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Featured researches published by Dmitry A. Shagin.


Molecular BioSystems | 2008

Normalization of full-length enriched cDNA

Ekaterina A. Bogdanova; Dmitry A. Shagin; Sergey Lukyanov

A well-recognized obstacle to efficient high-throughput analysis of cDNA libraries is the differential abundance of various transcripts in any particular cell type. Decreasing the prevalence of clones representing abundant transcripts before sequencing, using cDNA normalization, may significantly increase the efficacy of random sequencing and is essential for rare gene discovery. Duplex-specific nuclease (DSN) normalization allows the generation of normalized full-length-enriched cDNA libraries to permit a high gene discovery rate. The method is based on the unique properties of DSN from the Kamchatka crab and involves denaturation-reassociation of cDNA, degradation of the ds-fraction formed by abundant transcripts by DSN, and PCR amplification of the remaining ss-DNA fraction. The method has been evaluated in various plant and animal models.


BMC Biochemistry | 2008

Isolation, characterization and molecular cloning of Duplex-Specific Nuclease from the hepatopancreas of the Kamchatka crab

Veronika E. Anisimova; Denis V. Rebrikov; Dmitry A. Shagin; Valery B Kozhemyako; Natalia I. Menzorova; Dmitry B. Staroverov; Rustam Ziganshin; Laura L. Vagner; Valery A. Rasskazov; Sergey Lukyanov; Alex S. Shcheglov

BackgroundNucleases, which are key components of biologically diverse processes such as DNA replication, repair and recombination, antiviral defense, apoptosis and digestion, have revolutionized the field of molecular biology. Indeed many standard molecular strategies, including molecular cloning, studies of DNA-protein interactions, and analysis of nucleic acid structures, would be virtually impossible without these versatile enzymes. The discovery of nucleases with unique properties has often served as the basis for the development of modern molecular biology methods. Thus, the search for novel nucleases with potentially exploitable functions remains an important scientific undertaking.ResultsUsing degenerative primers and the rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) procedure, we cloned the Duplex-Specific Nuclease (DSN) gene from the hepatopancreas of the Kamchatka crab and determined its full primary structure. We also developed an effective method for purifying functional DSN from the crab hepatopancreas. The isolated enzyme was highly thermostable, exhibited a broad pH optimum (5.5 – 7.5) and required divalent cations for activity, with manganese and cobalt being especially effective. The enzyme was highly specific, cleaving double-stranded DNA or DNA in DNA-RNA hybrids, but not single-stranded DNA or single- or double-stranded RNA. Moreover, only DNA duplexes containing at least 9 base pairs were effectively cleaved by DSN; shorter DNA duplexes were left intact.ConclusionWe describe a new DSN from Kamchatka crab hepatopancreas, determining its primary structure and developing a preparative method for its purification. We found that DSN had unique substrate specificity, cleaving only DNA duplexes longer than 8 base pairs, or DNA in DNA-RNA hybrids. Interestingly, the DSN primary structure is homologous to well-known Serratia-like non-specific nucleases structures, but the properties of DSN are distinct. The unique substrate specificity of DSN should prove valuable in certain molecular biology applications.


Bioorganicheskaia khimiia | 2005

[A method for the preparation of normalized cDNA libraries enriched with full-length sequences].

Zhulidov Pa; Ekaterina A. Bogdanova; A. S. Shcheglov; Shagina Ia; L. L. Wagner; G. L. Khazpekov; V. V. Kozhemyako; Sergey Lukyanov; Dmitry A. Shagin

We developed a new method for the preparation of normalized cDNA libraries enriched with full-length sequences. It is based on the properties of the recently characterized duplex-specific nuclease from the hepatopancreas of the Kamchatka crab. The duplex-specific nuclease is thermostable, effectively cleaves double-stranded DNA, and is inactive toward single-stranded DNA (Shagin et al., Genome Res., 2002, vol. 12, pp. 1935–1942). Our method enables the normalization of cDNA samples enriched with full-length sequences without use of laborious and ineffective stages of physical separation. The efficiency of the method was demonstrated in model experiments using cDNA samples from several human tissues.


BioTechniques | 2010

Normalization of genomic DNA using duplex-specific nuclease.

Irina Shagina; Ekaterina Bogdanova; Ilgar Z. Mamedov; Yury B. Lebedev; Sergey Lukyanov; Dmitry A. Shagin

An application of duplex-specific nuclease (DSN) normalization technology to whole-genome shotgun sequencing of genomes with a large proportion of repetitive DNA is described. The method uses a thermostable DSN from the Kamchatka crab that specifically hydrolyzes dsDNA. In model experiments on human genomic DNA, we demonstrated that DSN normalization of double-stranded DNA formed during C0t analysis is effective against abundant repetitive sequences with high sequence identity, while retaining highly divergent repeats and coding regions at base-line levels. Thus, DSN normalization applied to C0t analysis can be used to eliminate evolutionarily young repetitive elements from genomic DNA before sequencing, and should prove invaluable in studies of large eukaryotic genomes, such as those of higher plants.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2002

Altering electrical connections in the nervous system of the pteropod mollusc Clione limacina by neuronal injections of gap junction mRNA

Ilya V. Kelmanson; Dmitry A. Shagin; Natalia Usman; Mikhail V. Matz; Sergey Lukyanov; Yury Panchin

Neurons can communicate with each other either via exchange of specific molecules at synapses or by direct electrical connections between the cytoplasm of either cell [for review see Bruzzone et al. (1996) Eur. J. Biochem., 238, 1–27]. Although electrical connections are abundant in many nervous systems, little is known about the mechanisms which govern the specificity of their formation. Recent cloning of the innexins – gap junction proteins responsible for electrical coupling in invertebrates (Phelan et al. (1998) Trends Genet., 14, 348–349], has made it possible to study the molecular mechanisms of patterning of the electrical connections between individual neurons in model systems. Here we demonstrate that intracellular injection of mRNA encoding the molluscan innexin Panx1 (Panchin et al. 2000 Curr. Biol., 10, R473‐R474) drastically alters the specificity of electrical coupling between identified neurons of the pteropod mollusc Clione limacina.


