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Department of Biotechnology (established in 1980) presented by Prof. Ritu Barthwal, Head, Dept. Biotechnology & Prof. R. P. Singh COURSES OFFERED B.Tech. Biotech. 4 years program since 2005 Admission IIT JEE, 200 credit course, Intake 48 M.Sc. Biotech. 2 years program since 1985 Admission JAM, 100 credit courses, Intake 36 Ph.D program since 1981 Admission to GATE/NET qualified, presently 70 FACULTY MEMBERS AND THEIR EXPERTISE Professor and Head of the Department Dr. Ritu Barthwal, Biophysics-NMR structure, Molecular Modeling, therapeutic herbs Professors Dr. H. S. Dhaliwal, Plant Biotech.-Germplasm Enhancemen, Gene Tagging Dr. G.S. Randhawa, Genetic Engineering - Molecular Genetics, Dr. R. P. Singh, Microbial Biotechnology – Microbial Enzymes, Associate Professors Dr. R. Prasad, Molecular Biology & Proteomics-Therapeutic Proteins, Dr. Vikas Pruthi, Molecular Microbiology-Biofilms, Biosurfactants Dr. Partha Roy, Animal Biotech- Hormone action, Steroid Receptors. Assistant Professors Dr. A.K. Sharma, Biochem.-Cloning - expression of plant defense proteins Dr. Bijan Choudhury, Biochem. Engg - Nitrile Biotransformation, Nutraceuticals Dr. Pravindra Kumar, Biophysics - Bioinformatics, X-ray Crystallography structures, Dr. Sanjoy Ghosh, Bioprocess Engg- Biofuel Production, Bioreactor Design Dr. Naveen K. Navani, Mol. & Chem. Biol.-Aptamers, DNA shuffling. Dr. Shailly Tomar, Mol. Biol.- Virus Proteins , Structure Analysis. Dr. Ranjana Pathania, Mol. Microbiology-Antimicrobial Drug Discovery Dr Maya S. Nair, Biophysics – Biomolecular structure by spectroscopy techniques M.Sc.students qualifying national – level examination (no. of students passed every year – 18 to 24) No. of students 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 NET-CSIR/ UGC 12 03 13 12 10 18 16 17 GATE 05 15 18 15 14 10 12 15 DBT-JRF - - 04 04 04 - 03 04 PLACEMENT • Postgraduate and Ph. D. students - R & D companies e.g. Glenmark Pharma (NJ), Novartis (NJ), Ranbaxy, Panacea Biotech, Dr Reddy’s Laboratory Hyderabad, Dabur, Cadila, Dr Lal Diagnostic Lab, Biotech Consortium India Limited, Pepsi foods, Hindustan Lever, Vam Organics, Wockhardt. • Most post graduate students qualify GATE/NET/GRE and join Ph.D. programs in leading universities in India and abroad. • Several Ph.D. students joined post doctoral program in institutes abroad such as MD Anderson Cancer Centre Houston (TX), Baylor College of Medicine Houston (TX), Univ. of California at San Francisco (UCSF), Univ. of California at San Diego, Museum National de Histoire Naturelle, Paris (France), John Hopkins Medical Institute (MD), Harvard Medical School, Univ. of Pennsylvania, Cleveland University and UIC Chicago. • On campus recruitment is done centrally for all the disciplines by the Professor-in-charge Training and Placement. • B.Tech. students placed at Deloitte, Mu Sigma, T Bits Global, TCS, 3M, Doctoral fellows/Interns at Max Planck Inst Germany, McGill Univ Canada, Stanford Univ. USA, Toronto Univ. Canada Post doc/ other visits abroad -17 • • • • • • • • • • University of Houston, Dept. of Biochemistry Indo-Russian, ILTP-DST, High performance computing Cohran Fellowship, US dept. Agriculture North Dakota state university, NSF project BOYCAST, DST, Indiana univ. Purdue univ. Indianapolis BOYCAST, DST, Purdue univ. Research Astt., Virology, Biol. Sci. Purdue Univ. Postdoc, Mcmaster univ., Biochemistry & Biomed. Sci. Postdoc, UMASS medical school, molecular medicine Postdoc, Imperial college of Science and Technology 