Browsing by Author "Niharika Singh"
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PublicationArticle A study on the influence of government, financial and incubation support on the success of startups in IT Cities of India(International University of Sarajevo, 2024) Shubham Mishra; Jyoti Bhargava; Shalini Singh; Niharika Singh; Roopam kumari; Ruhul AminThis paper revolves around the concept of start-ups in IT Cities of India. Start-ups are mostly created based on creative and innovative ideas and grow to achieve success. Start-up companies are newly established companies which generally strive for existence due to some challenges. The basic purpose of this paper is to put some light on the factors influencing the success of startups in IT Cities of India. factors include Government support, Incubation support and financial support which is again sub divided into various sub factors having an influence on the success of startups in IT Cities of India. An attempt is made to review the literature and based on which primary data were collected from various Start-up Unit, start- up owner, CEO through questionnaire and the total of 309 respondents have been analyzed. Based on data collected all the three factors have been analyzed and proposed some suggestions and strategies. © The Author 2024. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) that allows others to share and adapt the material for any purpose (even commercially), in any medium with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.PublicationBook Chapter Effect of Humidity on Pest and Disease Incidence in Crops(Apple Academic Press, 2025) Ramkumar; Manisha Chaudhary; Prince Sahu; Kartikey Singh; Ravi Kumar; Anju Shukla; Chander Singh; Vishal Dinkar; Ashish Kumar Singh; Niharika Singh; Ram Keval; Anshuman Semwal; Rishi Nath PandeyHumidity is a term used to describe how much moisture or water vapor is present in an atmosphere. It is a crucial environmental factor in the emergence, growth, and development of diseases and pests. Insects have a greater ability for reproduction, and high humidity has an impact on their physiology. There are several differences in how ambient moisture affects an insect’s metabolic rate. It may have an impact on insect behavior such as post-diapause egg hatching, molting, mating, and pest movement. Dry environments trigger diapause, but moist ones promote the growth and pupation of insect pests. With a maximal rate of disease progress at intermediate RHs (50–56%), disease development is often faster at close to room temperature. Low RH levels speed up host tissue death, inhibit disease progression, and limit spore germination and lesion growth. Within a range of suitable temperatures, intermediate RH levels enhance disease progression by increasing spore germination. Although prolonged exposure to these conditions seems to be detrimental for the development of disease, high RH enhances spore germination. Epidemics of disease, the prevalence of pests, and the use of pesticides are all influenced by weather conditions, especially high ambient humidity. Soil moisture and temperature have a considerable impact on the emergence and spread of nematodes and plant diseases. The population growth, survival, and incidence of nematodes are influenced by humidity. When egg-laying in a dry environment, mites produce more eggs more quickly and live longer than when doing so in a