Molecular Biotechnology | 2009

DSN Depletion is a Simple Method to Remove Selected Transcripts from cDNA Populations

Ekaterina A. Bogdanova; Irina Shagina; Elena Mudrik; Igor Ivanov; Peter Amon; Laura L. Vagner; Sergey Lukyanov; Dmitry A. Shagin

A novel DSN-depletion method allows elimination of selected sequences from full-length-enriched cDNA libraries. Depleted cDNA can be applied for subsequent EST sequencing, expression cloning, and functional screening approaches. The method employs specific features of the kamchatka crab duplex-specific nuclease (DSN). This thermostable enzyme is specific for double-stranded (ds) DNA, and is thus used for selective degradation of ds DNA in complex nucleic acids. DSN depletion is performed prior to library cloning, and includes the following steps: target cDNA is mixed with excess driver DNA (representing fragments of the genes to be eliminated), denatured, and allowed to hybridize. During hybridization, driver molecules form hybrids with the target sequences, leading to their removal from the ss DNA fraction. Next, the ds DNA fraction is hydrolyzed by DSN, and the ss fraction is amplified using long-distance PCR. DSN depletion has been tested in model experiments.


Archive | 2007

Normalization of cDNA Libraries

Alex S. Shcheglov; Pavel A. Zhulidov; Ekaterina A. Bogdanova; Dmitry A. Shagin

In a cellular transcriptome, the number of mRNA copies per gene may differ by several orders. In cDNA libraries, performed from mRNA, these proportions are the same. Normalization methods allow us to equalize numbers of gene’s copies in the library. Normalized cDNA libraries are used to discover new genes transcribed at relatively low levels or for functional screenings. Here, we observed different cDNA libraries normalization methods, which were based on hybridization (renaturation) of cDNA or DNA, or RNA. Also we described duplex-specific nuclease (DSN) normalization protocol – simple and effective cDNA libraries normalization method.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2010

A new set of markers for human identification based on 32 polymorphic Alu insertions

Ilgar Z. Mamedov; Irina Shagina; Marya A Kurnikova; Sergey N Novozhilov; Dmitry A. Shagin; Yury B. Lebedev

A number of genetic systems for human genetic identification based on short tandem repeats or single nucleotide polymorphisms are widely used for crime detection, kinship studies and in analysis of victims of mass disasters. Here, we have developed a new set of 32 molecular genetic markers for human genetic identification based on polymorphic retroelement insertions. Allele frequencies were determined in a group of 90 unrelated individuals from four genetically distant populations of the Russian Federation. The mean match probability and probability of paternal exclusion, calculated based on population data, were 5.53 × 10−14 and 99.784%, respectively. The developed system is cheap and easy to use as compared to all previously published methods. The application of fluorescence-based methods for allele discrimination allows to use the human genetic identification set in automatic and high-throughput formats.


Current protocols in molecular biology | 2010

Normalizing cDNA Libraries

Ekaterina A. Bogdanova; Irina Shagina; Ekaterina V. Barsova; Ilya V. Kelmanson; Dmitry A. Shagin; Sergey Lukyanov

The characterization of rare messages in cDNA libraries is complicated by the substantial variations that exist in the abundance levels of different transcripts in cells and tissues. The equalization (normalization) of cDNA is a helpful approach for decreasing the prevalence of abundant transcripts, thereby facilitating the assessment of rare transcripts. This unit provides a method for duplex‐specific nuclease (DSN)–based normalization, which allows for the fast and reliable equalization of cDNA, thereby facilitating the generation of normalized, full‐length‐enriched cDNA libraries, and enabling efficient RNA analyses. Curr. Protoc. Mol. Biol. 90:5.12.1‐5.12.27.


Gene | 2008

Is crab duplex-specific nuclease a member of the Serratia family of non-specific nucleases?

Veronika E. Anisimova; Alex S. Shcheglov; Ekaterina A. Bogdanova; Denis V. Rebrikov; Alexey N. Nekrasov; Ekaterina V. Barsova; Dmitry A. Shagin; Sergey Lukyanov

Kamchatka crab duplex-specific nuclease (Par_DSN) has been classified as a member of the family of DNA/RNA non-specific beta-beta-alpha metal finger (bba-Me-finger) nucleases, the archetype of which is the nuclease from Serratia marcescens. Although the enzyme under investigation seems to belong to the family of S. marcescens nucleases, Par_DSN exhibits a marked preference for double-stranded DNA as a substrate and this property is unusual for other members of this family. We have searched other Arthropod species and identified a number of novel Par_DSN homologs. A phylogenetic analysis demonstrates that the Par_DSN-like enzymes constitute a separate branch in the evolutionary tree of bba-Me-finger nucleases. Combining sequence analysis and site-directed mutagenesis, we found that Par_DSN and its homologs possess the nuclease domain that is slightly longer than that of classic Serratia relatives. The active site composition of Par_DSN is similar but not identical to that of classic Serratia nucleases. Based on these findings, we proposed a new classification of Par_DSN-like nucleases.

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Sergey Lukyanov

Russian National Research Medical University

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Mikhail V. Matz

University of Texas at Austin

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Irina Shagina

Russian National Research Medical University

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Konstantin A. Lukyanov

Nizhny Novgorod State Medical Academy

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Laura L. Vagner

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Denis V. Rebrikov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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