Basit Gulzar
Jamia Hamdard
19 Papers
3 Citations
Basit Gulzar is an academic researcher from Jamia Hamdard. The author has contributed to research in topics: Callus & Somatic embryogenesis. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 17 publications. Previous affiliations of Basit Gulzar include Hamdard University.
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Papers
Genes, proteins and other networks regulating somatic embryogenesis in plants.
TL;DR: This article reviews various genes/orthologs isolated from different plants and presents the need of high throughput, innovative techniques, and sensitive instruments in unraveling the mystery of SE.
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Inoculation of Rhizobium Alleviates Salinity Stress Through Modulation of Growth Characteristics, Physiological and Biochemical Attributes, Stomatal Activities and Antioxidant Defence in Cicer arietinum L.
TL;DR: In this paper, the significance of rhizobium application in alleviation of salt stress in chickpea by increasing cell viability, stomatal movement, photosynthetic pigment and protein content, nitrate reductase, carbonic anhydrase as well as enzymatic and nonenzymatic antioxidant activities was investigated.
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Plant tissue culture: agriculture and industrial applications
Basit Gulzar,A. Mujib,Moien Qadir Malik,Jyoti Mamgain,Rukaya Syeed,Nadia Zafar +5 more
- 01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: The role of PTC in medicinal and crop plant production and improvement is summarized; the various ways including Agrobacterium-mediated transformation in which the PTC suit to different needs and purpose have also been discussed.
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Mass propagation through direct and indirect organogenesis in three species of genus Zephyranthes and ploidy assessment of regenerants through flow cytometry.
TL;DR: In this paper, a dual in vitro regeneration system through callus mediated shoot regeneration and direct shoot regeneration in species Zephyranthes candida, Zephriranthes grandiflora and Zephrinhes citrina was investigated.
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Cadmium chloride (CdCl2) elicitation improves reserpine and ajmalicine yield in Rauvolfia serpentina as revealed by high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC).
Nadia Zafar,A. Mujib,Muzamil Ali,Dipti Tonk,Basit Gulzar,Moien Qadir Malik,Jyoti Mamgain,Rukaya Sayeed +7 more
- 20 Jul 2020
TL;DR: The study reveals enriched level of reserpine and ajmalicine in cultivated tissues and the enhancement was noted up to C3 (0.15 mM) elicitor level, which indicates the use of CdCl2 as a propitious method in enhancing reser Alpine yield in R. serpentina.
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