* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology
Neglected tropical diseases wikipedia , lookup
Marburg virus disease wikipedia , lookup
Schistosoma mansoni wikipedia , lookup
Eradication of infectious diseases wikipedia , lookup
Mass drug administration wikipedia , lookup
Chagas disease wikipedia , lookup
Cross-species transmission wikipedia , lookup
The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) The mission of the LSHTM is to contribute to the improvement of health worldwide through the pursuit of excellence in research, postgraduate teaching and advanced training in national and international public health and tropical medicine, and through informing policy and practice in these areas. The LSHTM was rated second among UK institutions for research excellent in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise. Leading researchers have backgrounds in public health medicine, epidemiology, clinical medicine, infectious diseases, chemotherapy, biochemistry, immunology, genetics, molecular biology, entomology, statistics, demography, health economics, public health engineering, medical anthropology, health promotion, and health policy. The Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases (ITD) ITD encompasses all of the laboratory-based research in the School as well as that on the clinical and public health aspects of infectious and tropical diseases. The range of disciplines represented in the Faculty is broad and inter-disciplinary research is a feature of much of our activity. The spectrum of diseases studied is wide and there are major research groups with a focus on malaria, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, vaccine development and evaluation, vector biology and disease control. The Faculty is organized into four Departments comprising: Disease Control, Clinical Research, Infections and Immunology and Pathogen Molecular Biology. There is close interaction between scientists in different departments. The Faculty has strong overseas links, which provide a basis for field studies and international collaborations in developed and developing countries. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 1 of 18 Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology (PMBD) Research in PMB focuses on the molecular biology and In recent years such a mission has been significantly genetics of pathogens and their hosts in the context of enhanced by the availability of whole genome improving the understanding and control of infectious sequences. The interpretation and exploitation of this diseases. Aspects of pathogen biology of interest basic information is the platform for numerous new include: (i) determining the mechanisms of infection of avenues of research on pathogenesis, epidemiology globally important viral, bacterial and parasitic and the evolution of virulence. pathogens, (ii) studying immune evasion mechanisms of particular disease agents, (iii) deciphering the genetic The genome resource facility, bioinformatic suite and diversity of pathogens in natural populations, (iv) protein expression laboratory have greatly expedited exploiting parasitic, bacterial and viral pathogens as genome data mining, population genetics, mathematical model biological systems and (v) developing practical modeling, phylogenetic and microarray analyses. One applications including improved diagnostics, example of the application of this technology has been antimicrobials and vaccines. PMB currently the development of “comparative phylogenomics” for investigates, amongst others, malaria (Plasmodium the whole genome comparison of pathogens coupled spp), Chagas disease (Trypanosoma cruzi), African with Bayesian-based algorithms to model phylogeny. sleeping sickness (Trypanosoma brucei), amoebic This method has identified previously hidden population dysentery (Entamoeba), the Leishmania species, structures and has expedited the identification of novel bacterial food borne pathogens (Campylobacter jejuni virulence factors and has now been applied to several and Yersinia enterocolitica), gastric ulcers/cancer pathogens. Other recent research projects include a (Helicobacter pylori), pseudomembranous colitis project to optimize the expression of multiprotein (Clostridium difficile), plague (Yersinia pestis), paddy complexes using the baculovirus system. This project field melioidosis (Burkholderia pseudomallei), will have broad applicability to a range of pathogens, tuberculosis (Mycobacterium tuberculosis), pneumonia and will support the current international lead the (Streptococcus pneumoniae), bluetongue viral disease Department has in the area of safe multiprotein of livestock, Herpesviridae, and the enteric rotavirus particulate vaccines against viral diseases. In the longer that cause significant diarrhoeal disease in infants term out research will help to translate the research developing countries. lead that we have in pathogen genomics into practical applications and will facilitate research on the structural The long-term aim of PMB research is to gain a fully analysis of virulence determinants and the development rounded understanding of the complex and dynamic of vaccines and antimicrobial agents. ways by which pathogens modulate virulence and interact with the human/animal host. Such a holistic More details of PMB can be found on approach will vastly increase the scope for the rational http://www.lshtm.ac.uk/pmbu/ design of long-term intervention strategies to reduce the burden of infectious diseases. