
Professor Dr. hula Younis Fadhil in 2020
University of Baghdad, College of Science, Biology Department Molecular virology and Bioinformatics Research interest: Virology, Molecular, Bioinformatics, and Statistical analysis
B.Sc. in Biology, University of Baghdad, college of science, Biology department, in 2000 (My rank is first) MS.c. in Microbiology, University of Baghdad, college of science, Biology department, in 2003 Ph.D. in Microbiology, University of Baghdad, college of science, Biology department, in 2012 (Research mission to India)
Undergraduate and postgraduate teaching Supervising postgraduate students Member for Polymerase Chain Reaction (Conventional& Real-Time) Unit.
Virology, Molecular, Bioinformatics, and Statistical analysis
Practical microbial physiology-third stage-undergraduate Theory & practical virology-fourth stage-undergraduate Applied & clinical virology-Postgraduate-Ph.D student Bacterial taxonomy-Postgraduate-MS.c student Bioinformatics-Postgraduate-MS.c & Ph.D. students Supervision on MS.c. & Ph.D. students
Nine Ms.c. and seven Ph.D.
Understanding Caspase-3 (CASP-3) and interleukin-32 (IL32) roles in SARS-CoV-2 infection is critical to linearize the pathogenesis of the virus as well as the resultant disease which may uncover novel therapeutic targets in treating COVID-19 patients. This study aimed to evaluate caspase‐3 (CASP3) and interleukin 32 (IL32) roles and their correlation with the disease severity among patients. The case-control study (140 patients and 60 healthy controls) was performed with molecular and ELISA assays. CASP3 and IL32 serum levels were determined along with other clinical data of patients. CASP3 levels were classified as significantly higher (p < 0.001), while IL-32 levels were significantly lower in production (p
... Show MoreSevere acute respiratory corona viruses (SARS-COVs) are a particular category of RNA viruses that have emerged as a potential danger to the human population, triggering epidemics and pandemics that have resulted in catastrophic human mortality. The SARS-CoV2, responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic that began on December 12, 2019 in Wuhan, China, has been linked to bats. A new SARS-CoV-2 variant appeared in late December 2020. Mutations with variants continued to appear until the time of this study. Thus, this study aimed to provide a local database among Iraqi patients about SARS-COV-2 variants as there have been very few local studies documenting its existence and its relationship with the progression and severity of infection.
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