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  1. Momynaliev KT, Govorun VM, Gnedenko O, Ivanov YD, Archakov AI
    J. Mol. Recognit., 2003 Jan-Feb;16(1):1-8.
    PMID: 12557232
    The possibility of using the resonant mirror biosensor to detect point substitutions in oligonucleotides was demonstrated with a fragment of the Helicobacter pylori 23S rRNA gene, point mutations in which are responsible for clarythromycin resistance. Conditions were optimized for the interaction of a probe immobilized on the sensing surface with targets containing various nucleotide substitutions. A probe allowing reliable discrimination of mutant targets was selected. The mismatch position in the probe was shown to affect the kinetic parameters (response) of hybridization with mutant targets, reporting not only the position, but also the character (G or C) of a substitution.
  2. Ilina EN, Borovskaya AD, Serebryakova MV, Chelysheva VV, Momynaliev KT, Maier T, et al.
    Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom, 2010 Feb;24(3):328-34.
    PMID: 20049887 DOI: 10.1002/rcm.4394
    The characteristics of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry based investigation of extremely variable bacteria such as Helicobacter pylori were studied. H. pylori possesses a very high natural variability. Accurate tools for species identification and epidemiological characterization could help the scientific community to better understand the transmission pathways and virulence mechanisms of these bacteria. Seventeen clinical as well as two laboratory strains of H. pylori were analyzed by the MALDI Biotyper method for rapid species identification. Mass spectra collected were found containing 7-13 significant peaks per sample, and only six protein signals were identical for more than half of the strains. Four of them could be assigned to ribosomal proteins RL32, RL33, RL34, and RL36. The reproducible peak with m/z 6948 was identified as a histidine-rich metal-binding polypeptide by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). In spite of the evident protein heterogeneity of H. pylori the mass spectra collected for a particular strain under several cultivations were highly reproducible. Moreover, all clinical strains were perfectly identified as H. pylori species through comparative analysis using the MALDI Biotyper software (Bruker Daltonics, Germany) by pattern matching against a database containing mass spectra from different microbial strains (n = 3287) including H. pylori 26695 and J99. The results of this study allow the conclusion that the MALDI-TOF direct bacterial profiling is suited for H. pylori identification and could be supported by mass spectra fragmentation of the observed polypeptide if necessary.
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