9 results on '"Yadav, Amita"'
Search Results
2. Contribution of point sources and non-point sources to nutrient and carbon loads and their influence on the trophic status of the Ganga River at Varanasi, India.
- Author
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Yadav, Amita and Pandey, Jitendra
- Subjects
POINT sources (Pollution) ,EUTROPHICATION ,PHOSPHORUS in water ,CARBON content of water - Abstract
To determine the possible contributions of point and non-point sources to carbon and nutrient loading in the Ganga River, we analyzed N, P, and organic carbon (OC) in the atmospheric deposits, surface runoff, and in the river along a 37-km stretch from 2013 to 2015. We also assessed the trophic status of the river as influenced by such sources of nutrient input. Although the river N, P, and productivity showed a declining trend with increasing discharge, runoff DOC and dissolved reactive phosphorus (DRP) increased by 88.05 and 122.7% between the Adpr and Rjht sites, indicating contributions from atmospheric deposition (AD) coupled with land use where agriculture appeared to be the major contributor. Point source input led to increased river concentrations of NO , NH , DRP, and DOC by 10.5, 115.9, 115.2, and 67.3%, respectively. Increases in N, P, and productivity along the gradient were significantly negatively correlated with river discharge ( p < 0.001), while river DOC and dissolved silica showed positive relationships. The results revealed large differences in point and non-point sources of carbon and nutrient input into the Ganga River, although these variations were strongly influenced by the seasonality in surface runoff and river discharge. Despite these variations, N and P concentrations were sufficient to enhance phytoplankton growth along the study stretch. Allochthonous input together with enhanced autotrophy would accelerate heterotrophic growth, degrading the river more rapidly in the near future. This study suggests the need for large-scale inter-regional time series data on the point and non-point source partitioning and associated food web dynamics of this major river system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Water Quality Interaction with Alkaline Phosphatase in the Ganga River: Implications for River Health.
- Author
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Yadav, Amita and Pandey, Jitendra
- Subjects
CARBON ,NITROGEN ,PHOSPHORUS ,ATMOSPHERIC deposition ,CHLOROPHYLL - Abstract
Carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus inputs through atmospheric deposition, surface runoff and point sources were measured in the Ganga River along a gradient of increasing human pressure. Productivity variables (chlorophyll a, gross primary productivity, biogenic silica and autotrophic index) and heterotrophy (respiration, substrate induced respiration, biological oxygen demand and fluorescein diacetate hydrolysis) showed positive relationships with these inputs. Alkaline phosphatase (AP), however, showed an opposite trend. Because AP is negatively influenced by available P, and eutrophy generates a feedback on P fertilization, the study implies that the alkaline phosphatase can be used as a high quality criterion for assessing river health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Dehydration-responsive miRNAs in foxtail millet: genome-wide identification, characterization and expression profiling.
- Author
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Yadav, Amita, Khan, Yusuf, and Prasad, Manoj
- Subjects
CULTIVARS ,DEHYDRATION ,DROUGHT-tolerant plants ,MICRORNA ,NON-coding RNA - Abstract
Main Conclusion: A set of novel and known dehydration-responsive miRNAs have been identified in foxtail millet. These findings provide new insights into understanding the functional role of miRNAs and their respective targets in regulating plant response to dehydration stress. MicroRNAs perform significant regulatory roles in growth, development and stress response of plants. Though the miRNA-mediated gene regulatory networks under dehydration stress remain largely unexplored in plant including foxtail millet ( Setaria italica), which is a natural abiotic stress tolerant crop. To find out the dehydration-responsive miRNAs at the global level, four small RNA libraries were constructed from control and dehydration stress treated seedlings of two foxtail millet cultivars showing contrasting tolerance behavior towards dehydration stress. Using Illumina sequencing technology, 55 known and 136 novel miRNAs were identified, representing 22 and 48 miRNA families, respectively. Eighteen known and 33 novel miRNAs were differentially expressed during dehydration stress. After the stress treatment, 32 dehydration-responsive miRNAs were up-regulated in tolerant cultivar and 22 miRNAs were down-regulated in sensitive cultivar, suggesting that miRNA-mediated molecular regulation might play important roles in providing contrasting characteristics to these cultivars. Predicted targets of identified miRNAs were found to encode various transcription factors and functional enzymes, indicating their involvement in broad spectrum regulatory functions and biological processes. Further, differential expression patterns of seven known miRNAs were validated by northern blot and expression of ten novel dehydration-responsive miRNAs were confirmed by SL-qRT PCR. Differential expression behavior of five miRNA-target genes was verified under dehydration stress treatment and two of them also validated by RLM RACE. Overall, the present study highlights the importance of dehydration stress-associated post-transcriptional regulation governed by miRNAs and their targets in a naturally stress-tolerant model crop. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Comprehensive genome-wide identification and expression profiling of foxtail millet [ Setaria italica (L.)] miRNAs in response to abiotic stress and development of miRNA database.
