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result(s) for
"Hunter, Christopher I"
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COVID-19 pandemic reveals the peril of ignoring metadata standards
2020
Efficient response to the pandemic through the mobilization of the larger scientific community is challenged by the limited reusability of the available primary genomic data. Here, the Genomic Standards Consortium board highlights the essential need for contextual genomic data FAIRness, for empowering key data-driven biological questions.
Journal Article
Experiences in integrated data and research object publishing using GigaDB
2017
In the era of computation and data-driven research, traditional methods of disseminating research are no longer fit-for-purpose. New approaches for disseminating data, methods and results are required to maximize knowledge discovery. The “long tail” of small, unstructured datasets is well catered for by a number of general-purpose repositories, but there has been less support for “big data”. Outlined here are our experiences in attempting to tackle the gaps in publishing large-scale, computationally intensive research.
GigaScience
is an open-access, open-data journal aiming to revolutionize large-scale biological data dissemination, organization and re-use. Through use of the data handling infrastructure of the genomics centre BGI,
GigaScience
links standard manuscript publication with an integrated database (GigaDB) that hosts all associated data, and provides additional data analysis tools and computing resources. Furthermore, the supporting workflows and methods are also integrated to make published articles more transparent and open. GigaDB has released many new and previously unpublished datasets and data types, including as urgently needed data to tackle infectious disease outbreaks, cancer and the growing food crisis. Other “executable” research objects, such as workflows, virtual machines and software from several
GigaScience
articles have been archived and shared in reproducible, transparent and usable formats. With data citation producing evidence of, and credit for, its use in the wider research community,
GigaScience
demonstrates a move towards more executable publications. Here data analyses can be reproduced and built upon by users without coding backgrounds or heavy computational infrastructure in a more democratized manner.
Journal Article
Eupolybothrus cavernicolus Komerički & Stoev sp. n. (Chilopoda: Lithobiomorpha: Lithobiidae): the first eukaryotic species description combining transcriptomic, DNA barcoding and micro-CT imaging data
by
Zapparoli, Marzio
,
Roberts, David
,
Faulwetter, Sarah
in
biodiversity
,
Bioinformatics
,
Chilopoda
2013
We demonstrate how a classical taxonomic description of a new species can be enhanced by applying new generation molecular methods, and novel computing and imaging technologies. A cave-dwelling centipede, Eupolybothrus cavernicolus Komerički & Stoev sp. n. (Chilopoda: Lithobiomorpha: Lithobiidae), found in a remote karst region in Knin, Croatia, is the first eukaryotic species for which, in addition to the traditional morphological description, we provide a fully sequenced transcriptome, a DNA barcode, detailed anatomical X-ray microtomography (micro-CT) scans, and a movie of the living specimen to document important traits of its ex-situ behaviour. By employing micro-CT scanning in a new species for the first time, we create a high-resolution morphological and anatomical dataset that allows virtual reconstructions of the specimen and subsequent interactive manipulation to test the recently introduced ‘cybertype’ notion. In addition, the transcriptome was recorded with a total of 67,785 scaffolds, having an average length of 812 bp and N50 of 1,448 bp (see GigaDB). Subsequent annotation of 22,866 scaffolds was conducted by tracing homologs against current available databases, including Nr, SwissProt and COG. This pilot project illustrates a workflow of producing, storing, publishing and disseminating large data sets associated with a description of a new taxon. All data have been deposited in publicly accessible repositories, such as GigaScience GigaDB, NCBI, BOLD, Morphbank and Morphosource, and the respective open licenses used ensure their accessibility and re-usability.
Journal Article
IL-6 as a keystone cytokine in health and disease
2015
IL-6 has context-dependent pro- and anti-inflammatory properties and is now regarded as a prominent target for clinical intervention. Hunter and Jones discuss the effect of IL-6 on innate and adaptive immunity, and consider how the immunobiology of IL-6 may inform clinical decisions.
