D. A. Rasskazov
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by D. A. Rasskazov.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2004
Elena A. Ananko; Nikolay L. Podkolodny; Irina L. Stepanenko; O. A. Podkolodnaya; D. A. Rasskazov; Denis S. Miginsky; Vitali A. Likhoshvai; Alexander V. Ratushny; N. N. Podkolodnaya; N. A. Kolchanov
The GeneNet system is designed for collection and analysis of the data on gene and metabolic networks, signal transduction pathways and kinetic characteristics of elementary processes. In the past 2 years, the GeneNet structure was considerably improved: (i) the current version of the database is now implemented using ORACLE9i; (ii) the capacities to describe the structure of the protein complexes and the interactions between the units are increased; (iii) two tables with kinetic constants and more detailed descriptions of certain reactions were added; and (iv) a module for kinetic modeling was supplemented. The current SRS release of the GeneNet database contains 37 graphical maps of gene networks, as well as descriptions of 1766 proteins, 1006 genes, 241 small molecules and 3254 relationships between gene network units, and 552 kinetic constants. Information distributed between 16 interlinked tables was obtained by annotating 1980 journal publications. SRS release of the GeneNet database, the graphical viewer and the modeling section are available at http://wwwmgs.bionet.nsc.ru/mgs/gnw/genenet/.
BMC Genomics | 2015
Olga Arkova; M. P. Ponomarenko; D. A. Rasskazov; I. A. Drachkova; Tatjana V. Arshinova; Petr Ponomarenko; L. K. Savinkova; N. A. Kolchanov
BackgroundObesity affects quality of life and life expectancy and is associated with cardiovascular disorders, cancer, diabetes, reproductive disorders in women, prostate diseases in men, and congenital anomalies in children. The use of single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers of diseases and drug responses (i.e., significant differences of personal genomes of patients from the reference human genome) can help physicians to improve treatment. Clinical research can validate SNP markers via genotyping of patients and demonstration that SNP alleles are significantly more frequent in patients than in healthy people. The search for biomedical SNP markers of interest can be accelerated by computer-based analysis of hundreds of millions of SNPs in the 1000 Genomes project because of selection of the most meaningful candidate SNP markers and elimination of neutral SNPs.ResultsWe cross-validated the output of two computer-based methods: DNA sequence analysis using Web service SNP_TATA_Comparator and keyword search for articles on comorbidities of obesity. Near the sites binding to TATA-binding protein (TBP) in human gene promoters, we found 22 obesity-related candidate SNP markers, including rs10895068 (male breast cancer in obesity); rs35036378 (reduced risk of obesity after ovariectomy); rs201739205 (reduced risk of obesity-related cancers due to weight loss by diet/exercise in obese postmenopausal women); rs183433761 (obesity resistance during a high-fat diet); rs367732974 and rs549591993 (both: cardiovascular complications in obese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus); rs200487063 and rs34104384 (both: obesity-caused hypertension); rs35518301, rs72661131, and rs562962093 (all: obesity); and rs397509430, rs33980857, rs34598529, rs33931746, rs33981098, rs34500389, rs63750953, rs281864525, rs35518301, and rs34166473 (all: chronic inflammation in comorbidities of obesity). Using an electrophoretic mobility shift assay under nonequilibrium conditions, we empirically validated the statistical significance (α < 0.00025) of the differences in TBP affinity values between the minor and ancestral alleles of 4 out of the 22 SNPs: rs200487063, rs201381696, rs34104384, and rs183433761. We also measured half-life (t1/2), Gibbs free energy change (ΔG), and the association and dissociation rate constants, ka and kd, of the TBP-DNA complex for these SNPs.ConclusionsValidation of the 22 candidate SNP markers by proper clinical protocols appears to have a strong rationale and may advance postgenomic predictive preventive personalized medicine.
