11 results on '"Lamson, Daryl M."'
Search Results
2. Characterization of Human Adenoviruses of Medical Importance: Isolation of Infectious Virus from Clinical Specimens and Molecular Typing.
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Kajon AE, Lamson DM, and George KS
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- Humans, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, DNA, Viral genetics, Molecular Typing, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Adenovirus Infections, Human diagnosis, Communicable Diseases
- Abstract
Human adenoviruses (HAdVs) constitute a group of ubiquitous viruses that currently comprises 51 well-defined serotypes and more than 113 genotypes classified into seven species, HAdV-A through HAdV-G. The members of these species differ considerably in their genomic characteristics and also in their tropism and pathogenicity. Virus isolation in cell culture remains critical for the preservation and comprehensive characterization of viruses of biomedical interest but has been almost completely abandoned by diagnostic laboratories. Currently, the most frequently used approach for the detection of HAdV in clinical specimens is real-time qPCR targeting a region of the hexon gene, conserved among all genotypes described to the present. In the absence of typing, the detection of an HAdV in association with disease provides limited information. Molecular typing is therefore highly desirable and required in the epidemiological investigation of HAdV-associated disease. © 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Virus isolation from plasma and whole blood Alternate Protocol 1: Virus isolation from stool Alternate Protocol 2: Virus isolation from respiratory specimens and urine Alternate Protocol 3: Virus isolation from tissue specimens Support Protocol: Inoculation of shell vials Basic Protocol 2: Extraction of highly pure viral genomic DNA from infected cells Basic Protocol 3: Molecular detection of human adenovirus by real-time PCR Basic Protocol 4: Molecular typing for basic identification of species and hexon type Basic Protocol 5: Typing human adenoviruses by next-generation whole-genome sequencing and analysis., (© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2023
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3. A Case Series of Children with Acute Hepatitis and Human Adenovirus Infection.
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Gutierrez Sanchez LH, Shiau H, Baker JM, Saaybi S, Buchfellner M, Britt W, Sanchez V, Potter JL, Ingram LA, Kelly D, Lu X, Ayers-Millsap S, Willeford WG, Rassaei N, Bhatnagar J, Bullock H, Reagan-Steiner S, Martin A, Rogers ME, Banc-Husu AM, Harpavat S, Leung DH, Moulton EA, Lamson DM, St George K, Hall AJ, Parashar U, MacNeil A, Tate JE, and Kirking HL
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- Acute Disease, Child, Child, Preschool, Humans, Infant, Viremia, Adenovirus Infections, Human complications, Adenovirus Infections, Human diagnosis, Adenovirus Infections, Human virology, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Hepatitis virology
- Abstract
Background: Human adenoviruses typically cause self-limited respiratory, gastrointestinal, and conjunctival infections in healthy children. In late 2021 and early 2022, several previously healthy children were identified with acute hepatitis and human adenovirus viremia., Methods: We used International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision , codes to identify all children (<18 years of age) with hepatitis who were admitted to Children's of Alabama hospital between October 1, 2021, and February 28, 2022; those with acute hepatitis who also tested positive for human adenovirus by whole-blood quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) were included in our case series. Demographic, clinical, laboratory, and treatment data were obtained from medical records. Residual blood specimens were sent for diagnostic confirmation and human adenovirus typing., Results: A total of 15 children were identified with acute hepatitis - 6 (40%) who had hepatitis with an identified cause and 9 (60%) who had hepatitis without a known cause. Eight (89%) of the patients with hepatitis of unknown cause tested positive for human adenovirus. These 8 patients plus 1 additional patient referred to this facility for follow-up were included in this case series (median age, 2 years 11 months; age range, 1 year 1 month to 6 years 5 months). Liver biopsies indicated mild-to-moderate active hepatitis in 6 children, some with and some without cholestasis, but did not show evidence of human adenovirus on immunohistochemical examination or electron microscopy. PCR testing of liver tissue for human adenovirus was positive in 3 children (50%). Sequencing of specimens from 5 children showed three distinct human adenovirus type 41 hexon variants. Two children underwent liver transplantation; all the others recovered with supportive care., Conclusions: Human adenovirus viremia was present in the majority of children with acute hepatitis of unknown cause admitted to Children's of Alabama from October 1, 2021, to February 28, 2022, but whether human adenovirus was causative remains unclear. Sequencing results suggest that if human adenovirus was causative, this was not an outbreak driven by a single strain. (Funded in part by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)., (Copyright © 2022 Massachusetts Medical Society.)