nearly saturated environment. In a moist environment, newly hatched mites have a limited chance of survival. At higher RH levels (>96%) with a well-defined incubation period, entomopathogenic agents exhibit their highest infection potential and mortality rates. © 2025 by Apple Academic Press, Inc.PublicationArticle Global Retinoblastoma Presentation and Analysis by National Income Level(American Medical Association, 2020) Ido Didi Fabian; Elhassan Abdallah; Shehu U. Abdullahi; Rula A. Abdulqader; Sahadatou Adamou Boubacar; Dupe S. Ademola-Popoola; Adedayo Adio; Armin R. Afshar; Priyanka Aggarwal; Ada E. Aghaji; Alia Ahmad; Marliyanti N. R. Akib; Lamis Al Harby; Mouroge H. Al Ani; Aygun Alakbarova; Silvia Alarcón Portabella; Safaa A. F. Al-Badri; Ana Patricia A. Alcasabas; Saad A. Al-Dahmash; Amanda Alejos; Ernesto Alemany-Rubio; Amadou I. Alfa Bio; Yvania Alfonso Carreras; Christiane Al-Haddad; Hamoud H. Y. Al-Hussaini; Amany M. Ali; Donjeta B. Alia; Mazin F. Al-Jadiry; Usama Al-Jumaly; Hind M. Alkatan; Charlotta All-Eriksson; Ali A. R. M. Al-Mafrachi; Argentino A. Almeida; Khalifa M. Alsawidi; Athar A. S. M. Al-Shaheen; Entissar H. Al-Shammary; Primawita O. Amiruddin; Romanzo Antonino; Nicholas J. Astbury; Hatice T. Atalay; La-Ongsri Atchaneeyasakul; Rose Atsiaya; Taweevat Attaseth; Than H. Aung; Silvia Ayala; Baglan Baizakova; Julia Balaguer; Ruhengiz Balayeva; Walentyna Balwierz; Honorio Barranco; Covadonga Bascaran; Maja Beck Popovic; Raquel Benavides; Sarra Benmiloud; Nissrine Bennani Guebessi; Rokia C. Berete; Jesse L. Berry; Anirban Bhaduri; Sunil Bhat; Shelley J. Biddulph; Eva M. Biewald; Nadia Bobrova; Marianna Boehme; H.C. Boldt; Maria Teresa B. C. Bonanomi; Norbert Bornfeld; Gabrielle C. Bouda; Hédi Bouguila; Amaria Boumedane; Rachel C. Brennan; Bénédicte G. Brichard; Jassada Buaboonnam; Patricia Calderón-Sotelo; Doris A. Calle Jara; Jayne E. Camuglia; Miriam R. Cano; Michael Capra; Nathalie Cassoux; Guilherme Castela; Luis Castillo; Jaume Català-Mora; Guillermo L. Chantada; Shabana Chaudhry; Sonal S. Chaugule; Argudit Chauhan; Bhavna Chawla; Violeta S. Chernodrinska; Faraja S. Chiwanga; Tsengelmaa Chuluunbat; Krzysztof Cieslik; Ruellyn L. Cockcroft; Codruta Comsa; Zelia M. Correa; Maria G. Correa Llano; Timothy W. Corson; Kristin E. Cowan-Lyn; Monika Csóka; Xuehao Cui; Isac V. Da Gama; Wantanee Dangboon; Anirban Das; Sima Das; Jacquelyn M. Davanzo; Alan Davidson; Patrick De Potter; Karina Q. Delgado; Hakan Demirci; Laurence Desjardins; Rosdali Y. Diaz Coronado; Helen Dimaras; Andrew J. Dodgshun; Craig Donaldson; Carla R. Donato Macedo; Monica D. Dragomir; Yi Du; Magritha Du Bruyn; Kemala S. Edison; I. Wayan Eka Sutyawan; Asmaa El Kettani; Amal M. Elbahi; James E. Elder; Dina Elgalaly; Alaa M. Elhaddad; Moawia M. Ali Elhassan; Mahmoud M. Elzembely; Vera A. Essuman; Ted Grimbert A. Evina; Zehra Fadoo; Adriana C. Fandiño; Mohammad Faranoush; Oluyemi Fasina; Delia D. P. G. Fernández; Ana Fernández-Teijeiro; Allen Foster; Shahar Frenkel; Ligia D. Fu; Soad L. Fuentes-Alabi; Brenda L. Gallie; Moira Gandiwa; Juan L. Garcia; David García Aldana; Pascale Y. Gassant; Jennifer A. Geel; Fariba Ghassemi; Ana V. Girón; Zelalem Gizachew; Marco A. Goenz; Aaron S. Gold; Maya Goldberg-Lavid; Glen A. Gole; Nir Gomel; Efren Gonzalez; Graciela Gonzalez Perez; Liudmira González-Rodríguez; Henry N. Garcia Pacheco; Jaime Graells; Liz Green; Pernille A. Gregersen; Nathalia