Friday, March 27, 2026
29.1 C
Delhi

Indian Scientists Make New Medicine to Fight Fungus

The Government of India’s Patent Office has given a patent to some important research done by Professor Rajan Patel, Dr. Farooq Ahmed Wani, and their team from Jamia Millia Islamia’s Department of Biosciences. Dr. Mohammad Abid, Dr. Babita Aneja, and Dr. Ahmaduddin also helped in this work.They made a new way to create a medicine called Benzimidazolium Gemini surfactant. This medicine is good at fighting fungus that makes people sick. It’s a big step forward in making medicines.

How the New Medicine Works

Benzimidazolium Gemini has special parts that can fight many types of harmful fungus. Its shape helps it work better with the outside of fungus cells. This means it can fight fungal infections well.

Professor Patel said, “Getting this patent is very important for our fungus-fighting research. Many fungal infections are hard to treat these days. Our new medicine might help solve this problem.” The team found a way to make more of this medicine and make it cleaner. Early tests show it works well against common fungus that makes people sick. It might be useful in hospitals and farms. The medicine is also safe for nature because it breaks down easily.

What Happens Next

The team wants to work with other scientists and companies. They want to test if the medicine is safe for people and animals. They also want to make it available in the market so more people can use it.This research shows how important it is for different types of scientists to work together. It helps create new things and understand science better. The patent is a big success for the team and puts their work at the top of new fungus-fighting medicines.

For detailed story, please visit: Awaz the voice

Also Read:Ram Babu Tiwari: The Water Hero

You can connect with DNN24 on FacebookTwitter, and Instagram and subscribe to our YouTube channel.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Hot this week

Turning Limitless Potential Into Real Results

U.S. Ambassador Sergio Gor on shaping the U.S.-India relationship into the defining strategic partnership of the 21st century and delivering tangible benefits for both nations.

Bangladesh: Emerging from the Year of Lawlessness

Year 2025 was a turbulent one for Bangladesh politics marked by mob violence on the streets, atrocities against religious minorities and refugees and persecution of independent media, topped by Islamist resurgence. The new government, led by Tarique Rehman, has brought in stability but has its work cut out.

Shabnam Bashir: The leader who introduced Kashmir’s undiscovered paths to the world

Bandipora in Jammu and Kashmir, where the lofty peaks...

Anjum Rahbar: A Poetic Journey from Education to Imagination

She is a poet of Urdu-Hindi literature whose every...

Fahmida Riaz: A Voice of Humanity Between the Borders of India and Pakistan

In the firmament of Urdu literature, there are some...

Topics

Turning Limitless Potential Into Real Results

U.S. Ambassador Sergio Gor on shaping the U.S.-India relationship into the defining strategic partnership of the 21st century and delivering tangible benefits for both nations.

Bangladesh: Emerging from the Year of Lawlessness

Year 2025 was a turbulent one for Bangladesh politics marked by mob violence on the streets, atrocities against religious minorities and refugees and persecution of independent media, topped by Islamist resurgence. The new government, led by Tarique Rehman, has brought in stability but has its work cut out.

Anjum Rahbar: A Poetic Journey from Education to Imagination

She is a poet of Urdu-Hindi literature whose every...

Fahmida Riaz: A Voice of Humanity Between the Borders of India and Pakistan

In the firmament of Urdu literature, there are some...

Pax Silica: Building Trusted Tech Alliances

Quad program alumnus Pranay Kotasthane explains how Pax Silica is shaping trusted technology alliances and advancing U.S.-India collaboration in the AI era.

Related Articles