30 results on '"Pal, Arijit"'
Search Results
2. Distinct epigenetic signatures of classical and hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae.
- Author
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Ghosh, Dipannita, Pal, Arijit, Mohapatra, Sarita, Raj, Stephen, and Vivekanandan, Perumal
- Published
- 2024
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3. A tough nut to crack? Proficiency in coconut processing of the Nicobar long-tailed macaque Macaca fascicularis umbrosus.
- Author
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Velankar, Avadhoot D, Kumara, Honnavalli N, Pal, Arijit, Mishra, Partha Sarathi, and Singh, Mewa
- Abstract
The ability to manipulate objects enables macaques to utilize resources well. Coconut (Cocos nucifera) is one such food that has high energy and nutrient value but requires complex motor skills for extraction. In this study, we examined the proficiency of a single group of Macaca fascicularis umbrosus from Campbell Bay, India, in feeding on different types of coconuts. The group comprised 16 individuals with 3 adult males, 6 adult females, 3 sub-adult males, and 4 infants. We observed individuals feeding on tender, mature, dry, and dry-dehusked coconuts in 90 feeding bouts between August 2013 and December 2015. Their feeding behaviour was divided into four types of behavioural acts: pluck, process, drink, and feed. We prepared an ethogram consisting of 32 behavioural acts associated with feeding on coconuts, and recorded the occurrence of these acts during focal animal sampling. We used NMDS to examine differences among age/sex classes in the occurrence of behavioural acts associated with feeding on coconuts. Although females and males showed no significant separation in these behaviours, adults and young individuals formed distinct groups. However, only 3 out of 32 acts were exclusive to age classes. Using Discrete Time Markov Chain analysis, we found that adults tended to transition back to processing behaviours after drinking and feeding behaviours more often than young individuals. An almost similar repertoire of behaviours among age and sex classes indicates that there is no single model behaviour. Further, this study indicates that among different age/sex classes, adults tend to maximise the nutritional gains during single feeding bouts than younger individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. Long-term treatment outcome and mutational analysis of patients on third-line antiretroviral therapy in programmatic conditions.
- Author
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Chakravarty, Jaya, Srivastva, Shweta, Kushwaha, Anurag Kumar, and Pal, Arijit
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PROTEASE inhibitors ,INTEGRASE inhibitors ,ANTIRETROVIRAL agents ,REVERSE transcriptase ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,HIV-positive persons ,MIDDLE-income countries ,SIMULATED patients - Abstract
Background In low- and middle-income countries where most patients receive standardized third-line ART through national programmes, real-world data are scarce. This study was done to assess the long-term survival, and virological and mutational outcomes of people living with HIV receiving third-line ART between July 2016 and December 2019 in an ART centre in India. Methods Eighty-five patients were started on third-line ART. Genotypic resistance testing to identify drug resistance mutations in the integrase, reverse transcriptase and protease genes was done at the start of third-line therapy, as well as in those who did not attain virological suppression after 12 months of therapy. Results Survival was 85% (72/85) at 12 months and 72% (61/85) at the end of follow-up in March 2022. Virological suppression was present in 82% (59/72) and 88% (59/67) at 12 months and at the end of follow-up, respectively. Five out of 13 patients who had virological failure at 12 months showed virological suppression at the end of the study. At the start of third-line therapy, 35% (14/40) and 45% (17/38) of patients had major integrase- and protease-associated mutations, respectively, even though they had never been on integrase inhibitor-based regimens. At 1 year follow-up, among those failing third-line therapy, 33% (4/12) of patients had major integrase mutations, but none had major protease mutations. Conclusions This study demonstrates good long-term outcome in patients on standardized third-line ART in programmatic conditions with very few mutations in those failing the therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Blowing the lid off! Bottle-directed, extractive foraging strategies in synurbic bonnet macaques Macaca radiata in southern India.
