Publications by authors named "Partha P Majumder"

The Human Cell Atlas (HCA) is a global partnership "to create comprehensive reference maps of all human cells-the fundamental units of life - as a basis for both understanding human health and diagnosing, monitoring, and treating disease." ( https://www.humancellatlas.

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Human papillomavirus (HPV) drives cervical cancer (CaCx) pathogenesis and viral oncoproteins jeopardize global gene expression in such cancers. In this study, our aim was to identify differentially expressed coding (DEcGs) and long noncoding RNA genes (DElncGs) specifically sense intronic and Natural Antisense Transcripts as they are located in the genic regions and may have a direct influence on the expression pattern of their neighbouring coding genes. We compared HPV16-positive CaCx patients (N = 44) with HPV-negative normal individuals (N = 34) by employing strand-specific RNA-seq and determined the relationships between DEcGs and DElncGs and their clinical implications.

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No biomarker has yet been identified that allows accurate diagnosis and prognosis of oral cancers. In this study, we investigated the presence of key metabolites in oral cancer using proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy to identify metabolic biomarkers of gingivobuccal oral squamous cell carcinoma (GB-OSCC). NMR spectroscopy revealed that uracil was expressed in 83.

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Typhoid is endemic in India and has high global incidence. There were large outbreaks of typhoid in India between 1990 and 2018. Available typhoid vaccines induce variable levels of protective antibodies among recipients; thus, there is variability in response to the vaccine.

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Oral squamous cell carcinoma of the gingivo-buccal region (OSCC-GB) is the most common cancer among men in India, and is associated with poor prognosis and frequent recurrence. Cellular heterogeneity in OSCC-GB was investigated by single-cell RNA sequencing of tumors derived from the oral cavity of 12 OSCC-GB patients, 3 of whom had concomitant presence of a precancerous lesion (oral submucous fibrosis [OSMF]). Unique malignant cell types, features, and phenotypic shifts in the stromal cell population were identified in oral tumors with associated submucous fibrosis.

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Oral cholera vaccine is one of the key interventions used in our fight to end the longest pandemic of our time, cholera. The immune response conferred by the currently available cholera vaccines, as measured by serum antibody levels, is variable amongst its recipients. We undertook a genome wide association study (GWAS) on antibody response to the cholera vaccine; globally, the first GWAS on cholera vaccine response.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cervical cancers (CaCx) are hard to treat because they can change a lot between different patients, and many women in India don't get checked early enough, leading to high death rates.
  • Researchers wanted to understand how different immune responses in tumors (the harmful cells) could help find new treatments like immunotherapy, which is not commonly used in some countries.
  • They studied data from 44 patients and found two different types of tumors: one type had fewer immune cells and the other had more, which could help figure out how best to treat these cancers.
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Background: Despite having the highest number of preterm births globally, no genomic study on preterm birth was previously published from India or other South-Asian countries.

Methods: We conducted a genome-wide association (GWA) study of spontaneous preterm birth (sPTB) on 6211 women from India. We used a novel resampling procedure to identify the associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) followed by haplotype association analysis and imputation.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how immune context affects the prognosis of gingivobuccal oral cancer, specifically examining immune profiling in 46 treatment-naive, HPV-negative patients.
  • Findings reveal that about 28% of patients had poor outcomes, characterized by low immune cell infiltration in tumors, and reduced expression of specific immune-related genes correlating with better prognosis.
  • The research suggests that high anti-tumor immune cell presence leads to better outcomes, while targeted inhibition of CD73 could potentially enhance clinical results for patients with poor prognoses.
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We performed an epigenome-wide longitudinal DNA methylation study on an Indian cohort of pregnant women, GARBH-Ini, at three time points during pregnancy and at delivery. Our aim was to identify temporal DNA methylation changes in maternal peripheral blood during the period of gestation and assess their impact on biological pathways critical for term delivery. Significantly differentially methylated CpGs were identified by linear mixed model analysis (Bonferroni p < 0.

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NorthEast India, with its unique geographic location in the midst of the Himalayas and Bay of Bengal, has served as a passage for the movement of modern humans across the Indian subcontinent and East/Southeast Asia. In this study we look into the population genetics of a unique population called the Khasi, speaking a language (also known as the Khasi language) belonging to the Austroasiatic language family and residing amidst the Tibeto-Burman speakers as an isolated population. The Khasi language belongs to one of the three major broad classifications or phyla of the Austroasiatic language and the speakers of the three sub-groups are separated from each other by large geographical distances.