BioMed Research International | 2015
Mikhail P. Ponomarenko; D. A. Rasskazov; Olga Arkova; Petr Ponomarenko; Valentin V. Suslov; L. K. Savinkova; N. A. Kolchanov
The use of biomedical SNP markers of diseases can improve effectiveness of treatment. Genotyping of patients with subsequent searching for SNPs more frequent than in norm is the only commonly accepted method for identification of SNP markers within the framework of translational research. The bioinformatics applications aimed at millions of unannotated SNPs of the “1000 Genomes” can make this search for SNP markers more focused and less expensive. We used our Web service involving Fishers Z-score for candidate SNP markers to find a significant change in a genes expression. Here we analyzed the change caused by SNPs in the genes promoter via a change in affinity of the TATA-binding protein for this promoter. We provide examples and discuss how to use this bioinformatics application in the course of practical analysis of unannotated SNPs from the “1000 Genomes” project. Using known biomedical SNP markers, we identified 17 novel candidate SNP markers nearby: rs549858786 (rheumatoid arthritis); rs72661131 (cardiovascular events in rheumatoid arthritis); rs562962093 (stroke); rs563558831 (cyclophosphamide bioactivation); rs55878706 (malaria resistance, leukopenia), rs572527200 (asthma, systemic sclerosis, and psoriasis), rs371045754 (hemophilia B), rs587745372 (cardiovascular events); rs372329931, rs200209906, rs367732974, and rs549591993 (all four: cancer); rs17231520 and rs569033466 (both: atherosclerosis); rs63750953, rs281864525, and rs34166473 (all three: malaria resistance, thalassemia).
Frontiers in Immunology | 2016
M. P. Ponomarenko; Olga Arkova; D. A. Rasskazov; Petr Ponomarenko; L. K. Savinkova; N. A. Kolchanov
Some variations of human genome [for example, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)] are markers of hereditary diseases and drug responses. Analysis of them can help to improve treatment. Computer-based analysis of millions of SNPs in the 1000 Genomes project makes a search for SNP markers more targeted. Here, we combined two computer-based approaches: DNA sequence analysis and keyword search in databases. In the binding sites for TATA-binding protein (TBP) in human gene promoters, we found candidate SNP markers of gender-biased autoimmune diseases, including rs1143627 [cachexia in rheumatoid arthritis (double prevalence among women)]; rs11557611 [demyelinating diseases (thrice more prevalent among young white women than among non-white individuals)]; rs17231520 and rs569033466 [both: atherosclerosis comorbid with related diseases (double prevalence among women)]; rs563763767 [Hughes syndrome-related thrombosis (lethal during pregnancy)]; rs2814778 [autoimmune diseases (excluding multiple sclerosis and rheumatoid arthritis) underlying hypergammaglobulinemia in women]; rs72661131 and rs562962093 (both: preterm delivery in pregnant diabetic women); and rs35518301, rs34166473, rs34500389, rs33981098, rs33980857, rs397509430, rs34598529, rs33931746, rs281864525, and rs63750953 (all: autoimmune diseases underlying hypergammaglobulinemia in women). Validation of these predicted candidate SNP markers using the clinical standards may advance personalized medicine.
Russian Journal of Genetics: Applied Research | 2014
N. L. Podkolodnyy; D. A. Afonnikov; Yu. Yu. Vaskin; L. O. Bryzgalov; Vladimir A. Ivanisenko; Pavel S. Demenkov; M. P. Ponomarenko; D. A. Rasskazov; K. V. Gunbin; I. V. Protsyuk; I. Yu. Shutov; P. N. Leontyev; M. Yu. Fursov; N. P. Bondar; E. V. Antontseva; T. I. Merkulova; N. A. Kolchanov
We describe development and application of the new SNP-MED modular software system, designed to examine the influence of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on the function of genes associated with the risk of socially significant diseases. The SNP-MED system includes Genomics, Proteomics, and Gene Networks’ software components, and the Information Resource Database.