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Pal, Arijit, Mahato, Santanu, Leca, Jean-Baptiste, and Sinha, Anindya
- Abstract
Nonhuman individuals and groups, living in anthropogenic landscapes, often adopt adaptive foraging strategies, mediated by their day-to-day interactions with humans and their artefacts. Exploring such novel behavioral manifestations, especially in the Anthropocene, offers us insights into behavioral innovations and their transmission in such rapidly changing ecologies. In this study, employing field experiments, we investigated an example of human-induced, extractive foraging behavior – the extraction of liquid contents from plastic bottles – in a synurbic bonnet macaque Macaca radiata population. The main aims of the study were to examine the distribution, diversity, inter-individual variability and intra-individual flexibility of bottle-directed manipulative behaviors, and to explore the social and environmental factors driving this behavioral practice. We video-recorded the manipulation of partially filled plastic bottles and the extraction of liquid across four groups of bonnet macaques in southern India. Two socio-demographic factors – age class and group membership – and one environmental factor – food provisioning – were identified as major determinants of inter-individual variation in the performance of sophisticated manipulative techniques and in bottle-opening success. Our results also suggest that age-related physical maturation, experiential trial-and-error learning, and possibly social learning contributed to the acquisition of foraging competence in this task. These findings illuminate the mechanisms underlying inter-individual behavioral variability and intra-individual behavioral flexibility amongst free-ranging individuals of a cercopithecine primate species, traditionally known for its ecological adaptability and behavioral plasticity. Finally, this study documents how the presence of humans, their artefacts and their activities facilitate the development of certain behavioral traditions in free-ranging nonhuman populations, thus providing valuable insights into how human–alloprimate relations can be restructured within the increasingly resource-competitive environments of the Anthropocene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. A Novel Bioimpedance-Based Detection of Miltefosine Susceptibility Among Clinical Leishmania donovani Isolates of the Indian Subcontinent Exhibiting Resistance to Multiple Drugs.
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Ghosh, Souradeepa, Biswas, Souvik, Mukherjee, Sandip, Pal, Arijit, Saxena, Aaditya, Sundar, Shyam, Dujardin, Jean-Claude, Das, Soumen, Roy, Syamal, Mukhopadhyay, Rupkatha, and Mukherjee, Budhaditya
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LEISHMANIA donovani ,DRUG resistance ,SUBCONTINENTS ,AMPHOTERICIN B ,SPECTRUM analysis - Abstract
The extent of susceptibility towards miltefosine (Mil), amphotericin B (AmpB), and paromomycin (Paro) was measured among 19 clinical isolates of Leishmania donovani (LD). Thirteen of these clinical isolates were reported to exhibit low susceptibility towards sodium stibogluconate (SSG-R), while six of them were highly susceptible (SSG-S). The degree of clearance of amastigotes (EC50) for these predefined SSG-R- and SSG-S-infected macrophages was determined against Mil, AmpB, and Paro. Two out of the 13 SSG-R isolates (BHU575 and BHU814) showed low susceptibility towards all three drugs studied, while the rest of the 11 SSG-R isolates showed varying degrees of susceptibility either towards none or only towards individual drugs. Interestingly, all the SSG-S isolates showed high susceptibility towards Mil/AmpB/Paro. The total intracellular non-protein thiol content of the LD promastigotes, which have been previously reported to be positively co-related with EC50 towards SSG, was found to be independent from the degree of susceptibility towards Mil/AmpB/Paro. Impedance spectra analysis, which quantifies membrane resistance, revealed lower impedimetric values for all those isolates exhibiting low efficacy to Mil (Mil-R). Our analysis points out that while non-protein thiol content can be an attribute of SSG-R, lower impedimetric values can be linked with lower Mil susceptibility, although neither of these parameters seems to get influenced by the degree of susceptibility towards AmpB/Paro. Finally, a correlation analysis with established biological methods suggests that impedance spectral analysis can be used for the accurate determination of lower Mil susceptibility among LD isolates, which is further validated in the LD-infected in vivo hamster model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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7. Polyaniline Functionalized Impedimetric Paper Sensor for Urine pH Measurement.
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Biswas, Souvik, Pal, Arijit, Chaudhury, Koel, and Das, Soumen
- Abstract
A miniaturized paper-based disposable pH sensor has been developed for the measurement of urine pH. The proposed sensor requires $2~\mu \text{l}$ of analyte solution for rapid detection of the analyte pH with a response time of 3.07 sec and 36.04 sec for acidic and basic pH, respectively. The sensor is fabricated via in situ deposition of polyaniline over the paper substrate by chemical oxidative synthesis. The sensitivity of the sensor is 1.6 $\text{k}\Omega $ /pH for acidic pH and 6.2 $\text{K}\Omega $ /pH for basic pH, at a frequency of 1kHz. The sensor has been characterized using scanning electron microscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and UV-vis spectroscopy to validate the formation of emeraldine salt and emeraldine base state of polyaniline. The varying optical band gap values of the in-situ deposited paper sensor in the acidic and basic region also validates the presence of polaron in acidic pH and formation of emeraldine base in basic pH. DC conductivity measurement reveals that the conductivity of the polyaniline coated paper substrate decreases at a higher pH value. For an in-depth understanding, a novel electrical equivalent model is proposed, and the electrical parameters extracted from the Bode impedance and phase plot. The fabricated sensor exhibits an average accuracy of 95.53% when tested with urine sample of healthy subjects and patients suffering from urinary tract infection (UTI). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Toxicological and behavioral study of two potential antibacterial agents:4-chloromercuribenzoic acid and quercetin on Swiss-albino mice.