2003-2010 •Research publications 150 Intl. J. + 10 Natl. J. •Research projects 30, Total Rs 450 lakhs •Patents 5 •Post doc/ other visits abroad 17 •Recognition/ Awards/Honours •Ph.D awarded – about 15 per year (total about 150) 0.10 0.08 Absorbance Berb alone 4.4 M 0.06 Increasing Poly d-(A-T) concentration 0.04 Berb+Poly d-(A-T) 44M 0.02 * * * 0.00 300 450 500 Structure (NMR) – Conformation -Interactions - Biomolecules Anticancer drugs , Topoisomerase poisons, peptides, flavonoids Duplex and quadruplex (telomere) DNA Therapeutic potential of herbs, active principles, characterization ESI-MS 8000000 Fluorescence Intensity (a.u.) 350 400 Wavelength (nm) Berb+Poly d-(A-T) 27M 6000000 Increasing Poly d-(A-T) concentration 4000000 2000000 0 400 Berb alone 4.4 M 450 500 550 600 Wavelength (nm) 650 Palmatine 1H NMR spectra palmatine- d(CCAATTGG)2 rMD model berberined-(CCAATTGG)2 31P - 31P NOESY 4’-epiadriamycin-d-(CGATCG)2 NOESY Berberine- d-(CCAATTGG)2 complex NOESY 4’-epiadriamycin Topoisomerase I inhibition by aqueous extract of Picrorrhiza kurroa Restriction inhibition assay of aqueous extract of Cinnamomum zeylanicum and Picrorrhiza kurroa with EcoRI restriction endonuclease Time (min) Pancreas from (A) streptozotocin-induced diabetic rat (B) diabetic rat treated with aqueous extract of C. zeylanicum Blood Glucose (mg/dl) Aqueous extract (300 mg/kg body weight) Aqueous extract (200 mg/kg body weight) Diabetic control 0 237± 6 303 ± 31* 277 ± 10 60 240 ± 10 305 ± 33* 320 ± 14 120 188 ± 16 299 ± 42* 289 ± 18 180 132 ± 2 240 ± 33* 272 ± 5 240 97 ± 11 209 ± 26* 262 ± 11 300 92 ± 5 162 ± 38* 289 ± 10 % Reduction 61.2 46.5 - 4.3 Short term activity of aqueous extracts of C. zeylanicum conducted in type 1 diabetic rats Macromolecular structure by X-ray crystallography, enzyme kinetics and molecular biology techniques. # shikimate pathway enzymes # enzymes involved in the pathway exists in plants and biodegradation of toxic micro organisms but absent in aromatic compounds humans Can be a potential target for the development of antimicrobial drug for microorganism and herbicide for plants studying enzymes from a variety of sources including the different species of bacteria and plant weeds •Chemicals having potential to promote cancer/heart disease & affect neural development •Study structure of enzymes from bacterial pathway that has partial ability to degrade toxic aromatic compounds •Identification of determinants of substrate specificity & design improved catalysts for bioremediation, enzyme mechanism # Chitinases •Assembly of the fungal cell wall and human signalling pathways involved in asthma, arthritis and cancer • Reaction mechanism with an aim to develop potent druglike inhibitors Biochemical and Structural Characterization of Plant Defense Proteins # Murraya koenigii Miraculin Like Protein # Glycosyl Hydrloase family I enzyme # Putranjiva roxburghii Trypsin Inhibitor. # Ribosome inactivating proteins Dnase activity on pBR 322 plasmid Targeting viral genes of plus sense ssRNA viruses (Alphaviruses) for antiviral screening and drug designing Laboratory Main Gene Targets : Capping enzyme RNA dependent RNA Polymerase Nsp2 replication protease Capsid protease Protein-Protein interaction: Capsid dimers assemble to form virus particles Protein-RNA interaction: Capsid encapsidate viral RNA genome Laboratory Molecular Tools: • Molecular gene cloning • Recombinant protein production • Function gene characterization • Development of enzyme assay • Site directed mutagenesis • Biophysical and biochemical