1.Assessment of Microbial Load in Made Tea and Antimicrobial Property of Made Tea Infusion
Md Monir Hossain ; Rezaul Karim ; Shamima Begum ; GM Rabiul Islam ; Md Mozammel Hoque
International Journal of Public Health Research 2013;3(2):276-281
This study aimed to find out that a cup of tea is or is not safe for human health from microbial contamination and to point out the antimicrobial property of made tea liquor. Different made tea brands were collected randomly from different super shop of Dhaka city. The Association of Official Agricultural Chemists (AOAC), 2005 was used as official methods of analysis. The Standard Plate Count (SPC) technique was used for total microbial load, yeast and fungal count. Most Probable Number (MPN) technique was used for the enumeration of coliform in tea samples. Bacteria, yeast, mould and coliform were observed before and after boiling in all studied the samples. Before boiling, total microbial load and coliform were found at significantly higher of its’ acceptable limit (p<0.05) whereas yeast and fungus were found of its’ acceptable limit (p>0.05). After boiling, only coliform was observed significantly higher in all except Tetley tea at its’ non-acceptable limit (p<0.05). Fecal coliform was not present at every stage of this study. Made tea liquor has shown to have antimicrobial property. Boiling in tea preparation and its’ liquor antimicrobial property considerably reduced the level of microbial load to safe level for public consumption.
2.An Efficient Approach to Mining Maximal Contiguous Frequent Patterns from Large DNA Sequence Databases.
Md Rezaul KARIM ; Md Mamunur RASHID ; Byeong Soo JEONG ; Ho Jin CHOI
Genomics & Informatics 2012;10(1):51-57
Mining interesting patterns from DNA sequences is one of the most challenging tasks in bioinformatics and computational biology. Maximal contiguous frequent patterns are preferable for expressing the function and structure of DNA sequences and hence can capture the common data characteristics among related sequences. Biologists are interested in finding frequent orderly arrangements of motifs that are responsible for similar expression of a group of genes. In order to reduce mining time and complexity, however, most existing sequence mining algorithms either focus on finding short DNA sequences or require explicit specification of sequence lengths in advance. The challenge is to find longer sequences without specifying sequence lengths in advance. In this paper, we propose an efficient approach to mining maximal contiguous frequent patterns from large DNA sequence datasets. The experimental results show that our proposed approach is memory-efficient and mines maximal contiguous frequent patterns within a reasonable time.
Base Sequence
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Computational Biology
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Databases, Nucleic Acid
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DNA
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Mining
3.Efficient Mining of Interesting Patterns in Large Biological Sequences.
Md Mamunur RASHID ; Md Rezaul KARIM ; Byeong Soo JEONG ; Ho Jin CHOI
Genomics & Informatics 2012;10(1):44-50
Pattern discovery in biological sequences (e.g., DNA sequences) is one of the most challenging tasks in computational biology and bioinformatics. So far, in most approaches, the number of occurrences is a major measure of determining whether a pattern is interesting or not. In computational biology, however, a pattern that is not frequent may still be considered very informative if its actual support frequency exceeds the prior expectation by a large margin. In this paper, we propose a new interesting measure that can provide meaningful biological information. We also propose an efficient index-based method for mining such interesting patterns. Experimental results show that our approach can find interesting patterns within an acceptable computation time.
Base Sequence
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Computational Biology
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DNA
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Mining
4.Protective effects of Moringa oleifera Lam. leaves against arsenic-induced toxicity in mice
Sheikh Afzal ; Yeasmin Fouzia ; Agarwal Smita ; Rahman Mashiur ; Islam Khairul ; Hossain Ekhtear ; Hossain Shakhawoat ; Karim Rezaul Md ; Nikkon Farjana ; Saud Alam Zahangir ; Hossain Khaled
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine 2014;(z1):353-358
Objective: To evaluate the protective role of leaves of Moringa oleifera (M. oleifera) Lam. against arsenic-induced toxicity in mice.Methods:non-treated control group while, the second, third, and fourth groups were treated with M.oleifera leaves (50 mg/kg body weight per day), sodium arsenite (10 mg/kg body weight per day) and sodium arsenite plus M. oleifera leaves, respectively. Serum indices related to cardiac, liver and renal functions were analyzed to evaluate the protective effect of Moringa leaves on arsenic-induced effects in mice.Results:Swiss albino male mice were divided into four groups. The first group was used as induced elevation of triglyceride, glucose, urea and the activities of alkaline phospatase, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase in serum. M. oleifera leaves also prevented the arsenic-induced perturbation of serum butyryl cholinesterase activity, total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol.Conclusions:The results indicate that the leaves of M. oleifera may be useful in reducing the It revealed that food supplementation of M. oleifera leaves abrogated the arsenic-effects of arsenic-induced toxicity.
5.Protective effects of Moringa oleifera Lam. leaves against arsenic-induced toxicity in mice.
Afzal SHEIKH ; Fouzia YEASMIN ; Smita AGARWAL ; Mashiur RAHMAN ; Khairul ISLAM ; Ekhtear HOSSAIN ; Shakhawoat HOSSAIN ; Md Rezaul KARIM ; Farjana NIKKON ; Zahangir Alam SAUD ; Khaled HOSSAIN
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine 2014;4(Suppl 1):S353-8
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the protective role of leaves of Moringa oleifera (M. oleifera) Lam. against arsenic-induced toxicity in mice.
METHODSSwiss albino male mice were divided into four groups. The first group was used as non-treated control group while, the second, third, and fourth groups were treated with M. oleifera leaves (50 mg/kg body weight per day), sodium arsenite (10 mg/kg body weight per day) and sodium arsenite plus M. oleifera leaves, respectively. Serum indices related to cardiac, liver and renal functions were analyzed to evaluate the protective effect of Moringa leaves on arsenic-induced effects in mice.
RESULTSIt revealed that food supplementation of M. oleifera leaves abrogated the arsenic-induced elevation of triglyceride, glucose, urea and the activities of alkaline phospatase, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase in serum. M. oleifera leaves also prevented the arsenic-induced perturbation of serum butyryl cholinesterase activity, total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol.
CONCLUSIONSThe results indicate that the leaves of M. oleifera may be useful in reducing the effects of arsenic-induced toxicity.