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Pal, Arijit and Tripathi, Anusri
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QUERCETIN ,DEATH rate ,ARTEMIA ,MICE ,ACIDS - Abstract
Global dissemination of carbapenem resistant-Gram negative bacteria (CR-GNB) is supposed to be clinically alarming because it extremely delimits the treatment options against serious infections. 4-Chloromercuribenzoic acid (pCMB) is an efficient metallo-enzyme inhibitor, and quercetin is known for antioxidant, antiviral, anticancer, antimicrobial, and anti-inflammatory activities. These two compounds could be considered as potential candidates for the treatment of CR-GNB mediated infections. Hence, in this study, antibacterial activity of pCMB and quercetin was evaluated against CR-GNB through minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) determination. Toxicity of pCMB and quercetin was evaluated by LC
50 calculation through brine shrimp test (BST) and by investigating hematological, serum biochemical, and histopathological parameters in Swiss-albino mice. Moreover, aggressive–depressive–cognitive behavioral effects of pCMB and quercetin on murine model were evaluated. All the carbapenem resistant isolates (CR-GNB) exhibited MIC values in the range of 4–256 μg/ml, 16–256 μg/ml, and 64–1024 μg/ml for pCMB, quercetin, and meropenem, respectively. BST determined LC50 of pCMB and quercetin at 91.57 ± 0.35 mg/L and 448.45 ± 0.46 mg/L, respectively. Oral administration of low dose of pCMB and quercetin did not induce any significant changes in morphological, behavioral, hematological, serum biochemical, and histopathological parameters among Swiss-albino mice. But, a high dose of pCMB and quercetin exhibited slight toxicity. However, no death was reported for any dosage of pCMB and quercetin. Therefore, pCMB and quercetin might be considered for further investigations on alternative therapeutics to combat against CR-GNB. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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9. Does rank rule? Rank-related grooming patterns in Nicobar long-tailed macaques Macaca fascicularis umbrosus.
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Mishra, Partha Sarathi, Pal, Arijit, Velankar, Avadhoot D., Kumara, Honnavalli N., Singh, Mewa, and Cooper, Matthew
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KRA ,SOCIAL network analysis ,SOCIAL exchange ,SOCIAL bonds - Abstract
Primates maintain social bonds with specific individuals in the group by directing grooming toward them. Social grooming is often targeted toward individuals with whom the most benefits can be exchanged, which are usually the high-ranking individuals. We used the Seyfarth model to investigate whether dominance rank alters the distribution of grooming in a group of Macaca fascicularis umbrosus at Great Nicobar Island. We investigated whether dominance rank predicted grooming rate in both males and females. We used social network analysis to examine whether high-ranking animals maintain a central position in the grooming network. We also investigated whether adult individuals exchange grooming for social tolerance, as indicated by physical proximity. We found that more social grooming was directed toward high-ranking females, but not high-ranking males. Social network analysis suggested that high-ranking animals are not central individuals in the distribution of grooming; rather, middle-ranking animals were major contributors to the distribution of grooming. There was no relation between the grooming rate and proximity in both males and females. Overall, our findings suggest that females prefer to direct grooming toward high-ranking partners, although the dominance hierarchy is less steep than expected for Macaca fascicularis. Thus rank-related grooming patterns may be a relatively conserved trait in this isolated island population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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10. Processing two environmental chemical signals with a synthetic genetic IMPLY gate, a 2‐input‐2‐output integrated logic circuit, and a process pipeline to optimize its systems chemistry in Escherichia coli.
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Mukhopadhyay, Sayak, Sarkar, Kathakali, Srivastava, Rajkamal, Pal, Arijit, and Bagh, Sangram
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Synthetic genetic devices can perform molecular computation in living bacteria, which may sense more than one environmental chemical signal, perform complex signal processing in a human‐designed way, and respond in a logical manner. IMPLY is one of the four fundamental logic functions and unlike others, it is an "IF‐THEN" constraint‐based logic. By adopting physical hierarchy of electronics in the realm of in‐cell systems chemistry, a full‐spectrum transcriptional cascaded synthetic genetic IMPLY gate, which senses and integrates two environmental chemical signals, is designed, fabricated, and optimized in a single Escherichia coli cell. This IMPLY gate is successfully integrated into a 2‐input‐2‐output integrated logic circuit and showed higher signal‐decoding efficiency. Further, we showed simple application of those devices by integrating them with an inherent cellular process, where we controlled the cell morphology and color in a logical manner. To fabricate and optimize the genetic devices, a new process pipeline named NETWORK Brick is developed. This pipeline allows fast parallel kinetic optimization and reduction in the unwanted kinetic influence of one DNA module over another. A mathematical model is developed and it shows that response of the genetic devices are digital‐like and are mathematically predictable. This single‐cell IMPLY gate provides the fundamental constraint‐based logic and completes the in‐cell molecular logic processing toolbox. The work has significance in the smart biosensor, artificial in‐cell molecular computation, synthetic biology, and microbiorobotics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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11. Quercetin inhibits carbapenemase and efflux pump activities among carbapenem‐resistant Gram‐negative bacteria.
