Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
8
result(s) for
"Narnoliya, Lokesh K."
Sort by:
Prebiotic Oligosaccharides: Special Focus on Fructooligosaccharides, Its Biosynthesis and Bioactivity
by
Singh, Sudhir P.
,
Narnoliya, Lokesh K.
,
Pandey, Ashok
in
Additives
,
Adequate Intakes
,
Bacteria
2017
The bacterial groups in the gut ecosystem play key role in the maintenance of host’s metabolic and structural functionality. The gut microbiota enhances digestion processing, helps in digestion of complex substances, synthesizes beneficial bioactive compounds, enhances bioavailability of minerals, impedes growth of pathogenic microbes, and prevents various diseases. It is, therefore, desirable to have an adequate intake of prebiotic biomolecules, which promote favorable modulation of intestinal microflora. Prebiotics are non-digestible and chemically stable structures that significantly enhance growth and functionality of gut microflora. The non-digestible carbohydrate, mainly oligosaccharides, covers a major part of total available prebiotics as dietary additives. The review describes the types of prebiotic low molecular weight carbohydrates, i.e., oligosaccharides, their structure, biosynthesis, functionality, and applications, with a special focus given to fructooligosaccharides (FOSs). The review provides an update on enzymes executing hydrolytic and fructosyltransferase activities producing prebiotic FOS biomolecules, and future perspectives.
Journal Article
De novo transcriptome analysis of rose-scented geranium provides insights into the metabolic specificity of terpene and tartaric acid biosynthesis
by
Singh, Sudhir P.
,
Narnoliya, Lokesh K.
,
Sangwan, Rajender S.
in
Acids
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Annotations
2017
Background
Rose-scented geranium (
Pelargonium
sp.) is a perennial herb that produces a high value essential oil of fragrant significance due to the characteristic compositional blend of rose-oxide and acyclic monoterpenoids in foliage. Recently, the plant has also been shown to produce tartaric acid in leaf tissues. Rose-scented geranium represents top-tier cash crop in terms of economic returns and significance of the plant and plant products. However, there has hardly been any study on its metabolism and functional genomics, nor any genomic expression dataset resource is available in public domain. Therefore, to begin the gains in molecular understanding of specialized metabolic pathways of the plant,
de novo
sequencing of rose-scented geranium leaf transcriptome, transcript assembly, annotation, expression profiling as well as their validation were carried out.
Results
De novo
transcriptome analysis resulted a total of 78,943 unique contigs (average length: 623 bp, and N50 length: 752 bp) from 15.44 million high quality raw reads.
In silico
functional annotation led to the identification of several putative genes representing terpene, ascorbic acid and tartaric acid biosynthetic pathways, hormone metabolism, and transcription factors. Additionally, a total of 6,040 simple sequence repeat (SSR) motifs were identified in 6.8% of the expressed transcripts. The highest frequency of SSR was of tri-nucleotides (50%). Further, transcriptome assembly was validated for randomly selected putative genes by standard PCR-based approach.
In silico
expression profile of assembled contigs were validated by real-time PCR analysis of selected transcripts.
Conclusion
Being the first report on transcriptome analysis of rose-scented geranium the data sets and the leads and directions reflected in this investigation will serve as a foundation for pursuing and understanding molecular aspects of its biology, and specialized metabolic pathways, metabolic engineering, genetic diversity as well as molecular breeding.
