Publications by authors named "Mahadevan R"

Background: Remedial teaching is a tailored educational approach dedicated to enhancing the academic performance of students facing challenges within the curriculum. By identifying and addressing specific learning difficulties, it provides essential support and guidance to bring students closer to expected standards while preventing future setbacks. We hypothesize that underperforming medical students who receive daily, tailored remediation will demonstrate significant improvement in their formative and summative assessment scores in biochemistry.

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is a genus of organohalide-respiring bacteria that is recognized for its fastidious growth using reductive dehalogenases (RDases). In the SC05 culture, however, a population also mineralizes dichloromethane (DCM) produced by chloroform dechlorination using the cassette, just downstream of its active RDase. A closed genome of this DCM-mineralizing lineage has previously evaded assembly.

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Background: Wilson's disease (WD) results from pathogenic ATP7B gene variations, causing copper accumulation mainly in the liver, brain, and kidneys.

Objectives: In India, despite studies on ATP7B variants, WD often goes undiagnosed, with the prevalence, carrier rate, and mutation spectrum remaining unknown.

Methods: A multicenter study examined genetic variations in WD among individuals of Indian origin via whole exome sequencing.

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Article Synopsis
  • The treatment of multidrug-resistant bacterial infections is difficult due to a lack of new drugs, leading researchers to explore bacteriophages as a potential treatment option.
  • Phages are currently under clinical trials, but there is a need for more understanding on how to dose them effectively in humans, necessitating preclinical studies to evaluate their pharmacokinetics and dynamics.
  • The review discusses mathematical models that analyze various phage and bacterial parameters to improve dosing strategies, which could facilitate the transition of phage therapy from research to clinical practice.
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A metabolic theory is presented for predicting maximum growth rate, overflow metabolism, respiration efficiency, and maintenance energy flux based on the intersection of cell geometry, membrane protein crowding, and metabolism. The importance of cytosolic macromolecular crowding on phenotype has been established in the literature but the importance of surface area has been largely overlooked due to incomplete knowledge of membrane properties. We demonstrate that the capacity of the membrane to host proteins increases with growth rate offsetting decreases in surface area-to-volume ratios (SA:V).

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Unlabelled: Chain elongating bacteria are a unique guild of strictly anaerobic bacteria that have garnered interest for sustainable chemical manufacturing from carbon-rich wet and gaseous waste streams. They produce C6-C8 medium-chain fatty acids, which are valuable platform chemicals that can be used directly, or derivatized to service a wide range of chemical industries. However, the application of chain elongating bacteria for synthesizing products beyond C6-C8 medium-chain fatty acids has not been evaluated.

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In this study, we introduce the Framework for Optimized Customizable User-Informed Synthesis (FOCUS), a generative machine learning model tailored for drug discovery. FOCUS integrates domain expertise and uses Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO) to guide Monte Carlo Tree Search (MCTS) to efficiently explore chemical space. It generates SMILES representations of potential drug candidates, optimizing for druggability and binding efficacy to NOD2, PEP, and MCT1 receptors.

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Transcription factor (TF)-based biosensors are useful synthetic biology tools for applications in a variety of areas of biotechnology. A major challenge of biosensor circuits is the limited repertoire of identified and well-characterized TFs for applications of interest, in addition to the challenge of optimizing selected biosensors. In this work, we implement the IclR family repressor TF TtgV from DOT-T1E as an indole-derivative biosensor in .

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Unlabelled: Chloroform (CF) and dichloromethane (DCM) are groundwater contaminants of concern due to their high toxicity and inhibition of important biogeochemical processes such as methanogenesis. Anaerobic biotransformation of CF and DCM has been well documented but typically independently of one another. CF is the electron acceptor for certain organohalide-respiring bacteria that use reductive dehalogenases (RDases) to dechlorinate CF to DCM.

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Transcription factor (TF)-based biosensors that connect small-molecule sensing with readouts such as fluorescence have proven to be useful synthetic biology tools for applications in biotechnology. However, the development of specific TF-based biosensors is hindered by the limited repertoire of TFs specific for molecules of interest since current construction methods rely on a limited set of characterized TFs. In this study, we present an approach for engineering the specificity of TFs through a computation-based workflow using molecular docking that enables targeted alteration of TF ligand specificity.

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There have been a growing number of computational strategies to aid in the design of synthetic microbial consortia. A framework to identify regions in parametric space to maximize two essential properties, evenness and stability, is critical. In this study, we introduce DyMMM-LEAPS (dynamic multispecies metabolic modeling-locating evenness and stability in large parametric space), an extension of the DyMMM framework.

