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1.
Data Brief ; 36: 107057, 2021 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33898662

ABSTRACT

The data presented in this article is related to the research article entitled "Developing an ultra-efficient microsatellite discoverer to find structural differences between SARS-CoV-1 and Covid-19" [Naghibzadeh et al. 2020]. Simple tandem repeats (microsatellites, STR) are extracted and investigated across all viral families from four main viral realms. An ultra-efficient and reliable software, which is recently developed by the authors and published in the above-mentioned article, is used for extracting STRs. The analysis is done for k-mer tandem repeats where k varies from one to seven. In particular the frequency of trimer STRs is shown to be low in RNA viruses compared with DNA viruses. Special attention is paid to seven zoonotic viruses from family Coronaviridae which caused several severe human crises during last two decades including MERS, SARS 2003 and Covid-19.

2.
Inform Med Unlocked ; 19: 100356, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32501423

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: Recently, the outbreak of Coronavirus-Covid-19 has forced the World Health Organization to declare a pandemic status. A genome sequence is the core of this virus which interferes with the normal activities of its counterparts within humans. Analysis of its genome may provide clues toward the proper treatment of patients and the design of new drugs and vaccines. Microsatellites are composed of short genome subsequences which are successively repeated many times in the same direction. They are highly variable in terms of their building blocks, number of repeats, and their locations in the genome sequences. This mutability property has been the source of many diseases. Usually the host genome is analyzed to diagnose possible diseases in the victim. In this research, the focus is concentrated on the attacker's genome for discovery of its malicious properties. RESULTS: The focus of this research is the microsatellites of both SARS and Covid-19. An accurate and highly efficient computer method for identifying all microsatellites in the genome sequences is discovered and implemented, and it is used to find all microsatellites in the Coronavirus-Covid-19 and SARS2003. The Microsatellite discovery is based on an efficient indexing technique called K-Mer Hash Indexing. The method is called Fast Microsatellite Discovery (FMSD) and it is used for both SARS and Covid-19. A table composed of all microsatellites is reported. There are many differences between SARS and Covid-19, but there is an outstanding difference which requires further investigation. AVAILABILITY: FMSD is freely available at https://gitlab.com/FUM_HPCLab/fmsd_project, implemented in C on Linux-Ubuntu system. Software related contact: hossein_savari@mail.um.ac.ir.

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