characterization • Structure function studies using X-ray crystallography and Bioinformatics • HTP inhibitor screening Molecular characterization, functional evaluation and expression of therapeutic and abiotic stress induce proteins. • Purification, molecular characterization of therapeutic ( antimicrobial & antioxidant ) and stress induced proteins. •Cloning , characterization and over expression of candidate genes using RNAi technology. • Functional evaluation of the respective proteins using various assays. SDS-PAGE & 2-D Protein Profile Immuno-localization study of 31.6 kDa protein Antimicrobial activity assay of protein Microorganisms Diameter of Inhibition Zone (mm) Amount of protein per well (μg) Standard 20 Kan (30μg/well) 40 60 80 Bacteria Serratia macescens (MTCC2453) 12 14 17 20 26 Pseudomonas putida (MTCC2453) 12 15 18 21 28 Staphylococcus aureus (MTCC2940) 13 16 18 21 30 Bacillus subtilis (MTCC 2423 12 14 17 19 26 Fungi AmB(30μg/well) Aspergillus niger (ITCC 5454) 10 12 13 15 23 Candida Albican (MTCC 227) 10 11 13 14 23 Identification of 31.6 kDa protein by mass spectrometry Regeneration of pancreatic cells by guggulsterone Isolated mesenchymal stem cells from rat bone marro Molecular Endocrinology and Reproductive Physiology- cell based assays to screen compounds, understand, both in vitro (cell lines) and in vivo (rodent models), mode of action.Endocrine disruptors: environmental chemicals (pesticides, industrial chemicals, various chemicals,mainly steroids).;Plant based medicines: bioactive principles from medicinal plants for diseases like diabetes, cancer and infertility.;Stem cells and their differentiation: Isolation of mesenchymal stem cells, role of various hormones and their pathways for the differentiation of adipocytes and osteoblasts. Pterostilbene (isolated from Pterocarpus marsupium) as anticancer agent Toxic effects of Triclosan (a potent Endocrine disruptor) on sperm structures Control Control Treated Treated MICROBIAL PRODUCTION OF ENZYMES, ENZYME ENGINEERING AND APPLICATIONS a b c 121 k Da 77 k Da 40 k Da 29 k Da SEM of P. oxa & Plu. ostr. SDS-PAGE (a), ZYMO; XYL (b) LACC (c) 1st D 2nd D 3rd D 4th D 5th D COMPATIBILITY ASSAY MAJOR ACTIVITIES: 1300 a Xylanase Laccase Xylanase (IU ml-1) 1100 30 1000 900 25 800 700 -1 Laccase (IU ml ) 1200 35 b 20 •Exploration of microbial diversity for the production of enzymes of industrial significance •Biopolymers, targeted nano drug delivery system, anti microbial reagents 600 500 15 Axenic culture Co-culture IMPROVED XYL AND LACC PRODN. USING CO-CULTIVATION FTIR ANALYSIS (a) UNTREATED (b) TREATED •Engineered microbial strains and development of microbial consortia for bioremediation of defined industrial effluents MICROBIAL PRODUCTION OF SURFACE ACTIVE AGENTS USING CHEAP RAW MATERIAL CHEAP RAW MATERIALS Cotton seed SCREENING METHODS Bamboo Powder BIOSURFACTANT PRODUCERS Baggase powder Acacia powder APPLICATIONS Blood Agar Drop collapse Tensiometer Emulsification B. subtilis, P. aeruginosa, Lactobacillus spp, Candida spp, A. calcoaceticus etc. CHARACTERIZATION Emulsifier, Demusifier, Solublizer Thickeners, Wetting and Foaming agent ENHANCED BIOSURFACTANT PRODUCTION COSMETICS Health care & Adhesives & Beauty products antiperspirants Soaps, toothpastes shampoo, conditioners SEM GC-MS FTIR ( A )( B ) Scale up process NMR Contact: Dr. Vikas Pruthi [email protected] Molecular Analysis of Candida Biofilm Contact: Dr. Vikas Pruthi [email protected] Microscopic analysis (CLSM, SEM, AFM) Candida Biofilm Drug efflux pump studies EPS Purification (GC-MS, HPLC, Ion exchange) Biomaterial interaction EPS analysis (Carbohydrate, protein, phosphorus) Immunological studies Biofilm Quantification (XTT, Dry weight,CFU) Gene analysis Effect of Surfactant, Herbal preparations, Enzymes, Antifungals Structural analysis (IR, NMR) Enzymatic surface modification of Polyacrylonitrile Enzymatic surface modification of Polyacrylonitrile using nitrile metabolizing enzymes of Amycolatopsis sp. Advantages of using enzymatic surface modification: Greener route Chemo Specificity Increase in hydrophilicity of polymer Ambient reaction conditions Negligible effect on polymer strength properties FTIR spectra of enzyme treated Polyacrylonitrile and control Fermentative Production of trehalose using P. shermanii NCIM5137 in different carbon sources 500 Trehalose, a low calorie sugar having nutraceutical properties was attempted to produce by fermentation using P. shermanii NCIM 5137. Glycerol from bio-diesel waste found to improve trehalose yields based on biomass (Yt/x) and substrate consumed (Yt/s). 400 300 200 100 0 glucose sucrose glycerol b iodies el waste Yt/x(mg/gm) 87 171 381 404 Yt/s(mg/gm) 1.3 5.1 2.8 104 Maximum trehalose production in various carbon sources •Development of detection kits for microbial pathogens using nucleic acid aptamers. In vivo combinatorial selection of microbial strains for detection of pollutants using promoter engineering. Selection of lactic acid bacteria with enhanced probiotic attributes. Aptamer generation against Salmonella typhi -FACS Confirmation Random DNA + Salmonella typhi ST1 aptamer DNA + Salmonella typhi ST1 aptamer DNA + Escherichia coli In-vivo SELEX Based Discovery of Synthetic Promoters for Biosensing Sig E 98 (sigE) NNNNNBVAACHMNNAAAAANNNNNNNNNTCNNAHHWWMMNNNNN B=GCT, H=ACT W=AT Y=CT M=AC Fig. 1 :Multiple sequence alignment of stress responsive promoters Fig.2: Library Construction Library cloned rRygC as Reporter system Least background +ve selection of Inducible Promoter Fig . 4 : Construction of Toxic Peptide based Promoter Probe vector Fig.3 RygC- rRygC Toxin Antitoxin system 2 A pNYL-rygc without promoter 1 uninduced 10 8 6 4 0 2 Fig.5 : Clone Confirmation 1,3,5,7,9,11– Cut clone plasmid 2,4,6,810 – Uncut clone plasmid Response of NAL promoter at different concentration of Nalidixic acid O.D. at A600 nm 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 B pNYL-rygc with NAL responsive promoter Concentration of Nalidixic acid µg/ml 1-pNYL-Rygc (without Promoter ) Induced by 6ug/ml Nalidixic Acid 2-pNYL-Rygc(without Promoter ) Uninduced 3-pNYL-NA( Nalidixic Acid responsive Promoter) Induced by 6ug/mlNalidixic Acid 4-pNYL-NA (Nalidixic Acid responsive Promoter) uninduced Fig.6: Nalidixic acid responsive Promoter discovered through In-Vivo SELEX. Figure depicts Live and Dead 21 selection achieved for this synthetic promoter while screening the entire promoter library with sublethal concentration of Genotoxic agents. A Microbe Isolated from Uttarakhand’s Soil Degrades Multiple Pesticides 1 1 A Fig 1. Light Microscopy at 100X Fig 2. Scanning Electron microscopy at 20000X 2 3 B 3 2 Fig 3. 