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    Information theory of mixed population genome-wide association studies

    , Article 2018 IEEE Information Theory Workshop, ITW 2018, 25 November 2018 through 29 November 2018 ; 2019 ; 9781538635995 (ISBN) Tahmasebi, B ; Maddah Ali, M. A ; Motahari, S. A ; Sun Yat-Sen University ; Sharif University of Technology
    Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc  2019
    Abstract
    Genome-Wide Association Study (GWAS) addresses the problem of associating subsequences of individuals' genomes to the observable characteristics called phenotypes. In a genome of length G, it is observed that each characteristic is only related to a specific subsequence of it with length L, called the causal subsequence. The objective is to recover the causal subsequence, using a dataset of N individuals' genomes and their observed characteristics. Recently, the problem has been investigated from an information theoretic point of view in [1]. It has been shown that there is a threshold effect for reliable learning of the causal subsequence at Gh ( N L/G ) by characterizing the capacity of... 

    Human papilloma virus and breast cancer: The role of inflammation and viral expressed proteins

    , Article BMC Cancer ; Volume 19, Issue 1 , 2019 ; 14712407 (ISSN) Khodabandehlou, N ; Mostafaei, S ; Etemadi, A ; Ghasemi, A ; Payandeh, M ; Hadifar, S ; Norooznezhad, A. H ; Kazemnejad, A ; Moghoofei, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    BioMed Central Ltd  2019
    Abstract
    Background: Breast cancer is currently the most common neoplasm diagnosed in women globally. There is a growing body of evidence to suggest that human papillomavirus (HPV) infection may play a key role in invasiveness of breast cancer. The aim of this study was to determine the presence of HPV in patients with breast cancer and its possible association with cancer progression. Methods: Breast specimens were collected from 72 patients with breast cancer and 31 healthy controls. The presence of HPV was investigated by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and genotyping was performed for positive cases. We also evaluated the viral factors such as E6, E2, and E7 in HPV positive cases. Enzyme-linked... 

    Aptamer hybrid nanocomplexes as targeting components for antibiotic/gene delivery systems and diagnostics: a review

    , Article International Journal of Nanomedicine ; Volume 15 , 2020 , Pages 4237-4256 Ahmadi, S ; Arab, Z ; Safarkhani, M ; Nasseri, B ; Rabiee, M ; Tahriri, M ; Webster, T. J ; Tayebi, L ; Rabiee, N ; Sharif University of Technology
    Dove Medical Press Ltd  2020
    Abstract
    With the passage of time and more advanced societies, there is a greater emergence and incidence of disease and necessity for improved treatments. In this respect, nowadays, aptamers, with their better efficiency at diagnosing and treating diseases than antibodies, are at the center of attention. Here, in this review, we first investigate aptamer function in various fields (such as the detection and remedy of pathogens, modification of nanoparticles, antibiotic delivery and gene delivery). Then, we present aptamer-conjugated nanocomplexes as the main and efficient factor in gene delivery. Finally, we focus on the targeted co-delivery of genes and drugs by nanocomplexes, as a new exciting... 

    Improving the performance of a photonic PCR system using TiO2 nanoparticles

    , Article Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry ; 2020 Amadeh, A ; Ghazimirsaeed, E ; Shamloo, A ; Dizani, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Korean Society of Industrial Engineering Chemistry  2020
    Abstract
    Nucleic acid amplification using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method has been widely used in different fields such as agricultural science, medicine, pathogen identification, and forensics to name a few. Today, it seems inevitable to have a robust, simple PCR system for diagnostics at the point-of-care (POC) level. Many photonic PCR systems have been proposed in the literature that benefit from plasmonic photothermal heating to achieve the common PCR thermal cycling. However, non-homogeneous temperature distribution is a challenge in some of them. In the present work, to achieve more efficient gene amplification, the effect of adding TiO2 nanoparticles has been investigated in a photonic... 

