66 results on '"Lord, JS"'
Search Results
2. Dynamics at T -> 0 in half-integer isotropic high-spin molecules
- Author
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Salman, Z, Keren, A, Mendels, P, Marvaud, V, Scuiller, A, Verdaguer, M, Lord, JS, and Baines, C
- Published
- 2002
3. Hysteresis in the spin transition regime of [Fe(NH(2)trz)(3)](NO3)(2) as probed by ZF-mu SR
- Author
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UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Ksenofontov, V, Garcia, Yann, Campbell, SJ, Boland, Yves, Lord, JS, Gutlich, P, UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Ksenofontov, V, Garcia, Yann, Campbell, SJ, Boland, Yves, Lord, JS, and Gutlich, P
- Abstract
The thermal spin transition which occurs in the polymeric chain compound [Fe(NH(2)trz)(3)](NO3)(2) above room temperature has been investigated by zero-field muon spin relaxation (mu SR) (similar to 8-402 K). The depolarization curves are best described by a Lorentzian and a Gaussian line that represent fast and slow components respectively. The spin transition is associated with a hysteresis loop of width Delta T = 34 K (T-1/2(up arrow) = 346 K and T-1/2(down arrow) = 312 K) that has been delineated by the temperature variation of the initial asymmetry parameter. Comparison of zero-field and transverse field (20 Oe) mu SR measurements shows that diamagnetic muon species occur over the entire temperature range, a large fraction of muons being however paramagnetic. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2006
4. Spin transition in [Fe(phen)(2)(NCS)(2)] - mu SR study
- Author
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UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Garcia, Yann, Ksenofontov, V, Campbell, SJ, Lord, JS, Boland, Yves, Gutlich, P, UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Garcia, Yann, Ksenofontov, V, Campbell, SJ, Lord, JS, Boland, Yves, and Gutlich, P
- Abstract
The reversible thermal spin transition which occurs in [Fe(phen)(2)(NCS)(2)] around T-1/2 similar to 177 K has been investigated by muon spin relaxation (muSR) (similar to10-280 K). The depolarisation curves are well described by two Lorentzian lines represent fast and slow components in the decay curves, with the initial asymmetry parameter of the fast component found to track the spin transition in [Fe(phen)2(NCS),]. Comparison of zero-field and transverse field (20 Oe) muSR measurements shows that diamagnetic muonic species occur over the entire temperature range.
- Published
- 2004
5. Muon spin relaxation study of the spin transition compound [Fe(Phen)(2)(NCS)(2)]
- Author
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UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Garcia, Yann, Ksenofontov, V, Campbell, SJ, Lord, JS, Boland, Yves, Gutlich, P, UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Garcia, Yann, Ksenofontov, V, Campbell, SJ, Lord, JS, Boland, Yves, and Gutlich, P
- Abstract
The thermal spin transition which occurs reversibly in [Fe(phen)(2)(NCS)(2)] (polymorph I) around T-1/2 similar to177 K upon cooling and warming has been investigated by muon spin relaxation (muetaSR) measurements over the temperature range (similar to10-280 K). The depolarization curves in zero and longitudinal fields (50-2000 Oe) are well described by two Lorentzian lines that represent fast and slow components in the decay curves and a nonrelaxing component. Evidence of the scope to track the spin transition occurring in [Fe(phen)(2)(NCS)(2)] (polymorph I) is provided via the temperature dependence of the zero-field initial asymmetry parameter of the fast component. Muonium-substituted radicals delocalized on the phenanthroline ring (hyperfine coupling constant A similar to500 MHz), as well as diamagnetic muonic species, have been identified on the basis of the applied field muSR experiments.
- Published
- 2004
6. Muon spin rotation and Mossbauer investigations of the spin transition in [Fe(ptz)(6)](ClO4)(2)
- Author
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UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Campbell, SJ, Ksenofontov, V, Garcia, Yann, Lord, JS, Boland, Yves, Gutlich, P, UCL - SC/CHIM - Département de chimie, Campbell, SJ, Ksenofontov, V, Garcia, Yann, Lord, JS, Boland, Yves, and Gutlich, P
- Abstract
The compound [Fe(ptz)(6)],(ClO4)(2) (Ptz = 1-propyl-tetrazole) displays a gradual thermal spin crossover with magnetic susceptibility in easurements (similar to4.2-300 K) showing that the transition is centered around T-12 similar to 150 K and extends from similar to90-190 K. Evidence of the scope to track a thermally induced spin transition using muon spin rotation (muSR) is provided in particular via the temperature dependence of the initial asymmetry parameter in the zero field as well as the relaxation rates. The spectral line broadening observed in the Mossbauer spectra of [Fe(Ptz)(6)](ClO4)(2) at similar to200 K is attributed to relaxation phenomena associated with the dynamics of the crystal lattice. Dynamic processes are also detected by muSR as revealed by the pronounced increase of the relaxation rate of a fast-relaxing component above 200 K. Muonium-substituted radicals delocalized on the tetrazole ring have been identified on the basis of applied magnetic field muSR experiments from 10 to 2000 Oe.