1)Pseudomonas aeruginosa 2) E. coli (negative control) 3) B. subtilis(negative control) A) Minimal media and imidacloprid as sole carbon B) Minimal media and endosulfan as sole carbon source A A Endosulfan Imidacloprid B Nitrosourea Imidaclopri d B Endosulfan Endosulfan ether Fig 4. Growth Profiles of RPT-52 in minimal media supplemented with 0.5 mM pesticide (▬ Imidacloprid, ■Endosulfan) Fig 5. ESI-MS Spectra of A) Minimal Media and Imidacloprid B) Minimal Media and Imidacloprid in the presence of pesticide degrading bacteria Fig 6. ESI-MS Spectra of A) Minimal Media and Endosulfan B) Minimal Media and Endosulfanin the presence of pesticide degrading bacteria Identification and Characterization of Small RNA in Acinetobacter baumannii 1000bp 800bp 600bp 31 Predictions 1 2 3 1 2 3 1000bp 800bp 600bp 400bp 300bp 400bp 300bp 200bp 200bp 100bp 100bp 5S rRNA Fig 3A. *AbsR 25 small RNA Fig 1. Gram Stained cells under 100X magnification Fig 2. Growth curve of Acinetobacter baumannii. Fig 3B. AbsR 28 small RNA Lane 1- 1.6 OD Total RNA (20ug) Lane 2- 1.0 OD Total RNA (20ug) Lane 3- 0.4 OD Total RNA (20ug) *Acinetobacter baumannii Small RNA (a) (I) Bioethanol production 12 7 Biothanol production, Dry cell biomass production and Total reducing sugars consumption (g/l) 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 5 4 3 2 1 dry cell Biomass (g/l) 6 144 136 128 120 112 96 104 88 80 72 64 56 48 40 32 28 24 0 0 Conc. of reducing sugars and ethanol (g/l) Overview: Substrate: Lignocellulosic perennial grass Fermentation condition: pH: 5, Temp.: 30°C, rpm: 200 Microorganisms: P.stipitis, T.reesei, S.cerevisiae Tim e in hours (b) Total reducing sugars (g/l) Ethanol (g/l) (II) Microbial production of Phytase Dry cell biomass (c) 10 8 6 4 2 0 0 2 4 6 8 Dry cell Biomass (g/l) 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 Tim e in hours Ethanol (g/l) 44 48 52 56 64 Total reducing sugars (g/l) RESEARCH FOCUS • Structural Biology and Drug Discovery: Structure-based drug designing (NMR, x ray crystallography & molecular modeling)- anticancer agents acting on DNA, proteins /DNA / RNA as drug targets, herbs having therapeutic potential, protein-protein and protein-nucleic acid interactions, metalloenzymes, phytases, esterases, trypsin inhibitors, antimicrobial peptides, characterization of proteins and gene cloning, high throughput screening for inhibitors for using genomic library, aptamer technology for drug target identification, enzymes of biosynthetic pathway of pathogens, proteins with biotic and abiotic resistance, salt tolerance, cell based assays, steroid receptors, effects of endocrine disrupting chemicals, cell assays to screen the compound, screening insulin receptors sensitizer, stem cell- biomaterial interactions. • Microbial Technology, Bioprocess technology and Nanobiotechnology; enzyme production and engineering, biobleaching, designing of strain engineering for bioremediation, biofilms, biosurfactants, promoter engineering for biosensors, biopolymers, designing of nanoparticles and drug targeting, small RNA and gene regulation, biofuels, nitrile bioremediation MAJOR EQUIPMENT / FACILITIES HPLC, Protein Purification System, uv-vis spectrophotometer, spectrofluorimeter, Gas Chromatograph Fermentor, Bioreactors, Orbital Shaker& Incubator Shaker, Sonicator DNA Synthesizer & Peptide Synthesizer Electrophoresis System, Transilluminator with Polaroid Camera, Gel Documentation & Analysis Silicon Graphics workstations, Software INSIGHT II, DISCOVER, AMBER, MOE, FELIX, CURVES, SPHINX-LINSHA, CNS-XPLOR, HYPERCHEM . Thermal Cycler (PCR), Elisa Plate Reader Plant Growth Chamber & CO2 Incubator, Ultracentrifuges Inverted, Stereozoom and Fluorescence Microscope 500 MHz FT NMR, cryoprobe & LC-NMR-MS(ESI MS), Software TOPSPIN 1.3, NMR REFINE PLUS - DGII & NMR XPLOR , FELIX, INSIGHT II , DISCOVER, BIOPOLYMER & GAUSSIAN Single Crystal X-Ray Diffractometer with CCD Detector Model Fluorescence Lifetime,TEM, SEM, EPMA, ICP-MS, TIMS, DTA, etc.