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Dive into the research topics where Vanga Siva Reddy is active.

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Featured researches published by Vanga Siva Reddy.


Molecular Breeding | 2003

Chloroplast expression of His-tagged GUS-fusions: a general strategy to overproduce and purify foreign proteins using transplastomic plants as bioreactors

Sadhu Leelavathi; Vanga Siva Reddy

High level expression and efficient recovery of recombinant protein aretwo main critical factors that determine the use of transgenic plants asnaturalbioreactors to produce foreign proteins for industrial applications. Wedemonstrate here the potential of a new strategy involving chloroplasttransformation, GUS-fusions and affinity-tag based chromatography tooverexpressand purify a human therapeutic protein, interferon gamma (IFN-g) in tobaccoplants. Our results show that IFN-g accumulation reaches up to 6% of totalsolubleprotein when expressed as a GUS-fusion protein in tobacco chloroplasts.Additionof His-tag simplified the downstream process and the recombinant protein yieldswere considerably high (∼360 μg/g fresh leaf tissue).Further we demonstrate the use of GUS-fusions to identify recombinant proteincontaining fractions very rapidly (< 5 minutes) through simple GUS assay, animportant consideration for those proteins that are highly labile duringlengthyand harsh downstream processing conditions. The chloroplast-produced IFN-g isbiologically as active as the same protein obtained through E.coli expression without any involvement of refolding procedure. Ourresults demonstrate that the new strategy has tremendous potential for largescale production of proteins from heterologous source, independent of theirphysio-chemical and biological properties, using plants as ‘naturalbioreactors’.


Molecular Breeding | 2003

Overproduction of an alkali- and thermo-stable xylanase in tobacco chloroplasts and efficient recovery of the enzyme

Sadhu Leelavathi; Naveen Gupta; Shankar Maiti; Amit Ghosh; Vanga Siva Reddy

Overproduction of cellulolytic enzymes through conventional nucleartransformation approaches posed a major challenge as they can potentiallydegrade the cell wall components and thereby affect transgenic plant growth anddevelopment. In this study, we have tested the possibility to over produce analkali-thermostable xylanase gene from Bacillus sp. StrainNG-27 in tobacco plants through chloroplast expression. Our results showed thatthe xylanase expression can reach up to 6% of the total soluble protein, avaluecomparable to high level expression reported for several non-cellulolyticproteins in tobacco chloroplasts. The chloroplast-expressed xylanase retainedits activity even when the leaves were dried under sun or at 42°C, offering flexibility in the agricultural system intransport and storage. The recombinant enzyme was purified to homogeneity usingsingle step chromatography with more than 85% recovery. Most importantly,transgenic plants were indistinguishable from the control untransformed plantsin their morphology, growth and in seed setting. These results open up newavenues for large scale production of several other industrially usefulcellulolytic enzymes through chloroplast expression.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2012

Genome-wide transcriptomic analysis of cotton under drought stress reveal significant down-regulation of genes and pathways involved in fibre elongation and up-regulation of defense responsive genes

Kethireddy Venkata Padmalatha; Gurusamy Dhandapani; Mogilicherla Kanakachari; Saravanan Kumar; Abhishek Dass; Deepak Prabhakar Patil; Vijayalakshmi Rajamani; Krishan Kumar; Ranjana Pathak; Bhupendra Rawat; Sadhu Leelavathi; Palakolanu Sudhakar Reddy; Neha Jain; Kasu N. Powar; Vamadevaiah Hiremath; Ishwarappa S. Katageri; Malireddy K. Reddy; Amolkumar U. Solanke; Vanga Siva Reddy; Polumetla Ananda Kumar

Cotton is an important source of natural fibre used in the textile industry and the productivity of the crop is adversely affected by drought stress. High throughput transcriptomic analyses were used to identify genes involved in fibre development. However, not much information is available on cotton genome response in developing fibres under drought stress. In the present study a genome wide transcriptome analysis was carried out to identify differentially expressed genes at various stages of fibre growth under drought stress. Our study identified a number of genes differentially expressed during fibre elongation as compared to other stages. High level up-regulation of genes encoding for enzymes involved in pectin modification and cytoskeleton proteins was observed at fibre initiation stage. While a large number of genes encoding transcription factors (AP2-EREBP, WRKY, NAC and C2H2), osmoprotectants, ion transporters and heat shock proteins and pathways involved in hormone (ABA, ethylene and JA) biosynthesis and signal transduction were up-regulated and genes involved in phenylpropanoid and flavonoid biosynthesis, pentose and glucuronate interconversions and starch and sucrose metabolism pathways were down-regulated during fibre elongation. This study showed that drought has relatively less impact on fibre initiation but has profound effect on fibre elongation by down-regulating important genes involved in cell wall loosening and expansion process. The comprehensive transcriptome analysis under drought stress has provided valuable information on differentially expressed genes and pathways during fibre development that will be useful in developing drought tolerant cotton cultivars without compromising fibre quality.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Protein complex directs hemoglobin-to-hemozoin formation in Plasmodium falciparum