- Published
- 2003
7. Micro and macroparasites of bats (Chiroptera)
- Author
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Lord, JS and Brooks, DR
- Subjects
QH301 ,other - Abstract
Bats (Chiroptera) are one of the most successful and diverse of mammalian orders, with an \ud estimated 1100 species worldwide. Due to protected species legislation, studies that focus upon \ud bat endoparasites are limited. As such, many fundamental questions concerning bat-parasite \ud relationships remain unanswered, including evolutionary aspects of such associations, hostparasite interactions and factors that may influence the composition of bat parasite communities. \ud To further knowledge of bat parasitology, one hundred bats, that had either died of natural \ud causes, or had been euthanized due to severity of injury, were acquired across Greater \ud Manchester and Lancashire between September 2005 and September 2008. Molecular typing \ud methods confirmed 93 specimens to be common pipistrelle (Pipistrellus pipistrellus), six to be \ud soprano pipistrelle (P. pygmaeus) and one to be a whiskered bat (Myotis mystacinus). \ud Development of PCR-based methodologies, coupled when possible with morphological analyses, \ud confirmed the presence of the following microparasites (prevalence data in parenthesis): Babesia \ud vesperuginis (23%), Trypanosoma spp (36%), Bartonella sp. (2%) and Eimeria sp. (20%), and \ud the following macroparasites: Lecithodendrium linstowi (80.4%), Lecithodendrium spathulatum\ud (19.6%), Prosthodendrium sp. (35.3%), Plagiorchis koreanus (29.4%) and Pycnoporus \ud heteroporus (9.8%). Potential factors affecting the parasite community composition including \ud host sex and age, season, year, geographic location and parasite co-infection are explored. \ud The detection of Eimeria sp. would appear to be the first record of coccidia in British bats, and \ud also the first global record of Eimeria sp. from the common pipistrelle. \ud Phylogenetic analysis of bat-associated Bartonella sp. ITS region, clusters the isolate in a well \ud supported clade with B. grahamii, B. elizabethae and B. queenslandensis, all known to infect \ud rodents, in addition to B. grahamii and B. elizabethae being recognised human pathogens. \ud The first molecular sequence data for L. spathulatum is presented, and sequence data for \ud Prosthodendrium specimens is also novel; both are incorporated into a phylogenetic analysis of \ud the Lecithodendriidae, which questions the current taxonomic status of Prosthodendrium. \ud Lastly, in an attempt to assist the evolutionary study of haemosporidian parasites, ectoparasitic \ud bat flies were collected in the field from Puerto Rican bats and additional samples were acquired \ud from Germany. Dissection and cytochrome b-specific PCR analysis of DNA extracted from \ud insect digestive tract tissue confirmed the presence of haemosporidian DNA within two of the \ud German samples. Phylogenetic analysis of the order Haemosporidia, incorporating the novel \ud cytochrome b gene sequence derived from these German samples, showed the latter to cluster \ud strongly with samples isolated from Madagascan bats and illustrates likely host-switching \ud between birds and mammals.
8. Importance of Spin-Orbit Interaction for the Electron Spin Relaxation in Organic Semiconductors
- Author
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John E. Anthony, Marsha A. Loth, Christian Bernhard, Kamil Sedlak, Marco Cannas, Rory M. Wilson, Theo Kreouzis, James S. Lord, Francis L. Pratt, Michele D'Amico, William P. Gillin, Laura Nuccio, Martin Heeney, Ignacio Hernández, Leander Schulz, Balaji Purushothaman, Simone Fratini, Alan J. Drew, Maureen Willis, Fabrizio Messina, Iain McKenzie, Nuccio, L, Willis, M, Schulz, L, Fratini, S, Messina, F, D’Amico, M, Pratt, FL, Lord, JS, McKenzie, I, Loth, M, Purushothaman, B, Anthony, J, Heeney, M, Wilson, RM, Hernández, I, Cannas, M, Sedlak, K, Kreouzis, T, Gillin, WP, Bernhard, C, Drew, AJ, Théorie de la Matière Condensée (TMC), Institut Néel (NEEL), Institut polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology (Grenoble INP )-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble 1 (UJF)-Institut polytechnique de Grenoble - Grenoble Institute of Technology (Grenoble INP )-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble 1 (UJF), Università degli studi di Palermo - University of Palermo, Fribourg Center for Nanomaterials (FriMat), Frigourg University, Department of Physics, Queen Mary University of London (QMUL), and Universidad de Cantabria
- Subjects
Photoluminescence ,Materials science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Spin-Orbit Interaction ,Hyperfine structure ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,Condensed matter physics ,Spintronics ,business.industry ,Organic Semiconductor ,Relaxation (NMR) ,Settore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentale ,Spin–orbit interaction ,Muon spin spectroscopy ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,0104 chemical sciences ,Organic semiconductor ,Semiconductor ,Electron Spin Relaxation ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,[PHYS.COND.CM-SCE]Physics [physics]/Condensed Matter [cond-mat]/Strongly Correlated Electrons [cond-mat.str-el] ,0210 nano-technology ,business - Abstract
Despite the great interest organic spintronics has recently attracted, there is only a partial understanding of the fundamental physics behind electron spin relaxation in organic semiconductors. Mechanisms based on hyperfine interaction have been demonstrated, but the role of the spin-orbit interaction remains elusive. Here, we report muon spin spectroscopy and time-resolved photoluminescence measurements on two series of molecular semiconductors in which the strength of the spin-orbit interaction has been systematically modified with a targeted chemical substitution of different atoms at a particular molecular site. We find that the spin-orbit interaction is a significant source of electron spin relaxation in these materials.
- Published
- 2013
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9. Developing forebrain synapses are uniquely vulnerable to sleep loss.
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Gay SM, Chartampila E, Lord JS, Grizzard S, Maisashvili T, Ye M, Barker NK, Mordant AL, Mills CA, Herring LE, and Diering GH
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- Animals, Mice, Male, Female, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Sleep physiology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Autism Spectrum Disorder physiopathology, Autism Spectrum Disorder metabolism, Autism Spectrum Disorder genetics, Sleep Deprivation physiopathology, Sleep Deprivation metabolism, Synapses physiology, Synapses metabolism, Prosencephalon metabolism
- Abstract
Sleep is an essential behavior that supports lifelong brain health and cognition. Neuronal synapses are a major target for restorative sleep function and a locus of dysfunction in response to sleep deprivation (SD). Synapse density is highly dynamic during development, becoming stabilized with maturation to adulthood, suggesting sleep exerts distinct synaptic functions between development and adulthood. Importantly, problems with sleep are common in neurodevelopmental disorders including autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Moreover, early life sleep disruption in animal models causes long-lasting changes in adult behavior. Divergent plasticity engaged during sleep necessarily implies that developing and adult synapses will show differential vulnerability to SD. To investigate distinct sleep functions and mechanisms of vulnerability to SD across development, we systematically examined the behavioral and molecular responses to acute SD between juvenile (P21 to P28), adolescent (P42 to P49), and adult (P70 to P100) mice of both sexes. Compared to adults, juveniles lack robust adaptations to SD, precipitating cognitive deficits in the novel object recognition task. Subcellular fractionation, combined with proteome and phosphoproteome analysis revealed the developing synapse is profoundly vulnerable to SD, whereas adults exhibit comparative resilience. SD in juveniles, and not older mice, aberrantly drives induction of synapse potentiation, synaptogenesis, and expression of perineuronal nets. Our analysis further reveals the developing synapse as a putative node of convergence between vulnerability to SD and ASD genetic risk. Together, our systematic analysis supports a distinct developmental function of sleep and reveals how sleep disruption impacts key aspects of brain development, providing insights for ASD susceptibility., Competing Interests: Competing interests statement:The authors declare no competing interest.
