242 results match your criteria: "Kharkevich Institute for Information Transmission Problems[Affiliation]"

"The COVID-19 pandemic in BRICS: Milestones, interventions, and molecular epidemiology".

PLOS Glob Public Health

December 2024

Centre for Epidemic Response and Innovation (CERI), School of Data Science and Computational Thinking, Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (BRICS) are a group of developing countries with shared economic, healthcare, and scientific interests. These countries navigate multiple syndemics, and the COVID-19 pandemic placed severe strain on already burdened BRICS' healthcare systems, hampering effective pandemic interventions. Genomic surveillance and molecular epidemiology remain indispensable tools for facilitating informed pandemic intervention.

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Objective: To create a formalized method for predicting papillary thyroid cancer recurrence after hemithyroidectomy based on preoperative data.

Material And Methods: At this stage of the study, we selected 101 patients with papillary thyroid cancer who underwent surgical treatment in 2017-2023. Recurrence was observed in in 47 patients.

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Background: Real-time monitoring of food consumer quality remains challenging due to diverse bio-chemical processes taking place in the food matrices, and hence it requires accurate analytical methods. Thresholds to determine spoiled food are often difficult to set. The existing analytical methods are too complicated for rapid in situ screening of foodstuff.

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The recognized importance of mutational spectra in molecular evolution is yet to be fully exploited beyond human cancer studies and model organisms. The wealth of intraspecific polymorphism data in the GenBank repository, covering a broad spectrum of genes and species, presents an untapped opportunity for detailed mutational spectrum analysis. Existing methods fall short by ignoring intermediate substitutions on the inner branches of phylogenetic trees and lacking the capability for cross-species mutational comparisons.

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BaRDIC: robust peak calling for RNA-DNA interaction data.

NAR Genom Bioinform

June 2024

Faculty of Bioengineering and Bioinformatics, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskiye Gory, Moscow 119234, Russia.

Chromatin-associated non-coding RNAs play important roles in various cellular processes by targeting genomic loci. Two types of genome-wide NGS experiments exist to detect such targets: 'one-to-al', which focuses on targets of a single RNA, and 'all-to-al', which captures targets of all RNAs in a sample. As with many NGS experiments, they are prone to biases and noise, so it becomes essential to detect 'peaks'-specific interactions of an RNA with genomic targets.

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Microtubules are an indispensable component of all eukaryotic cells due to their role in mitotic spindle formation, yet their organization and number can vary greatly in the interphase. The last common ancestor of all eukaryotes already had microtubules and microtubule motor proteins moving along them. Sponges are traditionally regarded as the oldest animal phylum.

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In the realm of predictive toxicology for small molecules, the applicability domain of QSAR models is often limited by the coverage of the chemical space in the training set. Consequently, classical models fail to provide reliable predictions for wide classes of molecules. However, the emergence of innovative data collection methods such as intensive hackathons have promise to quickly expand the available chemical space for model construction.

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Bioinformatic Prohormone Discovery in Basal Metazoans: Insights from Trichoplax.

Methods Mol Biol

April 2024

Department of Neuroscience and McKnight Brain Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.

Experimental discovery of neuropeptides and peptide hormones is a long and tedious task. Mining the genomic and transcriptomic sequence data with robust secretory peptide prediction tools can significantly facilitate subsequent experiments. We describe the application of various in silico neuropeptide discovery methods for the placozoan Trichopax adhaerens as an illustrated example and a powerful experimental paradigm for cellular and evolutionary biology.

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Long-Term Culturing of Placozoans (Trichoplax and Hoilungia).

Methods Mol Biol

April 2024

Department of Neuroscience, McKnight Brain Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.

The phylum Placozoa remains one of the least explored among early-branching metazoan lineages. For over 130 years, this phylum had been represented by the single species Trichoplax adhaerens-an animal with the simplest known body plan (three cell layers without any organs) but complex behaviors. Recently, extensive sampling of placozoans across the globe and their subsequent genetic analysis have revealed incredible biodiversity with numerous cryptic species worldwide.

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Article Synopsis
  • Chromatin structure plays a crucial role in determining gene expression and cell identity, especially in neurons, through the action of polycomb group (PcG) proteins.
  • A study mapping the 3D genome in neuronal and non-neuronal cells from the Wernicke's area shows that neurons have less separation between active and inactive gene regions compared to other brain cells.
  • Neuronal cells display unique chromatin interactions, including a specific network of PcG contacts linked to genes that control development, with a distinct pattern of histone modifications that suggest a functional significance of these interactions for neuron identity.
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While mutational processes operating in the Escherichia coli genome have been revealed by multiple laboratory experiments, the contribution of these processes to accumulation of bacterial polymorphism and evolution in natural environments is unknown. To address this question, we reconstruct signatures of distinct mutational processes from experimental data on E. coli hypermutators, and ask how these processes contribute to differences between naturally occurring E.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The virus SARS-CoV-2 uses its spike protein to enter human cells by binding to the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) receptor, followed by cleavage by specific host proteases such as furin and protease serine 2, which facilitate membrane fusion.
  • - This study employed a bioinformatics approach to analyze 169 human proteases that can potentially cleave the spike protein, identifying several families of proteases that cleave important sites on the spike protein and influence its entry into the cell.
  • - A particular focus was given to the potential cleavage site at the K790 position, where cleavage could mimic other influential cleavages, leading to significant changes in the spike protein's structure and
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δ-Aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) is a key enzyme of the cytoplasmic heme biosynthesis pathway. The primary structure of the ALAD gene, the multimeric structure of the ALAD/hemB protein, and ALAD expression during the annual reproductive cycle were studied in the cold-water marine sponge Halisarca dujardinii. The results implicated the GATA-1 transcription factor and DNA methylation in regulating ALAD expression.