Monika Chugh; Vidhya Sundararaman; Saravanan Kumar; Vanga Siva Reddy; Waseem Ahmad Siddiqui; Kenneth Stuart; Pawan Malhotra

Malaria parasites use hemoglobin (Hb) as a major nutrient source in the intraerythrocytic stage, during which heme is converted to hemozoin (Hz). The formation of Hz is essential for parasite survival, but to date, the underlying mechanisms of Hb degradation and Hz formation are poorly understood. We report the presence of a ∼200-kDa protein complex in the food vacuole that is required for Hb degradation and Hz formation. This complex contains several parasite proteins, including falcipain 2/2′, plasmepsin II, plasmepsin IV, histo aspartic protease, and heme detoxification protein. The association of these proteins is evident from coimmunoprecipitation followed by mass spectrometry, coelution from a gel filtration column, cosedimentation on a glycerol gradient, and in vitro protein interaction analyses. To functionally characterize this complex, we developed an in vitro assay using two of the proteins present in the complex. Our results show that falcipain 2 and heme detoxification protein associate with each other to efficiently convert Hb to Hz. We also used this in vitro assay to elucidate the modes of action of chloroquine and artemisinin. Our results reveal that both chloroquine and artemisinin act during the heme polymerization step, and chloroquine also acts at the Hb degradation step. These results may have important implications in the development of previously undefined antimalarials.


Crop Protection | 2000

Transgenic tomato plants resistant to fruit borer (Helicoverpa armigera Hubner)

Ajin D. Mandaokar; Ruchika Goyal; A. Shukla; S. Bisaria; Ritu Bhalla; Vanga Siva Reddy; A. Chaurasia; R.P. Sharma; Illimar Altosaar; P. Ananda Kumar

Abstract A synthetic cry 1 Ac gene coding for an insecticidal crystal protein (ICP) of Bacillus thuringiensis ( Bt ) was transferred to tomato by cocultivating cotyledonary explants with Agrobacterium tumefaciens . Transformant plants resistant to kanamycin were regenerated. Hybridization experiments demonstrated gene integration and gene copy number in the transgenic plants. Double-antibody sandwich ELISA analysis revealed high levels of Bt ICP expression in the leaves of transgenic plants. The expression resulted in a high level of protection of transgenic plant leaves and fruits against the larvae of tomato fruit borer ( Helicoverpa armigera ). Limited field trial of the transgenic plants (T 1 generation) confirmed the high levels of insect protection.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Synthesis and Characterization of Chimeric Proteins Based on Cellulase and Xylanase from an Insect Gut Bacterium

Nidhi Adlakha; Raman Rajagopal; Saravanan Kumar; Vanga Siva Reddy; Syed Shams Yazdani

ABSTRACT Insects living on wood and plants harbor a large variety of bacterial flora in their guts for degrading biomass. We isolated a Paenibacillus strain, designated ICGEB2008, from the gut of a cotton bollworm on the basis of its ability to secrete a variety of plant-hydrolyzing enzymes. In this study, we cloned, expressed, and characterized two enzymes, β-1,4-endoglucanase (Endo5A) and β-1,4-endoxylanase (Xyl11D), from the ICGEB2008 strain and synthesized recombinant bifunctional enzymes based on Endo5A and Xyl11D. The gene encoding Endo5A was obtained from the genome of the ICGEB2008 strain by shotgun cloning. The gene encoding Xyl11D was obtained using primers for conserved xylanase sequences, which were identified by aligning xylanase sequences in other species of Paenibacillus. Endo5A and Xyl11D were overexpressed in Escherichia coli, and their optimal activities were characterized. Both Endo5A and Xyl11D exhibited maximum specific activity at 50°C and pH 6 to 7. To take advantage of this feature, we constructed four bifunctional chimeric models of Endo5A and Xyl11D by fusing the encoding genes either end to end or through a glycine-serine (GS) linker. We predicted three-dimensional structures of the four models using the I-TASSER server and analyzed their secondary structures using circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. The chimeric model Endo5A-GS-Xyl11D, in which a linker separated the two enzymes, yielded the highest C-score on the I-TASSER server, exhibited secondary structure properties closest to the native enzymes, and demonstrated 1.6-fold and 2.3-fold higher enzyme activity than Endo5A and Xyl11D, respectively. This bifunctional enzyme could be effective for hydrolyzing plant biomass owing to its broad substrate range.