    Chaperones promote remarkable solubilization of salmonella enterica serovar enteritidis flagellin expressed in escherichia coli

    , Article Protein and Peptide Letters ; Volume 27, Issue 3 , 2020 , Pages 210-218 Bakhtiarvand, B ; Sadeghi, Z ; Tarahomjoo, S ; Yaghmaie, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    Bentham Science Publishers  2020
    Abstract
    Background: Flagellin of Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis (SEF) stimulates immune responses to both itself and coapplied antigens. It is therefore used in vaccine development and immunotherapy. Removal of pathogenic S. enterica ser. Enteritidis from SEF production process is advantageous due to the process safety improvement. The protein solubility analysis using SDS-PAGE indicated that 53.49% of SEF expressed in Escherichia coli formed inclusion bodies. However, the protein recovery from inclusion bodies requires a complex process with a low yield. Objective: We thus aim to study possibility of enhancing SEF expression in E. coli in soluble form using chemical and molecular... 

    Graphene oxide negatively regulates cell cycle in embryonic fibroblast cells

    , Article International Journal of Nanomedicine ; Volume 15 , 2020 , Pages 6201-6209 Hashemi, E ; Akhavan, O ; Shamsara, M ; Ansari Majd, S ; Sanati, M. H ; Daliri Joupari, M ; Farmany, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Dove Medical Press Ltd  2020
    Abstract
    Background: Unique properties of graphene and its derivatives make them attractive in the field of nanomedicine. However, the mass application of graphene might lead to side effects, which has not been properly addressed in previous studies, especially with regard to its effect on the cell cycle. Methods: The effect of two concentrations (100 and 200 μg/mL) of nano-and microsized graphene oxide (nGO and mGO) on apoptosis, cell cycle, and ROS generation was studied. The effect of both sizes on viability and genotoxicity of the embryonic fibroblast cell cycle was evaluated. MTT and flow cytometry were applied to evaluate the effects of graphene oxide (GO) nanosheets on viability of cells.... 

    OptCAM: An ultra-fast all-optical architecture for DNA variant discovery

    , Article Journal of Biophotonics ; Volume 13, Issue 1 , August , 2020 Maleki, E ; Koohi, S ; Kavehvash, Z ; Mashaghi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Wiley-VCH Verlag  2020
    Abstract
    Nowadays, the accelerated expansion of genetic data challenges speed of current DNA sequence alignment algorithms due to their electrical implementations. Essential needs of an efficient and accurate method for DNA variant discovery demand new approaches for parallel processing in real time. Fortunately, photonics, as an emerging technology in data computing, proposes optical correlation as a fast similarity measurement algorithm; while complexity of existing local alignment algorithms severely limits their applicability. Hence, in this paper, employing optical correlation for global alignment, we present an optical processing approach for local DNA sequence alignment to benefit both... 

    CRISPR-Cas, a robust gene-editing technology in the era of modern cancer immunotherapy

    , Article Cancer Cell International ; Volume 20, Issue 1 , September , 2020 Miri, S. M ; Tafsiri, E ; Cho, W. C. S ; Ghaemi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    BioMed Central Ltd  2020
    Abstract
    Cancer immunotherapy has been emerged as a promising strategy for treatment of a broad spectrum of malignancies ranging from hematological to solid tumors. One of the principal approaches of cancer immunotherapy is transfer of natural or engineered tumor-specific T-cells into patients, a so called "adoptive cell transfer", or ACT, process. Construction of allogeneic T-cells is dependent on the employment of a gene-editing tool to modify donor-extracted T-cells and prepare them to specifically act against tumor cells with enhanced function and durability and least side-effects. In this context, CRISPR technology can be used to produce universal T-cells, equipped with recombinant T cell... 

