Mohammed Monzoorul Haque
Tata Consultancy Services
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mohammed Monzoorul Haque.
Journal of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology | 2015
Anirban Dutta; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Tungadri Bose; Ch. V. Siva Kumar Reddy; Sharmila S. Mande
Sequence data repositories archive and disseminate fastq data in compressed format. In spite of having relatively lower compression efficiency, data repositories continue to prefer GZIP over available specialized fastq compression algorithms. Ease of deployment, high processing speed and portability are the reasons for this preference. This study presents FQC, a fastq compression method that, in addition to providing significantly higher compression gains over GZIP, incorporates features necessary for universal adoption by data repositories/end-users. This study also proposes a novel archival strategy which allows sequence repositories to simultaneously store and disseminate lossless as well as (multiple) lossy variants of fastq files, without necessitating any additional storage requirements. For academic users, Linux, Windows, and Mac implementations (both 32 and 64-bit) of FQC are freely available for download at: https://metagenomics.atc.tcs.com/compression/FQC .
Scientific Reports | 2017
Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Mitali Merchant; Pinna Nishal Kumar; Anirban Dutta; Sharmila S. Mande
Preterm birth is a leading cause of global neonate mortality. Hospitalization costs associated with preterm deliveries present a huge economic burden. Existing physical/biochemical markers for predicting preterm birth risk are mostly suited for application at mid/late pregnancy stages, thereby leaving very short time (between diagnosis and delivery) for adopting appropriate intervention strategies. Recent studies indicating correlations between pre/full-term delivery and the composition of vaginal microbiota in pregnant women have opened new diagnostic possibilities. In this study, we performed a thorough meta-analysis of vaginal microbiome datasets to evaluate the utility of popular diversity and inequality measures for predicting, at an early stage, the risk of preterm delivery. Results indicate significant differences (in diversity measures) between ‘first-trimester’ vaginal microbiomes obtained from women with term and preterm outcomes, indicating the potential diagnostic utility of these measures. In this context, we introduce a novel diversity metric that has significantly better diagnostic ability as compared to established diversity measures. The metric enables ‘early’ and highly accurate prediction of preterm delivery outcomes, and can potentially be deployed in clinical settings for preterm birth risk-assessment. Our findings have potentially far reaching implications in the fight against neonatal deaths due to preterm birth.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Disha Tandon; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Rengarajan Saravanan; Shafiq Shaikh; P Sriram; Ashok Kumar Dubey; Sharmila S. Mande
The human gut microbiome contributes to a broad range of biochemical and metabolic functions that directly or indirectly affect human physiology. Several recent studies have indicated that factors like age, geographical location, genetic makeup, and individual health status significantly influence the diversity, stability, and resilience of the gut microbiome. Of the mentioned factors, geographical location (and related dietary/socio-economic context) appears to explain a significant portion of microbiome variation observed in various previously conducted base-line studies on human gut microbiome. Given this context, we have undertaken a microbiome study with the objective of cataloguing the taxonomic diversity of gut microbiomes sampled from an urban cohort from Ahmedabad city in Western India. Computational analysis of microbiome sequence data corresponding to 160 stool samples (collected from 80 healthy individuals at two time-points, 60 days apart) has indicated a Prevotella-dominated microbial community. Given that the typical diet of participants included carbohydrate and fibre-rich components (predominantly whole grains and legume-based preparations), results appear to validate the proposed correlation between diet/geography and microbiome composition. Comparative analysis of obtained gut microbiome profiles with previously published microbiome profiles from US, China, Finland, and Japan additionally reveals a distinct taxonomic and (inferred) functional niche for the sampled microbiomes.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Tungadri Bose; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Cvsk Reddy; Sharmila S. Mande
Archive | 2011
Sharmila S. Mande; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Tarini Shankar Ghosh; Nitin Kumar Singh
Archive | 2014
Sharmila S. Mande; Anirban Dutta; Tungadri Bose; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque
PLOS ONE | 2016
Disha Tandon; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Sharmila S. Mande
Archive | 2015
Sharmila S. Mande; Tungadri Bose; Anirban Dutta; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Hemang Gandhi
Archive | 2014
Sharmila S. Mande; Anirban Dutta; Tungadri Bose; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque
Archive | 2011
Sharmila S. Mande; Mohammed Monzoorul Haque; Tarini Shankar Ghosh; Nitin Kumar Singh