Search results for "Hypervariable region"

showing 10 items of 26 documents

Deep learning models for bacteria taxonomic classification of metagenomic data.

2018

Background An open challenge in translational bioinformatics is the analysis of sequenced metagenomes from various environmental samples. Of course, several studies demonstrated the 16S ribosomal RNA could be considered as a barcode for bacteria classification at the genus level, but till now it is hard to identify the correct composition of metagenomic data from RNA-seq short-read data. 16S short-read data are generated using two next generation sequencing technologies, i.e. whole genome shotgun (WGS) and amplicon (AMP); typically, the former is filtered to obtain short-reads belonging to a 16S shotgun (SG), whereas the latter take into account only some specific 16S hypervariable regions.…

0301 basic medicineTime FactorsDBNComputer scienceBiochemistryStructural BiologyRNA Ribosomal 16SDatabases Geneticlcsh:QH301-705.5Settore ING-INF/05 - Sistemi Di Elaborazione Delle InformazionibiologySettore INF/01 - InformaticaShotgun sequencingApplied MathematicsAmpliconClassificationComputer Science Applicationslcsh:R858-859.7DNA microarrayShotgunAlgorithmsCNN030106 microbiologyk-mer representationlcsh:Computer applications to medicine. Medical informaticsDNA sequencing03 medical and health sciencesMetagenomicDeep LearningMolecular BiologyBacteriaModels GeneticPhylumbusiness.industryDeep learningResearchReproducibility of ResultsPattern recognitionBiological classification16S ribosomal RNAbiology.organism_classificationAmpliconHypervariable region030104 developmental biologyTaxonlcsh:Biology (General)MetagenomicsMetagenomeArtificial intelligenceMetagenomicsNeural Networks ComputerbusinessClassifier (UML)BacteriaBMC bioinformatics
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The impact of virus population diversity on the dynamics of cytomegalovirus DNAemia in allogeneic stem cell transplant recipients

2017

Mixed cytomegalovirus (CMV) infections are associated with delayed viral clearance in solid organ transplant recipients. We investigated whether this could be extrapolated to allogeneic stem cell transplant (allo-SCT) recipients. A total of 48 plasma specimens, obtained during 29 episodes of active CMV infection in 25 non-consecutive allo-SCT patients, were analysed. Baseline blood specimens, drawn shortly prior to the inception of pre-emptive antiviral therapy (pre-treatment specimen; n=29), as well as follow-up samples obtained either after the initiation of antiviral therapy (post-treatment specimen; n=15) or during recurrent episodes (n=4) were analysed. Plasma CMV DNA loads were quanti…

AdultMale0301 basic medicine030106 microbiologyCytomegalovirusBiologymedicine.disease_causeAntiviral AgentsVirus03 medical and health sciencesVirologyGenotypemedicineHumansTransplantation HomologousGenotypingAgedBase SequenceGenetic VariationHigh-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencingvirus diseasesCytomegalovirusSequence Analysis DNACmv dnaemiaMiddle AgedViral LoadVirologyHypervariable region030104 developmental biologyCytomegalovirus InfectionsDNA ViralImmunologyFemalePopulation diversityStem cellStem Cell TransplantationJournal of General Virology
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Application of mtDNA sequence analysis in forensic casework for the identification of human remains

2000

Abstract In four forensic cases of unidentified skeletal remains investigated in the last year, we were able to attach three to missing persons. In one case we could show that the discovered bone sample did not fit to a missing child. The method for mitochondrial DNA analysis for the routine identification of skeletal remains was established in our institute by typing bone samples of defined age obtained from Frankfurt's cemetery. Reproducible results were obtained for bones up to 75 years old. For analysis the bone samples were pulverised to fine powder, decalcified and DNA was extracted. From the DNA we amplified a 404-bp fragment from HV-1 and a 379-bp fragment from HV-2 of the mtDNA con…

AdultMaleMitochondrial DNASequence analysisMinisatellite RepeatsBiologyDNA MitochondrialPolymerase Chain ReactionBone and BonesPathology and Forensic Medicinelaw.inventionlawAge Determination by SkeletonHumansChildPolymerase chain reactionGeneticsmtDNA control regionForensic anthropologySequence Analysis DNADNA FingerprintingHypervariable regionForensic identificationDNA profilingForensic AnthropologyFemaleLawForensic Science International
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Analysis of the ORF2 of human astroviruses reveals lineage diversification, recombination and rearrangement and provides the basis for a novel sub-cl…