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Pal, Arijit and Tripathi, Anusri
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CARBAPENEM-resistant bacteria ,QUERCETIN ,CARBAPENEMS ,GRAM-negative bacteria ,LIGAND binding (Biochemistry) ,ACINETOBACTER baumannii ,MOLECULAR docking - Abstract
Rapid dissemination of carbapenem‐resistant Gram‐negative bacteria (CRGNB) is a global threat. Quercetin is known for its antimicrobial activity. In this study, carbapenemase and efflux pump inhibitory activities of quercetin were demonstrated against carbapenem‐resistant Escherichia coli, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Acinetobacter baumannii. Further, molecular docking was performed to elucidate molecular mechanisms of such inhibition. CRGNB, expressing one of the carbapenemases, demonstrated significant inhibition of carbapenemase activity when pre‐incubated with 64 µg/ml quercetin. Moreover, acrB overexpressing enterobacterial isolates exhibited significant inhibition of efflux activity upon quercetin treatment. Molecular docking studies revealed stability of quercetin‐carbapenemase complexes. (i) Virtual superimposition of quercetin onto meropenem, (ii) proximity of quercetin to attacking nucleophile and (iii) involvement of same amino acids that stabilize both meropenem and quercetin – indicated competition between quercetin and meropenem for ligand binding. Although quercetin and PAβN, a standard efflux pump inhibitor, docked at both central cavity and periplasmic drug binding sites of AcrB, they did not virtually superimpose on each other. However, sufficient release of Gibb's free energy and involvement of same set of amino acids in PAβN and quercetin stability predicted quercetin's efflux pump inhibitory potential. Hence, quercetin could be potential adjuvant therapeutics for CRGNB‐mediated infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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12. Chaos in Coexistence: Perceptions of Farmers towards Long-tailed Macaques (Macaca fascicularis umbrosus) Related to Crop Loss on Great Nicobar Island.
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Mishra, Partha Sarathi, Kumara, Honnavalli N., Thiyagesan, K., Singh, Mewa, Velankar, Avadhoot D., and Pal, Arijit
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KRA ,CROP losses ,HUMAN settlements ,FARMERS ,MACAQUES - Abstract
Increased occupation of primate habitats by humans has forced primates into close contact with their settlements and crops. We conducted a survey with the island settlers on Great Nicobar Island to investigate the conflict between farmers and Nicobar long-tailed macaques. The conflict may have increased following the 2004 tsunami due to the co-dependency of people and macaques on coconuts and cultivated crops. Farmers considered the macaques to be the major cause of crop loss. Macaques foraged on crops more during the rainy season, and more at dawn and dusk. Indirect market-related reasons added to the economic hardship on the part of the settlers. Farmers with small landholdings perceived the loss to be greater than did the owners of larger holdings. Farmers with small landholdings and large families were more intolerant of the macaques. The farmers did not, however, suggest killing the macaques as a way to mitigate crop loss and overcome the conflict. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
13. Do males bond? A study of male-male relationships in Nicobar long-tailed macaques Macaca fascicularis umbrosus.
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Mishra, Partha Sarathi, Pal, Arijit, Velankar, Avadhoot D, Kumara, Honnavalli N, and Singh, Mewa
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In primates, males compete for a mate, which is a non-sharable resource. This makes the conditions less conducive for males to have stable relationships. One such special kind of relationship is a bond where the interactions are reciprocated, equitable and differentiated. Bonds in macaque societies are based on the degree of within-group contest competition for mates which is dependent on the synchronization of female fertile phase and reliability of fertility signals. Species of the Fascicularis group, including Nicobar subspecies, show intermediate reliability in the signals with mild peaks, and studies have shown reciprocity but no differentiation. We conducted a study on a group of wild Nicobar long-tailed macaques Macaca fascicularis umbrosus to understand the existing patterns of male-male relationships. We examined whether there is reciprocity in affiliation among the individuals and whether the rate of affiliation is balanced. We also measured the dominance linearity and steepness in the group to understand the monopolizability of females. We used social network analysis to understand whether the relations are differentiated based on hierarchical position and whether the high-ranking individuals are the most central individuals in the distribution of grooming in the group. We found that there is reciprocity among the males although that is not equitable. There was no rank-related differentiation of affiliation among the males of the group. Instead, the identities of individuals influenced affiliation patterns. Our results correspond to the existent strong relationships but lack of social bond otherwise found in the Fascicularis group of macaques. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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14. Stay awhile in my burrow! Interspecific associations of vertebrates to Indian crested porcupine burrows.