    Point-of-use rapid detection of sars-cov-2: Nanotechnology-enabled solutions for the covid-19 pandemic

    , Article International Journal of Molecular Sciences ; Volume 21, Issue 14 , 2020 , Pages 1-23 Rabiee, N ; Bagherzadeh, M ; Ghasemi, A ; Zare, H ; Ahmadi, S ; Fatahi, Y ; Dinarvand, R ; Rabiee, M ; Ramakrishna, S ; Shokouhimehr, M ; Varma, R. S ; Sharif University of Technology
    MDPI AG  2020
    Abstract
    Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) caused the COVID-19 pandemic that has been spreading around the world since December 2019. More than 10 million affected cases and more than half a million deaths have been reported so far, while no vaccine is yet available as a treatment. Considering the global healthcare urgency, several techniques, including whole genome sequencing and computed tomography imaging have been employed for diagnosing infected people. Considerable efforts are also directed at detecting and preventing different modes of community transmission. Among them is the rapid detection of virus presence on different surfaces with which people may come in... 

    Theoretical simulation of surface-enhanced resonance Raman spectroscopy of cytosine and its tautomers

    , Article Journal of Raman Spectroscopy ; Volume 51, Issue 1 , 2020 , Pages 55-65 Sharafdini, R ; Mohammadpour, M ; Ramazani, S ; Jamshidi, Z ; Sharif University of Technology
    John Wiley and Sons Ltd  2020
    Abstract
    The primary challenge of spectroscopic techniques in selective detection and characterization of tautomeric structures of DNA and RNA bases, and moreover, the accurate interpretation and explanation of the experimental results are the main motives of theoretical studies. Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) can be a powerful approach to distinguish cytosine in the presence of its tautomers. For this respect, herein, the theoretical simulation of the SERS spectra of cytosine and its three most stable tautomers adsorbed on silver clusters is carried out. The calculations of SERS spectra is based on the excited-state energy gradient approximation as a well-established approach that gives... 

    Site-specific protein conjugation onto fluorescent single-walled carbon nanotubes

    , Article Chemistry of Materials ; Volume 32, Issue 20 , 2020 , Pages 8798-8807 Zubkovs, V ; Wu, S. J ; Rahnamaee, S. Y ; Schuergers, N ; Boghossian, A. A ; Sharif University of Technology
    American Chemical Society  2020
    Abstract
    Semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) are among the few photostable optical emitters that are ideal for sensing, imaging, drug delivery, and monitoring of protein activity. These applications often require strategies for immobilizing proteins onto the nanotube while preserving the optical properties of the SWCNTs. Site-specific and oriented immobilization strategies, in particular, offer advantages for improving sensor and optical signaling responses. In this study, we demonstrate site-specific protein immobilization of a model of enhanced yellow fluorescent protein with a single engineered cysteine residue, using either single-stranded DNA or a pyrene-containing linker to... 

    Stretching an anisotropic DNA

    , Article Journal of Chemical Physics ; Volume 128, Issue 12 , 2008 ; 00219606 (ISSN) Eslami Mossallam, B ; Ejtehadi, M. R ; Sharif University of Technology
    2008
    Abstract
    We present a perturbation theory to find the response of an anisotropic DNA to the external tension. It is shown that the anisotropy has a nonzero but small contribution to the force-extension curve of the DNA. Thus an anisotropic DNA behaves like an isotropic one with an effective bending constant equal to the harmonic average of its soft and hard bending constants. © 2008 American Institute of Physics  

    Solving haplotype reconstruction problem in MEC model with hybrid information fusion

    , Article EMS 2008, European Modelling Symposium, 2nd UKSim European Symposium on Computer Modelling and Simulation, Liverpool, 8 September 2008 through 10 September 2008 ; 2008 , Pages 214-218 ; 9780769533254 (ISBN) Asgarian, E ; Moeinzadeh, M. H ; Habibi, J ; Sharifian-R, S ; Rasooli-V, A ; Najafi-A, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2008
    Abstract
    Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs), a single DNA base varying from one individual to another, are believed to be the most frequent form responsible for genetic differences. Genotype is the conflated information of a pair of haplotypes on homologous chromosomes. Although haplotypes have more information for disease associating than individual SNPs and genotype, it is substantially more difficult to determine haplotypes through experiments. Hence, computational methods which can reduce the cost of determining haplotypes become attractive alternatives. MEC, as a standard model for haplotype reconstruction, is fed by fragments as input to infer the best pair of haplotypes with minimum error... 