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A thickened, white patch - leukoplakia - in the oral cavity is usually benign, but sometimes (in ~9% of individuals) it progresses to malignant tumour. Because the genomic basis of this progression is poorly understood, we undertook this study and collected samples of four tissues - leukoplakia, tumour, adjacent normal, and blood - from each of 28 patients suffering from gingivobuccal oral cancer. We performed multiomics analysis of the 112 collected tissues (four tissues per patient from 28 patients) and integrated information on progressive changes in the mutational and transcriptional profiles of each patient to create this genomic narrative.

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Oral cancer is highly prevalent in India and is the most frequent cancer type among Indian males. It is also very common in southeast Asia. India has participated in the International Cancer Genome Consortium (ICGC) and some national initiatives to generate large-scale genomic data on oral cancer patients and analyze to identify associations and systematically catalog the associated variants.

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Oral squamous cell carcinoma of the gingivo-buccal region (OSCC-GB) accounts for the highest cancer morbidity and mortality among men in India. It has been observed that about one-third of individuals with oral leukoplakia, a dysplastic precancerous lesion in the oral cavity, progress to oral cancer. We aimed to identify systematic transcriptomic changes as a normal tissue in the oral cavity progresses to frank OSCC-GB.

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SARS-CoV-2 was first reported from China. Within three months, it evolved to 10 additional subtypes. Two evolved subtypes (A2 and A2a) carry a non-synonymous Spike protein mutation (D614G).

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Background: Studies of epigenomic alterations associated with diseases primarily focus on methylation profiles of promoter regions of genes, but not of other genomic regions. In our past work (Das et al. 2019) on patients suffering from gingivo-buccal oral cancer - the most prevalent form of cancer among males in India - we have also focused on promoter methylation changes and resultant impact on transcription profiles.

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Atopic Dermatitis (AD) has been associated with the loss of function (LoF) mutations in Filaggrin () gene and increase in relative abundance of specific microbes in the lesional skin, predominantly in Caucasians. Our study aims to determine, in Indian AD patients, (a) the prevalence of LoF and missense mutations, and (b) the nature and extent of dysbiosis and altered microbial pathways with and without mutations in . AD patients ( = 34) and healthy controls ( = 54) were recruited from India in this study and shotgun sequencing was carried out in a subset of samples with adequate microbiome DNA concentration.

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Article Synopsis
  • The tumor immune microenvironment plays a key role in predicting cancer outcomes, specifically in Gingivo-Buccal Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma (GBOSCC).
  • A study of 94 patients revealed that higher densities of CD3+ immune cells were linked to smaller tumors and the absence of lymph node metastases.
  • The research suggests that measuring immune cell types and their locations within tumors can improve predictions of disease progression and survival, prompting recommendations for their inclusion in cancer classification systems.
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Many variants with low frequencies or with low to modest effects likely remain unidentified in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) because of stringent genome-wide thresholds for detection. To improve the power of detection, variant prioritization based on their functional annotations and epigenetic landmarks has been used successfully. Here, we propose a novel method of prioritization of a GWAS by exploiting gene-level knowledge (e.

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Introduction And Objectives: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is multistage with heterogeneous outcomes. We studied the influence of insulin resistance (IR) on the hepatic transcriptome of early NAFLD stages, to understand disease development.

Materials And Methods: In this cross-sectional study, possible clinicopathological risk factors were compared between mild-NAFL (N = 72) and non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH; N = 51) patients.

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It is hypothesized that same driver gene mutations should be present in both oral leukoplakia and cancer tissues. So, we attempted to find out mutations at one of the driver genes, CASP8, in cancer and adjacent leukoplakia tissues. Patients (n = 27), affected by both of cancer and adjacent leukoplakia, were recruited for the study.

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Background & Objectives: SARS-CoV-2 (Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2) is evolving with the progression of the pandemic. This study was aimed to investigate the diversity and evolution of the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 with progression of the pandemic over time and to identify similarities and differences of viral diversity and evolution across geographical regions (countries).

Methods: Publicly available data on type definitions based on whole-genome sequences of the SARS-CoV-2 sampled during December and March 2020 from 3636 infected patients spread over 55 countries were collected.

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