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Mukherjee, Aditi, Pal, Arijit, Velankar, Avadhoot Dilip, Kumara, Honnavalli Nagaraj, and Bhupathy, Subramanian
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REPTILES ,CICONIIFORMES ,PORCUPINES ,VERTEBRATES - Abstract
The Indian crested porcupine, Hystrix indica, is a significant ecosystem engineer that builds extensive burrows in the semi-arid regions of north-west India. Many different animals use these burrows as temporary retreats or permanent shelters. Camera-traps were used to record 22 species using porcupine burrows, including 10 mammals, 8 birds, 3 reptiles, and 1 amphibian. In addition to birds foraging inside and around the entrance, the most common and persistent visitors were mongooses, rats, squirrels, hares, jungle cats, and small Indian civets. A bat species, Hipposideros sp. was found to be permanent occupants of porcupine burrows, while Indian rock pythons and jackals exhibited seasonal use. During winter, pythons basked outside the burrows and constricted their activities to the daytime. Conversely, porcupines are nocturnal and use deeper parts of their burrows than the pythons. Temporal usage patterns and spatial segregation allows for mutualistic behaviour between pythons and porcupines. Jackals were also found to use porcupine burrows during their summer breeding season, employing aggression to evict both porcupines and pythons. The study demonstrates a functional role for porcupines, which are capable of constructing "landmark" structures in the semi-arid regions of north-west India that support a range of micro-communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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15. Analysis of bacterial DNA by surface enhanced Raman spectroscopy.
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Das, Sathi, Kundu, Vrishty, Pal, Arijit, Saxena, Kanchan, Perumal, Vivekanandan, and Singh Mehta, Dalip
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- 2023
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16. Renal amyloidosis causing nephrotic syndrome: An unusual presentation of light chain myeloma.
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Rai, Madhukar, Chakravarty, Jaya, Chaubey, Manaswi, Bhuyan, Nayana, Pal, Arijit, and Jaiswal, Rishab
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NEPHROTIC syndrome ,AMYLOIDOSIS ,PLASMA cell diseases ,MEDICAL sciences ,CARDIAC amyloidosis ,EOSINOPHILIC granuloma - Published
- 2020
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17. Prevalence of gastrointestinal parasites in bonnet macaque and possible consequences of their unmanaged relocations.
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Kumar, Shanthala, Sundararaj, Palanisamy, Kumara, Honnavalli N., Pal, Arijit, Santhosh, K., and Vinoth, S.
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GASTROINTESTINAL system ,GUT microbiome ,ENDOPARASITES ,CYSTS (Pathology) ,HELMINTHS - Abstract
Relocation is one of the mitigating measures taken by either local people or related officers to reduce the human-bonnet macaque Macaca radiata conflict in India. The review on relocations of primates in India indicates that monkeys are unscreened for diseases or gastrointestinal parasites (henceforth endoparasites) before relocation. We collected 161 spatial samples from 20 groups of bonnet macaque across their distribution range in south India and 205 temporal samples from a group in Chiksuli in the central Western Ghats. The isolation of endoparasite eggs/cysts from the fecal samples was by the centrifugation flotation and sedimentation method. All the sampled groups, except one, had an infection of at least one endoparasite taxa, and a total of 21 endoparasite taxon were recorded. The number of helminth taxon (16) were more than protozoan (5), further, among helminths, nematodes (11) were more common than cestodes (5). Although the prevalence of Ascaris sp. (26.0%), Strongyloides sp. (13.0%), and Coccidia sp. (13.0%) were greater, the load of Entamoeba coli, Giardia sp., Dipylidium caninum and Diphyllobothrium sp. were very high. Distant groups had more similarity in composition of endoparasites taxon than closely located groups. Among all the variables, the degree of provisioning was the topmost determinant factor for the endoparasite taxon richness and their load. Temporal sampling indicates that the endoparasite infection remains continuous throughout the year. Monthly rainfall and average maximum temperature in the month did not influence the endoparasite richness. A total of 17 taxon of helminths and four-taxon of protozoan were recorded. The prevalence of Oesophagostomum sp., and Strongyloides sp., and mean egg load of Spirurids and Trichuris sp. was higher than other endoparasite taxon. The overall endoparasite load and helminth load was higher in immatures than adults, where, adult females had the highest protozoan load in the monsoon. The findings indicate that relocation of commensal bonnet macaque to wild habitat can possible to lead transmission of novel endoparasites that can affect their population. Thus, we suggest avoidance of such relocations, however, if inevitable the captured animals need to be screened and treated for diseases and endoparasites before relocations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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18. Between-group encounters in Nicobar long-tailed macaque (Macaca fascicularis umbrosus).