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- 2022
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4. Human Adenovirus 7-Associated Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis-like Illness: Clinical and Virological Characteristics in a Cluster of Five Pediatric Cases.
- Author
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Otto WR, Behrens EM, Teachey DT, Lamson DM, Barrett DM, Bassiri H, Lambert MP, Mount S, Petrosa WL, Romberg N, Sullivan KE, Topjian AA, Fisher BT, and Kajon AE
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- Child, Humans, Pennsylvania, Phylogeny, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Lymphohistiocytosis, Hemophagocytic epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH) is a life-threatening condition of immune dysregulation. Children often suffer from primary genetic forms of HLH, which can be triggered by infection. Others suffer from secondary HLH as a complication of infection, malignancy, or rheumatologic disease. Identifying the exact cause of HLH is crucial, as definitive treatment for primary disease is hematopoietic stem cell transplant. Adenoviruses have been associated with HLH but molecular epidemiology data are lacking., Methods: We describe the clinical and virologic characteristics of 5 children admitted with adenovirus infection during 2018-2019 who developed HLH or HLH-like illness. Detailed virologic studies, including virus isolation and comprehensive molecular typing were performed., Results: All patients recovered; clinical management varied but included immunomodulating and antiviral therapies. A genetic predisposition for HLH was not identified in any patient. Adenovirus isolates were recovered from 4/5 cases; all were identified as genomic variant 7d. Adenovirus type 7 DNA was detected in the fifth case. Phylogenetic analysis of genome sequences identified 2 clusters-1 related to strains implicated in 2016-2017 outbreaks in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, the other related to a 2009 Chinese strain., Conclusions: It can be challenging to determine whether HLH is the result of an infectious pathogen alone or genetic predisposition triggered by an infection. We describe 5 children from the same center presenting with an HLH-like illness after onset of adenovirus type 7 infection. None of the patients were found to have a genetic predisposition to HLH. These findings suggest that adenovirus 7 infection alone can result in HLH., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2021
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5. Fatal Neonatal Sepsis Associated with Human Adenovirus Type 56 Infection: Genomic Analysis of Three Recent Cases Detected in the United States.
- Author
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Otto WR, Lamson DM, Gonzalez G, Weinberg GA, Pecora ND, Fisher BT, St George K, and Kajon AE
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- Adenovirus Infections, Human virology, Adenoviruses, Human classification, Adenoviruses, Human pathogenicity, Female, Genotype, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Phylogeny, Retrospective Studies, Sequence Analysis, DNA, United States, Adenovirus Infections, Human diagnosis, Adenovirus Infections, Human mortality, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Genome, Viral, Genomics methods, Neonatal Sepsis mortality, Neonatal Sepsis virology
- Abstract
Background: Human adenovirus (HAdV)-D56 was first described in 2011 by genomics analysis of a strain isolated in France in 2008 from a fatal case of neonatal infection. Since then, it has been reported in cases of keratoconjunctivitis and male urethritis. Three epidemiologically unrelated fatal cases of neonatal sepsis associated with infection by HAdV-D strains with a similar genetic makeup were documented in the United States between 2014 and 2020., Methods: Whole genome sequences were obtained for the isolated strains, and genomics analyses were conducted to compare them to phylogenetically related HAdV-D genomic sequences available in GenBank., Results: The three new US strains were indistinguishable by in silico restriction enzyme analysis. Their genome sequences were 99.9% identical to one another and to the prototype strain isolated in 2008 from a similar context of disease. The phylogenetic reconstruction revealed a highly supported clustering of all HAdV-D56 strains isolated in various countries since 1982. Our comparison to serologically intermediate strains 15/H9 described in the literature indicated that HAdV-D56-like viruses have circulated worldwide since the late 1950s., Conclusion: As with other HAdV-D genotypes with the ability to infect ocular and genital mucosae, the risk of severe prenatal or perinatal HAdV-D56 infection must be considered.
