46 results on '"Smithers, S."'
Search Results
2. Host Antigens in Schistosomiasis
- Author
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Smithers, S. R., Terry, R. J., and Hockley, D. J.
- Published
- 1969
3. Decreased Recovery of Invading Parasites from the Lungs as a Parameter of Acquired Immunity to Schistosomiasis in the Mouse
- Author
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Sher, Alan, Mackenzie, Pamela, and Smithers, S. Ronald
- Published
- 1974
4. Specificity of Immunoglobulin G in Rhesus Monkeys Infected with Schistosoma mansoni, Plasmodium knowlesi, and Trypanosoma brucei
- Author
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Freeman, T., Smithers, S. R., Targett, G. A. T., and Walker, P. J.
- Published
- 1970
5. Time scales and modes of reef lagoon infilling in the Maldives and controls on the onset of reef island formation
- Author
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Perry, C., Kench, P., Smithers, S., Yamano, H., O'Leary, Michael, Gulliver, P., Perry, C., Kench, P., Smithers, S., Yamano, H., O'Leary, Michael, and Gulliver, P.
- Abstract
Faro are annular reefs, with reef flats near sea level and lagoons of variable depth, characteristic of both the perimeter and lagoons of Maldivian (Indian Ocean) atolls. Their geomorphic development remains largely unknown, but where faro lagoons (termed velu in Maldivian) have infilled and support reef islands, these provide precious habitable land. Understanding the timing and modes of velu infilling is thus directly relevant to questions about reef island development and vulnerability. Here we use a chronostratigraphic data set obtained from a range of atoll-interior faro with partially to fully filled velu (including those with reef islands) from Baa (South Maalhosmadulu) Atoll, Maldives, to determine time scales and modes of velu infilling, and to identify the temporal and spatial thresholds that control reef island formation. Our data suggest a systematic relationship between faro size, velu infilling, and island development. These relationships likely vary between atolls as a function of atoll lagoon depth, but in Baa Atoll, our data set indicates the following faro-size relationships exist: (1) faros <~0.5 km2 have velu that were completely infilled by ca.3000 calibrated years B.P. (cal yr B.P.) with islands having established on these deposits by ca. 2.5 cal kyr B.P.; (2) faros >0.5 km2 but <~1.25 km2 have velu in late stages of infill, may support unvegetated sand cays and, given sufficient sand supply, may evolve into larger, more permanent islands; and (3) faros >~1.25 km2 have unfilled (deeper) velu which might only infill over long time scales and which are thus unlikely to support new island initiation. These new observations, when combined with previously published data on Maldivian reef island development, suggest that while the velu of the largest faro are unlikely to fi ll over the next few centuries (at least), other faro with near-infilled velu may provide important foci for future reef-island building, even under present highstand (and slightl
- Published
- 2013
6. Carbonate and terrigenous sediment budgets for inshore turbid reefs on the central Great Barrier Reef
- Author
-
Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S, Perry, C, Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S, and Perry, C
- Abstract
Inshore turbid zone reefs on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) occur within 20 km of the mainland coast under marine environmental conditions (with respect to sedimentation rates, turbidity and water quality) that are generally considered marginal for reef growth. Despite this, data from various benthic habitat assessments report high (N30%) coral cover in these environments and reef core records show them to be characterised by relatively rapid rates of vertical accretion (2–8 mm/year), a long-term trend indicative of high net carbonate productivity and in-situ carbonate framework accumulation. However, the lack of quantitative data on terrigenous sediment input and flux rates, and on carbonate production rates has inhibited understanding of both ecological timescale rates of carbonate production and the aggregated long-term net impacts of sediments on reef growth. To address this knowledge gap a modern carbonate budget and terrigenous sediment model, that quantified allochthonous sediment inputs onto, within and off reef, was developed at two inshore reefs: Middle Reef and Paluma Shoals. Both are located within the central region of the GBR and are subjected to high terrigenous sediment load (N11,000 tonnes/year) and fluctuating turbidity (5 to N100 mg/L) regimes.Based on sediment dynamic modelling, over 81% of sediments delivered were transported off reef, with net sediment accumulation limited to sheltered reef habitats. Net carbonate production was high (N6.9 kg/m2/year) due to high coral cover (N30%), high coral calcification rates (Acropora average 6.3 g/cm2/year), and low bioerosion rates (0.3 to 5 kg/m2/year), but varied spatially with highest net carbonate production (N10 kg/m2/year) within deep (N-2 m at LAT) windward reef zones. High carbonate framework production has enabled Middle Reef and Paluma Shoals to vertically accrete rapidly: Middle Reef establishing at depths of ~4 m, Paluma Shoals at ~3 m depth and both reaching sea level in b1200 years. Carbonate
- Published
- 2013
7. Spatial and temporal variations in turbidity on two inshore turbid reefs on the Great Barrier Reef, Australia
- Author
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Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., Perry, C., Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., and Perry, C.
- Abstract
This study describes the natural turbidity regimes at two inshore turbid reefs on the central Great Barrier Reef where wind-driven waves are the main agent of sediment resuspension. Many corals on inshore turbid reefs have adapted to high and fluctuating turbidity, however, anthropogenic activities such as dredging are speculated to produce larger and more prolonged turbidity events that may exceed the environmental tolerance and adaptive capacity of corals on these reefs. Natural turbidity regimes must be described and understood to determine whether and when coral communities on inshore turbid reefs are at risk from anthropogenically elevated turbidity, but at present few baseline studies exist. Here, we present turbidity data from (a) Middle Reef, a semi-protected reef located between Magnetic Island and Townsville and (b) Paluma Shoals, a reef exposed to higher energy wind and waves located in Halifax Bay. Instruments were deployed on both reefs for 16 days to measure spatial and temporal variations in turbidity and its driving forces (waves, currents, tides). Locally driven wind waves were the key driver of turbidity, but the strength of the relationship was dependent on wave exposure. Turbidity regimes thus vary markedly over individual reefs and this is reflected in community assemblage distributions, with a high abundance of heterotrophic corals (e.g. Goniopora) in reef habitats subjected to large fluctuations in turbidity (>100 NTU).A turbidity model developed using local wind speed data explained up to 75 % and up to 46 % of the variance in turbidity at Paluma Shoals and Middle Reef, respectively. Although the model was based on a brief two-week observational period, it reliably predicted variations in 24-h averaged turbidity and identified periods when turbidity rose above ambient baseline levels, offering reef managers insights into turbidity responses to modified climate and coastal sediment delivery regimes.
- Published
- 2013
8. A Field-Based Technique for Measuring Sediment Flux on Coral Reefs: Application to Turbid Reefs on the Great Barrier Reef
- Author
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Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., Perry, C., Ridd, P., Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., Perry, C., and Ridd, P.