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 2 of 18 PMBD Research Staff Brendan Wren, Head of PMBD and Professor of Microbial Pathogenesis Champion, O.L., Gaunt, M.W., Gundogdu, O., Elmi, Professor Wren joined the School with his A., Witney, A.A., Hinds, J., Dorrell, N., Wren, B.W. research team in July Comparative phylogenomics of the food-borne 1999. His research pathogen Campylobacter jejuni reveals genetic interests include markers predictive of infection source. PNAS, 2005; determining the 102(44):16043-8. genetic basis by which bacterial pathogens cause disease. Research on individual pathogens include; Pallen, M.J., Wren, B.W. Bacterial pathogenomics Clostridium difficile, Campylobacter jejuni, Helicobacter Nature, 2007; 449(7164):835-842. pylori, Bukrholderia pseudomallei, Streptococcus pneumonia and the enteropathogenic Yersinia. The He M et al. Evolutionary dynamics of Clostridium research group currently exploits a range of post difficile over short and long-time scales. PNAS genome research strategies to gain a comprehensive 2010; 107 (16):7527-32. understanding of how these pathogens function, how they evolve and how they interact with their respective hosts. Circular representation of the plague genome Current research focuses on: 1. Glycosylation in bacterial pathogens and their application in glycoengineering and novel vaccine design 2. Comparative phylogenomics and the evolution of bacterial virulence. 3. Systems biology of host pathogen interactions. ____________________________________________ Selected publications Wacker, M., et al. N-linked glycosylation in Campylobacter jejuni and its functional transfer into E-coli. Science, 2002; 298(5599):1790-1793. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 3 of 18 John Kelly, Professor of Molecular Biology The parasitic protozoa Selected publications Trypanosoma cruzi and Trypanosoma brucei are Wilkinson, S.R., Taylor, M.C., Horn, D., Kelly, J.M., responsible for two major tropical Cheeseman, I. A mechanism for cross-resistance to infections, Chagas disease and nifurtimox and benznidazole in trypanosomes. African trypanosomiasis, PNAS, 2008; 105(13):5022-7. respectively. These diseases Obado, S.O., Bot, C., Nilsson, D., Andersson, B., represent a major public health problem in regions of the world least able to deal with Kelly, J.M. Repetitive DNA is associated with the associated economic burden. Advances by centromeric domains in Trypanosoma brucei but not ourselves, and others have led to the development of a Trypanosoma cruzi. Genome Biol, 2007; 8(3):R37 wide range of genetic tools that can be used to address fundamental biological questions associated with these Kelly, J.M., McRobert, L., Baker, D.A. Evidence on important pathogens. In addition, the recent completion the chromosomal location of centromeric DNA in of the trypanosomatid genome projects, together with Plasmodium falciparum from etoposide-mediated major advances in imaging technology, is providing a topoisomerase-II cleavage. PNAS, 2006; research framework where rapid progress can be 103(17):6706-11. expected. We are exploiting these new approaches and opportunities to gain greater understanding of the Wilkinson, S.R., Prathalingam, S.R., Taylor, M.C., mechanisms of drug action and resistance, disease Horn, D., Kelly, J.M. Vitamin C biosynthesis in pathogenesis and genome inheritance. In collaboration trypanosomes: A role for the glycosome. PNAS, with biologists, biochemists and organic chemists, we 2005; 102:11645-11650 have validated a number of parasite drug targets and identified several lead compounds that show promise in terms of therapeutic development. This multidisciplinary approach, which brings together of both academic and industrial partners, is now widely seen as the way ahead to provide better treatments for these previously „Neglected Diseases‟. Trypanosoma cruzi, expressing green and red fluorescent protein. The ability to genetically modify parasites in this way has contributed greatly to advances in cell and molecular biology, with multiple downstream applications to areas such as drug development Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 4 of 18 Michael Miles, Professor of Protozoology Professor Mile‟s research is primarily focused on Selected publications Trypanosoma cruzi, the agent of Chagas disease (South American trypanosomiasis) and on Leishmania Gaunt, M. W., Yeo, M., Frame, I. A., Stothard, J. species, the agents of visceral (VL) and mucocutaneous R., Carrasco, H. J., Taylor, M. C., Mena, S. S., leishmaniasis (MCL), encompassing fundamental Veazey, P., Miles, G. A., Acosta, N., de Arias, A. laboratory research and fieldwork in endemic areas. R., Miles, M. A. Mechanism of genetic exchange Principal research interests are the presence, in American trypanosomes Nature, 2003; importance and mechanisms of genetic exchange in 421(6926):936-9 experimental and natural populations of these organisms, and the molecular epidemiology of Chagas Lukes, J., Mauricio, I.L., Schönian, G., Dujardin, disease and the leishmaniases in the context of J.C., Soteriadou, K., Dedet, J.P., Kuhls, K., improvement of control strategies. Other interests are Tintaya, K.W., Jirk, M., Chocholová, E., comparative genomics, diagnostics development, the Haralambous, C., Pratlong, F., Oborník, M., ecology and population genetics of triatomine bugs, the Horák, A., Ayala, F.J., Miles, M.A. Evolutionary ecology and behaviour of South American mammals, and geographical history of the Leishmania and the control of African trypanosomiasis. Recent donovani complex with a revision of current achievements of the research group include the