BioMed Research International | 2016
P. M. Ponomarenko; D. A. Rasskazov; Valentin V. Suslov; Ekaterina Sharypova; L. K. Savinkova; O. A. Podkolodnaya; Nikolay L. Podkolodny; Natalya N. Tverdokhleb; I. V. Chadaeva; Mikhail P. Ponomarenko; N. A. Kolchanov
Variations in human genome (e.g., single nucleotide polymorphisms, SNPs) may be associated with hereditary diseases, their complications, comorbidities, and drug responses. Using Web service SNP_TATA_Comparator presented in our previous paper, here we analyzed immediate surroundings of known SNP markers of diseases and identified several candidate SNP markers that can significantly change the affinity of TATA-binding protein for human gene promoters, with circadian consequences. For example, rs572527200 may be related to asthma, where symptoms are circadian (worse at night), and rs367732974 may be associated with heart attacks that are characterized by a circadian preference (early morning). By the same method, we analyzed the 90 bp proximal promoter region of each protein-coding transcript of each human gene of the circadian clock core. This analysis yielded 53 candidate SNP markers, such as rs181985043 (susceptibility to acute Q fever in male patients), rs192518038 (higher risk of a heart attack in patients with diabetes), and rs374778785 (emphysema and lung cancer in smokers). If they are properly validated according to clinical standards, these candidate SNP markers may turn out to be useful for physicians (to select optimal treatment for each patient) and for the general population (to choose a lifestyle preventing possible circadian complications of diseases).
BMC Genomics | 2016
I. V. Chadaeva; M. P. Ponomarenko; D. A. Rasskazov; Ekaterina Sharypova; Elena V. Kashina; Marina Yu Matveeva; Tatjana V. Arshinova; Petr Ponomarenko; Olga Arkova; Natalia P. Bondar; L. K. Savinkova; N. A. Kolchanov
BackgroundAggressiveness in humans is a hereditary behavioral trait that mobilizes all systems of the body—first of all, the nervous and endocrine systems, and then the respiratory, vascular, muscular, and others—e.g., for the defense of oneself, children, family, shelter, territory, and other possessions as well as personal interests. The level of aggressiveness of a person determines many other characteristics of quality of life and lifespan, acting as a stress factor. Aggressive behavior depends on many parameters such as age, gender, diseases and treatment, diet, and environmental conditions. Among them, genetic factors are believed to be the main parameters that are well-studied at the factual level, but in actuality, genome-wide studies of aggressive behavior appeared relatively recently. One of the biggest projects of the modern science—1000 Genomes—involves identification of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), i.e., differences of individual genomes from the reference genome. SNPs can be associated with hereditary diseases, their complications, comorbidities, and responses to stress or a drug. Clinical comparisons between cohorts of patients and healthy volunteers (as a control) allow for identifying SNPs whose allele frequencies significantly separate them from one another as markers of the above conditions. Computer-based preliminary analysis of millions of SNPs detected by the 1000 Genomes project can accelerate clinical search for SNP markers due to preliminary whole-genome search for the most meaningful candidate SNP markers and discarding of neutral and poorly substantiated SNPs.ResultsHere, we combine two computer-based search methods for SNPs (that alter gene expression) {i} Web service SNP_TATA_Comparator (DNA sequence analysis) and {ii} PubMed-based manual search for articles on aggressiveness using heuristic keywords. Near the known binding sites for TATA-binding protein (TBP) in human gene promoters, we found aggressiveness-related candidate SNP markers, including rs1143627 (associated with higher aggressiveness in patients undergoing cytokine immunotherapy), rs544850971 (higher aggressiveness in old women taking lipid-lowering medication), and rs10895068 (childhood aggressiveness-related obesity in adolescence with cardiovascular complications in adulthood).ConclusionsAfter validation of these candidate markers by clinical protocols, these SNPs may become useful for physicians (may help to improve treatment of patients) and for the general population (a lifestyle choice preventing aggressiveness-related complications).
Russian Journal of Genetics: Applied Research | 2014
D. A. Rasskazov; E. V. Antontseva; L. O. Bryzgalov; M. Yu. Matveeva; Elena V. Kashina; P. M. Ponomarenko; G. V. Orlova; M. P. Ponomarenko; D. A. Afonnikov; T. I. Merkulova
We examined six regulatory SNPs (Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms) of two human genes, APC and MLH1 (rs75996864, rs76241113, rs78037487, rs80112297, rs80313086, and rs1800734), using the previously developed rSNP_Guide technology to calculate the significance of the changes in the binding of the SNP region to a set of 40 transcription factors. For each SNP, all tested proteins were ranked according to the significance of the changes in their affinity to the allelic DNA sequences and evaluated using Student’s t-test. We found that rs75996864, rs76241113, rs78037487, rs80112297, and rs80313086 alleles of the APC, as well as rs1800734 of the MLH1, promote stronger binding of the transcription factors, NF-Y, NFkB, c-Myb, RAR, YY-1, and Sp-1, all of which have been previously implicated in the progression of colon cancer. Our results substantiate further experimental analysis of the association between colon cancer and the five examined APC alleles (rs75996864, rs76241113, rs78037487, rs80112297, and rs80313086) using the commonly accepted human genetics methods.