- Published
- 2024
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10. Caught in a trap: DNA contamination in tsetse xenomonitoring can lead to over-estimates of Trypanosoma brucei infection.
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Saldanha I, Lea R, Manangwa O, Garrod G, Haines LR, Acosta-Serrano Á, Auty H, Betson M, Lord JS, Morrison LJ, Mramba F, Torr SJ, and Cunningham LJ
- Subjects
- Animals, DNA, Protozoan genetics, DNA, Protozoan analysis, Insect Vectors parasitology, Feces parasitology, Female, Male, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Tsetse Flies parasitology, Trypanosoma brucei brucei isolation & purification, Trypanosoma brucei brucei genetics, Trypanosomiasis, African transmission, Trypanosomiasis, African epidemiology, Trypanosomiasis, African parasitology, Trypanosomiasis, African diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Tsetse flies (Glossina sp.) are vectors of Trypanosoma brucei subspecies that cause human African trypanosomiasis (HAT). Capturing and screening tsetse is critical for HAT surveillance. Classically, tsetse have been microscopically analysed to identify trypanosomes, but this is increasingly replaced with molecular xenomonitoring. Nonetheless, sensitive T. brucei-detection assays, such as TBR-PCR, are vulnerable to DNA cross-contamination. This may occur at capture, when often multiple live tsetse are retained temporarily in the cage of a trap. This study set out to determine whether infected tsetse can contaminate naïve tsetse with T. brucei DNA via faeces when co-housed., Methodology/principle Findings: Insectary-reared teneral G. morsitans morsitans were fed an infectious T. b. brucei-spiked bloodmeal. At 19 days post-infection, infected and naïve tsetse were caged together in the following ratios: (T1) 9:3, (T2) 6:6 (T3) 1:11 and a control (C0) 0:12 in triplicate. Following 24-hour incubation, DNA was extracted from each fly and screened for parasite DNA presence using PCR and qPCR. All insectary-reared infected flies were positive for T. brucei DNA using TBR-qPCR. However, naïve tsetse also tested positive. Even at a ratio of 1 infected to 11 naïve flies, 91% of naïve tsetse gave positive TBR-qPCR results. Furthermore, the quantity of T. brucei DNA detected in naïve tsetse was significantly correlated with cage infection ratio. With evidence of cross-contamination, field-caught tsetse from Tanzania were then assessed using the same screening protocol. End-point TBR-PCR predicted a sample population prevalence of 24.8%. Using qPCR and Cq cut-offs optimised on insectary-reared flies, we estimated that prevalence was 0.5% (95% confidence interval [0.36, 0.73])., Conclusions/significance: Our results show that infected tsetse can contaminate naïve flies with T. brucei DNA when co-caged, and that the level of contamination can be extensive. Whilst simple PCR may overestimate infection prevalence, quantitative PCR offers a means of eliminating false positives., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2024 Saldanha et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
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- 2024
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11. Sleep Disruption Precedes Forebrain Synaptic Tau Burden and Contributes to Cognitive Decline in a Sex-Dependent Manner in the P301S Tau Transgenic Mouse Model.
- Author
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Martin SC, Joyce KK, Lord JS, Harper KM, Nikolova VD, Cohen TJ, Moy SS, and Diering GH
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- Animals, Male, Female, Mice, Sex Characteristics, Tauopathies metabolism, Tauopathies pathology, Sleep Wake Disorders metabolism, Alzheimer Disease metabolism, Alzheimer Disease pathology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, tau Proteins metabolism, Mice, Transgenic, Cognitive Dysfunction metabolism, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Synapses metabolism, Synapses pathology, Disease Models, Animal, Prosencephalon metabolism
- Abstract
Sleep disruption and impaired synaptic processes are common features in neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's disease (AD). Hyperphosphorylated Tau is known to accumulate at neuronal synapses in AD, contributing to synapse dysfunction. However, it remains unclear how sleep disruption and synapse pathology interact to contribute to cognitive decline. Here, we examined sex-specific onset and consequences of sleep loss in AD/tauopathy model PS19 mice. Using a piezoelectric home-cage monitoring system, we showed PS19 mice exhibited early-onset and progressive hyperarousal, a selective dark-phase sleep disruption, apparent at 3 months in females and 6 months in males. Using the Morris water maze test, we report that chronic sleep disruption (CSD) accelerated the onset of decline of hippocampal spatial memory in PS19 males only. Hyperarousal occurs well in advance of robust forebrain synaptic Tau burden that becomes apparent at 6-9 months. To determine whether a causal link exists between sleep disruption and synaptic Tau hyperphosphorylation, we examined the correlation between sleep behavior and synaptic Tau, or exposed mice to acute or chronic sleep disruption at 6 months. While we confirm that sleep disruption is a driver of Tau hyperphosphorylation in neurons of the locus ceruleus, we were unable to show any causal link between sleep loss and Tau burden in forebrain synapses. Despite the finding that hyperarousal appears earlier in females, female cognition was resilient to the effects of sleep disruption. We conclude sleep disruption interacts with the synaptic Tau burden to accelerate the onset of cognitive decline with greater vulnerability in males., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interests., (Copyright © 2024 Martin et al.)