Journal Article
Interspecies comparative features of trichomes in Ocimum reveal insights for biosynthesis of specialized essential oil metabolites
by
Yadav, Ritesh K
,
Sangwan, Rajender S
,
Singh, Umesh
in
Abundance
,
Aroma
,
Autosomal dominant inheritance
2019
Ocimum species commonly referred to as “Tulsi” are well-known for their distinct medicinal and aromatic properties. The characteristic aroma of Ocimum species and cultivars is attributed to their specific combination of volatile phytochemicals mainly belonging to terpenoid and/or phenylpropanoid classes in their essential oils. The essential oil constituents are synthesized and sequestered in specialized epidermal secretory structures called as glandular trichomes. In this comparative study, inter- and intra-species diversity in structural attributes and profiles of expression of selected genes related to terpenoid and phenylpropanoid biosynthetic pathways have been investigated. This is performed to seek relationship of variations in the yield and phytochemical composition of the essential oils. Microscopic analysis of trichomes of O. basilicum, O. gratissimum, O. kilimandscharicum, and O. tenuiflorum (green and purple cultivars) revealed substantial variations in density, size, and relative proportions of peltate and capitate trichomes among them. The essential oil yield has been observed to be controlled by the population, dominance, and size of peltate and capitate glandular trichomes. The essential oil sequestration in leaf is controlled by the dominance of peltate glandular trichome size over its number and is also affected by the capitate glandular trichome size/number with variations in leaf area albeit at lower proportions. Comprehension and comparison of results of GC-MS analysis of essential oils showed that most of the Ocimum (O. basilicum, O. tenuiflorum, and O. gratissimum) species produce phenylpropanoids (eugenol, methyl chavicol) as major volatiles except O. kilimandscharicum, which is discrete in being monoterpenoid-rich species. Among the phenylpropanoid-enriched Ocimum (O. basilicum, O. gratissimum, O. tenuiflorum purple, O. tenuiflorum green) as well, terpenoids were important constituents in imparting characteristic aroma. Further, comparative abundance of transcripts of key genes of phenylpropanoid (PAL, C4H, 4CL, CAD, COMT, and ES) and terpenoid (DXS and HMGR) biosynthetic pathways was evaluated vis-à-vis volatile oil constituents. Transcript abundance demonstrated that richness of their essential oils with specific constituent(s) of a chemical group/subgroup was manifested by the predominant upregulation of phenylpropanoid/terpenoid pathway genes. The study provides trichomes as well as biosynthetic pathway-based knowledge for genetic improvement in Ocimum species for essential oil yield and quality.
Journal Article
Transcriptome mining and in silico structural and functional analysis of ascorbic acid and tartaric acid biosynthesis pathway enzymes in rose-scanted geranium
by
Sangwan, Rajender S
,
Singh, Sudhir P
,
Narnoliya, Lokesh K
in
Active sites
,
Amino acids
,
Antioxidants
2018
Rose-scented geranium (Pelargonium sp.) is widely known as aromatic and medicinal herb, accumulating specialized metabolites of high economic importance, such as essential oils, ascorbic acid, and tartaric acid. Ascorbic acid and tartaric acid are multifunctional metabolites of human value to be used as vital antioxidants and flavor enhancing agents in food products. No information is available related to the structural and functional properties of the enzymes involved in ascorbic acid and tartaric acid biosynthesis in rose-scented geranium. In the present study, transcriptome mining was done to identify full-length genes, followed by their bioinformatic and molecular modeling investigations and understanding of in silico structural and functional properties of these enzymes. Evolutionary conserved domains were identified in the pathway enzymes. In silico physicochemical characterization of the catalytic enzymes revealed isoelectric point (pI), instability index, aliphatic index, and grand average hydropathy (GRAVY) values of the enzymes. Secondary structural prediction revealed abundant proportion of alpha helix and random coil confirmations in the pathway enzymes. Three-dimensional homology models were developed for these enzymes. The predicted structures showed significant structural similarity with their respective templates in root mean square deviation analysis. Ramachandran plot analysis of the modeled enzymes revealed that more than 84% of the amino acid residues were within the favored regions. Further, functionally important residues were identified corresponding to catalytic sites located in the enzymes. To, our best knowledge, this is the first report which provides a foundation on functional annotation and structural determination of ascorbic acid and tartaric acid pathway enzymes in rose-scanted geranium.
Journal Article
Enhanced secondary metabolite production and pathway gene expression by leaf explants-induced direct root morphotypes are regulated by combination of growth regulators and culture conditions in Centella asiatica (L.) urban
2015
Centella asiatica (L), a herbaceous plant belonging to the family Apiaceae, possesses great medicinal value owing to the presence of important and characteristic triterpenoids as secondary metabolites. These triterpenoid secondary metabolites are found in leaves in substantial quantities whereas negligible amounts may be detected sometimes in root tissues. In the resent study direct rhizogenesis was induced from C. asiatica leaf explants using different concentrations and combinations of auxins (IBA/IAA/NAA) leading to the production of distinct root morphotypes. A number of culture conditions such as pH, nature of carbon sources (glucose, fructose, mannitol and maltose) as well as concentrations of sucrose exhibited their strong influence in terms of induction of root morphotypes, accumulation of total secondary metabolites and expression of key pathway genes. Phytochemical profiling using HPLC revealed that all root morphotypes accumulated enhanced amounts of triterpenoids. The enhanced phytochemical accumulation was further validated by the coherent pattern of expression of key genes related to their biosynthetic pathway in root morphotypes. The results have revealed that the hormonal combinations in the culture media not only mediated differential morphogenic responses but also regulated secondary metabolites accumulation in non-transgenic rhizogenic roots. The results of the study are promising for the utilization of such in vitro root morphotypes. The root morphotypes may act as alternative bioresources for the production of industrially important and leaf associated asiaticosides and other important triterpenoids for the commercial purposes.
