Publications by authors named "Vladimir Blinov"

, the etiological agent of anthrax, produces long-lived spores, which are resistant to heat, cold, pH, desiccation, and chemical agents. The spores maintain their ability to produce viable bacteria even after decades, and when inhaled can cause fatal disease in over half of the clinical cases. Owing to these characteristics, anthrax has been repeatedly selected for both bioweapon and bioterrorism use.

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This paper summarizes the results of the decontamination of the infrastructure materials concrete, limestone, brick and asphalt contaminated with Co, Sr, Cs and Am. The paper focuses on the effect of differences in substrate properties and of the pH of the radionuclide solution used for surface contamination on adsorption or ion exchange of the radionuclides and how these factors affect the decontamination effectiveness. A six-component chemical formulation was used and a process effectiveness of up to 76% was obtained depending on the substrate and radionuclide.

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The fundamental mission of the Chromosome-Centric Human Proteome Project (C-HPP) is the research of human proteome diversity, including rare variants. Liver tissues, HepG2 cells, and plasma were selected as one of the major objects for C-HPP studies. The proteogenomic approach, a recently introduced technique, is a powerful method for predicting and validating proteoforms coming from alternative splicing, mutations, and transcript editing.

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The Chromosome-centric Human Proteome Project (C-HPP) is aimed to identify the variety of protein products and transcripts of the number of chromosomes. The Russian part of C-HPP is devoted to the study of the human chromosome 18. Using widely accepted Tophat and SpliceGrapher, a tool for accurate splice sites and alternative mRNA isoforms prediction, we performed the extensive mining of the splice variants of chromosome 18 transcripts and encoded protein products in liver, brain, lung, kidney, blood, testis, derma, and skeletal muscles.

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Background: Many different genetic alterations are observed in cancer cells. Individual cancer genes display point mutations such as base changes, insertions and deletions that initiate and promote cancer growth and spread. Somatic hypermutation is a powerful mechanism for generation of different mutations.

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A method for species-specific detection of orthopoxviruses pathogenic for humans and animals is described. The method is based on hybridization of a fluorescently labeled amplified DNA specimen with the oligonucleotide DNA probes immobilized on a microchip (MAGIChip). The probes identify species-specific sites within the crmB gene encoding the viral analogue of tumor necrosis factor receptor, one of the most important determinants of pathogenicity in this genus of viruses.

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