Andrei D. Mirzabekov
Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology
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Featured researches published by Andrei D. Mirzabekov.
FEBS Letters | 1989
K. R. Khrapko; Yu. P. Lysov; A.A. Khorlyn; V.V. Shick; Vladimir L. Florentiev; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
DNA sequencing; Oligonucleotide hybridization, immobilized
Dna Sequence | 1991
K. R. Khrapko; Yu. P. Lysov; A. A. Khorlin; I. B. Ivanov; G. M. Yershov; S. K. Vasilenko; T V. L. Florentiev; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
A new technique of DNA sequencing by hybridization with oligonucleotide matrix (SHOM) which could also be applied for DNA mapping and fingerprinting, mutant diagnostics, etc., has been tested in model experiments. A dot matrix was prepared which contained 9 overlapping octanucleotides (8-mers) complementary to a common 17-mer. Each of the 8-mers was immobilized as individual dot in thin layer of polyacrylamide gel fixed on a glass plate. The matrix was hybridized with the 32P-labeled 17-mer and three other 17-mers differing from the first one by a single base change. The hybridization enabled us to distinguish perfect duplexes from those containing mismatches in 32 out of 35 cases. These results are discussed with respect to the applicability of the approach for sequencing. It was shown that hybridization of DNA with an immobilized 8-mer in the presence of a labeled 5-mer led to the formation of a stable duplex with the 5-mer only if the 5- and the 8-mers were in continuous stacking making a perfect nicked duplex 13 (5+8) base pairs long. These experiments and computer simulations suggest that continuous stacking hybridization may increase the efficiency of sequencing so that random or natural coding DNA fragments about 1000 bases long could be sequenced in more than 97% of cases. Miniaturized matrices or sequencing chips were designed, where oligonucleotides were immobilized within 100 x 100 micron dots disposed at 100 micron intervals. Hybridization of fluorescently labeled DNA fragments with microchips may simplify sequencing and ensure sensitivity of at least 10 attomoles per dot. The perspectives and limitations of SHOM are discussed.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001
Sergei G. Bavykin; James P. Akowski; Vladimir M. Zakhariev; Viktor E. Barsky; Alexander N. Perov; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
ABSTRACT We have developed a three-component system for microbial identification that consists of (i) a universal syringe-operated silica minicolumn for successive DNA and RNA isolation, fractionation, fragmentation, fluorescent labeling, and removal of excess free label and short oligonucleotides; (ii) microarrays of immobilized oligonucleotide probes for 16S rRNA identification; and (iii) a portable battery-powered device for imaging the hybridization of fluorescently labeled RNA fragments with the arrays. The minicolumn combines a guanidine thiocyanate method of nucleic acid isolation with a newly developed hydroxyl radical-based technique for DNA and RNA labeling and fragmentation. DNA and RNA can also be fractionated through differential binding of double- and single-stranded forms of nucleic acids to the silica. The procedure involves sequential washing of the column with different solutions. No vacuum filtration steps, phenol extraction, or centrifugation is required. After hybridization, the overall fluorescence pattern is captured as a digital image or as a Polaroid photo. This three-component system was used to discriminateEscherichia coli, Bacillus subtilis, Bacillus thuringiensis, and human HL60 cells. The procedure is rapid: beginning with whole cells, it takes approximately 25 min to obtain labeled DNA and RNA samples and an additional 25 min to hybridize and acquire the microarray image using a stationary image analysis system or the portable imager.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2003
Elizaveta A. Bonch-Osmolovskaya; Margarita L. Miroshnichenko; Alexander V. Lebedinsky; Nikolai A. Chernyh; T. N. Nazina; Valery S. Ivoilov; S. S. Belyaev; Eugenia S. Boulygina; Yury P. Lysov; Alexander N. Perov; Andrei D. Mirzabekov; Hans Hippe; Erko Stackebrandt; L'Haridon S; Christian Jeanthon
ABSTRACT Activity measurements by radioisotopic methods and cultural and molecular approaches were used in parallel to investigate the microbial biodiversity and its physiological potential in formation waters of the Samotlor high-temperature oil reservoir (Western Siberia, Russia). Sulfate reduction with rates not exceeding 20 nmol of H2S liter−1 day−1 occurred at 60 and 80°C. In upper horizons (AB, A, and B), methanogenesis (lithotrophic and/or acetoclastic) was detected only in wells in which sulfate reduction did not occur. In some of the wells from deeper (J) horizons, high-temperature sulfate reduction and methanogenesis occurred simultaneously, the rate of lithotrophic methanogenesis exceeding 80 nmol of CH4 liter−1 day−1. Enrichment cultures indicated the presence of diverse physiological groups representing aerobic and anaerobic thermophiles and hyperthermophiles; fermentative organotrophs were predominant. Phylogenetic analyses of 15 isolates identified representatives of the genera Thermotoga, Thermoanaerobacter, Geobacillus, Petrotoga, Thermosipho, and Thermococcus, the latter four being represented by new species. Except for Thermosipho, the isolates were members of genera recovered earlier from similar habitats. DNA obtained from three samples was hybridized with a set of oligonucleotide probes targeting selected microbial groups encompassing key genera of thermophilic bacteria and archaea. Oligonucleotide microchip analyses confirmed the cultural data but also revealed the presence of several groups of microorganisms that escaped cultivation, among them representatives of the Aquificales/Desulfurobacterium-Thermovibrio cluster and of the genera Desulfurococcus and Thermus, up to now unknown in this habitat. The unexpected presence of these organisms suggests that their distribution may be much wider than suspected.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001
Vladimir M. Mikhailovich; Sergey A. Lapa; Dimitry Gryadunov; Alexander Sobolev; Boris N Strizhkov; Nikolai Chernyh; Olga Skotnikova; Olga Irtuganova; Arkadii Moroz; Vitalii Litvinov; Mikhail Vladimirskii; Mikhail Perelman; Larisa Chernousova; Vladislav Erokhin; Alexander S. Zasedatelev; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
ABSTRACT Three new molecular approaches were developed to identify drug-resistant strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosisusing biochips with oligonucleotides immobilized in polyacrylamide gel pads. These approaches are significantly faster than traditional bacteriological methods. All three approaches—hybridization, PCR, and ligase detection reaction—were designed to analyze an 81-bp fragment of the gene rpoB encoding the β-subunit of RNA polymerase, where most known mutations of rifampin resistance are located. The call set for hybridization analysis consisted of 42 immobilized oligonucleotides and enabled us to identify 30 mutant variants of the rpoB gene within 24 h. These variants are found in 95% of all mutants whose rifampin resistance is caused by mutations in the 81-bp fragment. Using the second approach, allele-specific on-chip PCR, it was possible to directly identify mutations in clinical samples within 1.5 h. The third approach, on-chip ligase detection reaction, was sensitive enough to reveal rifampin-resistant strains in a model mixture containing 1% of resistant and 99% of susceptible bacteria. This level of sensitivity is comparable to that from the determination of M. tuberculosis drug resistance by using standard bacteriological tests.
