Abdul Latif Khan
University of Nizwa
316 Papers
717 Citations
Abdul Latif Khan is an academic researcher from University of Nizwa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Abscisic acid. The author has an hindex of 54, co-authored 293 publications. Previous affiliations of Abdul Latif Khan include University of Houston & Kyungpook National University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Allelopathy of Teucrium Royleanum Wall. Ex Benth. from Pakistan
Shabir Ahmad,Mohammad Arfan,Abdul Latif Khan,Riaz Ullah,Javid Hussain,Zia Muhammad,Rasool Khan,Naeem Khan,Kazuo N. Watanabe +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, Teucrium royleanum was tested by four variant assays using lettuce seeds, showing excellent inhibition, and the results from this study suggested that the secondary metabolites from T. roylanum can be potential candidates for the phytotoxicity (Allelopathy) and can be utilized on commercial scale for the development of new herbicides or weedicides.
RESEARCH ARTICLE Endophytes Aspergillus caespitosus LK12 and Phoma sp. LK13 of Moringa peregrina produce gibberellins and improve rice plant growth
Abdul Latif Khan,Muhammad Waqas,Javid Hussain,Ahmed Al-Harrasi,Ahmed N. Al-Rawahi,Khadija Al-Hosni,Min-Ji Kim,Muhammad Adnan,In-Jung Lee +8 more
- 01 Jan 2014
TL;DR: Khan et al. as discussed by the authors reported that endophytes Aspergillus caespitosus LK12 and Phoma sp. LK13 of Moringa peregrina produce gibberellins and improve rice plant growth.
26
Enzyme inhibitory metabolites from endophytic Penicillium citrinum isolated from Boswellia sacra
Sajid Ali,Sajid Ali,Abdul Latif Khan,Liaqat Ali,Tania Shamim Rizvi,Sumera Afzal Khan,Javid Hussain,Muhammad Hamayun,Ahmed Al-Harrasi +8 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the endophytic microorganism associated with the arid-land tree can offer a rich source of biologically active chemical constituents that could help discover lead drugs for enzyme inhibition.
25
Sorokiniol: a new enzymes inhibitory metabolite from fungal endophyte Bipolaris sorokiniana LK12
Liaqat Ali,Abdul Latif Khan,Javid Hussain,Ahmed Al-Harrasi,Muhammad Waqas,Muhammad Waqas,Sang-Mo Kang,Ahmed Al-Rawahi,In-Jung Lee +8 more
TL;DR: The present results suggest that the endophytic microorganism associated with indigenously important medicinal plants can offer a rich source of biologically active chemical constituents which could help in discovering enzyme inhibitory lead drugs.