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Pal, Arijit, Kumara, Honnavalli N., Mishra, Partha Sarathi, Velankar, Avadhoot D., and Singh, Mewa
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KRA ,ANIMAL aggression ,HOME range (Animal geography) ,PLANT phenology ,ANIMAL ecology - Abstract
Group living primates often participate in between-group encounters to defend monopolizable resources. Participation in an encounter is influenced by the density and abundance of resources and the relative fighting ability of groups. We studied between-group encounters in three groups of Nicobar long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis umbrosus) in the Great Nicobar Island, with one group, TR, being the focal study group to measure the influence of these factors on between-group encounters. Encounters varied from mutual tolerance to aggressive fights, with females participating less aggressively than males. Sleeping site and vegetation cover were the primary influences on the nature of interaction in the areas where home range overlapped. The initiation and intensity of an encounter were influenced by relative group size. The focal group (TR) was the smallest of the three groups in the area and it actively avoided confrontation with the other two groups (MG and PI), resulting in a lower observed encounter rate than expected. Both the frequency and aggressiveness of encounters was influenced by the number of females cycling and the number of males present in the study group. Inasmuch as encounters were influenced by the number of females and the distribution of food, rather than geography, we conclude that encounters serve to defend food resources and mates rather than that they are examples of territoriality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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19. Extractive foraging and tool-aided behaviors in the wild Nicobar long-tailed macaque (<italic>Macaca fascicularis umbrosus</italic>).
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Pal, Arijit, Kumara, Honnavalli N., Mishra, Partha Sarathi, Velankar, Avadhoot D., and Singh, Mewa
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Macaques possess a repertoire of extractive foraging techniques that range from complex manipulation to tool-aided behaviors, to access food items that increase their foraging efficiency substantially. However, the complexity and composition of such techniques vary considerably between species and even between populations. In the present study, we report seven such complex manipulative behaviors that include six extractive foraging behaviors, and teeth flossing, in a population of Nicobar long-tailed macaques. The apparent purpose of these behaviors was an extraction of encased food, processing food, foraging hidden invertebrates, and dental flossing. Among these behaviors, three behaviors viz. wrapping, wiping, and teeth-flossing were tool-aided behaviors, where macaques used both natural and synthetic materials as tools. Occasionally macaques also modified those tools prior to their use. The substrate use patterns of leaf rubbing and teeth flossing were similar to that observed in other macaques. The spontaneous tool modification to perform wrapping was a first time observation. These observations suggest that Nicobar long-tailed macaques have a high level of sensorimotor intelligence which helps to evolve such innovative foraging solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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20. Workshop on "Basic Wildlife Monitoring Techniques" promoting wildlife conservation education among students in Chotanagpur plateau, India.
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Mahato, Santanu, Samanta, Supriya, Goswami, Diptesh, Dash, Anirban, Bhattacharya, Shreya, Patra, Anirban, and Pal, Arijit
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WILDLIFE monitoring ,WILDLIFE conservation ,SCIENTIFIC knowledge ,EDUCATION conferences ,ZOOLOGICAL surveys ,HABITATS ,ANIMAL populations - Published
- 2022
21. Population Recovery of Nicobar Long-Tailed Macaque Macaca fascicularis umbrosus following a Tsunami in the Nicobar Islands, India.
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Velankar, Avadhoot D., Kumara, Honnavalli N., Pal, Arijit, Mishra, Partha Sarathi, and Singh, Mewa
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KRA ,PRIMATE populations ,TSUNAMIS -- Environmental aspects ,ANIMAL species ,ZOOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
Natural disasters pose a threat to isolated populations of species with restricted distributions, especially those inhabiting islands. The Nicobar long tailed macaque.Macaca fascicularis umbrosus, is one such species found in the three southernmost islands (viz. Great Nicobar, Little Nicobar and Katchal) of the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago, India. These islands were hit by a massive tsunami (Indian Ocean tsunami, 26 December 2004) after a 9.2 magnitude earthquake. Earlier studies [Umapathy et al. 2003; Sivakumar, 2004] reported a sharp decline in the population of M. f. umbrosus after thetsunami. We studied the distribution and population status of M. f. umbrosus on thethree Nicobar Islands and compared our results with those of the previous studies. We carried out trail surveys on existing paths and trails on three islands to get encounter rate as measure of abundance. We also checked the degree of inundation due to tsunami by using Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI) on landsat imageries of the study area before and after tsunami. Theencounter rate of groups per kilometre of M. f. umbrosus in Great Nicobar, Little Nicobar and Katchal was 0.30, 0.35 and 0.48 respectively with the mean group size of 39 in Great Nicobar and 43 in Katchal following the tsunami. This was higher than that reported in the two earlier studies conducted before and after the tsunami. Post tsunami, there was a significant change in the proportion of adult males, adult females and immatures, but mean group size did not differ as compared to pre tsunami. The results show that population has recovered from a drastic decline caused by tsunami, but it cannot be ascertained whether it has reached stability because of the altered group structure. This study demonstrates the effect of natural disasters on island occurring species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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22. Foliage area computation using Monarch Butterfly Algorithm.