- Abstract
Inshore turbid reefs on the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) are exposed to high and fluctuating sediment loads normally associated with poor reef growth, but many have high coral cover >30%) and diversity >50 species). Previous assessments of sediment regimes on these reefs have largely relied on sediment trap data, which overestimate sedimentation rates and may not accurately reflect sedimentary conditions. A new approach, based on paired sediment trays, is described here that allows the sedimentation rate, sediment resuspension, and total mass of mobile sediments transported on to and off of a site per unit time and area (termed the two-way total sediment flux) to be measured or calculated. The sediment trays were deployed on Middle Reef and Paluma Shoals, two inshore turbid reefs on the GBR where the two-way total sediment flux ranged from 34 g/m2/d in protected reef habitats to more than 640 g/m2/d in higher-energy settings. Mean sedimentation rates, calculated using data from four sites across these reefs, of less than 122 g/m2/d are considerably lower than published rates estimated for nearby coral reefs, largely because sediment traps limit sediment resuspension. At each tray installation, sediments were collected every 4 to 6 weeks to measure variations in net sedimentation through the year, and resuspension rates were calculated by comparing 100 g of preanalysed sediments placed on trays at deployment to sediments recovered 2 weeks later. These data demonstrate that despite high sediment delivery rates, net sedimentation may still be relatively low and potentially less of a threat to benthic communities on turbid reefs than previously assumed. Sediment trays provide a comprehensive assessment of sediment regimes that, together with ecological assessments of coral cover, improve our understanding of the sedimentary pressures affecting inshore turbid reefs and their ability to tolerate sedimentation.
- Published
- 2012
9. Coral reefs of the turbid inner-shelf of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia: An environmental and geomorphic perspective on their occurrence, composition and growth
- Author
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Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., Perry, C., Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., and Perry, C.
- Abstract
Investigations of the geomorphic and sedimentary context in which turbid zone reefs exist, both in the modern and fossil reef record, can inform key ecological debates regarding species tolerances and adaptability to elevated turbidity and sedimentation. Furthermore, these investigations can address critical geological and palaeoecological questions surrounding longer-term coral-sediment interactions and reef growth histories. Here we review current knowledge about turbid zone reefs from the inner-shelf regions of the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) in Australia to consider these issues and to evaluate reef growth in the period prior to and post European settlement. We also consider the future prospects of these reefs under reported changing water quality regimes. Turbid zone reefs on the GBR are relatively well known compared to those in other reef regions. They occur within 20 km of the mainland coast where reef development may be influenced by continual or episodic terrigenous sediment inputs, fluctuating salinities (24–36 ppt), and reduced water quality through increased nutrient and pollutant delivery from urban and agricultural runoff. Individually, and in synergy, these environmental conditions are widely viewed as unfavourable for sustained and vigorous coral reef growth, and thus these reefs are widely perceived as marginal compared to clear water reef systems.However, recent research has revealed that this view is misleading, and that in fact many turbid zone reefs in this region are resilient, exhibit relatively high live coral cover (> 30%) and have distinctive community assemblages dominated by fast growing (Acropora, Montipora) and/or sediment tolerant species (Turbinaria, Goniopora, Galaxea, Porites). Palaeoecological reconstructions based on the analysis of reef cores show that community assemblages are relatively stable at millennial timescales, and that many reefs are actively accreting (average 2–7 mm/year) where accommodation space is available, despite
- Published
- 2012
10. Evidence of very rapid reef accretion and reef growth under high turbidity and terrigenous sedimentation
- Author
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Perry, C., Smithers, S., Gulliver, P., Browne, Nicola, Perry, C., Smithers, S., Gulliver, P., and Browne, Nicola
- Abstract
Global-scale deteriorations in coral reef health are projected to lead to a progressive declinein reef-building potential and ultimately to states of net reef erosion. These transitions may bedriven by various human disturbances and by climate change; however, increased terrestrialsediment and nutrient yields from anthropogenically modifi ed coastal catchments are widelyrecognized as a major threat. As water quality deteriorates, reduced coral cover and speciesdiversity are commonly inferred, and lower reef accretion rates and impaired reef developmentare assumed consequences. Here we present a detailed chronostratigraphic growth history,constrained by 40 accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon dates for Middle Reef, aninshore turbid-zone reef on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, that challenges the assumptionthat high terrestrial sediment inputs inherently restrict reef accretion rates and inhibit reefdevelopment. We establish that Middle Reef has vertically accreted very rapidly for more than700 yr, at an average rate of 8.3 mm yr–1. Accretion rates varied across the reef at differenttimes, but it is signifi cant that the periods of most rapid accretion (averaging 13.0 mm yr–1)coincide with phases of reef development dominated by fi ne-grained terrigenoclastic sedimentaccumulation. We suggest that this is in large part a function of a high rate of terrigenous sediment accumulation aiding the postmortem preservation of coral skeletal material. Both maximumand site-averaged accretion rates match or exceed those documented for most clearwater,mid- and outer-shelf reefs in the region over the past 9000 yr, and those determined formany reefs throughout the Indian and Pacifi c Oceans over the same period. While examplesof inshore coral reefs that have been degraded in the short term by excessive terrestrial sedimentationclearly exist, others clearly tolerate high sedimentation and turbidity, and our dataconfi rm that sustained and long-term rapid reef growth is possible
- Published
- 2012
11. Implications of reef ecosystem change for the stability and maintenance of coral reef islands
- Author
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Perry, C., Kench, P., Smithers, S., Riegl, B., Yamano, H., O'Leary, Mick, Perry, C., Kench, P., Smithers, S., Riegl, B., Yamano, H., and O'Leary, Mick
- Abstract
Coral reef islands are among the most vulnerable environments on Earth to climate change because they are low lying and largely constructed from unconsolidated sediments that can be readily reworked by waves and currents. These sediments derive entirely from surrounding coral reef and reef flat environments and are thus highly sensitive to ecological transitions that may modify reef community composition and productivity. How such modifications - driven by anthropogenic disturbances and on-going and projected climatic and environmental change - will impact reef island sediment supply and geomorphic stability remains a critical but poorly resolved question. Here, we review the unique ecological-geomorphological linkages that underpin this question and, using different scenarios of environmental change for which reef sediment production responses can be projected, explore the likely resilience of different island types. In general, sand-dominated islands are likely to be less resilient than those dominated by rubble grade material. However, because different islands typically have different dominant sediment constituents (usually either coral, benthic foraminifera or Halimeda) and because these respond differently to individual ecological disturbances, island resilience is likely to be highly variable. Islands composed of coral sands are likely to undergo major morphological change under most near-future ecological change scenarios, while those dominated by Halimeda may be more resilient. Islands composed predominantly of benthic foraminifera (a common state through the Pacific region) are likely to exhibit varying degrees of resilience depending upon the precise combination of ecological disturbances faced. The study demonstrates the critical need for further research bridging the ecological-geomorphological divide to understand: (1) sediment production responses to different ecological and environmental change scenarios; and (2) dependant landform vulnerability. © 2
- Published
- 2011
12. Geomorphology and community structure of Middle Reef, central Great Barrier Reef, Australia: an inner-shelf turbid zone reef subject to episodic mortality events
- Author
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Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., Perry, C., Browne, Nicola, Smithers, S., and Perry, C.