D. A. K. Grigorovski; Koffi M. Guedenon; D. Sanjeeva Gunasekera; Ahmet K. Gündüz; Himika Gupta; Sanjiv Gupta; Theodora Hadjistilianou; Patrick Hamel; Syed A. Hamid; Norhafizah Hamzah; Eric D. Hansen; J. William Harbour; M. Elizabeth Hartnett; Murat Hasanreisoglu; Sadiq Hassan; Shadab Hassan; Stanislava Hederova; Jose Hernandez; Lorelay Marie Carcamo Hernandez; Laila Hessissen; Diriba F. Hordofa; Laura C. Huang; G.B. Hubbard; Marlies Hummlen; Kristina Husakova; Allawi N. Hussein Al-Janabi; Russo Ida; Vesna R. Ilic; Vivekaraj Jairaj; Irfan Jeeva; Helen Jenkinson; Xunda Ji; Dong Hyun Jo; Kenneth P. Johnson; William J. Johnson; Michael M. Jones; Theophile B. Amani Kabesha; Rolande L. Kabore; Swathi Kaliki; Abubakar Kalinaki; Mehmet Kantar; Ling-Yuh Kao; Tamar Kardava; Rejin Kebudi; Tomas Kepak; Naama Keren-Froim; Zohora J. Khan; Hussain A. Khaqan; Phara Khauv; Wajiha J. Kheir; Vikas Khetan; Alireza Khodabande; Zaza Khotenashvili; Jonathan W. Kim; Jeong Hun Kim; Hayyam Kiratli; Tero T. Kivelä; Artur Klett; Jess Elio Kosh Komba Palet; Dalia Krivaitiene; Mariana Kruger; Kittisak Kulvichit; Mayasari W. Kuntorini; Alice Kyara; Eva S. Lachmann; Carol P. S. Lam; Geoffrey C. Lam; Scott A. Larson; Slobodanka Latinović; Kelly D. Laurenti; Bao Han A. Le; Karin Lecuona; Amy A. Leverant; Cairui Li; Ben Limbu; Quah Boon Long; Juan P. López; Robert M. Lukamba; Livia Lumbroso; Sandra Luna-Fineman; Delfitri Lutfi; Lesia Lysytsia; George N. Magrath; Amita Mahajan; Abdul Rahim Majeed; Erika Maka; Mayuri Makan; Emil K. Makimbetov; Chatonda Manda; Nieves Martín Begue; Lauren Mason; John O. Mason; Ibrahim O. Matende; Miguel Materin; Clarissa C. D. S. Mattosinho; Marchelo Matua; Ismail Mayet; Freddy B. Mbumba; John D. McKenzie; Aurora Medina-Sanson; Azim Mehrvar; Aemero A. Mengesha; Vikas Menon; Gary John V. D. Mercado; Marilyn B. Mets; Edoardo Midena; Divyansh K. C. Mishra; Furahini G. Mndeme; Ahmed A. Mohamedani; Mona T. Mohammad; Annette C. Moll; Margarita M. Montero; Rosa A. Morales; Claude Moreira; Prithvi Mruthyunjaya; McHikirwa S. Msina; Gerald Msukwa; Sangeeta S. Mudaliar; Kangwa I. Muma; Francis L. Munier; Gabriela Murgoi; Timothy G. Murray; Kareem O. Musa; Asma Mushtaq; Hamzah Mustak; Okwen M. Muyen; Gita Naidu; Akshay Gopinathan Nair; Larisa Naumenko; Paule Aïda Ndoye Roth; Yetty M. Nency; Vladimir Neroev; Hang Ngo; Rosa M. Nieves; Marina Nikitovic; Elizabeth D. Nkanga; Henry Nkumbe; Murtuza Nuruddin; Mutale Nyaywa; Ghislaine Obono-Obiang; Ngozi C. Oguego; Andrzej Olechowski; Scott C. N. Oliver; Peter Osei-Bonsu; Diego Ossandon; Manuel A. Paez-Escamilla; Halimah Pagarra; Sally L Painter; Vivian Paintsil; Luisa Paiva; Bikramjit P. Pal; Mahesh Shanmugam Palanivelu; Ruzanna Papyan; Raffaele Parrozzani; Manoj Parulekar; Claudia R. Pascual Morales; Katherine E. Paton; Katarzyna Pawinska-Wasikowska; Jacob Pe'Er; Armando Peña; Sanja Perić; Chau T. M. Pham; Remezo Philbert; David A. Plager; Pavel Pochop; Rodrigo A. Polania; Vladimir G. Polyakov; Manca T. Pompe; Jonathan J. Pons; Daphna Prat; Vireak Prom; Ignatius Purwanto; Ali O. Qadir; Seema Qayyum; Jiang Qian; Ardizal Rahman; Salman Rahman; Jamalia Rahmat; Purnima Rajkarnikar; Rajesh Ramanjulu; Aparna Ramasubramanian; Marco A. Ramirez-Ortiz; Léa Raobela; Riffat Rashid; M. Ashwin Reddy; Ehud Reich; Lorna A. Renner; David Reynders; Dahiru Ribadu; Mussagy M. Riheia; Petra Ritter-Sovinz; Duangnate Rojanaporn; Livia Romero; Soma R. Roy; Raya