Publications by authors named "A V Likhtenshteĭn"

A recent study of human normal and tumor tissues revealed a high transcriptional activity of pericentromeric satellite DNA repeats (they produce half of all transcripts in tumor cells that is many times higher than in normal ones). It was found also that the two subtypes of satellite DNA (HSATII and GSATII) are transcribed reciprocally, i.e.

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High resolution melting analysis (HRMA) using special "saturating" fluorescent dyes is a new and very effective approach to genotyping and mutation scanning. HRMA, which is carried out usually just after PCR without any intermediate manipulations (the "closed tube" format), is simple and high-throughput method excluding sample cross-contaminations. The "closed tube" format makes, however, HRMA dependent on PCR mixes and, as such, limits its capability.

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Specimens of tumor with K-RAS mutations were used to compare SSCP and NIRCA efficiencies in screening long target regions for dispersed point mutations. K-RAS mutations were detected in 5 out of 10 tumor tissue samples from colorectal cancer patients (in codon 12-4 and codon 13-1). Mutant alleles occurred most frequently in adenocarcinoma of the ascending colon and rectum.

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