- Published
- 2024
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12. Probing the strongly correlated magnetic state of Co 2 C nanoparticles at low temperatures using μ SR.
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Roy N, Mahato PC, Saha S, Telling M, Lord JS, Adroja DT, and Banerjee SS
- Abstract
Co
2 C nanoparticles (NPs) are amongst transition metal carbides whose magnetic properties have not been well explored. An earlier study (Roy et al 2021 J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 33 375804) showed that a pellet made from Co2 C NPs exhibits exchange bias (EB) effect below a temperature, TEB = 50 K and a spin glass (SG) feature emerges below TSG = 5 K. In the current study we use magnetic, electrical transport, specific heat, and muon spin rotation ( μ SR) measurements to explore further the magnetic properties of a pellet made with 40 nm diameter pure Co2 C NPs. We uncover the onset of Kondo localization at Kondo temperature TK (= 40.1 K), which is close to the onset temperature ( TEB ) of the EB effect. A crossover from the Kondo-screened scenario to the Ruderman-Kittel-Kasuya-Yosida interaction-dominated regime is also observed for T < TK . Temperature-dependent specific heat measurement further supports the Kondo localization scenario in the pellet and shows the heavy fermionic nature of the strongly correlated electronic state in Co2 C. The zero field μ SR asymmetry spectra in the low-temperature regime are characterized by two distinct fast and slow relaxation rates. The spectra show the absence of long-range magnetic order in the sample. However, our analysis suggests the NPs-pellet shows the presence of a dominant magnetically disordered fraction and a smaller fraction with short-range order. Muons in the disordered fraction exhibit a slower relaxation rate, while muons in the smaller fraction with short-range order exhibit a faster relaxation rate. We observe an increase in this fast relaxation rate between TEB and TSG . This increase below TEB ∼ 50 K suggests a slowing down of the fluctuating local magnetic environment around muons. Transverse field- μ SR asymmetry spectra show the emergence of a stable, multi-peaked local magnetic field distribution in the pellet below TEB . Longitudinal field μ SR spectra shows distinct changes in the dynamics of fluctuations suggesting the presence of a frozen glassy like state below 6 K. Based on our results, we suggest that below TEB, the pellet of Co2 C NPs develops a magnetic interface that separates the two magnetic fractions; one is a disordered fraction, and the other is a fraction with short-range order. The exchange interaction that sets in below TEB at the interface couples the two fractions, leading to a suppression of the fluctuations. With the suppression of magnetic fluctuations below TEB , strong correlation effects in the electronic state of Co2 C lead to Kondo localization., (© 2023 IOP Publishing Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
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13. No evidence for direct thermal carryover effects on starvation tolerance in the obligate blood-feeder, Glossina morsitans morsitans .
- Author
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Weaving H, Lord JS, Haines L, and English S
- Abstract
Thermal stress during development can prime animals to cope better with similar conditions in later life. Alternatively, negative effects of thermal stress can persist across life stages and result in poorer quality adults (negative carryover effects). As mean temperatures increase due to climate change, evidence for such effects across diverse taxa is required. Using Glossina morsitans morsitans , a species of tsetse fly and vector of trypanosomiasis, we asked whether (i) adaptive developmental plasticity allows flies to survive for longer under food deprivation when pupal and adult temperatures are matched; or (ii) temperature stress during development persists into adulthood, resulting in a greater risk of death. We did not find any advantage of matched pupal and adult temperature in terms of improved starvation tolerance, and no direct negative carryover effects were observed. There was some evidence for indirect carryover effects-high pupal temperature produced flies of lower body mass, which, in turn, resulted in greater starvation risk. However, adult temperature had the largest impact on starvation tolerance by far: flies died 60% faster at 31°C than those experiencing 25°C, consequently reducing survival time from a median of 8 (interquartile range (IQR) 7-9) to 5 (IQR 5-5.25) days. This highlights differences in temperature sensitivity between life stages, as there was no direct effect of pupal temperature on starvation tolerance. Therefore, for some regions of sub-Saharan Africa, climate change may result in a higher mortality rate in emerging tsetse while they search for their first blood meal. This study reinforces existing evidence that responses to temperature are life stage specific and that plasticity may have limited capacity to buffer the effects of climate change., Competing Interests: The authors certify that they have no conflicts of interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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14. Mechanistic modelling of within-mosquito viral dynamics: Insights into infection and dissemination patterns.
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Lord JS and Bonsall MB
- Subjects
- Animals, Mosquito Vectors, Aedes
- Abstract
Vector or host competence can be defined as the ability of an individual to become infected and subsequently transmit a pathogen. Assays to measure competence play a key part in the assessment of the factors affecting mosquito-borne virus transmission and of potential pathogen-blocking control tools for these viruses. For mosquitoes, competence for arboviruses can be measured experimentally and results are usually analysed using standard statistical approaches. Here we develop a mechanistic approach to studying within-mosquito virus dynamics that occur during vector competence experiments. We begin by developing a deterministic model of virus replication in the mosquito midgut and subsequent escape and replication in the hemocoel. We then extend this to a stochastic model to capture the between-individual variation observed in vector competence experiments. We show that the dose-response of the probability of mosquito midgut infection and variation in the dissemination rate can be explained by stochastic processes generated from a small founding population of virions, caused by a relatively low rate of virion infection of susceptible cells. We also show that comparing treatments or species in competence experiments by fitting mechanistic models could provide further insight into potential differences. Generally, our work adds to the growing body of literature emphasizing the importance of intrinsic stochasticity in biological systems., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Lord, Bonsall. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
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15. Knockdown resistance allele L1014F introduced by CRISPR/Cas9 is not associated with altered vector competence of Anopheles gambiae for o'nyong nyong virus.
