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Friday, December 16, 2011

Why Does the Same Mutation Kill One Person but Not Another?

ScienceDaily (Dec. 7, 2011) — The vast majority of genetic disorders (schizophrenia or breast cancer, for example) have different effects in different people. Moreover, an individual carrying certain mutations can develop a disease, whereas another one with the same mutations may not. This holds true even when comparing two identical twins who have identical genomes. But why does the same mutation have different effects in different individuals?
The figure shows how the same mutation can differently affect each individual from C. elegans. The dice represent the stochastic component in the gene expression. (Credit: Image courtesy of Centre for Genomic Regulation)
Since the early twentieth century researchers have studied the role that genetic variability (mutations) and the environment (consumption habits, lifestyle, etc.) have in the development of diseases. "However, genetic and environmental differences are not enough" said Alejandro Burga, one of the authors of the article. "In the last decade we have learned by studying very simple organisms such as bacteria that gene expression -- the extent to which a gene is turned on or off -- varies greatly among individuals, even in the absence of genetic and environmental variation. Two cells are not completely identical and sometimes these differences have their origin in random or stochastic processes. The results of our study show that this type of variation can be an important influence the phenotype of animals, and that its measurement can help to reliably predict the chance of developing an abnormal phenotype such as a disease ."
The researchers conducted their study using the roundworm Caenorhabditis elegans as a model. Due to its simplicity, this microscopic worm is one of the most widely studied organisms in biology, and was the first animal to have its genome sequenced. Recently three different Nobel Prizes have been awarded for research using C. elegans.
Since the genetic composition and the environment are insufficient to determine whether or not a mutation will affect an individual, they developed a methodology to measure small differences in gene expression in vivo. "The challenge was not only to develop a method to quantify these small differences among individuals, but also to predict which genes are relevant for a particular mutation," adds Ben Lehner, coordinator of the study and ICREA Research Professor in the European Molecular Biology Laboratory-Centre for Genomic Regulation Systems Biology Research Unit. "In both round worms and humans, genes cooperate and help each other to perform functions within the cell. A few genes are very "generous" and help hundreds of others to perform many different processes, whereas others only help a few other genes to perform more specific functions. The key to predict what will happen in each individual is to measure variation in the expression of both types of gene."
The work suggests that, even if we completely understand all of the genes important for a particular human disease, we may never be able to predict what will happen to each person from their genome sequence alone. Rather, to develop personalised and predictive medicine it will also be necessary to consider the varying extent to which genes are turned on or off in each person.
The study was funded by the European Research Council, the Institució Catalana de recerca i Estudis Avanzats (ICREA) and the Ministry of Science and Innovation (MICINN).

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Happy holidays and advance new year wishes

Dear Staff and Students,
Semester holidays are announced from 21/12/11 to 03/01/13. Enjoy your free days and rejuvenate yourself, because we will be having lot of activities in coming months. 17/12/11 will be a working day.

Regards.
Ramesh.B

Lessons Learned from Yeast About Human Leukemia: The Power of Basic Model Organisms in Human Health

ScienceDaily (Dec. 5, 2011) — The trifecta of biological proof is to take a discovery made in a simple model organism like baker's yeast and track down its analogs or homologs in "higher" creatures right up the complexity scale to people, in this case, from yeast to fruit flies to humans. In a pair of related studies, scientists at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research have hit such a trifecta, closing a circle of inquiry that they opened over a decade ago.