first taxonomy. PNAS, 2007; 104(22):9375-80 experimental proof of genetic exchange in T. cruzi; demonstration that sylvatic Rhodnius prolixus does Llewellyn, M.S., Miles, M.A., Carrasco, H.J., invades houses in Venezuela, and several detailed Lewis, M.D., Yeo, M., Vargas, J., Torrico, F., population genetics studies of natural populations using Diosque, P., Valente, V., Valente, S.A., Gaunt, multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and microsatellite M.W. Genome-scale multilocus microsatellite analysis (MLMT). Coordinator, of the European/Latin typing of Trypanosoma cruzi discrete typing unit American FP6 network (LeishEpiNetSA), 12 partners, to I reveals phylogeographic structure and specific 2010 - Coordinator (assisted by Martin Llewellyn), of the genotypes linked to human infection. PLoS European/Latin American FP7 network (ChagasEpiNet), Pathog, 2009; 5(5):e1000410 15 partners, to 2011. Miles, M.A., Llewellyn, M.S., Lewis, M.D., Yeo, M., Baleela, R., Fitzpatrick, S., Gaunt, M.W., Mauricio, I.L. The molecular epidemiology and phylogeography of Trypanosoma cruzi and parallel research on Leishmania: looking back and to the future. Parasitology, 2009; :1-20 Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 5 of 18 Polly Roy, Professor of Virology Professor Roy joined the School Selected publications in March 2001 as Professor of Virology working in the field of Roy, P., Zhang, X., Boyce, M., Bhattacharya, B., double-stranded RNA viruses. Schein, S. and Zhou, H. (2010). Sialic acid binding Her group has made novel and domains and amphipathic helices in coat proteins of substantial contributions to the bluetongue virus. PNAS. 107: 6292–6297. medical and veterinary fields, particularly through their studies of multi-shelled viruses Boyce, M., Celma, C., Roy, P. (2008). Development of serious pathological and economic impact. Professor of Reverse Genetics Systems for Bluetongue Virus: Roy‟s most significant contribution has been the Recovery of Infectious Virus from Synthetic RNA provision of the first complete molecular description of a Transcripts. J. Virol. 82: 8339-48 distinct group of insect-borne viruses, Orbiviruses, particularly Bluetongue virus; the understanding of Sutton, G., Grimes, J.M., Stuart, D.I., Roy, P. which – gained through a combination of virology, (2007). Bluetongue virus VP4 is an RNA-capping molecular and structural studies – has been assembly line. Nat Struct Mol Biol. 14: 449-51 instrumental in paving the way for improved diagnosis, new vaccines and structure-based drug design. Forzan, M., Wirblich, C., Roy, P. (2004). A capsid Professor Roy‟s most recent research has continued to protein of nonenveloped Bluetongue virus exhibits centre on the basic understanding of each stage of the membrane fusion activity. PNAS. 101: 2100-5 viral life cycle as well as the diverse tropism of these insect-transmitted viruses. Recently, the Roy group pioneered the first reverse genetics system for BTV (the synthesis of infectious virus solely from synthetic genes). Such directed virus genetic manipulation opens a new window of opportunity to understanding how the virus invades a host to cause disease and will benefit the development of new control and therapy regimens in the longer term. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 6 of 18 David Conway, Professor of Biology Malaria parasites adapt well to diverse and changing Selected publications environments. For example, extracellular merozoites in the blood use a range of different receptors to invade erythrocytes and present many alternative antigenic Ochola, L.I., Tetteh, K.K.A., Stewart, L.B., Riitho, V., Marsh, K., & Conway, D.J. (2010) Allele frequencybased and polymorphism-versus-divergence indices of balancing selection in a new filtered set of polymorphic genes in Plasmodium falciparum. Molecular Biology and Evolution, in press. phenotypes to the host immune system. David Conway wants to understand how enough of them survive and reproduce in the face of acquired immunity, and how future interventions such as blood stage vaccines might impact on them sufficiently to better control malaria. Use of statistical signatures of natural selection from population genetic analyses, increasingly at the whole Gomez-Escobar, N., Amambua-Ngwa, A., Walther, M., Okebe, J., Ebonyi, A. & Conway, D.J. (2010) Erythrocyte invasion and merozoite ligand gene expression in severe and mild Plasmodium falciparum malaria. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 201:444-452. genome scale, enables focused investigation on particular genes and their products. The relevance of candidate parasite proteins and their structural variants as targets of acquired immunity in humans is studied by correlation of parasite phenotypes and immune responses with risk of clinical malaria. His group at LSHTM is currently funded by the Wellcome Trust, and since 2005 he has also headed the Malaria Research Programme at the MRC Laboratories in The Gambia, Lemieux, J.E., Gomez-Escobar, N., Feller, A., Pinches, R. Day, F., Carret, C.K., Amambua-Ngwa, A., Kyes, S., Conway, D.J., Holmes, C., & Newbold, C.I. (2009) Statistical models to account for asynchrony reveal limited variation in expression patterns of ex-vivo cultured P. falciparum from patients. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 106:7559-7564. leading a broader programme including epidemiology and entomology as well as immunology and molecular parasitology. He collaborates with research groups in several other countries including Kenya and Malaysia, and has previous experience of research on trachoma Nwakanma, D., Walther, M., Gomez-Escobar, N., Malkin, E., Locke, E. & Conway, D.J. (2009) Quantitative detection of Plasmodium falciparum DNA in saliva, blood, and urine. Journal of Infectious Diseases, 199:1567-1574. and intestinal nematode infections. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 7 of 18 Dr David Baker, Reader in Parasite Molecular Biology David Baker‟s research group Selected publications uses biochemical and genetic approaches to study the cyclic L McRobert, C J Taylor, W Deng, Q L Fivelman, R nucleotide signal transduction M Cummings, S D Polley, O Billker and D A Baker pathways of malaria parasites. (2008) Gametogenesis in malaria parasites is The cyclic nucleotides cAMP mediated by the cGMP-dependent protein kinase. and cGMP perform a spectrum PLoS Biology 6, e139. of cellular functions in diverse organisms. Earlier work from other laboratories suggested that both of these Moon, R.W., Taylor, C.J., Bex, C., Schepers, R., second messenger molecules may play roles in malaria Goulding, D., Janse, C.J., Waters, A.P., Baker, D.A., parasite differentiation. Our studies have focused on the Billker, O. (2009) A cyclic GMP signalling module cyclase enzymes that synthesise cyclic nucleotides, the that regulates gliding motility in a malaria parasite. phosphodiesterases that degrade them, but also on the PLoS Pathogens 5, e1000599. protein kinase that is activated by cGMP (PKG). We have found that in Plasmodium falciparum cGMP and Taylor, H.M., McRobert, L., Grainger, M., Sicard, A., PKG play an essential role in triggering the formation Dluzewski, A.R., Hopp, C.S., Holder, A.A., Baker, (gametogenesis) of mature sexual parasite forms which D.A. (2010) The malaria parasite cGMP-dependent are required to transmit disease to the mosquito vector protein kinase plays a central role in blood stage [1]. We also showed that this pathway is important for schizogony. Eukaryotic Cell 9, 37-45. the development of the ookinete form of P. berghei within the mosquito [2]. It is now becoming clear that Dvorin, J.D., Martyn, D.C., Patel, S.D., Grimley, cGMP signalling and the PKG enzyme are vital for J.S., Collins, C.R., Hopp, C.S., Bright, A.T., multiple parasite stages, because using specific PKG Westernberger, S., Winzeler, E., Blackman, M.J., inhibitors in conjunction with inhibitor-insensitive Baker, D.A., Wandless, T.J., Duraisingh, M.T. transgenic parasites we have demonstrated that (2010) A plant-like kinase in Plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stage schizogony cannot progress if this regulates parasite egress from erythrocytes. kinase is blocked [3]. Recently, with others we have Science 14; 328(5980):910-2. shown that PKG functions upstream of a protease cascade and a calcium- dependent protein kinase (CDPK5) that are also required for asexual blood stage schizont rupture and merozoite egress [4]. Cyclic nucleotide signalling pathways could be exploited in the development of novel antimalarial drugs. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 8 of 18 Dr Graham Clark, Reader in Molecular Parasitology Graham Clark‟s research falls Selected publications into two categories: 1. genetic diversity and evolution of gut Loftus, B. et al., 2005 The genome of the protist protozoan parasites, and 2. parasite Entamoeba histolytica. Nature 433: 865- evolution of mitochondria in 868. anaerobic eukaryotes. The main organisms studied are Ali, I.K.M., Mondal, U., Roy, S., Haque, R., Petri Jr., Entamoeba histolytica, the W.A., Clark, C.G. 2007 Evidence for a link between agent of amoebic dysentery and amoebic liver parasite genotype and outcome of infection with abscesses, and Blastocystis, an organism of uncertain pathogenicity. In Entamoeba, recent unpublished work Entamoeba histolytica. J. Clin. Microbiol. 45: 285289 has focused on genome re-sequencing as a way to build on earlier results that indicated a parasite genetic component linked to the outcome of infection with the Stechmann, A., Hamblin, K., Pérez-Brocal, V., Gaston, D., Richmond, G.S., van der Giezen, M., parasite - people who develop disease are infected with a different range of genotypes from those who remain Clark, C.G. Roger, A.J. 2008 Organelles in Blastocystis that blur the distinction between asymptomatic. The work on Blastocystis is focused on: 1. investigating whether any of the genetic subtypes in mitochondria and hydrogenosomes. Curr. Biol. 18: 580-5 the organism are linked to the symptoms found in some individuals, and 2. sequencing its mitochondrial and Stensvold, C.R., Alfellani, M.A., Nørskov-Lauritsen, nuclear genomes in an attempt to understand the S., Prip, K., Victory, E.L., Maddox, C., Nielsen, H.V., function of the mitochondrion-like organelle in this Clark, C.G. 2009 Subtype distribution of Blastocystis strictly anaerobic organism. The latter studies are also isolates from synanthropic and zoo animals and using comparisons with a related organism, identification of a new subtype . Int. J. Parasitol. Proteromonas. The former (unpublished) has shown 39(4): 473-9 that the one subtype is much more common in people with symptoms, suggesting that Blastocystis may indeed be responsible for disease in at least some cases. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 9 of 18 Dr Ursula A. Gompels, Reader in Molecular Virology Dr Gompels research is on human herpesviruses, Selected publications currently focused on the betaherpesvirus subgroup which includes human herpesvirus 6 (variants HHV-6A Bates, M., Monze, M., Bima, H., Kapambwe, M., and HHV-6B) and human cytomegalovirus (HCMV). Kasolo, F.C., Gompels, U.A.; CIGNIS study group. These viruses can be significant paediatric pathogens High human cytomegalovirus loads and diverse and are major opportunistic infections in immune- linked variable genotypes in both HIV-1 infected and suppressed populations, as HIV/AIDS and exposed, but uninfected, children in Africa. transplantation patients, where they cause both Virology.2008 ; 382:28-36. morbidity and mortality. HHV-6, particularly HHV-6A, is an emergent pathogen with links to multiple sclerosis Catusse, J., Spinks, J., Mattick, C., Dyer, A., Laing, and other neuro-inflammatory disease. K., Fitzsimons, C., Smit, M.J., Gompels, U.A. Betaherpesviruses cause lifelong latent infections Immunomodulation by herpesvirus U51A chemokine adapted to persist in cells of our immune system, and receptor via CCL5 and FOG-2 down-regulation plus can reactivate to cause disease. These adaptations XCR1 and CCR7 mimicry in human leukocytes. Eur provide a unique immunological toolbox to devise novel J Immunol. 2008; 38:763-77. immune-based medicines. Catusse, J., Parry, C.M., Dewin, D.R., Gompels, Work is multidisciplinary with topics in infection and U.A. Inhibition of HIV-1 infection by viral chemokine immune modulation with implications for vaccine studies U83A via high-affinity CCR5 interactions that block and paediatric HIV/AIDS: i) genomic variation and viral human chemokine-induced leukocyte chemotaxis load in relation to micronutrients and paediatric disease and receptor internalization. Blood. 2007, 109:3633- in maternally HIV exposed infants, in collaboration with 9. LSHTM EPH and the University Teaching Hospital in Zambia, ii) studies on molecular mechanisms of virus Dewin, D.R., Catusse, J., Gompels, U.A. entry mediated by cell fusion and iii) characterisation of Identification and characterization of U83A viral virus mimics of inflammatory mediators, chemokine and chemokine, a broad and potent beta-chemokine chemokine receptors, as major components of immune agonist for human CCRs with unique selectivity and modulation. Recent studies identified viral chemokine inhibition by spliced isoform. J Immunol. 2006 agonist and antagonists with HIV-1 inhibitory properties 176:544-56. plus applications for both vaccines and inflammatory disease inhibition. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 10 of 18 Dr David Horn, Reader in Molecular Biology and Head of African trypanosome laboratory Trypanosomatids are protozoan Selected publications parasites that cause a variety of devastating human and animal Kawahara, T., Siegel, T.N., Ingram, A.K., Alsford, diseases, including African S., Cross, G.A., Horn, D. Two essential MYST- trypanosomaiasis, Chagas family proteins display distinct roles in histone disease and leishmaniasis. The H4K10 acetylation and telomeric silencing in work is funded by The Wellcome trypanosomes. Mol Microbiol, 2008; 69(4):1054-68 Trust and focuses on understanding gene expression control in Trypanosoma Glover, L., McCulloch, R., Horn, D. Sequence brucei, more specifically, molecular mechanisms homology and microhomology dominate underlying antigenic variation and host immune evasion. chromosomal double-strand break repair in African This involves projects on monoallelic transcription trypanosomes. Nucleic Acids Res, 2008; control, DNA recombination and repair and telomere 36(8):2608-18 biology. The team has also pioneered technology Alsford, S., Kawahara, T., Isamah, C., Horn, D. A development to facilitate exploitation of genome sequence data and is currently using RNA interference sirtuin in the African trypanosome is involved in both DNA repair and telomeric gene silencing but is not libraries to identify and to study targets and drug required for antigenic variation. Mol Microbiol, 2007; resistance mechanisms. The work incorporates a number of collaborative projects across the UK, Europe, 63(3):724-36 USA and South Africa. The laboratory provides Glover, L., Horn, D. Repression of polymerase I- research laboratory training at various levels with two current Ph.D. students and a Masters student working in mediated gene expression at Trypanosoma brucei telomeres. EMBO Rep, 2006; 7(1):93-9 the laboratory. Dr Horn is currently the Departmental (PMB) Research Degree Coordinator and will organise the M.Sc. Advanced Training in Molecular Biology module from 2010. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 11 of 18 Dr Taane Clark, Reader in Genetic Epidemiology and Statistics Taane joined the LSHTM in early 2010, after holding senior Selected publications statistician appointments at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute Jallow, M. et al.,. Genome-wide and fine-resolution (WTSI) and Wellcome Trust association analysis of malaria in West Africa Centre for Human Genetics Nature Genetics, 2009; 41:657-665 (Oxford), where he focused on the genomic epidemiology of malaria. His main research MalariaGEN Consortium (TG Clark = Statistics interests include the design and analysis of large-scale lead). A global network for genomic epidemiology association studies of infectious diseases in humans of malaria. Nature. 