Publications by authors named "Danil V Krivonos"

Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on the role of mobile genetic elements in spreading biocide and antibiotic resistance among bacteria, specifically the qacEΔ1 gene that provides resistance to quaternary ammonium compounds (QACs).
  • Researchers developed a TaqMan real-time PCR assay to detect the qacEΔ1 gene in Gram-negative bacteria, which can accurately identify even low quantities (as few as 80 copies) without false results.
  • This assay serves as a rapid, sensitive, and specific method for monitoring QAC resistance, tracking the spread of class 1 integrons, and predicting multidrug-resistant (MDR) traits in Gram-negative bacteria.
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Motivation: The Oxford Nanopore technology has a great potential for the analysis of methylated motifs in genomes, including whole-genome methylome profiling. However, we found that there are no methylation motifs detection algorithms, which would be sensitive enough and return deterministic results. Thus, the MEME suit does not extract all Helicobacter pylori methylation sites de novo even using the iterative approach implemented in the most up-to-date methylation analysis tool Nanodisco.

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The study of individual fungi and their communities is of great interest to modern biology because they might be both producers of useful compounds, such as antibiotics and organic acids, and pathogens of various diseases. And certain features associated with the functional capabilities of fungi are determined by differences in gene content. Information about gene content is most often taken from the results of functional annotation of the whole genome.

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Nonribosomal peptides are a class of secondary metabolites synthesized by multimodular enzymes named nonribosomal peptide synthetases and mainly produced by bacteria and fungi. NMR, LC-MS/MS and other analytical methods allow to determine a peptide structure precisely, but it is often not a trivial task to find natural producers of them. There are cases when potential producers should be found among hundreds of strains, for instance, when analyzing metagenomic data.

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Short-chain fatty acids are metabolites widely presented in many natural sources, including human feces and blood. Estimation of their composition is a common procedure, usually performed using nuclear magnetic resonance or gas chromatography with a flame ionization detector. However, the commonly used methods often depend on specific sample preparation, such as filtration and homogenization.

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