Journal Article
Comparative transcripts profiling of fruit mesocarp and endocarp relevant to secondary metabolism by suppression subtractive hybridization in Azadirachta indica (neem)
by
Sangwan, Rajender S
,
Sangwan, Neelam S
,
Gupta, Vikrant
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Animal Anatomy
,
Animal Biochemistry
2014
Azadirachta indica (neem) is a medicinally important plant that is valued for its bioactive secondary metabolites. Higher levels of the bioactive phytochemicals are accumulated in fruits than in other tissues. In the present study, a total of 387 and 512 ESTs, respectively, from endocarp and mesocarp of neem fruits were isolated and analyzed. Out of them 318 ESTs (82.17 %) clones from endocarp and 418 ESTs (81.64 %) from mesocarp encoded putative proteins that could be classified into three major gene ontology categories: biological process, molecular function and cellular component. From the analyses of contigs, 73 unigenes from the forward subtracted library and 35 unigenes from the reverse subtracted library were obtained. The ESTs from mesocarp encoded cytochrome P₄₅₀ enzymes, which indicated hydroxylation to be a major metabolic event and that biogeneration of hydroxylated neem fruit phytochemicals was differentially regulated with developmental stage-specificity of synthesis. Through this study, we present the first report of any gene expression data in neem tissues. Neem hydroxy–methyl glutaryl–coenzyme A reductase (NHMGR) gene was used as expressing control vis-a-vis subtracted tissues. NHMGR was present in fruit, endocarp and mesocarp tissues, but absent in subtractive libraries, revealing that it was successfully eliminated during subtraction. Eight genes of interest from subtracted libraries were profiled for their expression in fruit, mesocarp and endocarp. Expression profiles validated the quality of the libraries and functional diversity of the tissues. The subtractive cDNA library and EST database described in this study represent a valuable transcript sequence resource for future research aimed at improving the economically important medicinal plant.
Journal Article
Chapter 9 - Plant Metabolic Engineering
by
Sangwan, Rajender S.
,
Mishra, Bhawana
,
Sangwan, Neelam S.
in
alkaloids
,
phenolics
,
recombinant DNA technology
2018
Plants are the natural source of innumerable chemicals which are synthesized via integrated complex networking biosynthetic pathways. We are dependent on plants for our needs since ancient time, and their population still seems enough for fulfilling our demands, but when we see in near future we are forced to think about the availability of resources for our next-generations, then we start to search for another alternative options of resources about food/food supplement, medicines and other required items. For accomplishing this task we are opting plant metabolic engineering by which we can produce higher amount of products in least time and less space. Metabolic engineering is the term giving a concept of alteration in metabolomics of any organism by regulating biosynthetic mechanism through reconstitution of changes at genetic level. Aim of metabolic engineering is enhancement of desired product through upregulation of some gene or may be through down regulation of other genes. It can be performed in either native system or any other heterologous system. Plant metabolic engineering needs knowledge about molecular biology techniques such as isolation and cloning of gene(s), and then its transformation in other suitable systems. By using plant metabolic engineering approach, tremendous changes at metabolic level in different plants have been done. In addition to basic techniques, systems biology approach seems to be more helpful by cutting some unnecessary exercise at wet lab level. By using bioinformatics tools, we can easily refine our targets (genes/enzymes) for application in metabolic engineering process. After a decade of research in this field still we are not at satisfactory status regarding the products development. We have to go many more steps ahead for attaining satisfactory achievements. Slow but steady progress in this area will soon result into a miracle growth and produce solution for all globally challenged problems.
Book Chapter