Stowers investigator, Ali Shilatifard, Ph.D., and his team finally confirmed that the molecular mechanics of a key regulatory complex implicated in human leukemia, which Shilatifard had first identified in yeast, are the same on each rung of the evolutionary ladder, all the way from yeast to fruit flies to humans. In addition, the Stowers team, working closely with collaborators at the University of Michigan, revealed the common molecular shape at the center of the complex, which regulates gene expression through the methylation of histone H3, one of several DNA packaging proteins.
These findings are important, says Shilatifard, for understanding a fundamental developmental process -- histone methylation. Understanding this protein modification, which protects, packages, and controls the output of expression from DNA, is essential for finding new ways to treat leukemia arising as a result of chromosomal translocations.
About 30 years ago, Janet Rowley, a physician and geneticist, was the first to propose that translocation, the swapping of chromosomal sections into abnormal locations during replication, was a cause of aggressive leukemia. Considered heresy at the time, Rowley's theory was briskly dismissed, but gained adherents as evidence piled up that the translocation of one gene in particular was a marker for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). This most commonly translocated gene became known as MLL or the "mixed-lineage leukemia" gene, and it is widely used today for diagnostics and determining therapy in patients.
Determined to explain just how the misplaced MLL causes leukemia, Shilatifard purified one of the first known interaction partners of human MLL about 16 years ago. Surprisingly, the protein functioned in transcription elongation, a key step in the process that leads to gene expression. Unable to make further progress on MLL in mouse models, he turned to a possible MLL homolog, a gene called Set1, in the humble baker's yeast.
"About 12 years ago, we decided to use yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, as a model system to learn about human leukemia," Shilatifard recalls. "Everyone thought we were out of our minds." Undaunted, the Shilatifard lab extracted Set1 protein from 300 liters of S. cerevisiae culture and found that Set1 belongs to a complex they dubbed COMPASS (Complex of Proteins Associated with Set1). In a major find, they had identified the first H3K4 (histone 3, lysine 4) methylase complex, an enzyme that modifies histones. Histones are protein spools around which long DNA helices are wound inside the cell nucleus. Methylation or demethylation (addition or removal of individual methyl groups) tightens or loosens histone spools, turning genes off or on.
More than a decade later, a study led by postdoctoral fellow Man Mohan, Ph.D., which was featured on the cover of the Nov. 1, 2011, issue of Molecular and Cellular Biology, firmly connects the yeast complex, known as Set1/COMPASS, to its fruit fly homologs, three COMPASS-like complexes built around the Drosophila melanogaster gene, Trithorax (Trx).
The second study, published in the online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science the week of Dec. 5, 2011, features the work of postdoctoral fellow Yoh-hei Takahasi, Ph.D., who painstakingly reconstituted the Set1/COMPASS from its component molecules both in yeast and human cells.
Working with Gerwin Westfield in the lab of structural biologist Georgios Skiniotis at the University of Michigan, they used state-of-the-art electron microscopy techniques to map out the Y-shaped molecular structure at the heart of the complex. "It was a very challenging project, but I am so glad to see Ali's many years of effort come to fruition and my lab being part of this breakthrough," says Skiniotis.
The mechanisms of histone methylation such as the Set1/COMPASS complex are conserved by evolutionary selection across a wide range of eukaryote organisms, which is why Shilatifard was able to move from the Set1/COMPASS in yeast to three COMPASS-like complexes involving trithorax in Drosophila, to six COMPASS-like complexes in MLL in humans. These factors are now known as the COMPASS family.
"Given the conservation of COMPASS family from yeast to human, having the 3D structure of the core complex not only reveals the fundamental architectural blueprint, but provides molecular insights into the function of the H3K4 methylase complexes," says Shilatifard. "And guess what?" says Shilatifard. "Comparing the overall architectures we cannot tell the difference between the yeast enyme and the human enzyme. They look almost identical!"
It's been a long but satisfying scientific journey to bring the Set1/COMPASS story together, says Shilatifard. "So the lesson learned is that yeast is an excellent model for studying the molecular basis of human leukemia."
Researchers who also contributed to the study published in PNAS include Austin Oleskie at the Life Sciences Institute at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and Raymond Trievel in the Department of Biological Chemistry at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor. Researchers who also contributed to the study published in MCB include Hans Martin Herz, Edwin R. Smith, Ying Zhang, Michael P. Washburn and Laurence Florens at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research as well as Jessica Jackson and Joel C. Eissenberg in the Edward A. Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the Saint Louis University School of Medicine.

Workshop for Teaching Faculties of Life Sciences on ‘Quantification of Biomolecules’


Hearty congratulations for Dr.A.Koodalingam and Mrs.M.Pratheeba for attending Workshop  for Teaching Faculties of Life Sciences on ‘Quantification of Biomolecules’ Organized by Eppendorf India Limited (8.12.2011).


Wednesday, December 14, 2011

A 'Wild Card' in Your Genes

ScienceDaily (Dec. 7, 2011) — The human genome and the endowments of genes in other animals and plants are like a deck of poker cards containing a "wild card" that in a genetic sense introduces an element of variety and surprise that has a key role in life. That's what scientists are describing in a review of more than 100 studies on the topic that appears in ACS Chemical Biology.