2008; 456:732-7. and the investigation of genetic variation in pathogen populations (e.g. Leishmania, Mycobacterium TB (Mtb), Clark, T.G., Fry, A.E., Auburn, S., Campino, S., Plasmodium) using high-throughput sequencing Diakite, M., Green, A., Richardson, A., Teo, Y.Y., technologies. This research includes developing new Small, K., Wilson, J., Jallow, M., Sisay-Joof, F., tools to integrate genetic and important phenotypic Pinder, M., Sabeti, P., Kwiatkowski, D.P., Rockett, information on maps, and devising analytical methods to K.A. Allelic heterogeneity of G6PD deficiency in identify genetic regions (e.g. structural variants) that West Africa and severe malaria susceptibility. Eur associate with important disease phenotypes of host J Hum Genet, 2009; 17(8):1080-5 and pathogens (e.g. drug resistance). Taane is a member of the LSHTM Malaria Centre and is involved in Teo, Y.Y., Fry, A.E., Bhattacharya, K., Small, K.S., establishing a new genetic epidemiology centre. He is Kwiatkowski, D.P., Clark, T.G. Genome-wide collaborating on school-initiated genome-wide comparisons of variation in linkage disequilibrium. association studies in developing countries, co-initiating Genome Res, 2009; 19(10):1849-60 global genetic diversity projects of Mtb, and provides statistical / epidemiology support and training to the Malaria Genomic Epidemiology Network and pathogen groups at the WTSI. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 12 of 18 Dr Johannes Dessens, Senior Lecturer in Cell and Molecular Biology The work focuses on the molecular genetics of malaria Selected publications parasites using the rodent malaria parasite model Plasmodium berghei. Central to this work is the Khater, E.I., Sinden, R.E., and Dessens, J.T. (2004). generation of genetically modified parasites in which A malaria membrane skeletal protein is essential for target genes are disrupted, tagged or mutated, normal morphogenesis, motility and infectivity of providing important information on the expression, sporozoites. J Cell Biol 167:425-432. subcellular localization, function and redundancy of gene products. Dr Dessens was one of the first in the Carter, V., Shimizu, S., Arai, M., and Dessens, J.T. UK to successfully establish the gene targeting (2008). PbSR is synthesized in macrogametocytes technology in P. berghei and has since applied the and involved in formation of the malaria crystalloids. technology to shed light on the function of many Mol Microbiol 68: 1560-1569. different Plasmodium genes. The emphasis of his work is on the molecular and cell biological characterisation Tremp, A.Z., Khater, E.I., and Dessens, J.T. (2008). of new genes, in particular those expressed in the IMC1b is a putative membrane skeleton protein mosquito stages: ookinetes, oocysts and sporozoites, involved in cell shape, mechanical strength, motility with the aim to discover new ways to reduce parasite and infectivity of malaria ookinetes. J Biol Chem transmission. Current successful research projects 283: 27604-27611. involve studies of a family of LCCL proteins involved in sporozoite development and infectivity (Carter et al., Saeed, S., Carter, V. Tremp, A.Z., and Dessens, 2008; Saeed et al., 2010); and a family of membrane J.T. (2010). Plasmodium berghei crystalloids contain skeleton proteins involved in parasite shape, motility and mechanical strength (Khater et al., 2004; Tremp et multiple LCCL proteins. Mol Biochem Parasitol 170: al., 2008). The team have expertise in parasite genetic 49-53. manipulation, mosquito infection and parasite transmission, electron and confocal microscopy, and in vitro culture of ookinete, oocyst and sporozoite stages. They have also pioneered dual tagging of the same protein at different ends with enhanced green fluorescent protein and mCherry red fluorescent protein (Carter et al., 2008), which has opened the door for the application of fluorescent resonance energy transfer (FRET) to study protein interactions in live parasites. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 13 of 18 Dr Nick Dorrell, Senior Lecturer in Bacterial Pathogenesis Current research interests cover Selected publications four main areas of bacterial Corcionivoschi, N., Clyne, M., Lyons, A., Elmi, A., pathogenesis relating to the human pathogens Campylobacter Gundogdu, O., Wren, B.W., Dorrell, N., Karlyshev, A.V., Bourke, B. 2009. Campylobacter jejuni jejuni and Helicobacter pylori. cocultured with epithelial cells reduces surface Studies into the regulation of C. capsular polysaccharide expression. Infect Immun jejuni gene expression have 77:1959-1967. identified Cj1556 as a transcriptional regulatory protein with a role in Zilbauer, M., Dorrell, N., Elmi, A., Lindley, K.J., controlling the bacterial oxidative and aerobic stress Schuller, S., Jones, H.E., Klein, N.J., Nunez, G., responses. An investigation into the role of bacterial Wren, B .W., Bajaj-Elliott, M. 2007. A major role for outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) in C. jejuni pathogenesis has identified over 120 C. jejuni proteins associated with OMVs and shown that C. jejuni OMVs intestinal epithelial nucleotide oligomerization domain 1 (NOD1) in eliciting host bactericidal immune responses to Campylobacter jejuni. Cell alone are capable of inducing a host innate immune Microbiol 9:2404-2416. response. Ongoing studies into the development of models of infection have lead to the use of a Vertical Diffusion Chamber (VDC) to study C. jejuni interactions Gundogdu, O., Bentley, S.D., Holden, M.T., Parkhill, J., Dorrell, N., Wren, B.W. 2007. Re-annotation and with and invasion of intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) under microaerobic conditions at the apical surface and aerobic conditions at the baso-lateral surface. Using this re-analysis of the Campylobacter jejuni NCTC11168 genome sequence. BMC Genomics 8:162. VDC system, we have demonstrated increased levels of Kamal, N., Dorrell, N., Jagannathan, A., Turner, C jejuni interactions with and invasion of IECs and an S.M., Constantinidou, C., Studholme, D.J., Marsden, increase in the host innate immune response and are G., Hinds, J., Laing, K.G., Wren, B.W., Penn, C.W. currently using the VDC system to investigate the 2007. Deletion of a previously uncharacterized mechanisms and outcomes of C. jejuni invasion of flagellar-hook-length control gene fliK modulates the IECs. Studies are also ongoing into the formation and sigma54-dependent regulon in Campylobacter role in pathogenesis of H. pylori biofilms. jejuni. Microbiology 153:3099-3111. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 14 of 18 Dr Ruth McNerney, Senior Lecturer in Pathogen Biology and Diagnostics Translational research is undertaken by Ruth McNerney's group whose research includes the development, adaptation and evaluation of tools for the control of tuberculosis. This laboratory is experienced in molecular techniques and immunoassay and previously developed a simple, rapid, test for drug susceptibility Mallard, K., Sharaf Eldin, G., McNerney, R. ScreenTape as a tool for the rapid differentiation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates. J Med Microbiol. 2009; 58:1266-8. includes diagnosis and detection of drug resistance. The low-cost Selected publications using bacteriophages. Point-of-care tests are a major theme and current activities include the application of artificial nose technology and novel molecular techniques for the diagnosis of tuberculosis. Patient based educational Temple, B., Ayakaka, I., Ogwang, S., Nabanjja, H., Kayes, S., Nakubulwa, S., Worodria, W., Levin, J., Joloba, M., Okwera, A., Eisenach, K.D., McNerney, R., Elliott, A.M., Smith, P.G., Mugerwa, R.D., Ellner, J.J., Jones-López, E.C.. Rate and amplification of drug resistance in previously-treated tuberculosis patients in Kampala, Uganda. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 2008; 47(9):1126-3. materials to assist diagnosis by improving the quality of expectorated sputum have been developed and are being evaluated in several countries. The second theme of research is disease transmission. The laboratory undertakes DNA fingerprinting and other PCR based technologies and sequence based analysis McNerney R, Wondafrash B, A, Amena K, Tesfaye A, McCash E.M and Murray N.J Field test of a novel detection device for Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigen in cough. BMC Infectious Diseases. 2010; 10:161. to differentiate strains of tuberculosis and investigate the emergence of drug resistant forms of the disease. The laboratory collaborates with a number of projects in countries with a high burden of tuberculosis, including Malawi, South Africa and Zimbabwe. Everett, D.B., Baisley, K.J., McNerney, R., Hambleton, I., Chirwa, T., Ross, D.A., Changalucha, J., Watson-Jones, D., Helmby, H., Dunne, D.W., Mabey, D., Hayes, R.J. 2010 Association of schistosomiasis with false positive HIV test results in an African adolescent population. J Clin Micro. 2010; 48(5):1570-7 Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 15 of 18 Dr Cally Roper, Senior Lecturer Since 2000 Dr Roper has Selected publications worked on practical questions surrounding the drug treatment Naidoo ,I., Roper, C. Following the Path of Most of P. falciparum malaria and its Resistance. The geographic dispersal of the dhps impact on resistance evolution. K540E mutation in African Plasmodium falciparum. Research funded by her Trends in Parasitology (2010) Wellcome Trust fellowship described how resistance mutations in the dhfr and Pearce, R. , Pota, H. , Evehe M.B. , El Hadj Bâ , dhps genes emerged and spread globally and within Mombo-Ngoma, G. , Malisa A. , Ord R. , Inojosa W. , Africa. Large regions of the chromosome around drug Matondo A., Diallo D.A. , Mbacham W., van den resistance mutations are affected by selective sweeps Broek I.V. , Swarthout T. D., Assefa, A. Dejene, S. , in Africa even where recombination rates are high and Grobusch, M.P. , Njie, F. Dunyo, S., Kweku, M., the team used these linked regions to map the dispersal Owusu-Agyei, S., Chandramohan, D. , Bonnet M. , of drug resistant lineages across Africa (Pearce et al Guthmann J-P. , Clarke, S. , Barnes K.I. , Streat E. , 2009), and to describe the emergence of highly Katokele S. T., P. Uusiku , Agboghoroma, C.O. , resistant dhfr in East Africa (Lynch et al 2008). By Elegba O. Y. , Cissé B., A-Elbasit, I. E. , Giha, H.A. collating all published dhfr and dhps mutation data, the , Kachur, S.P. , Lynch, C., Rwakimari, J. , Chanda, spatial and temporal spread of resistance mutations in P. , Hawela, M. , Sharp B. , Naidoo I., Roper, C. Africa has been mapped (Naidoo and Roper 2010) and Multiple origins and regional dispersal of resistant a database and publically available web-based resource dhps in African P. falciparum malaria. PLoS has been created http://www.drugresistancemaps.org/ Medicine (2009) 6(4):e1000055 which was used to guide WHO policy recommendations on SP-IPTi. Our maps of mutation distribution in Africa Lynch, C., Pearce, R., Pota, H., Abeku, Terakegn, also feature on the Worldwide Antimalarial Resistance Cox, J., Rwakimari, J., Tibenderand, J., Roper, C. Network (WWARN) website http://www.wwarn.org/ The emergence of highly resistant dhfr alleles in home/modules/markermaps/Mapper.html P. falciparum populations of SW Uganda. The Journal of Infectious Diseases (2008), 197, 15981604. Plowe, et al., World Antimalarial Resistance Network (WARN) III: Molecular markers for drug resistant malaria. (2007) Malaria Journal 6: 121 Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 16 of 18 Dr Richard Stabler (RCUK Academic Fellow) Lecturer