- Abstract
Middle Reef is an inshore turbid zone reef located 4 km offshore from Townsville, Queensland, Australia. The reef consists of four current-aligned, interconnected reef patches that have reached sea level and formed reef flats. It is regularly exposed to high turbidity (up to 50 mg l-1) generated by wave-driven sediment resuspension or by episodic flood plumes. Middle Reef has a high mean hard coral cover (>39%), relatively low mean macro-algal cover (<15%) and a coral community comprising at least 81 hard coral species. Cluster analysis differentiated six benthic communities which were mapped onto the geomorphological structure of the reef to reveal a spatially patchy community mosaic that reflects hydrodynamic and sediment redistribution processes. Coral cover data collected annually from windward slope transects since 1993 show that coral cover has increased over the last ~15 years despite a history of episodic mortality events. Although episodic mortality may be interpreted as an indication of marginality, over decadal timescales, Middle Reef has recovered rapidly following mortality events and is clearly a resilient coral reef.
- Published
- 2010
13. Fringing and Nearshore Coral Reefs of the Great Barrier Reef: Episodic Holocene Development and Future Prospects
- Author
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Smithers, S. G., primary, Hopley, D., additional, and Parnell, K. E., additional
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The Mariano Global Surface Velocity Analysis 1.0.
- Author
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MIAMI UNIV FL INST OF MARINE AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, Mariano, A. J., Ryan, E. H., Perkins, B. D., Smithers, S., MIAMI UNIV FL INST OF MARINE AND ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, Mariano, A. J., Ryan, E. H., Perkins, B. D., and Smithers, S.
- Abstract
This report details the construction of the Mariano Global Surface Velocity Analysis (MGSVA) 1.0 from the Maury Ship Drift Data. The generalized median filter and the parameter matrix objective analysis algorithm used in the analysis are detailed. The applicability and limitations of the MGSVA are discussed, and specific recommendations are made for using the MGSVA for U.S. Coast Guard Search and Rescue operations. (MM), Preparation in cooperation with Analysis and Technology Inc., North Stonington, CT.
- Published
- 1995
15. Geomorphological impacts of high-latitude storm waves on low-latitude reef islands - Observations of the December 2008 event on Nukutoa, Takuu, Papua New Guinea.
- Author
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Smithers, S. G. and Hoeke, R. K.
- Subjects
- *
GEOMORPHOLOGY , *CORAL reefs & islands , *HYDRODYNAMICS , *SHORELINES , *STORM surges - Abstract
Low-latitude reefs and reef islands usually experience relatively benign climatic and hydrodynamic conditions due to their location near to the equator, outside of the major storm belts, and they typically exhibit geomorphological traits that reflect the prevailing low-energy conditions. For example, algal ridges are poorly developed, reef flat boulder zones are modest or lacking, rubble banks are rare, and reef islands tend to be low and dominated by sand. Nukutoa is a low-lying triangular-shaped reef island of ~6 ha located on the eastern rim of Takuu atoll (4°45'S, 157°2'E), Papua New Guinea, approximately 300 km northeast of Bougainville. The approximately 450 residents of Takuu all live on Nukutoa. In December 2008 Takuu was struck by several days of very high water levels and waves, which washed completely over approximately 50% of Nukutoa. GPS shoreline mapping and topographic surveys of the island were undertaken in the days immediately prior to the event, and were repeated immediately after. Homes and village infrastructure were damaged during this event, which eroded around 60% of the shoreline, and deposited a sand sheet averaging around 50 mm thick over approximately 13% of the island. This event was generated by two distant storms - one located > 6000 km away near 50°N, and affected a wide area of the Western Pacific. Oral histories record at least five similar events since the 1940s. In this paper we document the geomorphic impacts of the December 2008 event and discuss the possible significance of similar events in the past, and in the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Impacts of Cyclone Yasi on nearshore, terrigenous sediment-dominated reefs of the central Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
- Author
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Perry, C. T., Smithers, S. G., Kench, P. S., and Pears, B.
- Subjects
- *
TROPICAL cyclones , *CORAL reefs & islands , *GEOMORPHOLOGY , *SEDIMENTS , *ECOLOGY - Abstract
Tropical Cyclone (TC) Yasi (Category 5) was a large (~700 km across) cyclone that crossed Australia's Queensland coast on the 3rd of February 2011. TC Yasi was one of the region's most powerful recorded cyclones, with winds gusting to 290 km/h and wave heights exceeding 7 m. Here we describe the impacts of TC Yasi on a number of nearshore, turbid-zone coral reefs, that include several in the immediate vicinity of the cyclone's landfall path (King Reef, Lugger Shoal and Dunk Island), as well as a more distally located reef (Paluma Shoals) ~150 km to the south in Halifax Bay. These reefs were the focus of recent (between 2006 and 2009) pre-Yasi studies into their geomorphology, sedimentology and community structure, and here we discuss data from a recent (August 2011) post-Yasi re-assessment. This provided a unique opportunity to identify and describe the impacts of an intense tropical cyclone on nearshore reefs, which are often assumed to be vulnerable to physical disturbance and reworking due to their poorly lithified framework. Observed impacts of TC Yasi were site specific and spatially highly heterogeneous, but appear to have been strongly influenced by the contemporary evolutionary stage and ecological make-up of the individual reefs, with site setting (i.e. exposure to prevailing wave action) apparently more important than proximity to the landfall path. The most significant ecological impacts occurred at King Reef (probably a result of freshwater bleaching) and at Paluma Shoals, where widespread physical destruction of branched Acropora occurred. New coral recruits are, however, common at all sites and colony re-growth clearly evident at King Reef. Only localised geomorphic change was evident, mainly in the form of coral fracturing, rubble deposition, and sediment movement, but again these impacts were highly site specific. The dominant impact at Paluma Shoals was localised storm ridge/shingle sheet deposition, at Lugger Shoal major offshore fine sediment flushing, and at Dunk Island major onshore coarse sand deposition. There was little geomorphic change evident at King Reef. Thus whilst small-scale and taxa specific impacts from Cyclone Yasi are clearly evident, geomorphological changes appear minor and ecological impacts highly variable between sites, and there is no observed evidence for major reef structural change. The study suggests that the vulnerability of reefs to major physical disturbance events can be extremely site specific and determined by interacting factors of location relative to storm path and pre-event geomorphology and ecology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Sediment facies of the Cocos (Keeling) Islands
- Author
-
Smithers, S. G., primary
- Published
- 1994
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Evidence of very rapid reef accretion and reef growth under high turbidity and terrigenous sedimentation.
- Author
-
Perry, C. T., Smithers, S. G., Gulliver, P., and Browne, N. K.