Protein Science | 2006

Crystal structures of native and xylosaccharide-bound alkali thermostable xylanase from an alkalophilic Bacillus sp. NG-27: structural insights into alkalophilicity and implications for adaptation to polyextreme conditions.

Karuppasamy Manikandan; Amit Bhardwaj; Naveen Gupta; Neratur K. Lokanath; Amit Ghosh; Vanga Siva Reddy; Suryanarayanarao Ramakumar

Crystal structures are known for several glycosyl hydrolase family 10 (GH10) xylanases. However, none of them is from an alkalophilic organism that can grow in alkaline conditions. We have determined the crystal structures at 2.2 Å of a GH10 extracellular endoxylanase (BSX) from an alkalophilic Bacillus sp. NG‐27, for the native and the complex enzyme with xylosaccharides. The industrially important enzyme is optimally active and stable at 343 K and at a pH of 8.4. Comparison of the structure of BSX with those of other thermostable GH10 xylanases optimally active at acidic or close to neutral pH showed that the solvent‐exposed acidic amino acids, Asp and Glu, are markedly enhanced in BSX, while solvent‐exposed Asn was noticeably depleted. The BSX crystal structure when compared with putative three‐dimensional homology models of other extracellular alkalophilic GH10 xylanases from alkalophilic organisms suggests that a protein surface rich in acidic residues may be an important feature common to these alkali thermostable enzymes. A comparison of the surface features of BSX and of halophilic proteins allowed us to predict the activity of BSX at high salt concentrations, which we verified through experiments. This offered us important lessons in the polyextremophilicity of proteins, where understanding the structural features of a protein stable in one set of extreme conditions provided clues about the activity of the protein in other extreme conditions. The work brings to the fore the role of the nature and composition of solvent‐exposed residues in the adaptation of enzymes to polyextreme conditions, as in BSX.


Plant Physiology | 2012

Light Intensity-Dependent Modulation of Chlorophyll b Biosynthesis and Photosynthesis by Overexpression of Chlorophyllide a Oxygenase in Tobacco

Ajaya K. Biswal; Gopal K. Pattanayak; Shiv S. Pandey; Sadhu Leelavathi; Vanga Siva Reddy; Govindjee; Baishnab C. Tripathy

Chlorophyll b is synthesized by the oxidation of a methyl group on the B ring of a tetrapyrrole molecule to a formyl group by chlorophyllide a oxygenase (CAO). The full-length CAO from Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) was overexpressed in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) that grows well at light intensities much higher than those tolerated by Arabidopsis. This resulted in an increased synthesis of glutamate semialdehyde, 5-aminolevulinic acid, magnesium-porphyrins, and chlorophylls. Overexpression of CAO resulted in increased chlorophyll b synthesis and a decreased chlorophyll a/b ratio in low light-grown as well as high light-grown tobacco plants; this effect, however, was more pronounced in high light. The increased potential of the protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase activity and chlorophyll biosynthesis compensated for the usual loss of chlorophylls in high light. Increased chlorophyll b synthesis in CAO-overexpressed plants was accompanied not only by an increased abundance of light-harvesting chlorophyll proteins but also of other proteins of the electron transport chain, which led to an increase in the capture of light as well as enhanced (40%–80%) electron transport rates of photosystems I and II at both limiting and saturating light intensities. Although the quantum yield of carbon dioxide fixation remained unchanged, the light-saturated photosynthetic carbon assimilation, starch content, and dry matter accumulation increased in CAO-overexpressed plants grown in both low- and high-light regimes. These results demonstrate that controlled up-regulation of chlorophyll b biosynthesis comodulates the expression of several thylakoid membrane proteins that increase both the antenna size and the electron transport rates and enhance carbon dioxide assimilation, starch content, and dry matter accumulation.