of Molecular Bacteriology Since joining the LSHTM Dr Stabler has been involved in two Selected publications main projects including the Stabler, R.A., Gerding, D.N., Songer, J.G., Drudy, genomic analysis of the D., Brazier, J.S., Trinh, H.T., Witney, A.A., Hinds, J., important nosocomial infection Wren, B.W., Comparative Phylogenomics of Clostridium difficile. Initially he Clostridium difficile Reveals Clade Specificity and used a whole genome Microevolution of Hypervirulent Strains. J Bacteriol, microarray in combination with 2006; 188(20):7297-305 Bayesian statistics (Comparative phylogenomics) to analyse a diverse collection of animal and clinical Stabler, R.A., He, M., Dawson, L., Martin, M., isolates. This identified for the first time that Valiente, E,. Corton, C., Lawley, T.D., Sebaihia, M., hypervirulent isolates from diverse geographical Quail, M.A., Rose, G., Gerding, D.N., Gibert, M., locations were due to the spread of hypervirulent clones Popoff, M.R., Parkhill, J., Dougan, G., Wren, B.W., [1]. The team were able to use this information to select Comparative genome and phenotypic analysis of two examples, one historic and one modern, of the Clostridium difficile 027 strains provides insight into PCR-ribotype 027 hypervirulent lineage for whole the evolution of a hypervirulent bacterium. Genome genome sequencing [2]. This gave an insight into the Biol, 2009; 10(9):R102 genetics behind the rapid evolution and emergence of this clone. To further dissect the genetics, high He, M., Sebaihia, M., Lawley, T.D., Stabler, R.A., throughput next generation genome sequencing Dawson, L.F., Martin, M.J., Holt, K.E., Seth-Smith, technology was used [3]. The second project involved H.M., Quail, M.A., Rance, R., Brooks, K., Churcher, the design and validation of an Active Surveillance of C., Harris, D., Bentley, S.D., Burrows, C., Clark, L., Pathogens (ASP) microarray [4]. The microarray also Corton, C., Murray, V., Rose, G., Thurston, S., Van has been designed to monitor gene flux with particular Tonder, A., Walker, D., Wren, B.W., Dougan, G., interest in emerging infectious diseases. Parkhill, J. Evolutionary dynamics of Clostridium Dr Stabler is also involved in a project involving the difficile over short and long time scales. PNAS, comparative phylogenomics of Listeria monocytogenes. 2010; 107(16):7527-32 Isolates from human, food and environmental sources have been analysed and the genetics behind Stabler, R.A., Dawson, L.F., Oyston, P.C., Titball, persistence is currently being investigated. He is also R.W., Wade, J., Hinds, J., Witney, A.A., Wren, B.W. involved in a number projects looking at virulence Development and application of the active factors from Streptococcus pneumoniae, Shigella surveillance of pathogens microarray to monitor sonnei and Campylobacter jejuni isolates. bacterial gene flux. BMC Microbiol, 2008; 8:177 Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 17 of 18 Michael Gaunt, (RCUK Academic Fellow) Lecturer The work focused on using Selected publications evolutionary models to understand the molecular epidemiology or Gaunt, M.W., Yeo, M., Frame, I.A., Stothard, J.R., “microevolution” and Carrasco, H.J., Taylor, M.C., Mena, S.S., Veazey, “macroevolution” of the parasite P., Miles, G.A., Acosta, N., de Arias, A.R., Miles, Trypanosoma cruzi the causative M.A. (2003). Mechanism of genetic exchange in agent of South American trypanosomiasis and its insect American trypanosomes. Nature 421:936-9. vector triatomine bugs. Microevolution: T. cruzi is a zoonose and the genetic Patterson & Gaunt (in press) Phylogenetic relationship, or “population structure”, between sylvatic multilocus codon models and molecular clocks mammals and human reservoir hosts could have reveal the monophyly of haematophagous reduviid important public health implications. The team have bugs and their evolution at the formation of South developed a population genomics method using America. Mol Phyl Evol “microsatellite” genetic markers that provide the most accurate typing tool available for T. cruzi. The Llewellyn, M.S., Miles, M.A., Carrasco, H.J., Lewis, application of this tool to field isolates demonstrates T. M.D., Yeo, M., Vargas, J., Torrico, F., Diosque, P., cruzi has a complex epidemiology. For example, some Valente, V., Valente, S.A., Gaunt, M.W. (2009) ecotopes show a close genetic association between Genome-scale multilocus microsatellite typing of sylvatic hosts (rodents) and humans but other ecotopes Trypanosoma cruzi discrete typing unit I reveals (opossums) show a mixture of close and distant genetic phylogeographic structure and specific genotypes associations. The microsatellites panel identified linked to human infection. PLoS Pathog multiclonal infections as being much more important 5:e1000410 than previously thought. Llewellyn, M.S., Lewis, M.D., Acosta, N., Yeo, M., Macroevolution: Evolutionary studies on triatomine Carrasco, H.J., Segovia, M., Vargas, J., Torrico, bugs revealed the insect evolved blood-feeding F., Miles, M.A., Gaunt, M.W. (2009) Trypanosoma behaviour once and this occurred exactly at the same cruzi IIc: phylogenetic and phylogeographic time as the formation of South America. Finally, insights from sequence and microsatellite analysis theoretical work on evolutionary models reveals that and potential impact on emergent Chagas disease. several commonly used assumptions (mutation PLoS Negl Trop Dis 3: e510 matrices) may result in erroneous epidemiological inferences. Refining these models provides new epidemiological insights. Department of Pathogen Molecular Biology Page 18 of 18