- Subjects
- *
STRATIGRAPHIC geology , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *TURBIDITY , *MARINE animals - Abstract
Global-scale deteriorations in coral reef health are projected to lead to a progressive decline in reef-building potential and ultimately to states of net reef erosion. These transitions may be driven by various human disturbances and by climate change; however, increased terrestrial sediment and nutrient yields from anthropogenically modified coastal catchments are widely recognized as a major threat. As water quality deteriorates, reduced coral cover and species diversity are commonly inferred, and lower reef accretion rates and impaired reef development are assumed consequences. Here we present a detailed chronostratigraphic growth history, constrained by 40 accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon dates for Middle Reef, an inshore turbid-zone reef on Australia's Great Barrier Reef, that challenges the assumption that high terrestrial sediment inputs inherently restrict reef accretion rates and inhibit reef development. We establish that Middle Reef has vertically accreted very rapidly for more than 700 yr, at an average rate of 8.3 mm yr-1. Accretion rates varied across the reef at different times, but it is significant that the periods of most rapid accretion (averaging 13.0 mm yr-1) coincide with phases of reef development dominated by fine-grained terrigenoclastic sediment accumulation. We suggest that this is in large part a function of a high rate of terrigenous sediment accumulation aiding the postmortem preservation of coral skeletal material. Both maximum and site-averaged accretion rates match or exceed those documented for most clear-water, mid- and outer-shelf reefs in the region over the past 9000 yr, and those determined for many reefs throughout the Indian and Pacific Oceans over the same period. While examples of inshore coral reefs that have been degraded in the short term by excessive terrestrial sedimentation clearly exist, others clearly tolerate high sedimentation and turbidity, and our data confirm that sustained and long-term rapid reef growth is possible in these environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Rapid reef island formation and stability over an emerging reef flat: Bewick Cay, northern Great Barrier Reef, Australia.
- Author
-
Kench, P. S., Smithers, S. G., and McLean, R. F.
- Subjects
- *
REEFS , *ISLANDS , *MICROATOLLS , *SEA level - Abstract
A model that resolves reef island formation in relation to both reef platform substrate development and mid-Holocene sea-level change is presented for Bewick Island, northern Great Barrier Reef, based on morphostratigraphic analysis and radiometrically dated island sediments and reef corals. On Bewick Island, microatolls record reef-flat development at higher sea level (+1.5 m) by 6500 yr B.P. Island building began on a partially emergent reef flat 5000-4000 yr B.P., when sea level was 0.5 m above present. As sea level fell to its present level, the reef platform process window closed and the island core stabilized. Results present the first unequivocal evidence of island building directly over a reef flat comprising microatolls, and the first detailed model of island formation from the Great Barrier Reef. The model demonstrates that the interplay of sea level and reef surface elevation can vary between sites but their convergence is critical for island initiation. Future trajectories of island change will vary, dependent on the unique relative sea level and substrate depth conditions that govern island formation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Holocene reef growth in the Maldives: Evidence of a mid-HoIocene sea-level highstand in the central Indian Ocean.
- Author
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Kench, P. S., Smithers, S. G., McLean, R. F., and Nichol, S. L.
- Subjects
- *
PLEISTOCENE-Holocene boundary , *SEA level , *OCEANOGRAPHY - Abstract
Radiometrically calibrated ages from three reef cores are used to develop a Holocene reef growth chronostratigraphy and sea-level history in the Maldives, central Indian Ocean. Last interglacial reef (U-series age 122 ± 7 ka) was encountered at 14.1 m below mean sea level. An age of ca. 8100 calibrated (cal) yr B.P. immediately overlying this Pleistocene surface records the initiation of Holocene reef growth. Massive in situ corals occur throughout the cores and the consistency of the three age-depth plots indicate that the reef grew steadily between 8100 and 6500 cal yr B.P., and at a decreasing rate for the next 2 k.y. The position of modern sea level was first achieved ca. 4500 cal yr B.P. and sea level reached at least 0.50 ± 1 m higher from 4000 to 2100 cal yr B.P. before falling to present level. Emergent fossil microatolls provide evidence of this higher sea level. Results are significant to two long-standing issues relating to Maldivian sealevel history. First, the ambiguity of a late Holocene high-stand has been resolved with clear evidence of its existence reported here. Second, the uncertainty of the regional pattern of sea-level change in the central Indian Ocean has been clarified, the Maldivian results broadly agreeing with island records in the eastern, rather than western Indian Ocean. Our results provide the first field evidence confirming geophysical model projections of a highstand 4-2 k.y. ago in the central Indian Ocean, though the observed level (+0.50 ± 0.1 m) is lower than that projected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. 1200 year paleoecological record of coral community development from the terrigenous inner shelf of the Great Barrier Reef.
- Author
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Perry, C. T., Smithers, S. G., Palmer, S. E., Larcombe, P., and Johnson, K. G.
- Subjects
- *
SEDIMENTS , *MARINE sediments , *SEDIMENTATION & deposition , *WATER quality , *TURBIDITY , *CORAL reefs & islands - Abstract
Increased terrestrial sediment and nutrient yields are regarded as significant threats to coral reef health. Within the central Great Barrier Reef lagoon, where water quality has reportedly declined since European settlement (since ca. A.D. 1850), inner-shelf reef conditions have purportedly deteriorated. However, the link between reef decline and water-quality change remains controversial, primarily because of a lack of pre-European period ecological baseline data against which to assess contemporary ecological states. Here we present a high-resolution record of reef accretion and coral community composition from a turbid-zone, nearshore reef on the inner shelf of the Great Barrier Reef; the record is based on six radiocarbon date-constrained cores, and extends back to ca. 1200 calibrated yr B.P. Results demonstrate not only the potential for coral communities to initiate and persist in settings dominated by fine-grained terrigenous sediment accumulation, but also that a temporally persistent (but low diversity) suite of corals has dominated the reef-building community at this site for at least the past millennium. Furthermore, the coral assemblages exhibit no evidence of community shifts attributable to post-European water-quality changes. While extrapolation of these findings to other turbid-zone reefs must remain tentative, the study raises important questions about the resilience of inner-shelf reefs that are under terrestrial sediment influence and subject to elevated turbidity conditions, and demonstrates the potential to develop detailed, millennial time scale, coral community records from Holocene reef systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Antibody-mediated adherence of rat eosinophils to schistosomula of Schistoma mansoni in vitro.
- Author
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Mackenzie, C. D., Ramalho-Pinto, F. J., McLaren, Diane J., and Smithers, S. R.
- Subjects
EOSINOPHILS ,FORMALDEHYDE ,SERUM ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,ANTIGENS ,RATS - Abstract
Eosinophils from the peritoneal washings of normal rats adhered to live or formalin-fixed schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni in vitro, in the presence of heat-inactivated serum from infected rats. Eosinophil adherence caused permeability changes in the schistosomula as revealed by
51 Cr release and methylene blue uptake. The serum factor which mediated adherence resided in the 7S fraction after Sephadex G-200 gel filtration. Protein A from Staphylococus aurens which binds specifically to the Fc piece of IgG inhibited adherence, thereby demonstrating that IgG was the antibody responsible for this reaction and that the Fc portion was the site of interaction between eosinophil and antibody; rat eosinophils were shown to possess Fc receptors. The antibody mediating adherence reached high titres in the sera of rats 5-8 weeks after exposure to 500 cercariae, but thereafter there was a gradual decline in titre. Surface membrane from adult S. mansoni inhibited adherence, indicating, the presence of cross-reacting antigens in adult worms and schistosomula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1977
23. T-cell helper response to antigens of <em>Schistosoma mansoni</em> in CBA mice.
- Author
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Ramalho-Pinto, F. J., Goldring, O. L., Smithers, S. R., and Playfair, J. H. L.