2014

Canonical human astroviruses (HAstVs) are important enteric pathogens that can be classified genetically and antigenically into eight types. Sequence analysis of small diagnostic regions at either the 5' or 3' end of ORF2 (capsid precursor) is a good proxy for prediction of HAstV types and for distinction of intratypic genetic lineages (subtypes), although lineage diversification/classification has not been investigated systematically. Upon sequence and phylogenetic analysis of the full-length ORF2 of 86 HAstV strains selected from the databases, a detailed classification of HAstVs into lineages was established. Three main lineages could be defined in HAstV-1, four in HAstV-2, two in HAstV-…

Gene RearrangementRecombination GeneticGeneticsSettore MED/07 - Microbiologia E Microbiologia ClinicaGenotypePhylogenetic treeSequence analysisComputational BiologySequence HomologyRNASequence Analysis DNAGeneral MedicineGene rearrangementBiologyAstrovirus classification recombination rearrangementHypervariable regionViral ProteinsCapsidPhylogeneticsVirologyGenotypeCluster AnalysisHumansPhylogenyMamastrovirus
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Molecular epidemiology and forensic genetics: application to a hepatitis C virus transmission event at a hemodialysis unit.

2002

Molecular phylogenetic analyses are frequently used in epidemiologic testing, although only occasionally in forensics. Their acceptability is hampered by a lack of statistical confidence in the conclusions. However, maximum likelihood testing provides a sound statistical framework for the testing of phylogenetic hypotheses relevant for forensic analysis. We present the results of applying this method to a small hepatitis C outbreak produced in a hospital hemodialysis unit that involved 6 patients. Polymerase chain reaction products from a 472-nt fragment of the E1-E2 region, including the hypervariable region, HVR-1, of the hepatitis C virus genome were cloned, and an average of 10 clones/p…

Genes ViralHepacivirusHepatitis C virusComputational biologyHepacivirusmedicine.disease_causeGenomelaw.inventionDisease OutbreakslawRenal DialysismedicineImmunology and AllergyHumansPolymerase chain reactionPhylogenyCross InfectionPhylogenetic treebiologyMolecular epidemiologyGenetic VariationHepatitis Cmedicine.diseasebiology.organism_classificationVirologyHepatitis CHypervariable regionInfectious DiseasesHemodialysis Units HospitalRNA ViralThe Journal of infectious diseases
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Contribution of insertions and deletions to the variability of hepatitis C virus populations

2007

Little is known about the potential effects of insertions and deletions (indels) on the evolutionary dynamics of hepatitis C virus (HCV). In fact, the consequences of indels on antiviral treatment response are a field of investigation completely unexplored. Here, an extensive sequencing project was undertaken by cloning and sequencing serum samples from 25 patients infected with HCV subtype 1a and 48 patients with subtype 1b. For 23 patients, samples obtained after treatment with alpha interferon plus ribavirin were also available. Two genome fragments containing the hypervariable regions in the envelope 2 glycoprotein and the PKR-BD domain in NS5A were sequenced, yielding almost 16 000 seq…

Genes ViralHepatitis C virusMolecular Sequence DataAlpha interferonHepacivirusViral quasispeciesViral Nonstructural ProteinsBiologymedicine.disease_causeAntiviral AgentsGenomeVirusSpecies SpecificityViral Envelope ProteinsVirologyRibavirinmedicineHumansAmino Acid SequenceNS5AIndelGeneticsInterferon-alphavirus diseasesHepatitis CVirologyHypervariable regionMutagenesis InsertionalSpainDrug Therapy CombinationSequence AlignmentGene DeletionJournal of General Virology
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Range Shifts of Mouse Lemurs in South-Eastern Madagascar: Evidence from Mitochondrial Genetic Data

2012

The gray mouse lemur, Microcebus murinus, occurs mainly in dry forests in western Madagascar, but its distribution extends into humid littoral forests in the south-eastern Anosy Region. We sequenced the mitochondrial hypervariable region 1 for 282 M. murinus individuals from 13 south-eastern study sites. The spatial distribution of mitochondrial haplotypes and the varying genetic distances within two haplotype clades indicated a trend of decreasing genetic diversity towards the south-eastern margin of the range. Rufous mouse lemurs, Microcebus cf. rufus, have a complementary distribution in south-eastern Madagascar which does not overlap with that of M. murinus. Taken together, the spatial …

Genetic diversityMicrocebus murinusMouse lemurbiologybiology.animalHaplotypeLittoral zoneLemurZoologybiology.organism_classificationSpatial distributionHypervariable region
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Epidemic dynamics of two coexisting hepatitis C virus subtypes.