    Characterization of a moderate thermophilic Nocardia species able to grow on polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons

    , Article Letters in Applied Microbiology ; Volume 45, Issue 6 , December , 2007 , Pages 622-628 ; 02668254 (ISSN) Zeinali, M ; Vossoughi, M ; Ardestani, S. K ; Sharif University of Technology
    2007
    Abstract
    Aims: Our goal was the characterization of a new moderate thermophilic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-utilizing Nocardia strain. Methods and Results: A thermophilic bacterium, strain TSH1, was isolated from a contaminated soil. The macroscopic and microscopic features fit well with the description of Nocardia species. The results of 16S rRNA gene analysis showed 100% match to the type strain of N. otitidiscaviarum DSM 43242T. Strain TSH1 showed the same mycolic acid pattern as the type strain of N. otitidiscaviarum but its fatty acid profile did not permit identification to the species level. The carbon utilization profile of strain TSH1 was different from N. otitidiscaviarum. The... 

    Comparison of Shuffling-Adaptive Neuro Fuzzy Inference System (Shuffling-ANFIS) with conventional ANFIS as feature selection methods for nonlinear systems

    , Article QSAR and Combinatorial Science ; Volume 26, Issue 10 , 2007 , Pages 1046-1059 ; 1611020X (ISSN) Jalali Heravi, M ; Kyani, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2007
    Abstract
    This paper compares the Shuffling-Adaptive Neuro Fuzzy Inference System (Shuffling-ANFIS) with conventional ANFIS as the method for selecting the features of nonlinear systems. Shuffling-ANFIS technique uses the advantage of data splitting with the ANFIS as a powerful feature selection method to select the most important factors affecting nonlinear phenomena. In this technique, the features with the largest percent of frequency can be found by running the conventional ANFIS sequential forward search on the large number of training and test sets using leave-one-out validation criteria. The superiority of Shuffling-ANFIS over the conventional ANFIS was evaluated by using two synthetic and one... 

    Thermodynamic studies on the complexation of cobalt(II) with dopamine in a cosolvent system

    , Article Journal of Solution Chemistry ; Volume 36, Issue 5 , 2007 , Pages 595-604 ; 00959782 (ISSN) Bagheri, A ; Boghaei, D. M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2007
    Abstract
    Equilibrium constants for formation of a cobalt(II) complex with the bidentate ligand dopamine have been studied with spectrophotometric methods in water + ethanol cosolvent systems at 15, 25, and 35 (±0.1)∈°C and an ionic strength of 0.2 mol·dm-3. The ionic strength was maintained using sodium chloride and a phosphate buffer. The stability constants of the complex and the resulting Gibbs energy changes are obtained. The results are discussed in terms of the effect of solvent on protonation and complexation. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2007  

    Simulation of DNA electrophoresis through microstructures

    , Article Electrophoresis ; Volume 28, Issue 3 , 2007 , Pages 301-308 ; 01730835 (ISSN) Maleki Jirsaraei, N ; Sarbolouki, M. N ; Rouhani, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    2007
    Abstract
    The dependence of the mobility of DNA molecules through an hexagonal array of micropillars on their length and the applied electric field was investigated and it was found that mobility is a nonmonotonic function of their length. Results also revealed that the size dependence of the DNA mobility depends on the applied electric field and there is a crossover around E ≈ 25 V/cm for the mobility of λ-DNA and T4-DNA. These observations are explained in terms of the diffusion process inside the structure affected by the solvent and are modeled using the Langevin and its corresponding Fokker-Planck equations. The phenomenon is generalized under three regimes in a phase diagram relating the... 

