Shalini Mohan
VIT University
8 Papers
23 Citations
Shalini Mohan is an academic researcher from VIT University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ethyl gallate & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
In vitro protection of biological macromolecules against oxidative stress and in vivo toxicity evaluation of Acacia nilotica (L.) and ethyl gallate in rats
TL;DR: Based on the acute toxicity results, A. nilotica (L.) leaf extract and ethyl gallate as well was found to be non-toxic and safe and could be used as potential antioxidants with safe therapeutic application in cancer chemotherapy.
Biomass characterisation and phylogenetic analysis of microalgae isolated from estuaries: Role in phycoremediation of tannery effluent
Balaji Sundaramoorthy,Kalaivani Thiagarajan,Shalini Mohan,Sankari Mohan,Priya Rajendra Rao,Siva Ramamoorthy,Rajasekaran Chandrasekaran +6 more
TL;DR: Four heavy-metal tolerant microalgal species isolated from the estuaries receiving tannery effluents showed impressive potential for phycoremediation activity, and the interactions are due to the presence of alkynes and aromatic functional groups.
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Evaluation of ethyl gallate for its antioxidant and anticancer properties against chemical-induced tongue carcinogenesis in mice.
TL;DR: Acacia nilotica (L.) leaf extract and ethyl gallate (EG), a phenolic compound present in AN, shows strong hope as drugs against oral cancer progression and the involvement of apoptosis in vivo is brought out.
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Alleviation of 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide induced oxidative stress by Oroxylum indicum (L.) leaf extract in albino Wistar rats.
Shalini Mohan,Kalaivani Thiagarajan,Balaji Sundaramoorthy,Vivek Gurung,Manas Barpande,Shilpi Agarwal,Rajasekaran Chandrasekaran +6 more
TL;DR: Results clearly suggest that O. indicum (L.) leaf extract when administered orally in a dose dependent manner has the ability to overcome the oxidative stress induced by 4-NQO with hepatoprotective and lipid protective properties.
In vitro evaluation of antiproliferative effect of ethyl gallate against human oral squamous carcinoma cell line KB
TL;DR: A volume of 50 μg/mL of ethyl gallate was found to be significantly effective in controlling the cancer cell proliferation leading to acute apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner.
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