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  1. Article ; Online: Dysbiosis of Oral Microbiota During Oral Squamous Cell Carcinoma Development

    Purandar Sarkar / Samaresh Malik / Sayantan Laha / Shantanab Das / Soumya Bunk / Jay Gopal Ray / Raghunath Chatterjee / Abhik Saha

    Frontiers in Oncology, Vol

    2021  Volume 11

    Abstract: Infection with specific pathogens and alterations in tissue commensal microbial composition are intricately associated with the development of many human cancers. Likewise, dysbiosis of oral microbiome was also shown to play critical role in the ... ...

    Abstract Infection with specific pathogens and alterations in tissue commensal microbial composition are intricately associated with the development of many human cancers. Likewise, dysbiosis of oral microbiome was also shown to play critical role in the initiation as well as progression of oral cancer. However, there are no reports portraying changes in oral microbial community in the patients of Indian subcontinent, which has the highest incidence of oral cancer per year, globally. To establish the association of bacterial dysbiosis and oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) among the Indian population, malignant lesions and anatomically matched adjacent normal tissues were obtained from fifty well-differentiated OSCC patients and analyzed using 16S rRNA V3-V4 amplicon based sequencing on the MiSeq platform. Interestingly, in contrast to the previous studies, a significantly lower bacterial diversity was observed in the malignant samples as compared to the normal counterpart. Overall our study identified Prevotella, Corynebacterium, Pseudomonas, Deinococcus and Noviherbaspirillum as significantly enriched genera, whereas genera including Actinomyces, Sutterella, Stenotrophomonas, Anoxybacillus, and Serratia were notably decreased in the OSCC lesions. Moreover, we demonstrated HPV-16 but not HPV-18 was significantly associated with the OSCC development. In future, with additional validation, this panel could directly be applied into clinical diagnostic and prognostic workflows for OSCC in Indian scenario.
    Keywords oral squamous cell carcinoma ; 16S rRNA sequence analysis ; oral microbiology ecology ; dysbiosis ; human papillomavirus-16 ; Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ; RC254-282
    Subject code 610
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-02-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article: Genome-wide regulatory gene-derived SSRs reveal genetic differentiation and population structure in fiber flax genotypes

    Saha, Dipnarayan / Rajeev Singh Rana / Shantanab Das / Subhojit Datta / Jiban Mitra / Sylvie J. Cloutier / Frank M. You

    Journal of applied genetics. 2019 Feb., v. 60, no. 1

    2019  

    Abstract: We designed a set of 580 simple sequence repeat markers; 506 from transcription factor-coding genes, and 74 from long non-coding RNAs and designated them as regulatory gene-derived simple sequence repeat (ReG-SSR) markers. From this set, we could anchor ... ...

    Abstract We designed a set of 580 simple sequence repeat markers; 506 from transcription factor-coding genes, and 74 from long non-coding RNAs and designated them as regulatory gene-derived simple sequence repeat (ReG-SSR) markers. From this set, we could anchor 559 ReG-SSR markers on 15 flax chromosomes with an average marker distance of 0.56 Mb. Thirty-one polymorphic ReG-SSR primers, amplifying SSR loci length of at least 20 bp were chosen from 134 screened primers. This primer set was used to characterize a diversity panel of 93 flax accessions. The panel included 33 accessions from India, including released varieties, dual-purpose lines and landraces, and 60 fiber flax accessions from the global core collection. Thirty-one ReG-SSR markers generated 76 alleles, with an average of 2.5 alleles per primer and a mean allele frequency of 0.77. These markers recorded 0.32 average gene diversity, 0.26 polymorphism information content and 1.35% null alleles. All the 31 ReG-SSR loci were found selectively neutral and showed no evidence of population reduction. A model-based clustering analysis separated the flax accessions into two sub-populations—Indian and global, with some accessions showing admixtures. The distinct clustering pattern of the Indian accessions compared to the global accessions, conforms to the principal coordinate analysis, genetic dissimilarity-based unweighted neighbor-joining tree and analysis of molecular variance. Fourteen flax accessions with 99.3% allelic richness were found optimum to adopt in breeding programs. In summary, the genome-wide ReG-SSR markers will serve as a functional marker resource for genetic and phenotypic relationship studies, marker-assisted selections, and provide a basis for selection of accessions from the Indian and global gene pool in fiber flax breeding programs.
    Keywords Linum usitatissimum ; breeding programs ; cluster analysis ; flax ; gene pool ; genetic markers ; genetic variation ; genotype ; landraces ; loci ; microsatellite repeats ; non-coding RNA ; null alleles ; oligodeoxyribonucleotides ; phenotype ; population structure ; variance ; India
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2019-02
    Size p. 13-25.
    Publishing place Springer Berlin Heidelberg
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 1235302-4
    ISSN 2190-3883 ; 1234-1983
    ISSN (online) 2190-3883
    ISSN 1234-1983
    DOI 10.1007/s13353-018-0476-z
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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