T
Taha Najar
Researcher at Carthage University
Publications - 20
Citations - 1115
Taha Najar is an academic researcher from Carthage University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oxidative stress & Biology. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 17 publications receiving 709 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Reactive oxygen species, heat stress and oxidative-induced mitochondrial damage. A review.
Imen Belhadj Slimen,Taha Najar,Abdeljelil Ghram,Hajer Dabbebi,Moncef Ben Mrad,Manef Abdrabbah +5 more
TL;DR: This manuscript describes the main mitochondrial sources of ROS and the antioxidant defences involved to prevent oxidative damage in all the mitochondrial compartments and deals with discussions concerning the cytotoxic effect of heat stress, mitochondrial heat-induced alterations, as well as heat shock protein (HSP) expression as a defence mechanism.
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Heat stress effects on livestock: molecular, cellular and metabolic aspects, a review.
TL;DR: It has recently been shown that heat stress disturbs the steady state concentrations of free radicals, resulting in both cellular and mitochondrial oxidative damage.
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Chemical and Antioxidant Properties of Betalains
TL;DR: All of the identified betalains are presented and a comprehensive discussion of their structure-activity relationship is presented, followed by a complete review of their safety and health promoting properties.
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Meta-analysis of some physiologic, metabolic and oxidative responses of sheep exposed to environmental heat stress
TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between the THI and some physiologic, metabolic and oxidative responses in sheep was studied. And the effects of the breed, physiological state and heat relieving strategies were investigated as well.
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A Complex Interrelationship between Rectal Temperature and Dairy Cows’ Performance under Heat Stress Conditions
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of rectal temperature (RT) on dairy cows performance (heart rates (HR), respiratory rates (RR), milk yield (MY), dry matter intake (DMI), digestibility, plasma concentration of vitamin C under hot climate.