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Kay GA, Patterson EI, Hughes GL, Lord JS, and Reimer LJ
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- Animals, O'nyong-nyong Virus, Alleles, CRISPR-Cas Systems genetics, Mosquito Vectors genetics, Insecticide Resistance genetics, Anopheles genetics, Insecticides
- Abstract
Knockdown resistance (kdr) alleles conferring resistance to pyrethroid insecticides are widespread amongst vector populations. Previous research has suggested that these alleles are associated with changes in the vector competence of mosquitoes for arboviruses and Plasmodium, however non-target genetic differences between mosquito strains may have had a confounding effect. Here, to minimise genetic differences, the laboratory Anopheles gambiae Kisumu strain was compared to a CRISPR/Cas9 homozygous kdr L1014F mutant Kisumu-kdr line in order to examine associations with vector competence for o'nyong nyong virus (ONNV). Mosquitoes were infected using either blood feeds or intrathoracic microinjections. There were no significant differences in the prevalence of virus in mosquito body parts between kdr mutant and wildtype lines from either oral or intrathoracic injection routes. The ONNV titre was significantly higher in the legs of the wildtype strain at 7dpi following intrathoracic microinjection, but no other significant differences in viral titre were detected. ONNV was not detected in the saliva of mosquitoes from either strain. Our findings from per os infections suggest that the kdr L1014F allele is not associated with altered infection prevalence for ONNV, a key component of vector competence., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Kay et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
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16. Probing different paradigms of morphine withdrawal on sleep behavior in male and female C57BL/6J mice.
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Bedard ML, Lord JS, Perez PJ, Bravo IM, Teklezghi AT, Tarantino LM, Diering GH, and McElligott ZA
- Subjects
- Male, Female, Mice, Animals, Humans, Morphine adverse effects, Analgesics, Opioid pharmacology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Narcotic Antagonists pharmacology, Narcotic Antagonists therapeutic use, Pandemics, Naloxone pharmacology, Naloxone therapeutic use, Narcotics adverse effects, Sleep, COVID-19, Opioid-Related Disorders drug therapy, Substance Withdrawal Syndrome drug therapy, Morphine Dependence drug therapy
- Abstract
Opioid misuse has dramatically increased over the last few decades resulting in many people suffering from opioid use disorder (OUD). The prevalence of opioid overdose has been driven by the development of new synthetic opioids, increased availability of prescription opioids, and more recently, the COVID-19 pandemic. Coinciding with increases in exposure to opioids, the United States has also observed increases in multiple Narcan (naloxone) administrations as a life-saving measures for respiratory depression, and, thus, consequently, naloxone-precipitated withdrawal. Sleep dysregulation is a main symptom of OUD and opioid withdrawal syndrome, and therefore, should be a key facet of animal models of OUD. Here we examine the effect of precipitated and spontaneous morphine withdrawal on sleep behaviors in C57BL/6 J mice. We find that morphine administration and withdrawal dysregulate sleep, but not equally across morphine exposure paradigms. Furthermore, many environmental triggers promote relapse to drug-seeking/taking behavior, and the stress of disrupted sleep may fall into that category. We find that sleep deprivation dysregulates sleep in mice that had previous opioid withdrawal experience. Our data suggest that the 3-day precipitated withdrawal paradigm has the most profound effects on opioid-induced sleep dysregulation and further validates the construct of this model for opioid dependence and OUD., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors M. Bedard and Dr. McElligott are sub-contracted by EpiCypher® on a SBIR grant unrelated to the work completed in this article., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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17. Investigating the unaccounted ones: insights on age-dependent reproductive loss in a viviparous fly.
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English S, Barreaux AMG, Leyland R, Lord JS, Hargrove JW, Vale GA, and Haines LR
- Abstract
Most empirical and theoretical studies on reproductive senescence focus on observable attributes of offspring produced, such as size or postnatal survival. While harder to study, an important outcome of reproduction for a breeding individual is whether a viable offspring is produced at all. While prenatal mortality can sometimes be directly observed, this can also be indicated through an increase in the interval between offspring production. Both direct reproductive loss and presumed losses have been found to increase in older females across several species. Here, we study such reproductive loss (or "abortion") in tsetse, a viviparous and relatively long-lived fly with high maternal allocation. We consider how age-dependent patterns of abortion depend on the developmental stage of offspring and find that, as per previous laboratory studies, older females have higher rates of abortion at the late-larval stage, while egg-stage abortions are high both for very young and older females. We track the reproductive output of individual females and find little evidence that experiencing an abortion is an adaptive strategy to improve future reproductive outcomes. After an abortion, females do not generally take less time to produce their next offspring, these offspring are not larger, and there is no sex bias towards females, the sex with presumed higher fitness returns (being slightly larger and longer-lived than males, and with high insemination rates). Abortion rates are higher for breeding females experiencing stress, measured as nutritional deprivation, which echoes previous work in tsetse and other viviparous species, i.e., humans and baboons. We discuss our results in the context of studies on reproductive loss across taxa and argue that this is an important yet often overlooked reproductive trait which can vary with maternal age and can also depend on environmental stressors., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2023
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18. Aedes albopictus invasion across Africa: the time is now for cross-country collaboration and control.
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Longbottom J, Walekhwa AW, Mwingira V, Kijanga O, Mramba F, and Lord JS
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- Animals, Humans, Mosquito Vectors, Africa epidemiology, Aedes, Dengue epidemiology, Chikungunya Fever epidemiology
- Abstract
The distribution of Aedes albopictus across west Africa is well documented. However, little has been done to synthesise data and establish the current distribution of this invasive vector in central and east Africa. In this Viewpoint, we show that A albopictus is establishing across Africa, how this is potentially related to urbanisation, and how establishment poses risks of near-term increases in arbovirus transmission. We then use existing species distribution maps for A albopictus and Aedes aegypti to produce consensus estimates of suitability and make these estimates accessible. Although urban development and increased trade have economic and other societal gains, the resulting potential changes in Aedes-borne virus epidemiology require a discussion of how cross-country collaboration and mitigation could be facilitated. Failure to respond to species invasion could result in increased transmission of Aedes-associated pathogens, including dengue, chikungunya, and Rift Valley fever viruses., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests We declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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19. TMPRSS2 polymorphism (rs12329760) and the severity of the COVID-19 in Iranian population.