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Prokaryotic transcription factors (TFs) regulate gene expression in response to small molecules, thus representing promising candidates as versatile small molecule-detecting biosensors valuable for synthetic biology applications. The engineering of such biosensors requires thorough in vitro and in vivo characterization of TF ligand response as well as detailed molecular structure information. In this work, we functionally and structurally characterize the Pca regulon regulatory protein (PcaR) transcription factor belonging to the IclR transcription factor family.

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Extracytoplasmic Ni(II)-binding proteins (NiBPs) are molecular shuttles involved in cellular nickel uptake. Here, we determined the crystal structure of apo CcNikZ-II at 2.38 Å, which revealed a Ni(II)-binding site comprised of the double His (HH-)prong (His511, His512) and a short variable (v-)loop nearby (Thr59-Thr64, TEDKYT).

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Background: Increasing stroke burden in India demands a long-term stroke surveillance framework. Earlier studies in India were urban-based, short term and provided limited data on stroke incidence and its outcomes. This gap is addressed by the establishment of five population-based stroke registries (PBSRs) of the National Stroke Registry Programme, India.

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Chloroform (CF) and dichloromethane (DCM) contaminate groundwater sites around the world but can be cleaned up through bioremediation. Although several strains of can reduce CF to DCM and multiple Peptococcaceae can ferment DCM, these processes cannot typically happen simultaneously due to CF sensitivity in the known DCM-degraders or electron donor competition. Here, we present a mixed microbial culture that can simultaneously metabolize CF and DCM and create an additional enrichment culture fed only DCM.

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Biotechnology has revolutionized the development of sustainable energy sources by harnessing biomass as a feedstock for energy production. However, challenges such as recalcitrant feedstocks and inefficient metabolic pathways hinder the large-scale integration of renewable energy systems. Enzyme engineering has emerged as a powerful tool to address these challenges by enhancing enzyme activity, specificity, and stability.

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Background: Lyme disease is one of the most commonly reported infectious diseases in the United States (US), accounting for more than [Formula: see text] of all vector-borne diseases in North America.

Objective: In this paper, self-reported tweets on Twitter were analyzed in order to predict potential Lyme disease cases and accurately assess incidence rates in the US.

Methods: The study was done in three stages: (1) Approximately 1.

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Background: Lyme disease is among the most reported tick-borne diseases worldwide, making it a major ongoing public health concern. An effective Lyme disease case reporting system depends on timely diagnosis and reporting by health care professionals, and accurate laboratory testing and interpretation for clinical diagnosis validation. A lack of these can lead to delayed diagnosis and treatment, which can exacerbate the severity of Lyme disease symptoms.

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Biomining processes utilize microorganisms, such as , to extract valuable metals by producing sulfuric acid and ferric ions that dissolve sulfidic minerals. However, excessive production of these compounds can result in metal structure corrosion and groundwater contamination. Synthetic biology offers a promising solution to improve strains for sustainable, eco-friendly, and cost-effective biomining, but genetic engineering of these slow-growing microorganisms is challenging with current inefficient and time-consuming methods.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sulfonamides (sulfas) are the oldest antibacterial drugs, working by mimicking p-aminobenzoic acid to inhibit the bacterial enzyme dihydropteroate synthase (DHPS).
  • Resistance to these drugs can occur through mutations in the folP gene or through the acquisition of sul genes, which code for sulfa-insensitive enzymes.
  • The study reveals that Sul enzymes (Sul1, Sul2, Sul3) have a different structural interaction with pABA compared to DHPS, and features a unique Phe-Gly sequence that helps them resist sulfanilamide while binding to pABA, contributing to broader drug resistance.
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Mine wastewater often contains dissolved metals at concentrations too low to be economically extracted by existing technologies, yet too high for environmental discharge. The most common treatment is chemical precipitation of the dissolved metals using limestone and subsequent disposal of the sludge in tailing impoundments. While it is a cost-effective solution to meet regulatory standards, it represents a lost opportunity.

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Microbial overproduction of aromatic chemicals has gained considerable industrial interest and various metabolic engineering approaches have been employed in recent years to address the associated challenges. So far, most studies have used sugars (mostly glucose) or glycerol as the primary carbon source. In this study, we used ethylene glycol (EG) as the main carbon substrate.

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Many proteins bind transition metal ions as cofactors to carry out their biological functions. Despite binding affinities for divalent transition metal ions being predominantly dictated by the Irving-Williams series for wild-type proteins, in vivo metal ion binding specificity is ensured by intracellular mechanisms that regulate free metal ion concentrations. However, a growing area of biotechnology research considers the use of metal-binding proteins in vitro to purify specific metal ions from wastewater, where specificity is dictated by the protein's metal binding affinities.

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Objective: Neurodevelopmental disorders NDD are neurologic processing problems that interfere with learning in children. Primary and preschool teachers who are essential links in public health reach out to such children do not receive any formal training to identify these disorders. Hence, a primary and preschool level intervention addressing the issue is proposed.

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