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1.
Curr Top Microbiol Immunol ; 440: 23-65, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32418034

ABSTRACT

In a pattern repeated across a range of ecological niches, arenaviruses have evolved a compact four-gene genome to orchestrate a complex life cycle in a narrow range of susceptible hosts. A number of mammalian arenaviruses cross-infect humans, often causing a life-threatening viral hemorrhagic fever. Among this group of geographically bound zoonoses, Lassa virus has evolved a unique niche that leads to significant and sustained human morbidity and mortality. As a biosafety level 4 pathogen, direct study of the pathogenesis of Lassa virus is limited by the sparse availability, high operating costs, and technical restrictions of the high-level biocontainment laboratories required for safe experimentation. In this chapter, we introduce the relationship between genome structure and the life cycle of Lassa virus and outline reverse genetic approaches used to probe and describe functional elements of the Lassa virus genome. We then review the tools used to obtain viral genomic sequences used for phylogeny and molecular diagnostics, before shifting to a population perspective to assess the contributions of phylogenetic analysis in understanding the evolution and ecology of Lassa virus in West Africa. We finally consider the future outlook and clinical applications for genetic study of Lassa virus.


Subject(s)
Lassa Fever , Lassa virus , Animals , Humans , Lassa virus/genetics , Lassa Fever/epidemiology , Lassa Fever/genetics , Phylogeny , Africa, Western/epidemiology , Zoonoses , Mammals
2.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 4693, 2023 08 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37542071

ABSTRACT

Effective infectious disease surveillance in high-risk regions is critical for clinical care and pandemic preemption; however, few clinical diagnostics are available for the wide range of potential human pathogens. Here, we conduct unbiased metagenomic sequencing of 593 samples from febrile Nigerian patients collected in three settings: i) population-level surveillance of individuals presenting with symptoms consistent with Lassa Fever (LF); ii) real-time investigations of outbreaks with suspected infectious etiologies; and iii) undiagnosed clinically challenging cases. We identify 13 distinct viruses, including the second and third documented cases of human blood-associated dicistrovirus, and a highly divergent, unclassified dicistrovirus that we name human blood-associated dicistrovirus 2. We show that pegivirus C is a common co-infection in individuals with LF and is associated with lower Lassa viral loads and favorable outcomes. We help uncover the causes of three outbreaks as yellow fever virus, monkeypox virus, and a noninfectious cause, the latter ultimately determined to be pesticide poisoning. We demonstrate that a local, Nigerian-driven metagenomics response to complex public health scenarios generates accurate, real-time differential diagnoses, yielding insights that inform policy.


Subject(s)
Lassa Fever , Viruses , Humans , Nigeria/epidemiology , Metagenomics , Lassa Fever/diagnosis , Lassa Fever/epidemiology , Lassa virus/genetics , Viruses/genetics
3.
J Clin Pathol ; 74(8): 496-503, 2021 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34049977

ABSTRACT

Developing and deploying new diagnostic tests are difficult, but the need to do so in response to a rapidly emerging pandemic such as COVID-19 is crucially important. During a pandemic, laboratories play a key role in helping healthcare providers and public health authorities detect active infection, a task most commonly achieved using nucleic acid-based assays. While the landscape of diagnostics is rapidly evolving, PCR remains the gold-standard of nucleic acid-based diagnostic assays, in part due to its reliability, flexibility and wide deployment. To address a critical local shortage of testing capacity persisting during the COVID-19 outbreak, our hospital set up a molecular-based laboratory developed test (LDT) to accurately and safely diagnose SARS-CoV-2. We describe here the process of developing an emergency-use LDT, in the hope that our experience will be useful to other laboratories in future outbreaks and will help to lower barriers to establishing fast and accurate diagnostic testing in crisis conditions.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Testing , COVID-19/diagnosis , Emergency Service, Hospital , Laboratories, Hospital , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction , SARS-CoV-2/genetics , COVID-19/virology , Humans , Predictive Value of Tests , Reproducibility of Results
4.
PLoS Biol ; 5(2): e15, 2007 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17227143

ABSTRACT

Haptic perception is an active process that provides an awareness of objects that are encountered as an organism scans its environment. In contrast to the sensation of touch produced by contact with an object, the perception of object location arises from the interpretation of tactile signals in the context of the changing configuration of the body. A discrete sensory representation and a low number of degrees of freedom in the motor plant make the ethologically prominent rat vibrissa system an ideal model for the study of the neuronal computations that underlie this perception. We found that rats with only a single vibrissa can combine touch and movement to distinguish the location of objects that vary in angle along the sweep of vibrissa motion. The patterns of this motion and of the corresponding behavioral responses show that rats can scan potential locations and decide which location contains a stimulus within 150 ms. This interval is consistent with just one to two whisk cycles and provides constraints on the underlying perceptual computation. Our data argue against strategies that do not require the integration of sensory and motor modalities. The ability to judge angular position with a single vibrissa thus connects previously described, motion-sensitive neurophysiological signals to perception in the behaving animal.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Motor Activity/physiology , Space Perception/physiology , Vibrissae/physiology , Animals , Female , Rats , Rats, Long-Evans , Time Factors
5.
Sci Rep ; 10(1): 3180, 2020 02 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32081931

ABSTRACT

Fifty patients with unexplained fever and poor outcomes presented at Irrua Specialist Teaching Hospital (ISTH) in Edo State, Nigeria, an area endemic for Lassa fever, between September 2018 - January 2019. After ruling out Lassa fever, plasma samples from these epidemiologically-linked cases were sent to the African Centre of Excellence for Genomics of Infectious Diseases (ACEGID), Redeemer's University, Ede, Osun State, Nigeria, where we carried out metagenomic sequencing which implicated yellow fever virus (YFV) as the etiology of this outbreak. Twenty-nine of the 50 samples were confirmed positive for YFV by reverse transcriptase-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR), 14 of which resulted in genome assembly. Maximum likelihood phylogenetic analysis revealed that these YFV sequences formed a tightly clustered clade more closely related to sequences from Senegal than sequences from earlier Nigerian isolates, suggesting that the YFV clade responsible for this outbreak in Edo State does not descend directly from the Nigerian YFV outbreaks of the last century, but instead reflects a broader diversity and dynamics of YFV in West Africa. Here we demonstrate the power of metagenomic sequencing for identifying ongoing outbreaks and their etiologies and informing real-time public health responses, resulting in accurate and prompt disease management and control.