    Effect of pesticides on erythrocytes of indigenous fish Labeo rohita

    , Article Journal of King Saud University - Science ; Volume 33, Issue 7 , 2021 ; 10183647 (ISSN) Bano, N ; Nadeem, A ; Maalik, S ; Mushtaq, S ; Iqbal, N ; Khan, A. K ; Shabbir, A ; Imran, M ; Niaz, S ; Yasin, M ; Qayyum, M. A ; Ahmad, B ; Skalicky, M ; Alharbi, S. A ; Alfarraj, S ; Sharif University of Technology
    Elsevier B.V  2021
    Abstract
    Single cell gel electrophoresis was used to observe the effect of bifenthrin and chlorpyrifos on Labeo rohita. The present work was planned to study the genotoxic effect of pesticide mixture on the major indian carp, L. rohita at sub-lethal concentration 33% LC50. First of all, 96-hr LC50 was determined for L. rohita, then fish was given sub-lethal environment for 70 days. Erythrocytes from blood were taken after each fortnight for the assessment of time dependent DNA damage (% damage), aggregate tail length of comets and genomic destruction. There was increase in damage up to 56 days and after that a slight decrease was observed in next fourteen days. After statistical analysis, it was... 

    Advancement of sensor integrated organ-on-chip devices

    , Article Sensors (Switzerland) ; Volume 21, Issue 4 , 2021 , Pages 1-44 ; 14248220 (ISSN) Clarke, G.A ; Hartse, B. X ; Niaraki Asli, A. E ; Taghavimehr, M ; Hashemi, N ; Abbasi Shirsavar, M ; Montazami, R ; Alimoradi, N ; Nasirian, V ; Ouedraogo, L. J ; Hashemi, N. N ; Sharif University of Technology
    MDPI AG  2021
    Abstract
    Organ-on-chip devices have provided the pharmaceutical and tissue engineering worlds much hope since they arrived and began to grow in sophistication. However, limitations for their applicability were soon realized as they lacked real-time monitoring and sensing capabilities. The users of these devices relied solely on endpoint analysis for the results of their tests, which created a chasm in the understanding of life between the lab the natural world. However, this gap is being bridged with sensors that are integrated into organ-on-chip devices. This review goes in-depth on different sensing methods, giving examples for various research on mechanical, electrical resistance, and bead-based... 

    Homozygous mutations in C14orf39/SIX6OS1 cause non-obstructive azoospermia and premature ovarian insufficiency in humans

    , Article American Journal of Human Genetics ; Volume 108, Issue 2 , 2021 , Pages 324-336 ; 00029297 (ISSN) Fan, S ; Jiao, Y ; Khan, R ; Jiang, X ; Javed, A. R ; Ali, A ; Zhang, H ; Zhou, J ; Naeem, M ; Murtaza, G ; Li, Y ; Yang, G ; Zaman, Q ; Zubair, M ; Guan, H ; Zhang, X ; Ma, H ; Jiang, H ; Ali, H ; Dil, S ; Shah, W ; Ahmad, N ; Zhang, Y ; Shi, Q ; Sharif University of Technology
    Cell Press  2021
    Abstract
    Human infertility is a multifactorial disease that affects 8%–12% of reproductive-aged couples worldwide. However, the genetic causes of human infertility are still poorly understood. Synaptonemal complex (SC) is a conserved tripartite structure that holds homologous chromosomes together and plays an indispensable role in the meiotic progression. Here, we identified three homozygous mutations in the SC coding gene C14orf39/SIX6OS1 in infertile individuals from different ethnic populations by whole-exome sequencing (WES). These mutations include a frameshift mutation (c.204_205del [p.His68Glnfs∗2]) from a consanguineous Pakistani family with two males suffering from non-obstructive...