- Author
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Yaghoobi A, Lord JS, Rezaiezadeh JS, Yekaninejad MS, Amini M, and Izadi P
- Subjects
- Humans, SARS-CoV-2, Iran epidemiology, Polymorphism, Genetic, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Serine Endopeptidases genetics, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 genetics
- Abstract
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has been responsible for the recent pandemic since early 2020. Due to the wide range of clinical symptoms of this disease, from asymptomatic to severe and critical forms, it seems that genetic differences among patients, along with other factors (such as gender, age, and underlying diseases), can explain part of the variation in disease symptoms. The TMPRSS2 enzyme plays a vital role in the early stages of the interaction of the SARS-CoV-2 with the host cells by facilitating viral entry. There is a polymorphism in the TMPRSS2 gene, called rs12329760(C to T) as a missense variant, which causes the replacement of valine to methionine in the TMPRSS2 protein at position 160. The present study investigated the association between the TMPRSS2 genotype and the severity of the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in Iranian patients. The TMPRSS2 genotype of 251 COVID-19 patients (151 patients with asymptomatic to mild and 100 patients with severe to critical symptoms) was detected on genomic DNA extracted from patients' peripheral blood via the ARMS-PCR method. Our results showed a significant association between the minor T allele and the severity of the COVID-19 (P-value = 0.043) under the dominant and additive inheritance model. In conclusion, the results of this study showed that the T allele of the rs12329760 in the TMPRSS2 gene is a risk allele for severe form of COVID-19 in Iranian patients in contrast to most previous studies on this variant in European ancestry populations which suggested this variant as a protective allele. Our results reiterate to the ethnic-specific risk alleles and hidden unknown complexity behind the host genetic susceptibility. However, further studies are needed to address the complex mechanisms behind the interaction of the TMPRSS2 protein and the SARS-CoV-2 and the role of rs12329760 polymorphism in determining the disease severity., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Yaghoobi et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
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20. The association of ACE I/D polymorphism with the severity of COVID-19 in Iranian patients: A case-control study.
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Soltani Rezaiezadeh J, Lord JS, Yekaninejad MS, and Izadi P
- Abstract
Background: Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, researchers have tried to find the reason behind the variety of the symptoms and disease severity among patients. It seems that genetic background may contribute in severity of this infection. The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) is involved in the pathogenesis of COVID-19. An Insertion/Deletion (I/D) polymorphism in the ACE1 gene may explain the genetic risk for disease severity., Methods: We genotyped 251 COVID-19 patients: 151 patients with mild or asymptomatic disease compared with 100 patients with severe to critical illness (without any comorbidities for the disease severity)., Results: There was a significant association between the ACE1 DD genotype and disease severity ( p-value = 1 × 10
-2 ; OR = 2.004, 95%CI = 1.147-3.499) and our results showed that it was inherited under recessive or codominant inheritance patterns. Also, the I allele showed a protective role against the severe form of COVID-19 disease ( p-value = 1 × 10-4 )., Conclusion: We concluded that ACE1 DD genotype can predict the risk of severe form of COVID-19 infection in the absence of known comorbidities as disease severity risk factors. Further studies with larger sample sizes in other populations are still needed to clarify the role of ACE I/D polymorphism in SARS-CoV-2 infection severity., Competing Interests: No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors., (© 2022 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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21. Reply to: On the observation of photo-excitation effects in molecules using muon spin spectroscopy.
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Jingliang M, Wang K, Murahari P, Yokoyama K, Lord JS, Pratt FL, He J, Schulz L, Willis M, Anthony JE, Morley NA, Nuccio L, Misquitta A, Dunstan DJ, Shimomura K, Watanabe I, Zhang S, Heathcote P, and Drew AJ
- Subjects
- Spectrum Analysis, Spin Labels, Mesons
- Published
- 2022
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22. Early life sleep disruption potentiates lasting sex-specific changes in behavior in genetically vulnerable Shank3 heterozygous autism model mice.
- Author
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Lord JS, Gay SM, Harper KM, Nikolova VD, Smith KM, Moy SS, and Diering GH
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Male, Mice, Microfilament Proteins, Nerve Tissue Proteins genetics, Sleep, Autism Spectrum Disorder genetics, Autistic Disorder genetics
- Abstract
Background: Patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience high rates of sleep disruption beginning early in life; however, the developmental consequences of this disruption are not understood. We examined sleep behavior and the consequences of sleep disruption in developing mice bearing C-terminal truncation mutation in the high-confidence ASD risk gene SHANK3 (Shank3ΔC). We hypothesized that sleep disruption may be an early sign of developmental divergence, and that clinically relevant Shank3
WT/ΔC mice may be at increased risk of lasting deleterious outcomes following early life sleep disruption., Methods: We recorded sleep behavior in developing Shank3ΔC/ΔC , Shank3WT/ΔC , and wild-type siblings of both sexes using a noninvasive home-cage monitoring system. Separately, litters of Shank3WT/ΔC and wild-type littermates were exposed to automated mechanical sleep disruption for 7 days prior to weaning (early life sleep disruption: ELSD) or post-adolescence (PASD) or undisturbed control (CON) conditions. All groups underwent standard behavioral testing as adults., Results: Male and female Shank3ΔC/ΔC mice slept significantly less than wild-type and Shank3WT/ΔC siblings shortly after weaning, with increasing sleep fragmentation in adolescence, indicating that sleep disruption has a developmental onset in this ASD model. ELSD treatment interacted with genetic vulnerability in Shank3WT/ΔC mice, resulting in lasting, sex-specific changes in behavior, whereas wild-type siblings were largely resilient to these effects. Male ELSD Shank3WT/ΔC subjects demonstrated significant changes in sociability, sensory processing, and locomotion, while female ELSD Shank3WT/ΔC subjects had a significant reduction in risk aversion. CON Shank3WT/ΔC mice, PASD mice, and all wild-type mice demonstrated typical behavioral responses in most tests., Limitations: This study tested the interaction between developmental sleep disruption and genetic vulnerability using a single ASD mouse model: Shank3ΔC (deletion of exon 21). The broader implications of this work should be supported by additional studies using ASD model mice with distinct genetic vulnerabilities., Conclusion: Our study shows that sleep disruption during sensitive periods of early life interacts with underlying genetic vulnerability to drive lasting and sex-specific changes in behavior. As individuals progress through maturation, they gain resilience to the lasting effects of sleep disruption. This work highlights developmental sleep disruption as an important vulnerability in ASD susceptibility., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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23. A cross-sectional survey to establish Theileria parva prevalence and vector control at the wildlife-livestock interface, Northern Tanzania.