H. Saab; Svetlana Saakyan; Ahmed H Sabhan; Mandeep S. Sagoo; Azza M. A. Said; Rohit Saiju; Beatriz Salas; Sonsoles San Román Pacheco; Gissela L. Sánchez; Phayvanh Sayalith; Trish A. Scanlan; Amy C. Schefler; Judy Schoeman; Ahad Sedaghat; Stefan Seregard; Rachna Seth; Ankoor S. Shah; Shawkat A. Shakoor; Manoj K. Sharma; Sadik T. Sherief; Nandan G. Shetye; Carol L. Shields; Sorath Noorani Siddiqui; Sidi Sidi Cheikh; Sónia Silva; Arun D. Singh; Niharika Singh; Usha Singh; Penny Singha; Rita S. Sitorus; Alison H. Skalet; Hendrian D. Soebagjo; Tetyana Sorochynska; Grace Ssali; Andrew W. Stacey; Sandra E. Staffieri; Erin D. Stahl; Christina Stathopoulos; Branka Stirn Kranjc; David K. Stones; Caron Strahlendorf; Maria Estela Coleoni Suarez; Sadia Sultana; Xiantao Sun; Meryl Sundy; Rosanne Superstein; Eddy Supriyadi; Supawan Surukrattanaskul; Shigenobu Suzuki; Karel Svojgr; Fatoumata Sylla; Gevorg Tamamyan; Deborah Tan; Alketa Tandili; Fanny F. Tarrillo Leiva; Maryam Tashvighi; Bekim Tateshi; Edi S. Tehuteru; Luiz F. Teixeira; Kok Hoi Teh; Tuyisabe Theophile; Helen Toledano; Doan L. Trang; Fousseyni Traoré; Sumalin Trichaiyaporn; Samuray Tuncer; Harba Tyau-Tyau; Ali B. Umar; Emel Unal; Ogul E. Uner; Steen F. Urbak; Tatiana L. Ushakova; Rustam H. Usmanov; Sandra Valeina; Milo Van Hoefen Wijsard; Adisai Varadisai; Liliana Vasquez; Leon O. Vaughan; Nevyana V. Veleva-Krasteva; Nishant Verma; Andi A. Victor; Maris Viksnins; Edwin G. Villacís Chafla; Vicktoria Vishnevskia-Dai; Tushar Vora; Antonio E. Wachtel; Werner Wackernagel; Keith Waddell; Patricia D. Wade; Amina H. Wali; Yi-Zhuo Wang; Avery Weiss; Matthew W. Wilson; Amelia D. C. Wime; Atchareeya Wiwatwongwana; Damrong Wiwatwongwana; Charlotte Wolley Dod; Phanthipha Wongwai; Daoman Xiang; Yishuang Xiao; Jason C. Yam; Huasheng Yang; Jenny M. Yanga; Muhammad A Yaqub; Vera A. Yarovaya; Andrey A. Yarovoy; Huijing Ye; Yacoub A. Yousef; Putu Yuliawati; Arturo M. Zapata López; Ekhtelbenina Zein; Chengyue Zhang; Yi Zhang; Junyang Zhao; Xiaoyu Zheng; Katsiaryna Zhilyaeva; Nida Zia; Othman A. O. Ziko; Marcia Zondervan; Richard BowmanImportance: Early diagnosis of retinoblastoma, the most common intraocular cancer, can save both a child's life and vision. However, anecdotal evidence suggests that many children across the world are diagnosed late. To our knowledge, the clinical presentation of retinoblastoma has never been assessed on a global scale. Objectives: To report the retinoblastoma stage at diagnosis in patients across the world during a single year, to investigate associations between clinical variables and national income level, and to investigate risk factors for advanced disease at diagnosis. Design, Setting, and Participants: A total of 278 retinoblastoma treatment centers were recruited from June 2017 through December 2018 to participate in a cross-sectional analysis of treatment-naive patients with retinoblastoma who were diagnosed in 2017. Main Outcomes and Measures: Age at presentation, proportion of familial history of retinoblastoma, and tumor stage and metastasis. Results: The cohort included 4351 new patients from 153 countries; the median age at diagnosis was 30.5 (interquartile range, 18.3-45.9) months, and 1976 patients (45.4%) were female. Most patients (n = 3685 [84.7%]) were from low-and middle-income countries (LMICs). Globally, the most common indication for referral was leukocoria (n = 2638 [62.8%]), followed by