Interleukin 6 (IL-6) has a broad effect on cells of the immune system and those not of the immune system and often displays hormone-like characteristics that affect homeostatic processes. IL-6 has context-dependent pro- and anti-inflammatory properties and is now regarded as a prominent target for clinical intervention. However, the signaling cassette that controls the activity of IL-6 is complicated, and distinct intervention strategies can inhibit this pathway. Clinical experience with antagonists of IL-6 has raised new questions about how and when to block this cytokine to improve disease outcome and patient wellbeing. Here we discuss the effect of IL-6 on innate and adaptive immunity and the possible advantages of various antagonists of IL-6 and consider how the immunobiology of IL-6 may inform clinical decisions.
Journal Article
Modulation of innate immunity by Toxoplasma gondii virulence effectors
2012
Key Points
The parasite
Toxoplasma gondii
is extremely widespread in animals and is a common cause of food- and water-borne infection in people. Although most infections are benign, they can have severe consequences in immunocompromised patients and following congenital infection.
T. gondii
is regarded as a model intracellular parasite for which forward- and reverse-genetics tools are available. In combination with the mouse model of toxoplasmosis (including the many genetic knockout and transgenic mouse lines that are available), these tools for genetic manipulation of the parasite have enabled researchers to explore the molecular determinants of
T. gondii
pathogenesis and host defence.
Forward-genetics crosses conducted in
T. gondii
, using strains of different genotypes and virulences in mice, revealed that acute virulence is largely mediated by a family of effector proteins that are secreted into the host cell cytoplasm during parasite invasion. These proteins are derived from a secretory organelle called the rhoptry and, hence, are called ROP effectors.
ROPs include a family of serine/threonine kinases that affect host targets and have important roles in infection in the mouse. Among these, ROP18 phosphorylates immunity-related GTPases, thus promoting parasite survival in activated macrophages, whereas ROP16 phosphorylates signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) and STAT6 and, hence, alters host gene transcription. Curiously, the activity of ROP18 is mediated by another family member called ROP5, which is a pseudokinase.
Although a limited subset of ROP kinases can largely explain the virulence of
T. gondii
in the mouse, their role in other hosts has not been established. The genome encodes more than 40 ROPs, and these different proteins might have distinct roles during infection in the wide range of hosts infected by
T. gondii
. Understanding these patterns might help in the prevention and treatment of human infections.
The intracellular parasite
Toxoplasma gondii
can infect a range of hosts and occasionally causes serious disease in humans. In this Review, Hunter and Sibley summarize recent studies that implicate rhoptry kinases and a dense-granule protein as mediators of acute virulence in the mouse model. They also describe the complex interplay between these parasite effector proteins and the innate immune system.
Toxoplasma gondii
is a common parasite of animals and humans and can cause serious opportunistic infections. However, the majority of infections are asymptomatic, possibly because the organism has co-evolved with its many vertebrate hosts and has developed multiple strategies to persist asymptomatically for the lifetime of the host. Over the past two decades, infection studies in the mouse, combined with forward-genetics approaches aimed at unravelling the molecular basis of infection, have revealed that
T. gondii
virulence is mediated, in part, by secretion of effector proteins into the host cell during invasion. Here, we review recent advances that illustrate how these virulence factors disarm innate immunity and promote survival of the parasite.
Journal Article
Where Medical Statistics Meets Artificial Intelligence
2023
Challenges at the interface of medical statistics and AI are population inference vs. prediction, generalizability, reproducibility and interpretation of evidence, and stability and statistical guarantees.
Journal Article
Is IL-6 a key cytokine target for therapy in COVID-19?
2021
The identification of elevated IL-6 levels in patients with severe COVID-19 led to the rapid development of clinical trials targeting this cytokine. Overall, these trials do not support the widespread use of IL-6 antagonists in hospitalized patients with mild-to-moderate disease, but IL-6 antagonists may be beneficial when rapidly deployed in patients with severe COVID-19, as we discuss here.