- Subjects
CELLULAR immunity ,IMMUNE response ,T cells ,MEMBRANE proteins ,EPITOPES ,CELL surface antigens ,IMMUNOSPECIFICITY - Abstract
It is believed that a T-celI helper response against the schistosome surface is a necessary prerequisite for the development of protective immunity in schistosomiasis. Accordingly, the carrier effect has been used to assay eleven antigenic preparations of Schistosoma mansoni for their helper T-cell priming against surface components of the schistosomula. Three weeks after i.v. injection of the preparation, CBA mice were injected with schistosomula coated with trinitrophenol (TNP) and 4 days later, their spleens were assayed for plaque-forming cells (PEG) against TNP. Formalin-fixed schistosomula and crude adult worm tegumental membrane induced the highest response; only thirty schistosomula or 10 μg of crude membrane protein were needed to generate a T-cell helper response equivalent to that induced by a living infection. All other antigenic preparations, including formalin-fixed cercariae, live miracidia, eggs and adult worm culture fluid, generated some response indicating the presence of shared carricr components. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1976
24. Acquisition of human blood group antigens by Schistosoma mansoni.
- Author
-
Goldring, O. L., Clegg, J. A., Smithers, S. R., and Terry, R. J.
- Subjects
BLOOD testing ,IMMUNITY ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,BLOOD transfusion ,ANTIGEN-antibody reactions ,IMMUNOCYTOCHEMISTRY - Abstract
Juvenile forms of Schistosoma mansoni (schistosomula) have been cultured in human blood of various specificities and tested for the presence of blood group substances on their surfaces. The tests employed were survival following transfer into rhesus monkeys immunized against human blood substances, mixed agglutination reactions, and immunofluorescence. A, B, H and Lewis
b+ antigens were expressed at the surface when the parasites were cultured in blood of appropriate specificities. Rhesus, M N S, and Duffy antigens could not be detected on the parasite surface following culture. The evidence suggests that the expressed blood group antigens are of host origin and are acquired by the parasite during culture, probably in the form of glycolipids or megalogycolipids. It is likely that these substances are also acquired by parasites in the bloodstream of man. They may serve to mask surface parasite antigens, and so enable schistosomes to evade parasitespecific humoral or cellular immune responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 1976
25. Histocompatible unrelated volunteer donors compared with HLA nonidentical family donors in marrow transplantation for aplastic anemia and leukemia
- Author
-
Hows, JM, Yin, JL, Marsh, J, Swirsky, D, Jones, L, Apperley, JF, James, DC, Smithers, S, Batchelor, JR, and Goldman, JM
- Abstract
We treated 14 patients by transplantation of marrow from unrelated volunteer donors. Eight patients had severe aplastic anemia, 3 had chronic granulocytic leukemia, and 3 had Fanconi's anemia. The results are compared with those of a group of 14 similar patients transplanted concurrently from human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-mismatched family members: Sustained engraftment was achieved in 8 of 14 patients in both groups; one additional patient survived with autologous marrow reconstitution following an unrelated donor transplant. In the unrelated donor group, 6 of 9 evaluable patients developed grade III through IV acute graft-v-host disease, as compared with 4 of 9 patients after family-mismatched transplants. Overall survival was similar in the two groups. In the unrelated donor group 4 of 14 (29%) patients survived (median survival 1,299 days) as compared with 5 of 14 (36%) in the mismatched-family donor group (median survival 808 days). In both groups, patients with HLA phenotypically matched donors fared better than those with donors who were mismatched for one or more HLA antigen. Of the patients transplanted from HLA phenotypically matched donors 6 of 12 patients (50%) survived, as compared with 3 of 16 patients (19%) transplanted from HLA-mismatched donors. We conclude that unrelated donor bone marrow transplantation (BMT) should be considered in those cases of leukemia or bone marrow failure in which the chance of cure using conventional therapy is remote and a HLA genotypically or phenotypically matched family donor is not available.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Complement-mediated killing of schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni by rat eosinophils in vitro.
- Author
-
Ramalho-Pinto, F J, McLaren, D J, and Smithers, S R
- Abstract
Eosinophils from the peritoneal cavity of normal rats, in the presence of fresh normal rat serum (NRS), adhered to schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni in vitro and killed the majority of parasites within 18 h. The reaction differed from the previously described antibody-mediated eosinophil adherence to schistosomula which occurs in heat-inactivated immune rat serum (IRS) and where adherence is mediated through Fc receptors. Adherence of eosinophils in fresh NRS was shown to be due to the activation of complement at the schistosomular surface by the alternative pathway, and it was effected through C3 receptors. The ability of eosinophils to kill in Fc-mediated adherence. This enhancement of killer activity may be due to the generation by complement activation of eosinophil chemotactic factors which increase the concentration of cells at the target surface. It is suggested that eosinophil adherence mediated through complement activation could be the principla mechanism of destroying schistosomula in the host.
- Published
- 1978
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Immunological reconstitution after bone marrow transplant with Campath-1 treated bone marrow
- Author
-
Parreira, A, Smith, J, Hows, J M, Smithers, S A, Apperley, J, Rombos, Y, Goldman, J M, Gordon-Smith, E C, and Catovsky, D
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,T-Lymphocytes ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Immunoglobulins ,Lymphocyte Depletion ,Killer Cells, Natural ,Postoperative Complications ,Leukemia, Myeloid ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Research Article ,Bone Marrow Transplantation - Abstract
Immunological reconstitution after allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) was studied in 20 patients who received Campath-1 treated bone marrow. The peripheral blood lymphocyte phenotype was analysed with a panel of monoclonal antibodies at 3, 6 and 12 months. T cell proliferative capacity was evaluated by stimulation with PHA and Con A and in the mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR). Natural killer (NK) cell activity was analysed against the K562 cell line at specified times after BMT in nine patients. Absolute numbers of T lymphocytes were reduced in all patients at 3 and 6 months. A marked decrease in the number of CD4+ cells persisted beyond 12 months. CD8+ cells regenerated more rapidly and reached normal at 6 months. No correlation was found between changes in lymphocyte subpopulations and the presence of graft-versus-host disease or cytomegalovirus infection. B cells recovered rapidly and maintained normal numbers throughout the study. A moderate increase in HNK1+ (Leu7) cells was observed at 3 and 6 months simultaneously with a low expression of NK15 (Leu11) and OKM1 antigens at 3 and 6 months, suggesting the presence of immature NK cells early after the transplant. A profound decrease of T cell proliferative capacity was observed both after mitogen stimulation and in the mixed lymphocyte reaction. NK cell activity was raised during the first month after transplant in all but one patient but no correlation was found with the presence of GVHD or cell marker analysis.
- Published
- 1987
28. Antibody to Carbohydrate and Polypeptide Epitopes on the Surface of Schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni in Egyptian Patients with Acute and Chronic Schistosomiasis
- Author
-
NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT NO 3 FPO NEW YORK 09527, Ali, P. O., Mansour, M., Woody, J. N., Smithers, S. R., Simpson, A. J., NAVAL MEDICAL RESEARCH UNIT NO 3 FPO NEW YORK 09527, Ali, P. O., Mansour, M., Woody, J. N., Smithers, S. R., and Simpson, A. J.