Rahul Kohli and colleagues focus on cytosine, one of the four chemical "bases" that comprise the alphabet that the genetic material DNA uses to spell out everything from hair and eye color to risk of certain diseases. But far from just storing information, cytosine has acquired a number of other functions that give it a claim to being the genome's wild card. "In poker, the rules of the game can occasionally change," they note in the article. "Adding a 'wild card' to the mix introduces a new degree of variety and presents opportunities for a skilled player to steal the pot. Given that evolution is governed by the same principles of risk and reward that are common to a poker game, it is perhaps not surprising that a genomic 'wild card' has an integral role in biology."

They discuss the many faces of cytosine that make it such a game-changer and the biological processes that help to change its identity. Removing something called an amine group from cytosine, for instance, allows the immune system to recognize and destroy foreign invaders such as viruses. Adding so-called "methyl groups" on cytosines acts as on/off switches for genes. The authors say that these many faces of cytosine allow it to play various roles and give it true "wild card" status.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Educationcal Scholarship Sponsored by MHRD for March 2011


Last date extended up to 30th December. I request all the eligible studetns to apply.
Application can be downloaded from http://tndce.in/NotificationPDF/National%20Merit%20Scholarship.pdf

Friday, December 9, 2011

NATIONAL SEMINAR ON RECENT ADVANCES IN MICROBIAL BIOTECHNOLOGY 06/12/11





























SUBJECT EXPERT COMMITTEE MEETING - PREPARATION OF DICTIONARY OF BIOTECHNOLOGY

Subject expert committee meeting for the preparation of Dictionary of Biotechnology sponsered by Commission for Scientific & Technical Terminology, Ministry of Human Resource Development (MHRD), Govt. of India was held between 05/12/11 - 08/12/11 (4 days). Photographs of committee members with our college principal Prof.K.R.Venkatesan and the meeting are given below;

Ramesh.B

Saturday, December 3, 2011

WALK‐IN‐INTERVIEW

Candidates who possess the qualification mentioned below may attend the WALK‐IN INTERVIEW on 05.12.2011 between 9.00 AM to 12.00 PM with all original certificates, including community certificate and recent passport size photograph. The selected candidates will be working under the DBT project entitled “Characterization of the bacterial toxins isolated from soil samples for the control of mosquito vectors”. The selected candidate will be appointed initially for a period of one year and will be extended upto three years based on their performance and availability of funds.

I. Name of the post : Junior Research Fellow – 1 post
II. Educational qualification : Master’s degree in Zoology/ Microbiology/
Biotechnology/ Life sciences

2. Qualified in the entrance examination conducted
by Pondicherry central University for PhD admission
IV. Nature of Research : To conduct research in the field of characterization of
mosquitocidal toxin from marine bacteria
V. Fellowship : Rs.12,000/‐ + 20% HRA for 1st & 2rd year
and Rs.14,000/‐ + 20% HRA for 3rd year

VI. Duration of the project JRF : 2 years as JRF and 1 year as SRF (subject to
progress based on yearly assessment)

VII. Age limit : Below 28 years and relaxable for SC/ST and OBC candidates, as per Govt. of India rules in force

VIII. Venue : Vector Control Research Centre, Indira Nagar, Pondicherry – 605006
Candidates who wish to appear for the interview can download the application format given in the web site (www. icmr.nic.in) and complete it and bring it along with the required enclosures. Any canvassing by or on behalf of the candidate or bringing political or other outside influence with regard to selection shall be a disqualification and such candidates will not be entertained. No TA/DA will be paid for attending the interview.

Friday, December 2, 2011

JUNIOR RESEARCH FELLOW

Dear students,
Applications are invited for JUNIOR RESEARCH FELLOW in VIT
Sponsoring agency : DBT
Fellowship : 14,000/- pm
Qulification : M.Sc Biotechnology
Last date : 10.12.2011

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Science Academies' Summer Research Fellowship Programme for Students and Teachers 2012

