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Hariharakrishnan Janardhanan

Hariharakrishnan Janardhanan

Ph.D

About

9
Publications
3,767
Reads
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198
Citations
Additional affiliations
December 2012 - November 2014
SASTRA University
Position
  • Assistant Professor(Research)
July 2012 - November 2012
Pondicherry University
Position
  • Guest Faculty
October 2010 - September 2011
University of Alberta
Position
  • PostDoc Position
Education
January 2005 - December 2009
Jiwaji University
Field of study
  • Biotechnology
August 2002 - May 2004
Bharathidasan University
Field of study
  • Biotechnology
July 1999 - May 2002
Vysya College, Periyar University
Field of study
  • Biochemistry

Publications

Publications (9)
Article
Full-text available
Ammonia is a widely used industrial chemical that is recognized as a potent neurotoxin and environmental pollutant. The present study addresses the oxidative stress and tissue pathology caused by 4 weeks of exposure to ammonium acetate (AMA; 100 mg/kg daily; orally) in rats, and their response to oral treatments with alpha-ketoglutarate (A-KG; 1.0...
Article
Full-text available
Cyanide is primarily a neurotoxin but its hepatotoxic and nephrotoxic potentials are also known. The present study reports the effect of alpha-ketoglutarate A-KG (2.5–20 mM; 0 min), a potential cyanide antidote on potassium cyanide (KCN; 1.25–20 mM) induced cytotoxicity in primary culture of rat hepatocytes. Cytotoxicity measured at various time po...
Article
Full-text available
Cyanide is a potential suicidal, homicidal and chemical warfare agent. It produces histotoxic hypoxia following inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase, a terminal respiratory chain enzyme. The profound metabolic changes lead to neurotoxicity including alterations in the levels of neurotransmitters. The present study addressed the effect of acute exposu...
Article
Full-text available
Cyanide is a mitochondrial poison, which is ubiquitously present in the environment. Cyanide-induced oxidative stress is known to play a key role in mediating the neurotoxicity and cell death in rat pheochromocytoma (PC12) cells. PC12 cells are widely used as a model for neurotoxicity assays in vitro. In the present study, we investigated the prote...
Article
Oral toxicity of several cyanogens and their reversal by alpha-ketoglutarate (A-KG; oral) were studied in rats. LD(50) of acetonitrile (ATCN), acrylonitrile (ACN), malononitrile (MCN), propionitrile (PCN), sodium nitroprusside (SNP), and succinonitrile (SCN) was 4891, 143.3, 69.8, 122.9, 69.8 and 488.7 mg/kg, respectively while the protection index...
Article
Full-text available
Cyanide is a rapidly acting mitochondrial poison that inhibits cellular respiration and energy metabolism leading to histotoxic hypoxia followed by cell death. Cyanide is predominantly a neurotoxin but its toxic manifestations in non-neuronal cells are also documented. This study addresses the oxidative stress mediated cytotoxicity of cyanide in Rh...
Article
Full-text available
Oxidative stress plays a crucial role in mediating cyanide toxicity. The present study addresses the effect of cyanide on activity and gene-expression profile of certain antioxidant enzymes and the expression of heat shock protein (HSP-70) in different organs of rats. Rats were treated with 0.50 LD(50) (7.0 mg/kg) of potassium cyanide (KCN; oral) a...
Article
Cyanide is a rapidly acting neurotoxin that inhibits cellular respiration and energy metabolism leading to histotoxic hypoxia. This results in the dissipation of mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) accompanied by decreased cellular ATP content which in turn is responsible for increased levels of intracellular calcium ions ([Ca(2+)](i)) and total...

Questions

Questions (5)
Question
I have an idea and i wish to submit it as a project proposal for funding. I would want to know if its worth pursuing?is there any site or forum to do this and of course without the idea being absorbed?
Question
I'm planning to use THLE-2,3 cells for my studies. I heard that they are genetically modified. Do I have to get a bio-safety certificate before using them? If yes, please suggest some other normal human cell lines.
Question
To overcome the bio-availability and permeability of drugs, nanoformualtions are being developed. Will it be more easy, cost effective and better if the compound can be given as co-therapy with the nano-particles?
Question
I want to compare the toxicity of a plant based compound on proliferating and non-proliferating cells. For proliferating cells, there are a lot of cancerous cell lines that can be used. Can anyone suggest some cell lines which are non-proliferating excluding primary cells.
Question
I am planning to work on anti-tumor compounds from traditional medicine in different cell lines. I would prefer to compare their efficacy with known drugs. Is cyclophosphamide a good choice? Please suggest drugs that can be used as a positive control and are cost-effective.

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