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Krovvidi Ravi Kumar

ravi_ccmb@yahoo.com

Journal articles

 
PMID 
Suresh B Pakala, Purushotam Gorla, P Aleem Basha, K Rajasekhar B Ravikumar, Y Mahesh, Mike Merrick, Dayananda Siddavatam  Pnitrophenol 2–hydroxylase in a Gram-negative Serratia sp. strain DS001   Appl Microbiol Biotechnol. 73: 6. 1452-62 Jan2007  
Abstract: A soil bacterium capable of utilizing methyl parathion as sole carbon and energy source was isolated by selective enrichment on minimal medium containing methyl parathion. The strain was identified as belonging to the genus Serratia based on a phylogram constructed using the complete sequence of the 16S rRNA. Serratia sp. strain DS001 utilized methyl parathion, p-nitrophenol, 4-nitrocatechol, and 1,2,4-benzenetriol as sole carbon and energy sources but could not grow using hydroquinone as a source of carbon. p-Nitrophenol and dimethylthiophosphoric acid were found to be the major degradation products of methyl parathion. Growth on p-nitrophenol led to release of stoichiometric amounts of nitrite and to the formation of 4-nitrocatechol and benzenetriol. When these catabolic intermediates of p-nitrophenol were added to resting cells of Serratia sp. strain DS001 oxygen consumption was detected whereas no oxygen consumption was apparent when hydroquinone was added to the resting cells suggesting that it is not part of the p-nitrophenol degradation pathway. Key enzymes involved in degradation of methyl parathion and in conversion of p-nitrophenol to 4-nitrocatechol, namely parathion hydrolase and p-nitrophenol hydroxylase component "A" were detected in the proteomes of the methyl parathion and p-nitrophenol grown cultures, respectively. These studies report for the first time the existence of a p-nitrophenol hydroxylase component "A", typically found in Gram-positive bacteria, in a Gram-negative strain of the genus Serratia.
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PMID 
K S Kumar, B Ravi Kumar, D Siddavattam, C Subramanyam  Characterization of calcineurin-dependent response element binding protein and its involvement in copper- metallothionein gene expression in Neurospora   Biochem Biophys Res Communication 345: 2006. 1010-3  
Abstract: In continuation of our recent observations indicating the presence of a lone calcineurin-dependent response element (CDRE) in the -3730bp upstream region of copper-induced metallothionein (CuMT) gene of Neurospora [K.S. Kumar, S. Dayananda, C. Subramanyam, Copper alone, but not oxidative stress, induces copper-metallothionein gene in Neurospora crassa, FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 242 (2005) 45-50], we isolated and characterized the CDRE-binding protein. The cloned upstream region of CuMT gene was used as the template to specifically amplify CDRE element, which was immobilized on CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B for use as the affinity matrix to purify the CDRE binding protein from nuclear extracts obtained from Neurospora cultures grown in presence of copper. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of the affinity purified protein revealed the presence of a single 17kDa protein, which was identified and characterized by MALDI-TOF. Peptide mass finger printing of tryptic digests and analysis of the 17kDa protein matched with the regulatory beta-subunit of calcineurin (Ca(2+)-calmodulin dependent protein phosphatase). Parallel identification of nuclear localization signals in this protein by in silico analysis suggests a putative role for calcineurin in the regulation of CuMT gene expression.
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PMID 
S Sreenatha, K Ravi Kumar, G V Reddya, B Sridevi, D Praveena, S Monikaa, S Sudhab, M GopalReddyc, P Reddanna  1. Evidence for the association of synaptotagmin with Glutathione S- transferases: Implications for a novel function in human breast cancer   Clinical Biochemsitry 2005: 38. 436-43 May  
Abstract: To analyze the pattern of changes in GSTs in cancerous and adjacent non-cancerous tissues obtained from breast cancer patients undergoing surgery.
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