- Author
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Khan, Yusuf, Yadav, Amita, Bonthala, Venkata, Muthamilarasan, Mehanathan, Yadav, Chandra, and Prasad, Manoj
- Abstract
MicroRNA (miRNA)-guided post-transcriptional regulation is an important mechanism of gene regulation during multiple biological processes including response to abiotic stresses. Foxtail millet is a model crop, which is genetically closely related to several bioenergy grasses and also known for its potential abiotic stress tolerance. Hence deciphering the role of miRNAs in regulating stress-responsive mechanism would enable imparting durable stress tolerance in both millets and bioenergy grasses. Considering this, a comprehensive genome-wide in silico analysis was performed in foxtail millet which identified 355 mature miRNAs along with their secondary structure as well as corresponding targets. Predicted miRNA targets were found to encode various DNA binding proteins, transcription factors or important functional enzymes, which could be the crucial regulators in plant abiotic stress responses. All the 355 miRNAs were physically mapped onto the foxtail millet genome and in silico tissue-specific expression for these miRNAs were studied. Comparative mapping of the 355 miRNAs between foxtail millet and other related grass species would assist miRNA studies in these genetically closely-related plants. Expression profiling was performed for eight candidate miRNAs under diverse abiotic stresses in foxtail millet, which unravelled the putative involvement of these miRNAs in stress tolerance. With an aim of providing the generated miRNA marker information to the global scientific community, a foxtail millet MiRNA Database (FmMiRNADb: ) has also been constructed. Overall, the present study provides novel insights onto the role of miRNAs in abiotic stress tolerance and would promisingly expedite research on post-transcriptional regulation of stress-related genes in millets and bioenergy grasses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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6. High Uptake of HIV Testing in a Cohort of Male Injection Drug Users in Delhi, India: Prevalence and Correlates of HIV Infection.