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Allan FK, Sindoya E, Adam KE, Byamungu M, Lea RS, Lord JS, Mbata G, Paxton E, Mramba F, Torr SJ, Morrison WI, Handel I, Morrison LJ, and Auty HK
- Subjects
- Acaricides administration & dosage, Animals, Animals, Wild, Cattle, Cross-Sectional Studies, Livestock, Prevalence, Tanzania epidemiology, Tick Infestations veterinary, Rhipicephalus parasitology, Theileria parva isolation & purification, Tick Control
- Abstract
East Coast fever (ECF) in cattle is caused by the protozoan parasite Theileria parva, transmitted by Rhipicephalus appendiculatus ticks. In cattle ECF is often fatal, causing annual losses >$500 million across its range. The African buffalo (Syncerus caffer) is the natural host for T. parva but the transmission dynamics between wild hosts and livestock are poorly understood. This study aimed to determine the prevalence of T. parva in cattle, in a 30 km zone adjacent to the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania where livestock and buffalo co-exist, and to ascertain how livestock keepers controlled ECF and other vector-borne diseases of cattle. A randomised cross-sectional cattle survey and questionnaire of vector control practices were conducted. Blood samples were collected from 770 cattle from 48 herds and analysed by PCR to establish T. parva prevalence. Half body tick counts were recorded on every animal. Farmers were interviewed (n = 120; including the blood sampled herds) using a standardised questionnaire to obtain data on vector control practices. Local workshops were held to discuss findings and validate results. Overall prevalence of T. parva in cattle was 5.07% (CI: 3.70-7.00%), with significantly higher prevalence in older animals. Although all farmers reported seeing ticks on their cattle, tick counts were very low with 78% cattle having none. Questionnaire analysis indicated significant acaricide use with 79% and 41% of farmers reporting spraying or dipping with cypermethrin-based insecticides, respectively. Some farmers reported very frequent spraying, as often as every four days. However, doses per animal were often insufficient. These data indicate high levels of acaricide use, which may be responsible for the low observed tick burdens and low ECF prevalence. This vector control is farmer-led and aimed at both tick- and tsetse-borne diseases of livestock. The levels of acaricide use raise concerns regarding sustainability; resistance development is a risk, particularly in ticks. Integrating vaccination as part of this community-based disease control may alleviate acaricide dependence, but increased understanding of the Theileria strains circulating in wildlife-livestock interface areas is required to establish the potential benefits of vaccination., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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24. Effects of maternal age and stress on offspring quality in a viviparous fly.
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Lord JS, Leyland R, Haines LR, Barreaux AMG, Bonsall MB, Torr SJ, and English S
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Maternal Age, Pregnancy, Aging, Reproduction
- Abstract
Many organisms show signs of deterioration with age in terms of survival and reproduction. We tested whether intraspecific variation in such senescence patterns can be driven by resource availability or reproductive history. We did this by manipulating nutritional stress and age at first reproduction and measuring age-dependent reproductive output in tsetse (Glossina morsitans morsitans), a viviparous fly with high maternal allocation. Across all treatments, offspring weight followed a bell-shaped curve with maternal age. Nutritionally stressed females had a higher probability of abortion and produced offspring with lower starvation tolerance. There was no evidence of an increased rate of reproductive senescence in nutritionally stressed females, or a reduced rate due to delayed mating, as measured by patterns of abortion, offspring weight or offspring starvation tolerance. Therefore, although we found evidence of reproductive senescence in tsetse, our results did not indicate that resource allocation trade-offs or costs of reproduction increase the rate of senescence., (© 2021 The Authors. Ecology Letters published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
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25. The evolutionary dynamics of viruses: virion release strategies, time delays and fitness minima.
- Author
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Lord JS and Bonsall MB
- Abstract
Viruses exhibit a diverse array of strategies for infecting host cells and for virion release after replication. Cell exit strategies generally involve either budding from the cell membrane or killing the host cell. The conditions under which either is at a selective advantage is a key question in the evolutionary theory of viruses, with the outcome having potentially important impacts on the course of infection and pathogenicity. Although a plethora of external factors will influence the fitness of either strategy; here, we focus just on the effects of the physical properties of the system. We develop theoretical approaches to assess the effects of the time delays between initial infection and virion release. We show that the length of the delay before apoptosis is an important trait in virus evolutionary dynamics. Our results show that for a fixed time to apoptosis, intermediate delays lead to virus fitness that is lower than short times to apoptosis - leading to an apoptotic strategy - and long times to apoptosis - leading to a budding strategy at the between-cell level. At fitness minima, selection is expected to be disruptive and the potential for adaptive radiation in virus strategies is feasible. Hence, the physical properties of the system are sufficient to explain the existence of both budding and virus-induced apoptosis. The fitness functions presented here provide a formal basis for further work focusing on the evolutionary implications of trade-offs between time delays, intracellular replication and resulting mutation rates., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press.)
- Published
- 2021
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26. Changes in Rice and Livestock Production and the Potential Emergence of Japanese Encephalitis in Africa.