- Abstract
Pub. in Parasitology, v98 p417-424 1989.
- Published
- 1989
29. The stimulation of acquired resistance to schistosome infection
- Author
-
Smithers, S. R. and Terry, R. J.
- Subjects
Cricetinae ,Animals ,Schistosomiasis ,Haplorhini ,Research Article - Published
- 1967
30. Commitment-enhancing tools in centipede games: Evidencing european–Japanese differences in trust and cooperation
- Author
-
Krockow, E. M., Takezawa, M., Briony D. Pulford, Colman, A. M., Smithers, S., Kita, T., and Nakawake, Y.
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Social Sciences ,Psychology ,General Decision Sciences ,centipede game ,cooperation ,cross-cultural differences ,trust ,reciprocityNAKeywords ,Applied Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Theories of trust distinguish general trust in situations of social uncertainty from assurance-based trust in committed, long-term relationships. This study investigates European-Japanese differences using the Centipede game, in which two players choose between cooperation and defection. The game models repeated reciprocal interactions, necessitating assurance-based trust to sustain cooperation. We included game conditions offering players the option of purchasing commitment-enhancing tools to increase social certainty. Japanese participants were more cooperative than Europeans, confirming higher assurance-based trust, and also purchased more commitment-enhancing tools, demonstrating their preferences for social certainty. Purchase of commitment-enhancing tools improved cooperativeness in both groups. However, if co-players refused tool purchase, the Japanese appeared to interpret this as non-cooperative intent and cooperativeness in the respective games decreased.
31. Keeping healthy …
- Author
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Smithers, S. R., primary
- Published
- 1975
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Acquisition of Human Antigens by Schistosoma mansoni during Cultivation in vitro
- Author
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CLEGG, J. A., primary, SMITHERS, S. R., additional, and TERRY, R. J., additional
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Immunizing Effect of Irradiated Cercariæ of Schistosoma Mansoni in Rhesus Monkeys
- Author
-
SMITHERS, S. R., primary
- Published
- 1962
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Some Aspects of Resistance to Animal and Human Helminths [Abridged
- Author
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Smithers, S R, primary and Terry, R J, additional
- Published
- 1967
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Parasitic Infections
- Author
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Smithers, S R, primary
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Reagin-Like Antibodies in Experimental Infections of Schistosoma mansoni and the Passive Transfer of Resistance
- Author
-
OGILVIE, BRIDGET M., primary, SMITHERS, S. R., additional, and TERRY, R. J., additional
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Time scales and modes of reef lagoon infilling in the Maldives and controls on the onset of reef island formation.
- Author
-
Perry, C. T., Kench, P. S., Smithers, S. G., Yamano, H., O'Leary, M., and Gulliver, P.
- Subjects
- *
CORAL reefs & islands , *REEFS , *LAGOONS , *GEOMORPHOLOGICAL research , *CLIMATIC geomorphology - Abstract
Faro are annular reefs, with reef flats near sea level and lagoons of variable depth, characteristic of both the perimeter and lagoons of Maldivian (Indian Ocean) atolls. Their geo- morphic development remains largely unknown, but where faro lagoons (termed velu in Maldivian) have infilled and support reef islands, these provide precious habitable land. Understanding the timing and modes of velu infilling is thus directly relevant to questions about reef island development and vulnerability. Here we use a chronostratigraphic data set obtained from a range of atoll-interior faro with partially to fully filled velu (including those with reef islands) from Baa (South Maalhosmadulu) Atoll, Maldives, to determine time scales and modes of velu infilling, and to identify the temporal and spatial thresholds that control reef island formation. Our data suggest a systematic relationship between faro size, velu infilling, and island development. These relationships likely vary between atolls as a function of atoll lagoon depth, but in Baa Atoll, our data set indicates the following faro-size relationships exist: (1) faros <~0.5 km² have velu that were completely infilled by ca. 3000 calibrated years B.P. (cal yr B.P.) with islands having established on these deposits by ca. 2.5 cal kyr B.P.; (2) faros >0.5 km² but <~1.25 km² have velu in late stages of infill, may support unvegetated sand cays and, given sufficient sand supply, may evolve into larger, more permanent islands; and (3) faros >~1.25 km² have unfilled (deeper) velu which might only infill over long time scales and which are thus unlikely to support new island initiation. These new observations, when combined with previously published data on Maldivian reef island development, suggest that while the velu of the largest faro are unlikely to fill over the next few centuries (at least), other faro with near-infilled velu may provide important foci for future reef-island building, even under present highstand (and slightly rising) sea levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Schistosoma mansoni : characterization and comparison of the surfaces of developing schistosomula and adult worms
- Author
-
Holk Brink, L. and Smithers, S. R.
- Subjects
591.9857 - Abstract
An animal Infected with schistosome worms is stimulated by antigen associated with the living, adult parasite to mount an Immunological reaction against the surface of invading schlstosomula. The adult worms, however, remain unaffected by the Immune response of the host and the. young schistosomula develop resistance to the host response during the 5 days in which they migrate from the skin to the lungs. The aim of the experiments described In this thesis was to compare the biochemical composition and antigenicity of the surface of the parasite at different stages of development from the cercarla to the adult, in order to understand more about how resistance to the host is acquired and maintained. The initial step was to establish a method for producing sufficient quantities of schlstosomula which were uniformly developed and uncontaminated by host material. Comparative studies were made of several types of artificially transformed schlstosomula and the prototype organisms, namely schistososaila resulting from cercarial penetration of isolated skin (SS). An organism (MS) produced by mechanically separating cercarial tails from bodies with subsequent incubation of the bodies in a defined medium was shown to undergo surface changes similar to those observed during cercarlae-SS transformation. Surface microvilli were produced in the 1st hour, the glycocalyx was lost within 2 hours, there was a change from a trilaminate to a heptalamlnata surface membrane by 2-3 hours and the inclusions sesn in the tegument were similar to those previously described in the SS tegument. Only one morphological difference was noted between MS and SS: the pre-acetabular glands of MS retain their contents for up to 48-72 hours while SS secrete the granular contents within 3 hours of skin penetration. MS were therefore used as the reference organisms In all further studies. Comparisons were made with cercarlae, the in vivo stages of in vitro schlstosomula (CS) and adult worms. Immunological techniques and reagents, i.e. immunofluorescence,125 I-Protein A binding, and radio-labelled myeloma proteins and antiglobulin were adapted to the study of living schistosomes. The use of triple-layer antibody techniques and the use of radioimmunoassays are considered to be significant Improvements over previous studies. A combined study of antibody class and subclass development and the binding capacity of the surfaces of the various organisms revealed differences both in the host response of different mice strains and in the