- Author
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Sarna, Avina, Tun, Waimar, Sharma, Vartika, Sebastian, Mary, Madan, Ira, Yadav, Amita, Sheehy, Meredith, Lewis, Dean, and Thior, Ibou
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HIV infection risk factors ,HIV infection epidemiology ,CHI-squared test ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK-taking behavior ,HUMAN sexuality ,STATISTICS ,T-test (Statistics) ,U-statistics ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,DATA analysis ,INTRAVENOUS drug abusers ,RELATIVE medical risk ,DATA analysis software ,AIDS serodiagnosis - Abstract
We report baseline findings from a longitudinal cohort study to examine HIV incidence, high-risk injection and sexual behaviors of 3,792 male injection drug users (IDUs) in Delhi. The majority (95.4 %) accepted HIV testing; HIV prevalence was 21.9 %. In multivariate analysis, belonging to states adjacent to Delhi (AOR: 1.23; 95 % CI: 1.07-1.52), earning INR 500-1,500 (AOR: 2.38; 95 % CI: 1.43-3.96); duration of drug use 2-5 years (AOR: 2.02; 95 % CI: 1.09-3.73), 6-10 years (AOR: 2.81; 95 % CI: 1.55-5.11), ≥11 years (AOR: 3.35; 95 % CI: 1.84-6.11); prior HIV testing (AOR: 1.60; 95 % CI: 1.35-1.91), self-reported risky-injection behavior (AOR: 1.60; 95 % CI: 1.33-1.92), and utilization of harm-reduction services (AOR: 1.32; 95 % CI: 1.11-1.58) were positively associated with HIV infection. Alcohol use ≤2 times/week (AOR: 0.67; 95 % CI: 0.55-0.82) or ≥3 times/week (AOR: 0.74; 95 % CI: 0.54-1.01), unit increase in age (AOR: 0.99; 95 % CI: 0.98-1.00), ≥7 years of schooling (AOR: 0.82; 95 % CI: 0.66-1.02) and unsafe sex with any female partner (AOR: 0.69; 95 % CI: 0.55-0.86) were negatively associated with HIV infection. HIV prevalence remains high among male IDUs in Delhi. HIV prevention programs should include comprehensive package of services for IDUs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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7. Correlation of Adiponectin and Leptin with Insulin Resistance: A Pilot Study in Healthy North Indian Population.
- Author
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Yadav, Amita, jyoti, Pramila, Jain, S., and Bhattacharjee, Jayashree
- Abstract
The increasing incidence of obesity, leading to metabolic complications is now recognized as a major public-health problem. Insulin resistance is a central abnormality of the metabolic syndrome, or syndrome X, originally hypothesized by Reaven Insulin resistance is more strongly linked to intra abdominal fat than to fat in other depots. Adipose tissue secretes numerous factors (adipokines) known to markedly influence lipid and glucose/insulin metabolism, oxidative stress, and cardiovascular integrity. Some of these adipokines have been shown to directly or indirectly affect insulin sensitivity through modulation of insulin signaling and the molecules involved in glucose and lipid metabolism. A pilot study was conducted with 80 healthy subjects who were non diabetic, non hypertensive and having no family history of hypertension, the aim was to evaluate the correlation of adiponectin and leptin levels with obesity and insulin resistance markers in healthy north Indian adult population. Serum leptin, adiponectin and insulin was estimated by sandwich ELISA method. In our study, Leptin correlated significantly with BMI ( P value of 0.0000), WC ( P value = 0.007), and HC ( P value = 0.000). leptin showed significant positive correlation with fasting insulin ( P value 0.002), post prandial insulin ( P value = 0.000) and HOMA-IR ( P value = 0.002). Adiponectin showed significant positive correlation with triglycerides ( P value = 0.038), strong negative correlation with HDL-cholesterol ( P value = 0.017). Serum concentrations of leptin are associated with central body fat distribution. Insulin resistance and adiponectin is associated with dyslipidemia and these all disorders may ultimately lead to metabolic syndrome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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8. Closed mitral commissurotomy for mitral stenosis with dextrocardia-case series.
- Author
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Abraham, Viju, Mathur, Rajendra, Devgarha, Sanjeev, and Yadav, Amita
- Abstract
Rheumatic valvular affection is not an uncommon disease especially in the developing nations, but its association with dextrocardia is relatively rare. In the present day scenario, where mitral valve replacements far exceed the number of closed commissurotomies, a sound understanding of the anatomy, approach, and technique is vital vis-à-vis surgical management of these patients who do not have the finances for replacement of a severely stenotic valve or patients who may present in extremis. We present a case series of three such patients who underwent successful closed commissurotomies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Posterior chest wall swelling concealing a large aneurysm of the descending thoracic aorta.
- Author
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Abraham, Viju, Devgarha, Sanjeev, Mathur, Rajendra, Sain, Ramswaroop, Yadav, Amita, and Sharma, Sunil
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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