Science Academies' Summer Research Fellowship Programme for Students and Teachers 2012
The three national Science Academies offer several two-month Summer Fellowships to enable students/teachers to work with scientists associated with the three Academies during 2012. A list of those who have consented to guide students/teachers to work on short-term projects is displayed on the online announcement. on short-term projects.
Applications are invited from interested students and teachers from all universities and colleges affiliated to UGC/AICTE/MCI/Accredited Institutions of State Universities for these Fellowships. The application should include: (a)a brief resume of the applicant (in the prescribed format); (b) a write-up (in about 250 words) as to what the applicant wants to learn and achieve; (c) the guide with whom the applicant would like to work. Student applicants should include a recommendation letter from a teacher (in the prescribed format) familiar with their work, in a sealed envelope.
The selected candidate may work in consultation with the assigned guide for two months any time during the calendar year, preferably during the summer.
Applications should be submitted Onlinethrough one of our websites http://www.ias.ac.in/,http://www.insaindia.org/ or http://www.nasi.org.in/; however a copy of the application together with enclosures must be sent by speed post (within 7 days) to The Coordinator, Science Education Programme, Indian Academy of Sciences, C.V. Raman Avenue, Near Mekri Circle Sadashivanagar, Bangalore 560 080.
The registration number assigned soon after online submission must be quoted both in the hard copy of the application to be sent and in the letter of recommendation to be forwarded by the teacher in the case of student applicants.
The last date for receipt of applications is 31 December 2011.
Information of selection along with concurrence of the guide will be despatched by early March 2012.
The selected students/teachers will be provided appropriate round trip train fare and a monthly fellowship to meet their living expenses at the place of work.

SUMMER RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS – 2012

SUMMER RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS – 2012
(Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Bangalore, in association
with Dept. of Science and Technology and Rajiv Gandhi Foundation, New Delhi)
Website: http://www.jncasr.ac.in/srfp.php E-mail: srfp@jncasr.ac.in
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Minimum academic requirements for applying:
Students who have secured not less than 80% in Maths and Science subjects in their 10th and 12th, equivalent examinations and not less than first class in graduation and post graduation ( if applicable).
Students presently studying in I & II year of B.Sc., I, II & III year of B.E/ B.Tech., I year of M.Sc and I- IV year of Integrated M.Sc. can apply for Life Sciences and Mathematics.

The students selected under this programme are placed with scientists at the Centre or elsewhere in India, for 2 months with a stipend of Rs. 6000 /- p.m and travel support as per Govt. of India norms.
Detailed information and application form can be downloaded from http://www.jncasr.ac.in/srfp.php

The Assistant Coordinator,
Summer Research Fellowship Programme,
Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research,
Jakkur P.O.,
Bangalore 560 064.

request for application form : 15th November 2011
downloading application form from website : 01st December 2011
Last dates for:
receipt of completed application : 2nd December 2011

Thursday, November 10, 2011

SUMMER RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP-2011 - JNC

Dear Students,

JNC is offering SUMMER RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP-2011.

Last date for submitting application is DEC-2.
Eligibility: 80% in SCIENCE and MATHS.
 
Request all of you who have the eligibility to apply
 
http://www.jncasr.ac.in/srfp.php
 
Regards.
Ramesh.B

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Wish you a happy Deepavali - 2011

Wish you a happy Deepavali




Hope this Deepavali festival brings you prosperity and joy to the rest of your life



Thursday, September 29, 2011

Hearty welcome to Dr. Sathiya N Ramakrishnan, Ph.D.

Dear staff and students,

Let me take the privilege of introducing the following Researcher, friend, philosopher as our new contributor. I wholeheartedly welcome Dr. Sathiya N Ramakrishnan, Ph.D.

Sathiya N Ramakrishnan, Ph.D.
Research Fellow in Neurology
Massachusetts General Hospital
Center for Human Genetic Research
Harvard Medical School (Boston, MA)
185 Cambridge St Boston, MA 02114

Phone 6177260832
Hope this type of international interaction is beneficial for our students.

Regards.
Ramesh.B

Monday, September 19, 2011

HEARTY CONGRATULATIONS TO

Ms. R. DEEPALAKSHMI AND Ms. S. GOMATHY

FOR RECEIVING THE FOLLOWING AWARDS

 
Ms. R. DEEPALAKSHMI II M.Sc BIOTECHNOLOGY (2010-2011) – BEST PROJECT AWARD FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 2010-2011.

Ms. S. GOMATHY II M.Sc BIOTECHNOLOGY (2010-2011) – BEST OUTGOING STUDENT AWARD FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 2010-2011.
HEARTY CONGRATULATIONS
TO
Ms.A.RAJALAKSHMI AND Ms.S.PREETHI



FOR RECEIVING THE FOLLOWING AWARDS

Ms. A.RAJALAKSHMI III B.Sc BIOTECHNOLOGY (2010-2011) - PROFICIENCY AWARD FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 2010-2011.