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- 2021
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6. Human Adenovirus 7d Strains Associated with Influenza-Like Illness, New York, USA, 2017-2019.
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Lamson DM, Kajon A, Popowich M, Fuschino M, and St George K
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- Humans, New York epidemiology, Phylogeny, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Influenza, Human epidemiology, Virus Diseases
- Abstract
Human adenovirus 7d is a respiratory pathogen capable of causing acute respiratory disease of variable severity. Phylogenetic analysis of whole-genome sequences of 15 strains isolated from cases of influenza-like-illness during 2017-2019 demonstrated the circulation of 2 distinct clades of genomic variant 7d in colleges in New York, USA.
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- 2020
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7. Genomic characterization of human adenovirus type 4 strains isolated worldwide since 1953 identifies two separable phylogroups evolving at different rates from their most recent common ancestor.
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Gonzalez G, Bair CR, Lamson DM, Watanabe H, Panto L, Carr MJ, and Kajon AE
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- Adenoviruses, Human classification, Adenoviruses, Human isolation & purification, Base Composition, Base Sequence, Evolution, Molecular, Genomics, Humans, Recombination, Genetic, Viral Proteins genetics, Adenovirus Infections, Human virology, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Genome, Viral, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Species Human mastadenovirus E (HAdV-E) comprises several simian types and a single human type: HAdV-E4, a respiratory and ocular pathogen. RFLP analysis for the characterization of intratypic genetic variability has previously distinguished two HAdV-E4 clusters: prototype (p)-like and a-like. Our analysis of whole genome sequences confirmed two distinct lineages, which we refer to as phylogroups (PGs). PGs I and II comprise the p- and a-like genomes, respectively, and differ significantly in their G + C content (57.7% ± 0.013 vs 56.3% ± 0.015). Sequence differences distinguishing the two clades map to several regions of the genome including E3 and ITR. Bayesian analyses showed that the two phylogroups diverged approximately 602 years before the present. A relatively faster evolutionary rate was identified for PG II. Our data provide a rationale for the incorporation of phylogroup identity to HAdV-E4 strain designation to reflect the identified unique genetic characteristics that distinguish PGs I and II., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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8. Emergence and re-emergence of respiratory adenoviruses in the United States.
- Author
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Kajon AE, Lamson DM, and St George K
- Subjects
- Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Disease Outbreaks, Genome, Viral, Genomics, Humans, Military Personnel, Phylogeny, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Adenoviruses, Human pathogenicity, Communicable Diseases, Emerging epidemiology, Communicable Diseases, Emerging virology, Respiratory Tract Infections virology
- Abstract
Human adenoviruses (HAdVs) are prevalent causes of acute respiratory disease (ARD) in military and civilian communities. Over the last 20 years, collaborative efforts between US public health, military and academic laboratories have gathered comprehensive data documenting the emergence and re-emergence of specific HAdV types in association with outbreaks and unrelated cases of ARD, which have attracted national attention. New or reemerging HAdVs have included genomic variants of HAdV-B14, HAdV-B7, and HAdV-E4. Detailed molecular characterizations of virus strains are essential to understand the etiology and epidemiology of HAdV infections. The continuation of such studies is important for ongoing assessment of the national and global evolution of respiratory HAdVs and to inform decisions regarding antiviral drug and vaccine development and implementation., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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9. Adenovirus Type 4 Respiratory Infections among Civilian Adults, Northeastern United States, 2011-2015 1 .
