13 results match your criteria: "Mauritius Oceanography Institute[Affiliation]"
RSC Adv
November 2024
Biomaterials, Drug Delivery & Nanotechnology Unit, Centre for Biomedical & Biomaterials Research (CBBR), University of Mauritius Réduit 80837 Mauritius
Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) exhibit different physical properties compared to small molecules, bulk materials and other nanoparticles. Their synthesis using plant extracts, particularly polyflavonoids as phytoreductants, for the conversion of Au(iii) into Au(0) has been reported. In this study, AuNPs were synthesized with extracts, sterols and pure compounds derived from marine sponges using gold(iii) chloride trihydrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Biol Macromol
February 2024
Biomaterials, Drug Delivery & Nanotechnology Unit, Centre for Biomedical & Biomaterials Research, University of Mauritius, Réduit, Mauritius. Electronic address:
Nanofibers for drug delivery systems have gained much attention during the past years. This paper describes for the first time the loading of a bioactive precipitate (JAD) from the marine sponge Jaspis diastra in PDX and fucoidan-PDX. JAD was characterized by LC-MS/MS and the major component was jaspamide (1) with a purity of 62.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFuture Med Chem
March 2021
Biomaterials, Drug Delivery & Nanotechnology Unit, Centre for Biomedical & Biomaterials Research, MSIRI Building, University of Mauritius, 80837 Réduit, Mauritius.
Oceans harbor a vast biodiversity that is not represented in terrestrial habitats. Marine sponges have been the richest source of marine natural products reported to date, and sponge-derived natural products have served as inspiration for the development of several drugs in clinical use. However, many promising sponge-derived drug candidates have been stalled in clinical trials due to lack of efficacy, off-target toxicity, metabolic instability or poor pharmacokinetics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
April 2018
Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan, Republic of China.
Phylogeography of animals provides clues to processes governing their evolution and diversification. The Indian Ocean has been hypothesized as a 'dispersal corridor' connecting hydrothermal vent fauna of Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Stalked barnacles of the family Eolepadidae are common associates of deep-sea vents in Southern, Pacific and Indian oceans, and the family is an ideal group for testing this hypothesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Mol Biol
April 2018
Laboratoire de Bioelectrochimie et Spectroscopie, UMR 7140, Chimie de la Matière Complexe, Université de Strasbourg, 4 rue Blaise Pascal, Strasbourg, France.
H/D exchange kinetics at the level of the amide proton in the mid infrared (1700-1500 cm) make it possible to study the conformational flexibility of membrane proteins, independent of size or the presence of detergent or lipids. Slow, medium, and fast exchanging domains are distinguished, which reveal a different accessibility to the solvent. Whereas amide hydrogens undergo rapid exchange with solvent in an open structure, hydrogens experience much slower exchange when involved in H-bonded structures or when sterically inaccessible to the solvent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
December 2014
Natural History Museum and Institute, Chiba, 955-2 Aoba-cho, Chuo-ku, Chiba 260-8682, Japan.; Email:
A new species of the alvinocaridid shrimp genus Alvinocaris Williams & Chace, 1982 is described from the Solitaire hydrothermal vent field at 2606 m depth on the Central Indian Ridge. Alvinocaris solitaire sp. nov.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Prod Res
April 2015
a Mauritius Oceanography Institute (MOI) , France Centre, Victoria Avenue, Quatre-Bornes , Mauritius.
This report describes the use of α-glucosidase to evaluate the anti-diabetic potential of extracts from marine sponges collected in the Mauritius waters. Initial screening at 1.0 mg/mL of 141 extracts obtained from 47 sponge species revealed 10 extracts with inhibitory activity greater than 85%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pharm Pharmacol
September 2014
Mauritius Oceanography Institute (MOI), Quatre-Bornes, Mauritius.
Objectives: Based on previous screening results, the cytotoxic effect of the hexane (JDH) and ethyl acetate extracts (JDE) of the marine sponge Jaspis diastra were evaluated on HeLa cells and the present study aimed at determining their possible mechanism of cell death.
Methods: Nuclear staining, membrane potential change, flow cytometry analysis of cell cycle distribution and annexin V staining were undertaken to investigate the effects of JDE and JDH. Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) and nuclear magnetic resonance were used to characterize an isolated bioactive molecule.
Dispersal ability plays a key role in the maintenance of species in spatially and temporally discrete niches of deep-sea hydrothermal vent environments. On the basis of population genetic analyses in the eastern Pacific vent fields, dispersal of animals in the mid-oceanic ridge systems generally appears to be constrained by geographical barriers such as trenches, transform faults, and microplates. Four hydrothermal vent fields (the Kairei and Edmond fields near the Rodriguez Triple Junction, and the Dodo and Solitaire fields in the Central Indian Ridge) have been discovered in the mid-oceanic ridge system of the Indian Ocean.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Toxicol Pharmacol
July 2013
Mauritius Oceanography Institute, Quatre-Bornes, Mauritius.
Marine sponges are considered as a gold mine of new natural products possessing numerous biological activities. We examined the cytotoxic properties of the ethyl acetate extract (JDE) of the previously unrecorded sponge, Jaspis sp. collected from Mauritius Waters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Biodivers
March 2013
Mauritius Oceanography Institute, Quatre-Bornes, Mauritius.
Patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease (AD) show a characteristic neurochemical deficit of acetylcholine, especially in the basal forebrains. The use of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitors to retard the hydrolysis of acetylcholine has been suggested as a promising strategy for AD treatment. In this study, we evaluated the acetylcholinesterase inhibitory (AChEI) activities of 134 extracts obtained from 45 species of marine sponges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Toxicol Pharmacol
September 2012
Mauritius Oceanography Institute, France Centre, Quatre-Bornes, Mauritius. Electronic address:
The ocean is an exceptional source of natural products with many of them exhibiting novel structural features and bioactivity. As one of the most interesting phylum with respect to pharmacological active marine compounds, Poriferas have been investigated widely in the last few decades. A total of 60 organic extracts (hexane, ethyl acetate and butanol) from 20 species of marine sponges from Mauritius were screened at 50μg/ml in an in vitro screening assay against 9 human cancer cell lines.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhilos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci
January 2005
Mauritius Oceanography Institute, France Centre, Victoria Avenue, Quatre Bornes, Mauritius.
Mauritius forms part of the Mascarene Islands of the Indian Ocean and is situated ca. 700 km to the east of Madagascar at latitude 20 degrees S and longitude 57.5 degrees E.
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