quantity and distribution of antibody bound by the various schistosome stages. With identical cercarlal infections, Parkes mice produced da tec table levels of schistosome surface specific antibody by 10 days while antibody was not detected until 2-3 weeks after infection in CHA mice. IgM levels were shown to appear late and remained high throughout the course of the infection. IgG1 IgG2a, IgG2b, IgG3 and IgD levels were only slightly Increased while IgA levels were moderately Increased over that observed with normal mouse sera. Furthermore, the various schistosome stages differed in the binding of antlbody: cercariae, MS and SS bound significantly more antibody than did the later stages, namely, CS, LS and the adult schlatosomea. Only one morphological difference was noted between MS and SS: the pre-acetabular glands of MS retain their contents for up to 48-72 hours while SS secrete the granular contents within 3 hours of skin penetration. MS were therefore used as the reference organisms in all further studies. Comparisons were made with cercarlae, the In vivo stages of schistosomula collected from the skin (SS) and from the lungs (LS), the in vitro schlstosomula (CS) and adult worms. Immunological techniques and reagents, i.e. immunofluorescence, 125 I-Proteln A binding, and radio-labelled myeloma proteins and antiglobulin were adapted to the study of living schistosomes. The use of radioimmunoassays are considered to be significant Improvements over previous studies. A combined study of antibody class and subclass development, and the binding capacity of the surfaces of the various organisms revealed differences both In the host response of different mice strains and In the quantity and distribution of antibody bound by the various schistosome stages. With identical cercarlal infections, Parkes mice produced de tec table levels of schistosome surface specific antibody by 10 days while antibody was not detected until 2-3 weeks after Infection In CBA mice. IgM levels were shown to appear late and remained high throughout the course of Ota Infection. IgCj, IgG2a, IgC2b, IgG3 and IgD levels were only slightly Increased while IgA levels were moderately Increased over that observed with normal mouse sera. Furthermore, the various schistosome stages differed In the binding of antibody:cercarlae, MS and SS bound significantly store antibody than did the later stages, namely, CS, LS and the adult schistosomes. A phenomena observed during the inmunofluorescence studies was the sloughing of the fluorescent surface coat of MS as the organism moved across the microscopic field. Sloughing could be prevented at A°C; electron microscopy revealed no damage to the tegument, but microvilli were observed In the sloughing surface coat. Attempts to restaln "sloughed organisms" with Immune serum were unsuccessful. Sloughing may represent a mechanism for eliminating host antibodies but further studies are necessary to prove this. The use of radioimmunoassays revealed the adsorption of host Immunoglobulins onto the surface of all the schlstosomula stages. The use of lodlnated myeloma proteins and F(ab)2 fragments indicated that this adsorption was non-specific and did not require the presence of an Fc receptor. Schistosome synthesis of a mouse a2- macroglobulin-like determinant was confirmed using the artificially prepared MS. However,adsorption was also observed In studies using 125 I-Mo a2-macroglobulin. Correlations between parasite antigens and the presence of host antigens on the schistosome surfaces have been observed. The expression of human blood group-llke antigens and mouse erythrocytes antigens was studied by mixed agglutination, Immunofluorescence and immunoradloassay. With all schistosome stages the binding of specific antibody is relative to the amount of host material detected on the surface. A variety of biochemical techniques were used to compare the tegumental surfaces of cercarlae, schlstosomula and adults. These techniques Included lactoperoxldasa lodlnatlon and galactose oxldase- tritlated borohydrlde labelling of surface proteins and glycoproteins, followed by detergent solubilization and separation of components by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Similarities and differences in the total proteins and surface components of the various schistosome stages were noted. The number of proteins obtained by 1° SDS-PAGE was between 45-55, which was considered minimal. The majority of these proteins were common to all stages, two of these proteins migrated at rates similar to actln and myosin. The actln-llke component was labelled by the lactoperoxldase. technique, Indicating that it is exposed to the external surface. The proteins unique to a particular developmental stage included a 160,000-180,000 molecular weight component of cercarlae, three components (58,000-60,000 daltons, 23,000 daltons and 11,000 daltons in adult schistosomes and a protein of about 29,000 daltons in adult females. Carearlas had 8 surface components, which were iodinated by the lactoperoxldase technique, 3 of these components were also labelled by the galactose oxidase- 3H borohydrlde procedure. MS and SS shared 8 lactoperoxldase labelled surface components, 3 of these were similar to cercarlal surface components. Two surface components were also labelled by the galactose oxidase- 3H borohydrlda procedure. LS had 7 components which wars iodinated by the lactoperoxldase procedure; 3 components are also labelled by tritium. CS possess 9 lactoperoxldase labelled components, three of which were tritiated. Adult schistosomes had 8 iodinated surface components, 3 of which were labelled by tritium. It Is concluded that the schistosomes maintain a complex Interaction of acquisition, elimination and mimicry of host antigenic material and thus evade the action of the host Immune response. It is suggested that the development of these evasive mechanisms occurs during the period between skin penetration and migration through the lungs.
- Published
- 1977
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Protein kinase A regulatory subunits in colon cancer.
- Author
-
Carlson CC, Smithers SL, Yeh KA, Burnham LL, and Dransfield DT
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Blotting, Western, Catalysis, Cell Division, Cyclic AMP metabolism, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Female, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Male, Middle Aged, Oligopeptides pharmacology, Phosphorylation, Signal Transduction, Colonic Neoplasms enzymology, Colonic Neoplasms genetics, Cyclic AMP-Dependent Protein Kinases metabolism
- Abstract
The protein kinase A (PKA) is classified as type I or II depending on the association of the catalytic subunit with either the R(I) or R(II) regulatory subunits. Alterations in the levels of these regulatory subunits and PKA activity itself appear to affect cellular proliferation and tumorigenesis. We examined colorectal tumor specimens from 45 patients to investigate the potential role of cAMP-related signaling molecules in regulating tumorigenesis. Western blot analysis (PKA subunit protein levels) and in vitro kemptide phosphorylation assays (PKA catalytic subunit activity) were performed on human colorectal tumor tissue homogenates. R(I)beta protein levels were decreased 200% in ascending and 50% in descending colonic tumors compared to adjacent mucosa. R(II) protein levels were decreased 77% in descending colonic tumors but no change was observed in ascending colonic tumors compared to adjacent mucosa. PKA activity and the absolute amount of catalytic subunit protein in ascending and descending tumors were unchanged compared to adjacent mucosa. Differences in cAMP-related signaling molecules exist between neoplastic and normal colorectal tissues. These differences may not only serve as potential therapeutic targets for chemotherapeutic agents, but also lead to the identification of novel regulatory mechanisms involved in cellular proliferation and tumorigenesis.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Sm25, a major schistosome tegumental glycoprotein, is dependent on palmitic acid for membrane attachment.