- Author
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Kajon AE, Lamson DM, Bair CR, Lu X, Landry ML, Menegus M, Erdman DD, and St George K
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- Adenovirus Infections, Human diagnosis, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Adult, Disease Outbreaks, Genome, Viral, Humans, Molecular Epidemiology, New England epidemiology, Retrospective Studies, Adenovirus Infections, Human epidemiology, Adenovirus Infections, Human virology, Adenoviruses, Human classification, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Tract Infections virology
- Abstract
Human adenovirus type 4 (HAdV-4) is most commonly isolated in military settings. We conducted detailed molecular characterization on 36 HAdV-4 isolates recovered from civilian adults with acute respiratory disease (ARD) in the northeastern United States during 2011-2015. Specimens came from college students, residents of long-term care facilities or nursing homes, a cancer patient, and young adults without co-morbidities. HAdV-4 genome types 4a1 and 4a2, the variants most frequently detected among US military recruits in basic training before the restoration of vaccination protocols, were isolated in most cases. Two novel a-like variants were recovered from students enrolled at a college in Tompkins County, New York, USA, and a prototype-like variant distinguishable from the vaccine strain was isolated from an 18-year-old woman visiting a physician's office in Ulster County, New York, USA, with symptoms of influenza-like illness. Our data suggest that HAdV-4 might be an underestimated causative agent of ARD among civilian adults.
- Published
- 2018
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10. Detection and Genetic Characterization of Adenovirus Type 14 Strain in Students with Influenza-Like Illness, New York, USA, 2014-2015.
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Lamson DM, Kajon A, Shudt M, Girouard G, and St George K
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- Adenovirus Infections, Human diagnosis, Adenovirus Infections, Human history, Diagnosis, Differential, Genetic Variation, Genome, Viral, History, 21st Century, Humans, Influenza, Human diagnosis, New York epidemiology, Phylogeny, Respiratory Tract Infections diagnosis, Respiratory Tract Infections history, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Symptom Assessment, Adenovirus Infections, Human epidemiology, Adenovirus Infections, Human virology, Adenoviruses, Human classification, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Respiratory Tract Infections epidemiology, Respiratory Tract Infections virology
- Abstract
During the 2014-15 influenza season, 13/168 respiratory samples from students with influenza-like illness (ILI) at a college in New York, USA, were positive for human adenovirus (HAdV); 4/13 samples were positive for HAdV-B14p1. During influenza season, HAdV should be included in the differential diagnostic panel used to determine the etiology of ILI.
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- 2017
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11. Molecular phylogeny of a novel human adenovirus type 8 strain causing a prolonged, multi-state keratoconjunctivitis epidemic in Germany.
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Hage E, Espelage W, Eckmanns T, Lamson DM, Pantó L, Ganzenmueller T, and Heim A
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- Adult, Aged, DNA, Viral, Disease Outbreaks, Female, Genome, Viral, Geography, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Phylogeny, Population Surveillance, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Viral Load, Whole Genome Sequencing, Young Adult, Adenovirus Infections, Human epidemiology, Adenovirus Infections, Human virology, Adenoviruses, Human classification, Adenoviruses, Human genetics, Genotype, Keratoconjunctivitis epidemiology, Keratoconjunctivitis virology
- Abstract
The German infectious disease surveillance system revealed an increase of epidemic keratoconjunctivitis (EKC) from an average of 320 cases/year (2001 to 2010) up to 2146 and 1986 cases in 2012 and 2013, respectively. From November 2011 until December 2013 (epidemic period) 85% of typed isolates were human adenovirus type 8 (HAdV-D8), whereas only low level circulation (19%) of HAdV-D8 was observed outside the epidemic period. In order to investigate whether a novel monophyletic HAdV-D8 strain prevailed during the epidemic period, complete genomic sequences of 23 HAdV-D8 isolates were generated by deep sequencing and analyzed phylogenetically. For comparison, eight HAdV-D8 isolates from outside the epidemic period were sequenced. HAdV-D8 isolates of the epidemic period had a very high sequence identity of at least 99.9% and formed a monophyletic cluster with two subclusters. A single outlier was closely related to HAdV-D8 strains isolated prior to the epidemic period. Circulation of the epidemic strain was detected as early as 2010 but not after the epidemic period in 2014. In conclusion, molecular phylogeny of complete genomic sequences proved a monophyletic HAdV-D8 epidemic. However, co-circulation of other HAdV types as well as better reporting may have contributed to the huge increase of reported cases.
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- 2017
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