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Chakrabarty, Sayan, Pal, Arijit Kumar, Dey, Nilanjan, Das, Debarati, and Acharjee, Suvojit
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- 2014
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23. Reversible Color Image Watermarking Using Trigonometric Functions.
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Chakraborty, Sayan, Maji, Prasenjit, Pal, Arijit Kumar, Biswas, Debalina, and Dey, Nilanjan
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- 2014
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24. A hybrid reversible watermarking technique for color biomedical images.
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Pal, Arijit Kumar, Dey, Nilanjan, Samanta, Sourav, Das, Achintya, and Chaudhuri, Sheli Sinha
- Abstract
In the field of medical diagnosis, exchange of information amongst various hospitals and diagnostic centres for mutual availability of diagnostic and therapeutic case studies is quite common. During digital image transportation, some information needs to be added or hidden in order to identify the owner of the data in multimedia content. EPR (electronic patient record) or hospital logo can be hidden within a bio medical image for high security instead of transferring the EPR/logo through the internet. In this present work a reversible watermarking method (Odd-Even Method) is used for watermark insertion and extraction in a bio medical image with large data hiding capacity, security as well as high watermarked quality. It can be seen that in this approach the correlation value of the original watermark and the extracted watermark is 1 and the experimental results demonstrate that, no matter how much secret data is embedded, Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) is high enough which clams the robustness of the method. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Impact of forest fragment size on between-group encounters in lion-tailed macaques.
- Author
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Kumara, Honnavalli, Singh, Mewa, Sharma, Anantha, Santhosh, Kumar, and Pal, Arijit
- Abstract
Between-group encounters are an obvious outcome of intergroup competition. Between-group encounters in primates range from avoidance to fatally aggressive. The prevailing hypotheses explain such encounters as mate defense strategy by males and resource defense strategy by females. However, the rate and nature of between-group encounters may also be influenced by habitat and demographic characteristics. We studied the effect of forest fragment size on group encounters in lion-tailed macaques in the Western Ghats of southern India. The encounter rate decreased as the fragment size increased. Group density and home range overlap correlated positively with the encounter rate. The aggressive encounters were more in the relatively medium-sized fragment where the observed frequency of between-group encounters was higher than the expected frequency than in the small fragment and the large forest complex. Together, these results indicate a complex pattern of effects of fragment size on between-group encounters in primates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Gerris spinolae Lethierry and Severin (Hemiptera: Gerridae) and Brachydeutera longipes Hendel (Diptera: Ephydridae): Two Effective Insect Bioindicators to Monitor Pollution in Some Tropical Freshwater Ponds under Anthropogenic Stress.
- Author
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Pal, Arijit, Sinha, Devashish Chandra, and Rastogi, Neelkamal
- Subjects
HEMIPTERA ,GERRIDAE ,BRACHYDEUTERA ,DIPTERA ,EPHYDRIDAE ,BIOINDICATORS ,POLLUTION ,PHYSIOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
The abundance patterns of two insects, Gerris spinolae and Brachydeutera longipes, were found to be affected by abiotic aquatic factors including free carbon dioxide, dissolved oxygen, BOD, and phosphate concentrations prevailing in four tropical freshwater ponds, three of which being anthropogenically stressed. Regression analysis between each individual-independent water quality variable and insect abundance demonstrated a significant positive correlation in each case between B. longipes abundance and BOD, phosphate, free CO
2 , and algae dry weight, while a significant negative correlation of each of these variables was found with Gerris spinolae abundance. Moreover, a significant negative correlation of B. longipes abundance was calculated with dissolved oxygen concentration, while G. spinolae abundance exhibited a positive correlation with the same. Thus, G. spinolae appears to be a pollution sensitive, effective bioindicator for healthy unpolluted ponds, while B. longipes has potential as a pollution-resistant insect species indicative of pollution occurrence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Comparison of avifaunal diversity in and around Neora Valley National Park, West Bengal, India.