- Author
-
Pearce EJ, Magee AI, Smithers SR, and Simpson AJ
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Blotting, Western, Cell Membrane metabolism, Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel, Glycosylphosphatidylinositols, Hydrolysis, Lipid Bilayers, Membrane Proteins metabolism, Mice, Molecular Sequence Data, Palmitic Acid, Antigens, Helminth metabolism, Glycolipids metabolism, Membrane Glycoproteins metabolism, Palmitic Acids metabolism, Phosphatidylinositols metabolism, Schistosoma mansoni immunology
- Abstract
Sm25, a major antigen in the surface tegument of the parasitic helminth Schistosoma mansoni, is a 25 kDa N-glycosylated glycoprotein which co-purifies with isolated surface membranes and behaves as an integral membrane protein in Triton X-114 (TX-114). The deduced amino acid sequence of Sm25 shows a short C-terminal hydrophobic domain between residues 163 and 180, containing six uncharged polar amino acids and followed by a Lys181-Ser192 dipeptide. We were interested in whether or not this marginal C-terminal amphiphilic domain is responsible for the association of Sm25 with the membrane or whether a post-translational modification such as the addition of glycosyl phosphatidyl inositol (GPI) represents the membrane anchor for this molecule. We find that treatment with phosphatidyl inositol-specific phospholipase C, which cleaves many GPI anchors, does not reveal Cross Reacting Determinant (CRD) on Sm25, nor affect the association of this protein with membranes, providing no support for the addition of GPI. However, Sm25 is palmitoylated via a thioester bond to the single Cys residue, at position 168, which lies within the C-terminal hydrophobic domain. Removal of palmitate by reduction results in a marked decrease in the hydrophobicity of Sm25, as demonstrated by its partitioning into the aqueous rather than detergent phase of TX-114 and its quantitative release from membrane preparations. The hydrophobicity of several membrane proteins in addition to Sm25 is also decreased by reduction, raising the possibility that fatty acylation by thioester linkage is an important mechanism used by schistosomes to stabilize protein-membrane interactions.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. T-cell helper response to antigens of Schistosoma mansoni in CBA mice.
- Author
-
Ramalho-Pinto FJ, Goldring OL, Smithers SR, and Playfair HL
- Subjects
- Animals, Antibody-Producing Cells, Carrier Proteins, Hemolytic Plaque Technique, Mice, Mice, Inbred CBA, Schistosomiasis immunology, Trinitrobenzenes immunology, Antigens, Schistosoma mansoni immunology, T-Lymphocytes immunology
- Abstract
It is believed that a T-cell helper response against the schistosome surface is a necessary prerequisite for the development of protective immunity in schistosomiasis. Accordingly, the carrier effect has been used to assay eleven antigenic preparations of Schistosoma mansoni for their helper T-cell priming against surface components of the schistosomula. Three weeks after i.v. injection of the preparation, CBA mice were injected with schistosomula coated with trinitrophenol (TNP) and 4 days later, their spleens were assayed for plaque-forming cells (PFC) against TNP. Formalin-fixed schistosomula and crude adult worm tegumental membrane induced the highest response; only thirty schistosomula or 10mug of crude membrane protein were needed to generate a T-cell helper response equivalent to that induced by a living infection. All other antigenic preparations, including formalin-fixed cercariae, live miracidia, eggs and adult worm culture fluid, generated some response indicating the presence of shared carrier components.
- Published
- 1976
42. Immunological reconstitution after bone marrow transplant with Campath-1 treated bone marrow.
- Author
-
Parreira A, Smith J, Hows JM, Smithers SA, Apperley J, Rombos Y, Goldman JM, Gordon-Smith EC, and Catovsky D
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Antibodies, Monoclonal, Child, Female, Humans, Immunoglobulins analysis, Killer Cells, Natural immunology, Leukemia, Myeloid immunology, Lymphocyte Depletion, Male, Postoperative Complications etiology, T-Lymphocytes classification, T-Lymphocytes immunology, Bone Marrow Transplantation, Leukemia, Myeloid therapy
- Abstract
Immunological reconstitution after allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) was studied in 20 patients who received Campath-1 treated bone marrow. The peripheral blood lymphocyte phenotype was analysed with a panel of monoclonal antibodies at 3, 6 and 12 months. T cell proliferative capacity was evaluated by stimulation with PHA and Con A and in the mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR). Natural killer (NK) cell activity was analysed against the K562 cell line at specified times after BMT in nine patients. Absolute numbers of T lymphocytes were reduced in all patients at 3 and 6 months. A marked decrease in the number of CD4+ cells persisted beyond 12 months. CD8+ cells regenerated more rapidly and reached normal at 6 months. No correlation was found between changes in lymphocyte subpopulations and the presence of graft-versus-host disease or cytomegalovirus infection. B cells recovered rapidly and maintained normal numbers throughout the study. A moderate increase in HNK1+ (Leu7) cells was observed at 3 and 6 months simultaneously with a low expression of NK15 (Leu11) and OKM1 antigens at 3 and 6 months, suggesting the presence of immature NK cells early after the transplant. A profound decrease of T cell proliferative capacity was observed both after mitogen stimulation and in the mixed lymphocyte reaction. NK cell activity was raised during the first month after transplant in all but one patient but no correlation was found with the presence of GVHD or cell marker analysis.
- Published
- 1987
43. Cell-free synthesis of Schistosoma mansoni surface antigens: stage specificity of their expression.
- Author
-
Knight M, Simpson AJ, Payares G, Chaudri M, and Smithers SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, Surface isolation & purification, Molecular Weight, RNA, Messenger genetics, RNA, Messenger isolation & purification, Rabbits, Reticulocytes metabolism, Antigens, Surface genetics, Protein Biosynthesis, Schistosoma mansoni immunology
- Abstract
Messenger RNA has been extracted from all stages of the life cycle of the parasitic multicellular helminth Schistosoma mansoni. In vitro translation of these mRNA preparations in rabbit reticulocyte lysates yielded in each case a large number of polypeptides. Immunoprecipitation of translation products either by serum from immune mice or from human patients demonstrated that relatively few, approximately 10, polypeptides are recognised as antigens. Two of the in vitro synthesised antigens, of mol. wts. 22 000 and 14 000, were demonstrated to correspond to schistosomula surface antigens. The expression of these antigens may show stage specificity. Both are readily detected from adult and sporocyst translation products, neither from schistosomula and only the 22 000 antigen from miracidia. This is an unexpected finding since similar polypeptide antigens occur on the surface of schistosomula. These results indicate that not only are schistosomula surface antigens preformed at the preceding sporocyst stage, i.e., within the snail host, but they also remain invariant throughout the life cycle in the vertebrate host. Two other prominent schistosomula surface antigens of mol. wts. 38 000 and 32 000, were not recognised amongst cell-free translation products directed by RNA from any life cycle stage. The demonstration that at least two schistosomula surface antigens are detectable amongst adult mRNA cell-free translation products demonstrates the feasibility of identifying the genes encoding them in cDNA libraries from adult worm mRNA.
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Parasitology. Improving prospects for a schistosomiasis vaccine.
- Author
-
Smithers SR
- Subjects
- Animals, Antigens, Helminth immunology, Carbohydrates immunology, Humans, Immunization, Schistosomiasis mansoni immunology, Vaccines, Schistosomiasis mansoni prevention & control
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The stimulation of acquired resistance to schistosome infection.
- Author
-
Smithers SR and Terry RJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Cricetinae, Haplorhini, Schistosomiasis immunology
- Published
- 1967
46. Immunity to schistosomiasis.
- Author
-
Smithers SR
- Published
- 1973
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