Ms. S.PREETHI III B.Sc BIOTECHNOLOGY  (2010-2011) – BEST OUTGOING STUDENT AWARD FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 2010-2011.



Saturday, September 17, 2011

Best Teacher Award

Hearty Congratulations to Mr. B. Ramesh, M.Sc. M.Phil, Associate Professor & Head, Department of Biotechnology on receiving the Best Teacher Award from the Management of Sri Sankara Arts & Science College, Enathur, Kancheepuram for his outstanding teaching and inspire the students. Mr. Ramesh received the award from Dr. P. Rajendran, D.Sc., Professor, Department of Microbiology, Sri Ramachandra University, Chennai. We Wish you all the best for your future.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Sankara Biotech Community Toolbar

We've launched our Sankara Biotech Community Toolbar
Give it a try! Please click following banner and install our toolbar.
Regards.
Ramesh.B
Powered by Conduit

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Happy 65th Independence Day

Our life is full of Colors
I hope this 15th August will add more colors to the life of poor
Happy Independence Day

 

Thursday, April 28, 2011

An Astrology Chart for Bacteria

From Journal of Improbable Research

Astrological science holds that the differential monthly positioning of the stars and planets controls human mood (DSM-IIIR),1 personality (Goodman, 1972),2 and even fate (Reagan, 1982).3


But what of the daily variations in the location of the star that is responsible for all life on earth-the sun? Might this simple diurnal cycle affect the lives of more primitive, shorter-lived organisms, such as prokaryotes? If the relative hourly positions of the Sun and Earth do influence bacterial fate, a sample horoscope for the common laboratory bug, Escherichia coli,4 might read something like this. Numbers indicate time of day (am or pm) when a bacterium was born.

Aries (12 to 1)

A long dark stranger may be swimming into your life. Might be a good idea to eliminate any viral sequences from your genome. This special someone has an F plasmid with your name on it. Excess oxygen may be in your future. Crank up the superoxide dismutase and hoard vitamins C and E.

Taurus (1 to 2)

You will develop ampicillin resistance. Take advantage of your new beta lactam splitting talents and venture into drugged media. Look for a nice, tetracycline-resistant mate and start a multi-drug resistant family.

Gemini (2 to 3)

A creep with wandering pilli will make a pass at you. Why not take all his genes and leave him an empty mass of lipoprotein? You're feeling motile, but should avoid the south side of the petri dish. Don't be intimidated by eukaryotes.

Cancer (3 to 4)

Your stars are definitely off course, and you will likely be engulfed by a hungry euglena. But every cloud has a silver lining-you will develop a trusting relationship with its mitochondria.

Leo (4 to 5)

Tough times ahead-minimal media at best. Why not sporulate and try again in a month or two? A hearty virus will sweep through your parent colony. Rest and get plenty of complex sugars to avoid this nasty little phage.

Virgo (5 to 6)

Great financial news-New England BioLabs is hot for your plasmid. But things slow down when your home plate gets shoved into the cold room for two weeks. Use the time to do some badly needed repairs to your cell wall.

Libra (6 to 7)

You're feeling mischievous and consider ruining a grad student's thesis by inexplicably altering your phosphofructokinase expression. Sure, it might be fun to wreck a scientist's career, but can you handle the extra glucose-1,6 bisphosphate? Be sure to get rid of excess acid before visiting your mother.

Scorpio (7 to 8)

Rich medium supplemented with casamino acids is in your future. Rev up the Embden-Myerhoff pathway! Avoid sticking you chemoreceptors into other cells' business. Some of your more sensitive friends may be experiencing pre-S phase-syndrome and are best left alone.

Sagittarius (8 to 9)

Beware lab techs promising golden opportunities. You'll only get a nanometer-thick coating of precious metal before you take a little trip to the scanning electron microscope. Prepare to spend some time caring for a friend in heat shock.

Capricorn (9 to 10)

Isn't it time you grow up and divide? Your friends have all set up colonies of their own. So stop living off the nutrients released by your dead relatives, and GET A LIFE! Live or lyse, my friend.

Aquarius (10 to 11)

An urge to rediscover your roots sends you on a trip to your homeland-a young student's lower bowel. Travel should be easy: Microbiologists rarely wash their hands before eating.

Pisces (11 to 12)

Ethanol has become your main source of carbon, you soused bug. Keep it up and you may wake up wondering how you ever acquired the ability to fluoresce. While you're thinking of it, stock up on catalase-where there's oxygen there's peroxide. Divide early and often!