Journal Article
Cassini finds molecular hydrogen in the Enceladus plume
by
Perryman, Rebecca S.
,
Magee, Brian A.
,
Bouquet, Alexis
in
Abundance
,
Carbon dioxide
,
Cassini mission
2017
Saturn’s moon Enceladus has an ice-covered ocean; a plume of material erupts from cracks in the ice. The plume contains chemical signatures of water-rock interaction between the ocean and a rocky core. We used the Ion Neutral Mass Spectrometer onboard the Cassini spacecraft to detect molecular hydrogen in the plume. By using the instrument’s open-source mode, background processes of hydrogen production in the instrument were minimized and quantified, enabling the identification of a statistically significant signal of hydrogen native to Enceladus. We find that the most plausible source of this hydrogen is ongoing hydrothermal reactions of rock containing reduced minerals and organic materials. The relatively high hydrogen abundance in the plume signals thermodynamic disequilibrium that favors the formation of methane from CO₂ in Enceladus’ ocean.
Journal Article
Development of a nucleoside-modified mRNA vaccine against clade 2.3.4.4b H5 highly pathogenic avian influenza virus
by
Phan, Anthony T.
,
Webby, Richard J.
,
Rubrum, Adam
in
13/106
,
631/1647/334/1874/345
,
631/250/590/2293
2024
mRNA lipid nanoparticle (LNP) vaccines would be useful during an influenza virus pandemic since they can be produced rapidly and do not require the generation of egg-adapted vaccine seed stocks. Highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses from H5 clade 2.3.4.4b are circulating at unprecedently high levels in wild and domestic birds and have the potential to adapt to humans. Here, we generate an mRNA lipid nanoparticle (LNP) vaccine encoding the hemagglutinin (HA) glycoprotein from a clade 2.3.4.4b H5 isolate. The H5 mRNA-LNP vaccine elicits strong T cell and antibody responses in female mice, including neutralizing antibodies and broadly-reactive anti-HA stalk antibodies. The H5 mRNA-LNP vaccine elicits antibodies at similar levels compared to whole inactivated vaccines in female mice with and without prior H1N1 exposures. Finally, we find that the H5 mRNA-LNP vaccine is immunogenic in male ferrets and prevents morbidity and mortality of animals following 2.3.4.4b H5N1 challenge. Together, our data demonstrate that a monovalent mRNA-LNP vaccine expressing 2.3.4.4b H5 is immunogenic and protective in pre-clinical animal models.
Highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses from H5 clade 2.3.4.4b are circulating widely in birds and have recently caused large outbreaks in mammals. Here, Furey et al. develop a clade 2.3.4.4b HA-expressing mRNA-LNP vaccine and show that it elicits strong protective immune responses in mice and ferrets.
Journal Article
Validation of eDNA Surveillance Sensitivity for Detection of Asian Carps in Controlled and Field Experiments
2013
In many North American rivers, populations of multiple species of non-native cyprinid fishes are present, including black carp (Mylpharyngodon piceus), grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella), bighead carp (Hypophthalmichthys nobilis), silver carp (Hypophthalmichthys molitrix), common carp (Cyprinus carpio), and goldfish (Carassius auratus). All six of these species are found in the Mississippi River basin and tracking their invasion has proven difficult, particularly where abundance is low. Knowledge of the location of the invasion front is valuable to natural resource managers because future ecological and economic damages can be most effectively prevented when populations are low. To test the accuracy of environmental DNA (eDNA) as an early indicator of species occurrence and relative abundance, we applied eDNA technology to the six non-native cyprinid species putatively present in a 2.6 river mile stretch of the Chicago (IL, USA) canal system that was subsequently treated with piscicide. The proportion of water samples yielding positive detections increased with relative abundance of the six species, as indicated by the number of carcasses recovered after poisoning. New markers for black carp, grass carp, and a common carp/goldfish are reported and details of the marker testing to ensure specificity are provided.
Journal Article