Subject(s)
Computer Systems , Disease Outbreaks , Metagenome , Undiagnosed Diseases/epidemiology , Undiagnosed Diseases/genetics , Yellow Fever/epidemiology , Yellow Fever/genetics , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Child, Preschool , Female , Humans , Likelihood Functions , Male , Middle Aged , Nigeria/epidemiology , Phylogeny , Undiagnosed Diseases/virology , Yellow Fever/virology , Young Adult
6.
medRxiv ; 2020 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32909014

ABSTRACT

Developing and deploying new diagnostic tests is difficult, but the need to do so in response to a rapidly emerging pandemic such as COVID-19 is crucially important for an effective response. In the early stages of a pandemic, laboratories play a key role in helping health care providers and public health authorities detect active infection, a task most commonly achieved using nucleic acid-based assays. While the landscape of diagnostics is rapidly evolving, polymerase chain reaction (PCR) remains the gold-standard of nucleic acid-based diagnostic assays, in part due to its reliability, flexibility, and wide deployment. To address a critical local shortage of testing capacity persisting during the COVID-19 outbreak, our hospital set up a molecular based laboratory developed test (LDT) to accurately and safely diagnose SARS-CoV-2. We describe here the process of developing an emergency-use LDT, in the hope that our experience will be useful to other laboratories in future outbreaks and will help to lower barriers to fast and accurate diagnostic testing in crisis conditions.

7.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4131, 2020 08 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32807807

ABSTRACT

Recent outbreaks of viral hemorrhagic fevers (VHFs), including Ebola virus disease (EVD) and Lassa fever (LF), highlight the urgent need for sensitive, deployable tests to diagnose these devastating human diseases. Here we develop CRISPR-Cas13a-based (SHERLOCK) diagnostics targeting Ebola virus (EBOV) and Lassa virus (LASV), with both fluorescent and lateral flow readouts. We demonstrate on laboratory and clinical samples the sensitivity of these assays and the capacity of the SHERLOCK platform to handle virus-specific diagnostic challenges. We perform safety testing to demonstrate the efficacy of our HUDSON protocol in heat-inactivating VHF viruses before SHERLOCK testing, eliminating the need for an extraction. We develop a user-friendly protocol and mobile application (HandLens) to report results, facilitating SHERLOCK's use in endemic regions. Finally, we successfully deploy our tests in Sierra Leone and Nigeria in response to recent outbreaks.


Subject(s)
Ebolavirus/pathogenicity , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/diagnosis , Lassa Fever/diagnosis , Lassa virus/pathogenicity , Antibodies, Viral , Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats/genetics , Ebolavirus/genetics , Hemorrhagic Fever, Ebola/virology , Lassa Fever/virology , Lassa virus/genetics
8.
Neuron ; 41(2): 181-4, 2004 Jan 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14741099

ABSTRACT

How are two prominent environmental features, surface texture and object location, transduced and encoded as rats whisk? Recent papers show that textures may excite intrinsic mechanical vibrations of the vibrissae. Although these vibrations are too rapid to be directly followed by cortical neurons, there is evidence that their speed is encoded by contact-dependent sensory signals. In addition to contact, sensory signals exist that report the angular position of the vibrissae. The combination of contact and reference signals may be used to decode spatial variations in the environment, particularly the location of objects in head-centered coordinates.


Subject(s)
Neurons, Afferent/physiology , Vibrissae/innervation , Afferent Pathways/physiology , Animals , Discrimination, Psychological , Physical Stimulation , Rats , Surface Properties
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 100(26): 15989-93, 2003 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14671315

ABSTRACT

The discovery of a postsynaptically expressed form of cerebellar parallel fiber-Purkinje cell long-term potentiation (LTP) raises the question whether this is the long-sought resetting mechanism for long-term depression (LTD). Extracellular monitoring of PC spikes enables stable prolonged recordings of parallel fiber-Purkinje cell synaptic efficacy. LTD, saturated by repeated induction protocols, can be reversed by a single round of postsynaptic LTP or nitric oxide (NO), enabling LTD to be reinduced. Conversely, after postsynaptic LTP has been saturated, one round of LTD permits fresh postsynaptic LTP. By contrast, after saturation of LTD, induction of presynaptic LTP or application of forskolin leaves LTD still saturated. Likewise, presynaptic LTP cannot be reversed by LTD. Therefore postsynaptic LTP mediated by NO without postsynaptic Ca2+ elevation, unlike presynaptic LTP mediated by cAMP, is a true counterbalance to LTD mediated by coincidence of NO plus postsynaptic Ca2+


Subject(s)
Cerebellum/physiology , Long-Term Synaptic Depression/physiology , Animals , Electric Stimulation , Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials/physiology , In Vitro Techniques , Kinetics , Long-Term Potentiation/physiology , Long-Term Synaptic Depression/drug effects , Nitric Oxide/pharmacology , Purkinje Cells/drug effects , Purkinje Cells/physiology , Rats
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