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1.
Biochem Genet ; 62(5): 4157-4173, 2024 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38212571

ABSTRACT

Repetitive DNA sequences cause genomic instability and are important genetic markers. Identification of repeats is a critical step in genome annotation and analysis. On the other hand, repeats also pose a technical challenge for genome assembly and alignment programs using NGS data. RFGR is a comprehensive tool that can find exact repetitive sequences in complete genomes and assembled genomes, as well as NGS reads of prokaryotes. For complete genomes, RFGR uses a suffix trees to find seed repeats of repetitive sequences of fixed length with indels. For assembled genomes, RFGR uses a modified Bowtie aligner to find seed repeats of exact repetitive sequences in the contigs/ scaffolds, which are then extended to maximal repeats. The repeats are classified and for repeats near a gene, RFGR reports the gene as well. For the control dataset of E. coli UTI89 and E. coli K12, RFGR reports 35,141 and 49,352 repeats, respectively. For NGS reads, RFGR uses the frequency of the repetitive k-mers to determine FASTQ reads containing repetitive sequences and removes them from the dataset. An E. coli K12 NGS dataset pre-processed using RFGR, on comparison with the original dataset, gives an improved assembly. The N50 value improves by 22.86% with a decrease in size of the assembly graph by nearly 50%. Thus, with RFGR, we achieve a better assembly with reduced computation. RFGR can be improved in terms of the length of the minimum repeat found, extending to find approximate repeats and to be applicable to Eukaryotes as well.


Subject(s)
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , Genome, Bacterial , Software , Sequence Analysis, DNA/methods , Escherichia coli K12/genetics
2.
J Maxillofac Oral Surg ; 23(3): 706-709, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38911408

ABSTRACT

The World Health Organisation defines mucosal malignant melanoma as a malignant tumour of melanocytes or of melanocyte progenitors. Due to the lack of symptoms and unknown etiology, mucosal malignant melanoma may go undiagnosed. The surgeon can find it challenging to come up with a definitive treatment strategy because of its rarity and rapid spread. In this case study, a 57-year-old female patient with hyperpigmented gingiva and palate diagnosed pathologically and immunohistochemically as malignant melanoma underwent surgical excision and a modified radical neck dissection.

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