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



References and Notes

1Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition [DSM-IV], published by American Psychiatric Association (American Psychiatric Press, Inc.), updated 1994, Washington, DC.

2Sun Signs, Linda Goodman, Bantam Books, NY, 1968.

3President Ronald Reagan, numerous US government documents, and interpersonal and interstellar communications.

4To be specific: DH5 E. coli, phenotype F- supE44 hsdR17 recA1 gyrA96 endA1 thi-1 relA1 deoR -

Copyright © 1997 The Annals of Improbable Research (AIR). All rights reserved.

Monday, April 18, 2011

As you know that our II BSc. Student Miss. G. Priya, has been selected for the Summer Research Fellowship Programme 2011, for two months, in the area of Life Sciences from JAWAHARLAL NEHRU CENTRE FOR ADVANCED SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH, and now she will be working under the guidance of Dr. Sheeba Vasu, Ramanujan Fellow, Behavioural Neurogenetics Laboratory, Evolutionary and Organismal Biology Unit, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Jakkur P.O, Bangalore – 560064 with a fellowship of Rs.6000/- p.m.

Friday, April 1, 2011

ALL THE BEST

Dear Students,


Happy that you have completed all your practical and projects successfully. I expect the same kind of sincere effort in your theory examinations. Best wishes from the core of my heart.

B.Ramesh (and on behalf of all the faculty members)

Monday, March 28, 2011

Congratulation Priya

Congratulation Priya

G. Priya (II B.Sc.) has been selected for prestigious Summer Research Fellowships Programme (SRFP - 2011) from Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (JNCASR). Is a multidisciplinary research institute situated in Jakkur, a locality north of Bangalore, India.

Monday, February 7, 2011

39 students of III B.Sc and II M.Sc Biotechnology had participated in the National Conference "Recent Scenario in Biological Innovations" held at Hindustan College of Arts and Science,Coimbatore




Miss S.Sakthi of III B.Sc Biotechnology under the guidance of C.Vijayameena won first prize in paper presentation on "Antibacterial, Antifungal, Antibacterial and Antifertility property of Ocimum sanctum in the national conference "recent scenario in biological innovations held at hindustan college of arts and science,coimbatore







Mr D. Vasanth(III B.Sc) R. Veerapandi (III B.Sc) G. Priya(II B.Sc)under the guidance of Dr A.Koodalingam won first prize for poster presentation "Evaluation of mosquito larvicidal activity of concanavalin A, a lectin isolated from the seeds of Canavalia ensiformis" in the National Conference "Recent Scenario in Biological Innovations" held at Hindustan College of Arts and Science College, Coimbatore


TNSCST

Congratulations to Mr. G. Karthick of II MSc. Biotechnology received the student project under the guidance of Mr. B. Ramesh, Head, Department of Biotechnology, from the The Tamilnadu State Council for Science and Technology. They granted the amount of Rs. 6,000/= .




Monday, January 24, 2011

Ms.C.Vijaiyameena, Lecturer and Four II M.Sc students (R. Deepalakshmi, M. Indhumathi, S. Gomathy, G.K.Sandhya and M.K. Dhayanidhi) were participated in the International Conference on Drug Design and Development,Conducted by Nadar Saraswathi College of Arts & Science,Theni,Jan-21.


Regards.
Ramesh.B

Hearty Congrulation to Ms.M.Indhumathi and Ms.R.Deepalakshmi

Hearty Congratulation to Ms.M.Indhumathi and Ms.R.Deepalakshmi of II M.Sc. Biotechnology for individually receiving First prize in Oral Presentation on International Conference on Drug Design and Development,Conducted by Nadar Saraswathi College of Arts & Science,Theni,Jan-21.


Research Paper Title
Anti-inflammatory property of aqueous extract from Adenanthera pavonia on lipopolysaccharide induced inflammation in mice macrophages
A.Koodalingam, M. Indhumathi, R. Deepalakshmi, E.S. Kaviya & B. Ramesh



Team members


Research Paper Title

Studies on cytoprotective efficacy of Quercetin on H2O2 induced cell death in peritoneal macrophages of mice
A.Koodalingam, R. Deepalakshmi, M. Indhumathi, M. Pratheeba & B. Ramesh


Team members


By staff members and Students of Biotechnology