- Author
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Roy, Utpal Singha, Pal, Arijit, Banerjee, Purbasha, and Mukhopadhyay, Subhra Kumar
- Subjects
BIRD surveys ,ANIMAL diversity ,NATIONAL parks & reserves ,HABITATS - Abstract
Anthropogenic intervention has led to conversion of much of the global diversity by means of habitat alterations. The present study was carried out to investigate the importance of habitat quality and habitat heterogeneity for the diversity, distribution and abundance of avifauna in and around Neora Valley National Park (NVNP) during April-May 2010. A total of 73 bird species belonging to 25 families were recorded during the present study applying a modified point count method. Forest edges were found to be most diverse with a total count of 54 bird species having an abundance of 172.53 number of birds ha-1. Study areas with human settlements was represented by a total species count of 24 with an abundance of 130.39 number of birds ha-1 while a total species count of 22 with an abundance of 69.32 number of birds ha-1 was recorded from thick vegetation assemblage with close canopy cover. This site specific occurrence pattern for avifauna was reflected in the study of diversity indices. The highest Shannon-Wiener general diversity score of 3.77 was recorded for bird species from forest edges. Study areas with dense canopy closure were found to support more habitat specialist bird species while areas having human settlements harboured more opportunistic bird species. An overall negative influence of human settlements on bird diversity, distribution and abundance was evidenced from the present study and needs further investigation. Moreover, intensive studies will certainly enrich our knowledge of avian diversity and distribution pattern from the present study location. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Record of Some Unusual Avian Species from the Wetlands of Urbanizing Haryana, India.
- Author
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Banerjee, Purbasha and Pal, Arijit
- Subjects
FARMS ,NATIONAL parks & reserves ,MIGRATORY birds ,WETLANDS ,URBANIZATION - Published
- 2017
29. Structure-based functional fitness analyses of carbapenemase variants identified among pathogenic carbapenem-resistant Gram-negative bacteria.
- Author
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Pal, Arijit, Bhattacharyya, Indrani, and Tripathi, Anusri
- Subjects
CARBAPENEMS ,CARBAPENEM-resistant bacteria ,GRAM-negative bacteria ,FUNCTIONAL analysis ,STRUCTURAL dynamics ,BACTERIAL diseases ,BETA lactam antibiotics - Abstract
Carbapenemase-mediated carbapenem resistance is a major public health concerns worldwide. In the present study, prevalence of circulating carbapenemases was estimated among carbapenem-resistant clinical isolates using PCR and sequencing. Diameters of zone of inhibition (ZDs) were compared for imipenem, meropenem and ertapenem among single carbapenemase producing isolates. Structure-based functional fitness of those carbapenemases was predicted through several in silico analyses. Approximately, 63.76% isolates demonstrated carbapenem resistance, of which 39.13% harboured carbapenemases like bla
NDM-1 (33.23%), blaNDM-1 -like (0.31%), blaVIM-2 (4.35%), blaKPC-2 (4.04%), blaOXA-181 (6.85%), blaOXA-23 (16.50%), blaOXA-69 (3.88%), blaOXA-66 (2.91%) and blaOXA-104 (1.94%). Omega values indicated selection pressure over blaOXA-69 , blaOXA-66 and blaOXA-104 . Protein structural dynamics predicted NDM-1 and KPC-2 to have the highest and least flexibility, indicating differences in β-lactam binding and catalytic efficiency. Increased requirement of free folding energy, improved solvent accessibility and decreased melting temperatures among NDM-1-like, OXA-181, OXA-66, OXA-69 and OXA-104 predicted functional improvement over their ancestral variants. NDM-1-like carbapenemases demonstrated improvement in binding stability, affinity and catalysis of meropenem than that of NDM-1. Catalytic activity of imipenem was predicted to improve among OXA-181, which could be correlated with more than 1.5 folds smaller ZDs around imipenem disc, than that of meropenem/ertapenem, among OXA-181 producing isolates. However, OXA-66 indicated greater binding stability and affinity for imipenem and meropenem. This study indicated structural/functional convergence as well as divergence among several carbapenemase variants and provided useful insights into carbapenemase-mediated carbapenem resistance that might help in identifying appropriate treatment regimen for bacterial infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A systems biology pipeline identifies new immune and disease related molecular signatures and networks in human cells during microgravity exposure.
- Author
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Mukhopadhyay, Sayak, Saha, Rohini, Palanisamy, Anbarasi, Ghosh, Madhurima, Biswas, Anupriya, Roy, Saheli, Pal, Arijit, Sarkar, Kathakali, and Bagh, Sangram
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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