Molecular Biology | 2016
I. I. Turnaev; D. A. Rasskazov; Olga Arkova; M. P. Ponomarenko; Petr Ponomarenko; L. K. Savinkova; N. A. Kolchanov
The following hypothesis has been proposed: IF an SNP can significantly increase the expression of an oncogene by increasing the affinity of the TATA-binding protein (TBP) to its promoter, THEN this SNP can also reduce the apparent bioactivity of inhibitors of this oncogene during antitumor chemotherapy and vice versa. In the context of this hypothesis, the previously proposed method (http://beehive.bionet.nsc. ru/cgi-bin/mgs/tatascan/start.pl) was applied to analyze all SNPs found within the [-70; -20] regions (which harbor all proven TBP-binding sites) of the promoters of VEGFA, EGFR, ERBB2, IGF1R, FLT1, KDR, and MET oncogenes according to the human reference genome, hg19. For 83% of these SNPs, their effect on TBP affinity to the oncogene promoters required for assembly of preinitiation complexes was not significant. rs36208385, rs36208384, rs370995111, rs372731987, rs111811434, rs369547510, rs76407893, rs369728300, and rs72001900 can potentially serve as SNP markers to reduce the apparent bioactivity of oncogene inhibitors, while rs141092704, rs184083669, rs145139616, rs200697953, rs187746433, rs199730913, rs377370642, rs114484350, rs374921120, rs146790957, rs376727645, and rs72001900 can be the markers for enhancing this activity.
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2017
Petr Ponomarenko; I. V. Chadaeva; D. A. Rasskazov; Ekaterina Sharypova; Elena V. Kashina; I. A. Drachkova; Dmitry Zhechev; M. P. Ponomarenko; L. K. Savinkova; N. A. Kolchanov
While year after year, conditions, quality, and duration of human lives have been improving due to the progress in science, technology, education, and medicine, only eight diseases have been increasing in prevalence and shortening human lives because of premature deaths according to the retrospective official review on the state of US health, 1990-2010. These diseases are kidney cancer, chronic kidney diseases, liver cancer, diabetes, drug addiction, poisoning cases, consequences of falls, and Alzheimers disease (AD) as one of the leading pathologies. There are familial AD of hereditary nature (~4% of cases) and sporadic AD of unclear etiology (remaining ~96% of cases; i.e., non-familial AD). Therefore, sporadic AD is no longer a purely medical problem, but rather a social challenge when someone asks oneself: “What can I do in my own adulthood to reduce the risk of sporadic AD at my old age to save the years of my lifespan from the destruction caused by it?” Here, we combine two computational approaches for regulatory SNPs: Web service SNP_TATA_Comparator for sequence analysis and a PubMed-based keyword search for articles on the biochemical markers of diseases. Our purpose was to try to find answers to the question: “What can be done in adulthood to reduce the risk of sporadic AD in old age to prevent the lifespan reduction caused by it?” As a result, we found 89 candidate SNP markers of familial and sporadic AD (e.g., rs562962093 is associated with sporadic AD in the elderly as a complication of stroke in adulthood, where natural marine diets can reduce risks of both diseases in case of the minor allele of this SNP). In addition, rs768454929, and rs761695685 correlate with sporadic AD as a comorbidity of short stature, where maximizing stature in childhood and adolescence as an integral indicator of health can minimize (or even eliminate) the risk of sporadic AD in the elderly. After validation by clinical protocols, these candidate SNP markers may become interesting to the general population [may help to choose a lifestyle (in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood) that can reduce the risks of sporadic AD, its comorbidities, and complications in the elderly].