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Trisomies Reorganize Human 3D Genome.

Int J Mol Sci

November 2023

Department of Molecular Biology, Faculty of Biology, M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University, 119234 Moscow, Russia.

Trisomy is the presence of one extra copy of an entire chromosome or its part in a cell nucleus. In humans, autosomal trisomies are associated with severe developmental abnormalities leading to embryonic lethality, miscarriage or pronounced deviations of various organs and systems at birth. Trisomies are characterized by alterations in gene expression level, not exclusively on the trisomic chromosome, but throughout the genome.

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Cellular respiration is associated with at least six distinct but intertwined biological functions. (1) biosynthesis of ATP from ADP and inorganic phosphate, (2) consumption of respiratory substrates, (3) support of membrane transport, (4) conversion of respiratory energy to heat, (5) removal of oxygen to prevent oxidative damage, and (6) generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as signaling molecules. Here we focus on function #6, which helps the organism control its mitochondria.

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Provora.

Curr Biol

August 2023

Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, V6T1Z4 BC, Canada.

Tikhonenkov et al. introduce the Provora-a newly described, yet ancient, supergroup of unicellular protists encompassing as much genetic diversity as animals and fungi combined.

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The Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 rapidly spread worldwide in late 2021-early 2022, displacing the previously prevalent Delta variant. Before 16 December 2021, community transmission had already been observed in tens of countries globally. However, in Russia, the majority of reported cases at that time had been sporadic and associated with travel.

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Expanding on Haeckel's classical definition, ecology can be defined as the study of strong and weak interactions between the organism and the environment, hence the need for identifying strong interactions as major drivers of population and community dynamics. The solution to this problem is facilitated by the fact that the frequency distribution of interaction strengths is highly skewed, resulting in few or, according to Liebig's law of the minimum, just one strong interaction. However, a single strong interaction often remains elusive.

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Centrohelids (Haptista: Centroplasthelida) are axopodial protists with a remarkable diversity of external siliceous scale morphologies. It is believed that the last common ancestor of centrohelids had a double layer of siliceous scales composed of plate scales closer to a cell surface and spine scales radiating outwards. The characteristic morphotype of spine scales with a heart-shaped base was once believed to be a unique feature of the genus Choanocystis, as it was defined by Siemensma and Roijackers (1988).

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The importance of 3D protein structure in proteolytic processing is well known. However, despite the plethora of existing methods for predicting proteolytic sites, only a few of them utilize the structural features of potential substrates as predictors. Moreover, to our knowledge, there is currently no method available for predicting the structural susceptibility of protein regions to proteolysis.

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Visual acuity is the quantitative parameter of the visual system characterizing its functional spatial resolution. Special test charts are commonly used for visual acuity assessment. The development of foreign tests for visual acuity is comprehensively covered in the literature, while the history of improving visual acuity charts in modern Russia, the USSR, and in the territory of the Russian Empire is only considered fragmentarily.

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RNA-Chrom: a manually curated analytical database of RNA-chromatin interactome.

Database (Oxford)

April 2023

Faculty of Bioengineering and Bioinformatics, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskiye Gory, Moscow 119234, Russia.

Every year there is more and more evidence that non-coding RNAs play an important role in biological processes affecting various levels of organization of living systems: from the cellular (regulation of gene expression, remodeling and maintenance of chromatin structure, co-transcriptional suppression of transposons, splicing, post-transcriptional RNA modifications, etc.) to cell populations and even organismal ones (development, aging, cancer, cardiovascular and many other diseases). The development and creation of mutually complementary databases that will aggregate, unify and structure different types of data can help to reach the system level of studying non-coding RNAs.

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The triplet nature of the genetic code is considered a universal feature of known organisms. However, frequent stop codons at internal mRNA positions in ciliates ultimately specify ribosomal frameshifting by one or two nucleotides depending on the context, thus posing a nontriplet feature of the genetic code of these organisms. Here, we sequenced transcriptomes of eight species and assessed evolutionary patterns arising at frameshift sites.

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The phylum Cnidaria consists of several morphologically diverse classes including Anthozoa, Cubozoa, Hydrozoa, Polypodiozoa, Scyphozoa, Staurozoa, and Myxozoa. Myxozoa comprises two subclasses of obligate parasites-Myxosporea and Malacosporea, which demonstrate various degrees of simplification. Myxosporea were previously reported to lack the majority of core protein domains of apoptotic proteins including caspases, Bcl-2, and APAF-1 homologs.

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In 2020, SARS-CoV-2 has spread rapidly across the globe, with most nations failing to prevent or substantially delay its introduction. While many countries have imposed some limitations on trans-border passenger traffic, the effect of these measures on the global spread of COVID-19 strains remains unclear. Here, we report an analysis of 3206 whole-genome sequences of SARS-CoV-2 samples from 78 regions of Russia covering the period before the spread of variants of concern (between March and November 2020).

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