Archives of Virology | 2012

A survey of geminiviruses and associated satellite DNAs in the cotton-growing areas of northwestern India

Valerio Zaffalon; Vanga Siva Reddy; Jeremy R. Thompson; Mark Tepfer

Severe symptoms of cotton leaf curl disease (CLCuD) are caused by the association of a single-stranded circular DNA satellite (betasatellite) with a helper begomovirus. In this study, we analyzed 40 leaf samples (primarily cotton with CLCuD symptoms and other plants growing close by) from four sites between New Delhi and the Pakistan/India border, using rolling-circle amplification (RCA) and PCR. In total, the complete sequences of 12 different helper viruses, eight alphasatellites, and one betasatellite from five different plant species were obtained. A recombinant helper virus molecule found in okra and a novel alphasatellite-related DNA from croton are also described. This is the first report of the presence of both DNA components (helper virus and betasatellite) associated with resistance-breaking CLCuD in India, and it highlights the need for further work to combat its damage and spread.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Functional genomics of fuzzless-lintless mutant of Gossypium hirsutum L. cv. MCU5 reveal key genes and pathways involved in cotton fibre initiation and elongation

Kethireddy Venkata Padmalatha; Deepak P. Patil; Krishan Kumar; Gurusamy Dhandapani; Mogilicherla Kanakachari; Mullapudi Lv Phanindra; Saravanan Kumar; T C Mohan; Neha Jain; Arkalgud Hiriyannaiah Prakash; Hiremath Vamadevaiah; Ishwarappa S. Katageri; Sadhu Leelavathi; Malireddy K. Reddy; Polumetla Ananda Kumar; Vanga Siva Reddy

BackgroundFuzzless-lintless cotton mutants are considered to be the ideal material to understand the molecular mechanisms involved in fibre cell development. Although there are few reports on transcriptome and proteome analyses in cotton at fibre initiation and elongation stages, there is no comprehensive comparative transcriptome analysis of fibre-bearing and fuzzless-lintless cotton ovules covering fibre initiation to secondary cell wall (SCW) synthesis stages. In the present study, a comparative transcriptome analysis was carried out using G. hirsutum L. cv. MCU5 wild-type (WT) and it’s near isogenic fuzzless-lintless (fl) mutant at fibre initiation (0 dpa/days post anthesis), elongation (5, 10 and 15 dpa) and SCW synthesis (20 dpa) stages.ResultsScanning electron microscopy study revealed the delay in the initiation of fibre cells and lack of any further development after 2 dpa in the fl mutant. Transcriptome analysis showed major down regulation of transcripts (90%) at fibre initiation and early elongation (5 dpa) stages in the fl mutant. Majority of the down regulated transcripts at fibre initiation stage in the fl mutant represent calcium and phytohormone mediated signal transduction pathways, biosynthesis of auxin and ethylene and stress responsive transcription factors (TFs). Further, transcripts involved in carbohydrate and lipid metabolisms, mitochondrial electron transport system (mETS) and cell wall loosening and elongation were highly down-regulated at fibre elongation stage (5–15 dpa) in the fl mutant. In addition, cellulose synthases and sucrose synthase C were down-regulated at SCW biosynthesis stage (15–20 dpa). Interestingly, some of the transcripts (~50%) involved in phytohormone signalling and stress responsive transcription factors that were up-regulated at fibre initiation stage in the WT were found to be up-regulated at much later stage (15 dpa) in fl mutant.ConclusionsComparative transcriptome analysis of WT and its near isogenic fl mutant revealed key genes and pathways involved at various stages of fibre development. Our data implicated the significant role of mitochondria mediated energy metabolism during fibre elongation process. The delayed expression of genes involved in phytohormone signalling and stress responsive TFs in the fl mutant suggests the need for a coordinated expression of regulatory mechanisms in fibre cell initiation and differentiation.

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Sadhu Leelavathi

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Saravanan Kumar

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Amit Bhardwaj

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Krishan Kumar

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Mogilicherla Kanakachari

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Polumetla Ananda Kumar

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Sudhir K. Sopory

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Gurusamy Dhandapani

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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Kethireddy Venkata Padmalatha

Indian Agricultural Research Institute

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