4 research outputs found
The Comparative Study of Antimicrobial Activity of Four Different Spices Formulations Using their Essential Oil and Ethanolic Extract
The study was conducted to determine the antibacterial and antifungal activity of four different spices formulations each having twelve spices cinnamon (Cinnamomum verum), black pepper (Piper nigrum), ginger (Zingiber officinale), clove (Syzygium aromaticum), cumin (Cuminum cyminum), mustard, coriander (Coriandrum sativum), nutmeg (Myristica fragrans), mace (Myristica fragrans), turmeric (Curcuma longa), bay leaf (Laurus nobilis) and cardamom (Amomum krervanh). The essential oil and ethanolic extract of all the spices mixtures were used against the food borne pathogens including three bacteria Salmonella typhi, Escherichia coli, Bacillus subtillus and three fungi namely Aspergillus niger, Penicillum digitatum, Fusarium oxysporium using agar disc diffusion method. The observed result showed that the spices mixtures ethanolic extract has more potential against all the tested microorganism where as spices mixtures essential oil showed only activity against tested bacterial strains but no activity against the fungal strains expect spices mixture D which exhibit antifungal activity
Molecular characterization and transcriptome profiling of expansin genes isolated from Calotropis procera fibers
The Calotropis procera seed fibers provide an excellent model system
to study the genes involved in fiber elongation, fineness and strength.
Expansins constitute one of the important gene families involved in
plant cell expansion and other cell wall modification processes. Four
homologs of Expansin A gene i.e. CpEXPA1, CpEXPA2, CpEXPA3 and CpEXPA4
were isolated from the cDNA library obtained from fast growing
Calotropis procera fibers. These homologs represented typical Expansin
A family. Each of them had two conserved domains including GH45 like
domain and the putative polysaccharide binding domain. The deduced
amino acid sequences of the homologs indicated three conserved motifs:
i) eight cysteine residues at N-terminus, ii) four tryptophan residues
at C-terminus and iii) a Histidine-Phenylalanine-Aspartate motif in the
center of the sequence. The presence of N-terminal signal peptide
consisting of hydrophobic amino acids and a transmembrane region in all
these expansin isoforms suggests their cotranslational insertion into
the endoplasmic reticulum and then transportation to the cell wall by
secretory pathway. The relative quantification of the four expansins in
root, stem, fiber and leave tissues indicated that the transcripts of
CpEXPA1, CpEXPA2, CpEXPA3 and CpEXPA4 are variably transcribed in these
tissues. The lowest transcription of all the four Expansin A isoforms
was observed in elongating roots indicating that root tissue might be
having specific expansins other than those confined to air grown
organs
Molecular characterization and transcriptome profiling of expansin genes isolated from Calotropis procera fibers
The Calotropis procera seed fibers provide an excellent model system
to study the genes involved in fiber elongation, fineness and strength.
Expansins constitute one of the important gene families involved in
plant cell expansion and other cell wall modification processes. Four
homologs of Expansin A gene i.e. CpEXPA1, CpEXPA2, CpEXPA3 and CpEXPA4
were isolated from the cDNA library obtained from fast growing
Calotropis procera fibers. These homologs represented typical Expansin
A family. Each of them had two conserved domains including GH45 like
domain and the putative polysaccharide binding domain. The deduced
amino acid sequences of the homologs indicated three conserved motifs:
i) eight cysteine residues at N-terminus, ii) four tryptophan residues
at C-terminus and iii) a Histidine-Phenylalanine-Aspartate motif in the
center of the sequence. The presence of N-terminal signal peptide
consisting of hydrophobic amino acids and a transmembrane region in all
these expansin isoforms suggests their cotranslational insertion into
the endoplasmic reticulum and then transportation to the cell wall by
secretory pathway. The relative quantification of the four expansins in
root, stem, fiber and leave tissues indicated that the transcripts of
CpEXPA1, CpEXPA2, CpEXPA3 and CpEXPA4 are variably transcribed in these
tissues. The lowest transcription of all the four Expansin A isoforms
was observed in elongating roots indicating that root tissue might be
having specific expansins other than those confined to air grown
organs
Molecular characterization and transcriptome profiling of expansin genes isolated from Calotropis procera fibers
The Calotropis procera seed fibers provide an excellent model system to study the genes involved in fiber elongation, fineness and strength. Expansins constitute one of the important gene families involved in plant cell expansion and other cell wall modification processes. Four homologs of Expansin A gene i.e. CpEXPA1, CpEXPA2, CpEXPA3 and CpEXPA4 were isolated from the cDNA library obtained from fast growing Calotropis procera fibers. These homologs represented typical Expansin A family. Each of them had two conserved domains including GH45 like domain and the putative polysaccharide binding domain. The deduced amino acid sequences of the homologs indicated three conserved motifs: i) eight cysteine residues at N-terminus, ii) four tryptophan residues at C-terminus and iii) a Histidine-Phenylalanine-Aspartate motif in the center of the sequence. The presence of N-terminal signal peptide consisting of hydrophobic amino acids and a transmembrane region in all these expansin isoforms suggests their cotranslational insertion into the endoplasmic reticulum and then transportation to the cell wall by secretory pathway. The relative quantification of the four expansins in root, stem, fiber and leave tissues indicated that the transcripts of CpEXPA1, CpEXPA2, CpEXPA3 and CpEXPA4 are variably transcribed in these tissues. The lowest transcription of all the four Expansin A isoforms was observed in elongating roots indicating that root tissue might be having specific expansins other than those confined to air grown organs