Journal of Biomolecular Structure & Dynamics | 1991
P. A. Pevzner; Yu. P. Lysov; K. R. Khrapko; A. V. Belyavsky; Vladimir L. Florentiev; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
The SHOM method (Sequencing by Hybridization with Oligonucleotide Matrix) developed in 1988 is a new approach to nucleic acid sequencing by hybridization to an oligonucleotide matrix composed of an array of immobilized oligonucleotides. The original matrix proposed for sequencing by SHOM had to contain at least 65,536 octanucleotides. The present work describes a new family of matrices, which allows one to reduce the number of synthesized oligonucleotides 5-15 times without essentially decreasing the resolving power of the method.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1980
V.V. Shick; A.V. Belyavsky; S.G. Bavykin; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
A high-resolution map for the arrangement of histones along DNA in the nucleosome core particles has been determined by a new sequencing procedure. The lysine groups of histones were crosslinked to partly depurinated DNA at neutral pH. One strand of DNA was split at the points of crosslinking, thus leaving the 5′-terminal DNA fragments bound to histones. The lengths of these crosslinked DNA fragments were measured to determine the position of histones on one strand of the core DNA from its 5′ end. The results demonstrate that histones are bound to regularly arranged, discrete DNA segments about six nucleotides long. These segments are separated by histone-free gaps about four nucleotides wide located at a distance of about 10n nucleotides from the 5′ end of DNA. The first 20 nucleotides from the 5′ ends of DNA seem to be free of histones. Histones appear to be arranged symmetrically and in a similar way on both DNA strands. Any one histone, being bound predominantly to discrete segments on one or other of the strands, can oscillate at the same time between the two strands across the major DNA groove. Two symmetrical models for the arrangement of two molecules of each core histone on linearized and folded DNA are proposed.
Trends in Biotechnology | 1994
Andrei D. Mirzabekov
The length of DNA from different sources that has been sequenced has already exceeded 1 x 10(8) bases, and this figure is continuing to grow exponentially. Even so, the very large quantity of DNA that remains to be sequenced and the impetus generated by the worldwide Human Genome Project has increased the need for the development of megasequencing procedures. Sequencing by hybridization (SbH) shows promise as an approach for developing such a method. The technique involves hybridization of the DNA of unknown sequence with an enormous set of short oligonucleotides; identification and analysis of the overlapping set of oligomers that form perfect duplexes with the DNA of interest permits reconstruction of the target-DNA sequence. Preliminary experiments have already demonstrated the feasibility of incorporating this approach into large-scale sequencing projects, and processes have been developed both for manufacturing the sequencing microchips that incorporate the immobilized oligonucleotides, and for detecting hybridization of the target DNA to these microchips.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1980
A.V. Belyavsky; S.G. Bavykin; E.G. Goguadze; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
Abstract The sequential arrangement of histones along DNA in nucleosomes containing all five histones and DNA about 165 and 175 base-pairs in length has been determined. The data provide evidence that core histones (H2A, H2B, H3 and H4) are arranged in nucleosomes and nucleosome core particles in a largely similar way with the following differences. (1) On nucleosomal DNA about 175 basepairs long core histones are probably shifted by 20 nucleotides on one DNA strand and by 10 nucleotides on the complementary DNA strand from the 5′ end. On nucleosomal DNA 165 base-pairs long, histones appear to be shifted by 10 nucleotides from the 5′ end of DNA on both the DNA strands. (2) Histone H3 is extended beyond core DNA and is bound to the 3′ end of DNA about 175 nucleotides long. Thus, core histones span the whole length of nucleosomal DNA. (3) Histone H2A seems to be absent from the central region of nucleosomal DNA. These results indicate that during the preparation of core particles, some rearrangement of histones or some of their regions occurs. Histone H1 has been shown to be bound mainly to the ends of nucleosomal DNA and, along the whole DNA length, to the gap regions that are free of core histones.
Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2001
Sergei V Tillib; Andrei D. Mirzabekov
The analysis of DNA variation (polymorphisms and mutations) on a genome-wide scale is becoming both increasingly important and technically challenging. An integration of a growing number of molecular biological methods of DNA-sequence analysis with the high-throughput feature of oligonucleotide microarray-based technologies is one of the most promising current directions of research and development.