Publications by authors named "Vachev T"

Background: MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are short non-coding RNA molecules with a well-recognized role in gene expression mostly at the post-transcriptional level. Recently, dysregulation of miRNAs and miRNA-mRNA interactions has been associated with CNS diseases, including numerous psychiatric disorders. Dynamic changes in the expression profiles of circulating miRNA are nowadays regarded as promising non-invasive biomarkers that may facilitate the accurate and timely diagnosis of complex conditions.

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Specific language impairment (SLI) is a psychiatric condition with a complex etiology and a substantial genetic basis that affects children's verbal communication abilities. In this study, we examined the expression of five different human endogenous retrovirus elements (HERVs) in a cohort of 25 children with SLI and 25 healthy children in the control group. Human endogenous retrovirus elements, a diverse group of repetitive DNA sequences, can potentially cause considerable genetic heterogeneity.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the potential of circulating microRNAs (miRNAs) in the serum of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) patients to serve as biomarkers for diagnosis or prognosis of the condition.
  • Analysis of 42 miRNAs showed that ASD patients had significantly higher levels of 11 specific miRNAs and lower levels of 29 others compared to healthy control subjects.
  • The findings suggest that these altered serum miRNAs may be involved in ASD-related molecular pathways, indicating that certain miRNAs could be promising candidates for future biomarker development in ASD.
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Article Synopsis
  • Neuropsychiatric diseases like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and autism spectrum disorder significantly impact individuals' health, learning, and work abilities, creating a societal burden.
  • Researchers are exploring biomarkers outside the brain, such as circulating microRNAs (miRNAs) found in body fluids, as potential tools for diagnosing these disorders since brain tissue is often hard to access.
  • Evidence indicates that there are distinct differences in the expression of cell-free miRNAs between healthy individuals and patients, suggesting that circulating miRNAs could serve as noninvasive, sensitive biomarkers for neuropsychiatric diseases.
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Schizophrenia (SZ) is a chronic neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by affective, neuromorphological and cognitive impairment, deteriorated social functioning and psychosis with underlying molecular abnormalities, including gene expression changes. Observations have suggested that fasciculation and elongation protein ζ-1 (FEZ1) may be implicated in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia. Nevertheless, our current knowledge of the expression of FEZ1 in peripheral blood of schizophrenia patients remains unclear.

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Autism spectrum disorder is an entity that reflects a scientific consensus that several previously separated disorders are actually a single spectrum disorder with different levels of symptom severity in two core domains - deficits in social communication and interaction, and restricted repetitive behaviors. Autism spectrum disorder is diagnosed in all racial, ethnic and socioeconomic groups and because of its increased prevalence, reported worldwide through the last years, made it one of the most discussed child psychiatric disorders. In term of aetiology as several other complex diseases, Autism spectrum disorder is considered to have a strong genetic component.

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Amniocentesis is the most common and reliable prenatal diagnostic method for chromosomopathies. The purpose of the present study is to retrospectively evaluate our 15-year experience with prenatal cytogenetic diagnosis by amniocentesis, focusing on the indications and rates of chromosome abnormalities. The current study involve prenatal cytogenetic analysis from 564 amniocentesis performed at the Department of Medical Genetics, St.

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Balanced chromosomal translocations do not generally have phenotypic manifestation, but lead to increased risk of miscarriage and live-birth of chromosomally unbalanced offspring in carriers. Frequently prenatal diagnosis of an unbalanced translocation may incidentally detect a balanced translocation in the family. Here, we report a unique case of trisomy 3q (karyotype 46,XYder(3)t(3;21)(q11;p11)), detected prenatally due to abnormal findings of the fetus ascertained through ultrasound assessment like growth retardation, vermal agenesis, micrognathia, cystic hygroma of the neck, dextra position of arcus aortae, shorter for the gestational week long bones In order to determine the paternity of this chromosomal aberration, the cytogenetic analyses of the parents was performed.

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Primary amenorrhea is one of the common reproductive disorder affecting females. It leads to the absence of menarche in the reproductive age group in females and/or complete absence of reproductive organs. The physiology of menstruation and reproduction has a strong correlation with the expression of the X chromosome.

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Potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd) is an infectious small, circular, non-coding single-stranded RNA that induces disease on many crop species, ornamental plants, weeds and parasitic plants. PSTVd propagate in their host as a population of closely related but non-identical RNA variants referred to as quasispecies. Recently, we have described three arising PSTVd variants in the parasitic plant after mechanical inoculation with the PSTVd KF440-2 isolate.

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Small RNA profiling and assessing its dependence on changing environmental factors have expanded our understanding of the transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulation of plant stress responses. Insufficient data have been documented earlier to depict the profiling of small RNA classes in temperature-associated stress which has a wide implication for climate change biology. In the present study, we report a comparative assessment of the genome-wide profiling of small RNAs in Arabidopsis thaliana using two conditional responses, induced by high- and low-temperature.

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Plants defend themselves against virus/viroid infection by induction of a mechanism of viral RNA degradation or translation inhibition. This is achieved by the production of small RNAs referred to as small interfering RNAs and microRNA, the key molecules in establishment of RNA directed silencing. Potato Spindle Tuber Viroid (PSTVd) was the first viroid species to be identified as naturally infecting potato, and it was found to infect many other crop species, wild and ornamental plants.

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Epidemiological evidence suggests that etiology of schizophrenia may involve both the influence of genetic factors specific for the individual and the impact of the environment. It is quite likely that a crucial role in the disease development is played by molecular mechanisms mediating the interaction between genes and environment. Modern research have shown that epigenetic mechanisms or chemical modifications of deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA) and histone proteins remain unstable throughout life and can be changed by environmental factors.

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Viroids, small RNA pathogens capable of infecting flowering plants, coexist in the field with parasitic plants that infest many crops. The ability of viroids to be exchanged between host and parasitic plants and spread in the latter has not yet been investigated. We studied the interaction between the Potato spindle tuber viroid (PSTVd) and Branched bromrape (Orobanche ramosa) using the tomato, Solanum lycopersicon, as a common host.

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