agricultural crops resulting in the enhanced content of some bioactive compounds and diminished content of others. Plants continue to serve as a valuable source of therapeutic compounds because of their vast biosynthetic capacity. A primary advantage of botanicals is their complex composition consisting of collections of related compounds having multiple activities that interact for a greater total activity.


Phytomedicine | 2009

Hypoglycemic activity of a novel anthocyanin-rich formulation from lowbush blueberry, Vaccinium angustifolium Aiton

Mary H. Grace; David M. Ribnicky; Peter Kuhn; Alexander Poulev; Sithes Logendra; Gad G. Yousef; Ilya Raskin; Mary Ann Lila

Blueberry fruits are known as a rich source of anthocyanin components. In this study we demonstrate that anthocyanins from blueberry have the potency to alleviate symptoms of hyperglycemia in diabetic C57b1/6J mice. The anti-diabetic activity of different anthocyanin-related extracts was evaluated using the pharmaceutically acceptable self-microemulsifying drug delivery system: Labrasol. Treatment by gavage (500 mg/kg body wt) with a phenolic-rich extract and an anthocyanin-enriched fraction formulated with Labrasol lowered elevated blood glucose levels by 33 and 51%, respectively. The hypoglycemic activities of these formulae were comparable to that of the known anti-diabetic drug metformin (27% at 300 mg/kg). The extracts were not significantly hypoglycemic when administered without Labrasol, demonstrating its bio-enhancing effect, most likely due to increasing the bioavailability of the administered preparations. The phenolic-rich extract contained 287.0+/-9.7 mg/g anthocyanins, while the anthocyanin-enriched fraction contained 595+/-20.0 mg/g (cyanidin-3-glucoside equivalents), as measured by HPLC and pH differential analysis methods. The greater hypoglycemic activity of the anthocyanin-enriched fraction compared to the initial phenolic-rich extract suggested that the activity was due to the anthocyanin components. Treatment by gavage (300 mg/kg) with the pure anthocyanins, delphinidin-3-O-glucoside and malvidin-3-O-glucoside, formulated with Labrasol, showed that malvidin-3-O-glucoside was significantly hypoglycemic while delphinidin-3-O-glucoside was not.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2014

Anti-inflammatory activity of grains of paradise (Aframomum melegueta Schum) extract

Nebojsa Ilic; Moul Dey; Alexander Poulev; Sithes Logendra; Peter Kuhn; Ilya Raskin

The ethanolic extract of grains of paradise (Aframomum melegueta Schum, Zingiberaceae) has been evaluated for inhibitory activity on cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) enzyme, in vivo for the anti-inflammatory activity and expression of several pro-inflammatory genes. Bioactivity-guided fractionation showed that the most active COX-2 inhibitory compound in the extract was [6]-paradol. [6]-Shogaol, another compound from the extract, was the most active inhibitory compound in pro-inflammatory gene expression assays. In a rat paw edema model, the whole extract reduced inflammation by 49% at 1000 mg/kg. Major gingerols from the extract [6]-paradol, [6]-gingerol, and [6]-shogaol reduced inflammation by 20, 25 and 38%. respectively when administered individually at a dose of 150 mg/kg. [6]-Shogaol efficacy was at the level of aspirin, used as a positive control. Grains of paradise extract has demonstrated an anti-inflammatory activity, which is in part due to the inhibition of COX-2 enzyme activity and expression of pro-inflammatory genes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999

Use of plant roots for phytoremediation and molecular farming

Doloressa Gleba; Nikolai Borisjuk; Ludmyla G. Borisjuk; Ralf Kneer; Alexander Poulev; Marina Skarzhinskaya; Slavik Dushenkov; Sithes Logendra; Yuri Y. Gleba; Ilya Raskin


Plant Physiology | 2000

Characterization of Arabidopsis acid phosphatase promoter and regulation of acid phosphatase expression

Shoshan Haran; Sithes Logendra; Mirjana Seskar; Margarita Bratanova; Ilya Raskin


Food Chemistry | 2012

In Vitro and in Vivo Anti-Diabetic Effects of Anthocyanins from Maqui Berry (Aristotelia chilensis).

Leonel E. Rojo; David M. Ribnicky; Sithes Logendra; Alexander Poulev; Patricio Rojas-Silva; Peter Kuhn; Ruth Dorn; Mary H. Grace; Mary Ann Lila; Ilya Raskin


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2003

Elicitation, a new window into plant chemodiversity and phytochemical drug discovery.

Alexander Poulev; Joseph M. O'Neal; Sithes Logendra; Reneta Pouleva; Vesa Timeva; Alison Garvey; Doloressa Gleba; Ivan S. Jenkins; Barbara T. Halpern; Ralf Kneer; Gordon M. Cragg; Ilya Raskin


Phytochemistry | 2006

Bioassay-guided isolation of aldose reductase inhibitors from Artemisia dracunculus

Sithes Logendra; David M. Ribnicky; Hui Yang; Alexander Poulev; Jun Ma; Edward J. Kennelly; Ilya Raskin


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2007

Polyphenolic compounds from Artemisia dracunculus L. inhibit PEPCK gene expression and gluconeogenesis in an H4IIE hepatoma cell line.

Dmitry Govorko; Sithes Logendra; Yanxin Wang; Debora Esposito; Slavko Komarnytsky; David M. Ribnicky; Alexander Poulev; Zhong Q. Wang; William T. Cefalu; Ilya Raskin

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William T. Cefalu

American Diabetes Association

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Mary Ann Lila

North Carolina State University

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