2006

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection affects about 3 % of the human population. Phylogenetic analyses have grouped its variants into six major genotypes, which have a star-like distribution and several minor subtypes. The most abundant genotype in Europe is the so-called genotype 1, with two prevalent subtypes, 1a and 1b. In order to explain the higher prevalence of subtype 1b over 1a, a large-scale sequence analysis (100 virus clones) has been carried out over 25 patients of both subtypes in two regions of the HCV genome: one comprising hypervariable region 1 and another including the interferon sensitivity-determining region. Neither polymorphism analysis nor molecular variance analysis (att…

Geneticseducation.field_of_studyAnalysis of VariancebiologyHepatitis C virusHepacivirusPopulationMolecular Sequence DataGenetic VariationHepacivirusHepatitis C Chronicmedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationAnalysis of molecular varianceVirologyVirusHypervariable regionFlaviviridaeVirologyGenotypemedicineHumanseducationThe Journal of general virology
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Genetic Variability of Hepatitis C Virus before and after Combined Therapy of Interferon plus Ribavirin

2008

We present an analysis of the selective forces acting on two hepatitis C virus genome regions previously postulated to be involved in the viral response to combined antiviral therapy. One includes the three hypervariable regions in the envelope E2 glycoprotein, and the other encompasses the PKR binding domain and the V3 domain in the NS5A region. We used a cohort of 22 non-responder patients to combined therapy (interferon alpha-2a plus ribavirin) for which samples were obtained before initiation of therapy and after 6 or/and 12 months of treatment. A range of 25-100 clones per patient, genome region and time sample were sequenced. These were used to detect general patterns of adaptation, t…

Genome evolutionHepatitis C virusEvolutionary Biology/Bioinformaticslcsh:MedicineAlpha interferonGenome ViralHepacivirusBiologyVirology/Immune EvasionInterferon alpha-2Viral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeGenomeAntiviral AgentsEvolution Molecularchemistry.chemical_compoundGenetics and Genomics/Population GeneticsRibavirinmedicineHumanslcsh:ScienceNS5APhylogenyGenetics:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Genética ::Otras [UNESCO]Virology/Antivirals including Modes of Action and ResistanceMultidisciplinaryEvolutionary Biology/Evolutionary and Comparative GeneticsHepatitis C virusRibavirinlcsh:RGenetic VariationInterferon-alphaVirologyComplementarity Determining RegionsHepatitis CVirology/Virus Evolution and SymbiosisRecombinant ProteinsUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Genética ::OtrasHypervariable regionchemistryViral evolutionInterferonlcsh:QGenetic variabilityHepatitis C virus; Genetic variability; Interferon; Ribavirin; Combined therapyCombined therapyResearch ArticlePLoS ONE
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Refined analysis of genetic variability parameters in hepatitis C virus and the ability to predict antiviral treatment response.

2008

Summary.  Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infects approximately 3% of the world population. The chronicity of hepatitis C seems to depend on the level of genetic variability. We have recently (Torres-Puente et al., J Viral Hepat, 2008; 15: 188) reported genetic variability estimates from a large-scale sequence analysis of 67 patients infected with HCV subtypes 1a (23 patients) and 1b (44 patients) and related them to response, or lack of, to alpha-interferon plus ribavirin treatment.. Two HCV genome regions were analysed in samples prior to antiviral therapy, one compressing the three hypervariable regions of the E2 glycoprotein and another one including the interferon sensitive determining region …

Hepatitis C virusMutation MissenseAlpha interferonHepacivirusBiologyViral Nonstructural Proteinsmedicine.disease_causeAntiviral AgentsNucleotide diversityViral Envelope ProteinsVirologyDrug Resistance ViralRibavirinmedicineHumansGenetic variabilityNS5AGeneticsHepatologyHaplotypeGenetic VariationHepatitis CHepatitis C Chronicmedicine.diseaseVirologyHypervariable regionInfectious DiseasesTreatment OutcomeHaplotypesInterferonsJournal of viral hepatitis
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