strabismus (n = 429 [10.2%]) and proptosis (n = 309 [7.4%]). Patients from high-income countries (HICs) were diagnosed at a median age of 14.1 months, with 656 of 666 (98.5%) patients having intraocular retinoblastoma and 2 (0.3%) having metastasis. Patients from low-income countries were diagnosed at a median age of 30.5 months, with 256 of 521 (49.1%) having extraocular retinoblastoma and 94 of 498 (18.9%) having metastasis. Lower national income level was associated with older presentation age, higher proportion of locally advanced disease and distant metastasis, and smaller proportion of familial history of retinoblastoma. Advanced disease at diagnosis was more common in LMICs even after adjusting for age (odds ratio for low-income countries vs upper-middle-income countries and HICs, 17.92 [95% CI, 12.94-24.80], and for lower-middle-income countries vs upper-middle-income countries and HICs, 5.74 [95% CI, 4.30-7.68]). Conclusions and Relevance: This study is estimated to have included more than half of all new retinoblastoma cases worldwide in 2017. Children from LMICs, where the main global retinoblastoma burden lies, presented at an older age with more advanced disease and demonstrated a smaller proportion of familial history of retinoblastoma, likely because many do not reach a childbearing age. Given that retinoblastoma is curable, these data are concerning and mandate intervention at national and international levels. Further studies are needed to investigate factors, other than age at presentation, that may be associated with advanced disease in LMICs. © 2020 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.PublicationArticle Pathogen induced subversion of NAD+ metabolism mediating host cell death: a target for development of chemotherapeutics(Springer Nature, 2021) Ayushi Chaurasiya; Swati Garg; Ashish Khanna; Chintam Narayana; Ved Prakash Dwivedi; Nishant Joshi; Zill e Anam; Niharika Singh; Jhalak Singhal; Shikha Kaushik; Amandeep Kaur Kahlon; Pallavi Srivastava; Manisha Marothia; Mukesh Kumar; Santosh Kumar; Geeta Kumari; Akshay Munjal; Sonal Gupta; Preeti Singh; Soumya Pati; Gobardhan Das; Ram Sagar; Anand Ranganathan; Shailja SinghHijacking of host metabolic status by a pathogen for its regulated dissemination from the host is prerequisite for the propagation of infection. M. tuberculosis secretes an NAD+-glycohydrolase, TNT, to induce host necroptosis by hydrolyzing Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). Herein, we expressed TNT in macrophages and erythrocytes; the host cells for M. tuberculosis and the malaria parasite respectively, and found that it reduced the NAD+ levels and thereby induced necroptosis and eryptosis resulting in premature dissemination of pathogen. Targeting TNT in M. tuberculosis or induced eryptosis in malaria parasite interferes with pathogen dissemination and reduction in the propagation of infection. Building upon our discovery that inhibition of pathogen-mediated host NAD+ modulation is a way forward for regulation of infection, we synthesized and screened some novel compounds that showed inhibition of NAD+-glycohydrolase activity and pathogen infection in the nanomolar range. Overall this study highlights the fundamental importance of pathogen-mediated modulation of host NAD+ homeostasis for its infection propagation and novel inhibitors as leads for host-targeted therapeutics. © 2021, The Author(s).