- Author
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Lord JS
- Abstract
The known distribution of Japanese encephalitis (JE) is limited to Asia and Australasia. However, autochthonous transmission of Japanese encephalitis virus was reported in Africa for the first time in 2016. Reasons for the current geographic restriction of JE and the circumstances that may permit emergence in non-endemic areas are not well known. Here, I assess potential changes in vector breeding habitat and livestock production in Africa that are conducive to JEV transmission, using open-source data available from the Food and Agriculture Organization between 1961 and 2019. For 16 of 57 countries in Africa, there was evidence of existing, or an increase in, conditions potentially suitable for JE emergence. This comprised the area used for rice production and the predicted proportion of blood meals on pigs. Angola, where autochthonous transmission was reported, was one of these 16 countries. Studies to better quantify the role of alternative hosts, including domestic birds in transmission in endemic regions, would help to determine the potential for emergence elsewhere. In Africa, surveillance programs for arboviruses should not rule out the possibility of Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) circulation in areas with high pig or bird density coincident with Culicine breeding habitats.
- Published
- 2021
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27. Modelling the impact of climate change on the distribution and abundance of tsetse in Northern Zimbabwe.
- Author
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Longbottom J, Caminade C, Gibson HS, Weiss DJ, Torr S, and Lord JS
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Humans, Insect Vectors parasitology, Population Dynamics, Temperature, Trypanosomiasis, African parasitology, Tsetse Flies parasitology, Vector Borne Diseases parasitology, Weather, Zimbabwe epidemiology, Climate Change, Trypanosoma brucei gambiense physiology, Trypanosomiasis, African epidemiology, Tsetse Flies physiology, Vector Borne Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Climate change is predicted to impact the transmission dynamics of vector-borne diseases. Tsetse flies (Glossina) transmit species of Trypanosoma that cause human and animal African trypanosomiasis. A previous modelling study showed that temperature increases between 1990 and 2017 can explain the observed decline in abundance of tsetse at a single site in the Mana Pools National Park of Zimbabwe. Here, we apply a mechanistic model of tsetse population dynamics to predict how increases in temperature may have changed the distribution and relative abundance of Glossina pallidipes across northern Zimbabwe., Methods: Local weather station temperature measurements were previously used to fit the mechanistic model to longitudinal G. pallidipes catch data. To extend the use of the model, we converted MODIS land surface temperature to air temperature, compared the converted temperatures with available weather station data to confirm they aligned, and then re-fitted the mechanistic model using G. pallidipes catch data and air temperature estimates. We projected this fitted model across northern Zimbabwe, using simulations at a 1 km × 1 km spatial resolution, between 2000 to 2016., Results: We produced estimates of relative changes in G. pallidipes mortality, larviposition, emergence rates and abundance, for northern Zimbabwe. Our model predicts decreasing tsetse populations within low elevation areas in response to increasing temperature trends during 2000-2016. Conversely, we show that high elevation areas (> 1000 m above sea level), previously considered too cold to sustain tsetse, may now be climatically suitable., Conclusions: To our knowledge, the results of this research represent the first regional-scale assessment of temperature related tsetse population dynamics, and the first high spatial-resolution estimates of this metric for northern Zimbabwe. Our results suggest that tsetse abundance may have declined across much of the Zambezi Valley in response to changing climatic conditions during the study period. Future research including empirical studies is planned to improve model accuracy and validate predictions for other field sites in Zimbabwe.
- Published
- 2020
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28. Assessing the effect of insecticide-treated cattle on tsetse abundance and trypanosome transmission at the wildlife-livestock interface in Serengeti, Tanzania.
- Author
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Lord JS, Lea RS, Allan FK, Byamungu M, Hall DR, Lingley J, Mramba F, Paxton E, Vale GA, Hargrove JW, Morrison LJ, Torr SJ, and Auty HK
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Cattle Diseases prevention & control, Female, Models, Theoretical, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Prevalence, Pyrethrins, Tanzania epidemiology, Trypanosoma, Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense, Trypanosomiasis, African prevention & control, Tsetse Flies, Animals, Wild, Cattle Diseases epidemiology, Cattle Diseases transmission, Insecticides pharmacology, Livestock, Trypanosomiasis, African epidemiology, Trypanosomiasis, African transmission
- Abstract
In the absence of national control programmes against Rhodesian human African trypanosomiasis, farmer-led treatment of cattle with pyrethroid-based insecticides may be an effective strategy for foci at the edges of wildlife areas, but there is limited evidence to support this. We combined data on insecticide use by farmers, tsetse abundance and trypanosome prevalence, with mathematical models, to quantify the likely impact of insecticide-treated cattle. Sixteen percent of farmers reported treating cattle with a pyrethroid, and chemical analysis indicated 18% of individual cattle had been treated, in the previous week. Treatment of cattle was estimated to increase daily mortality of tsetse by 5-14%. Trypanosome prevalence in tsetse, predominantly from wildlife areas, was 1.25% for T. brucei s.l. and 0.03% for T. b. rhodesiense. For 750 cattle sampled from 48 herds, 2.3% were PCR positive for T. brucei s.l. and none for T. b. rhodesiense. Using mathematical models, we estimated there was 8-29% increase in mortality of tsetse in farming areas and this increase can explain the relatively low prevalence of T. brucei s.l. in cattle. Farmer-led treatment of cattle with pyrethroids is likely, in part, to be limiting the spill-over of human-infective trypanosomes from wildlife areas., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2020
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29. Mania- and anxiety-like behavior and impaired maternal care in female diacylglycerol kinase eta and iota double knockout mice.
- Author
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Bartsch VB, Lord JS, Diering GH, and Zylka MJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Anxiety physiopathology, Bipolar Disorder physiopathology, Diacylglycerol Kinase metabolism, Female, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Anxiety genetics, Bipolar Disorder genetics, Diacylglycerol Kinase genetics, Maternal Behavior
- Abstract
Genome-wide association studies linked diacylglycerol kinase eta and iota to mood disorders, including bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and both genes are expressed throughout the brain. Here, we generated and behaviorally characterized female mice lacking Dgkh alone, Dgki alone, and double Dgkh/Dgki-knockout (dKO) mice. We found that fewer than 30% of newborn pups raised by dKO females survived to weaning, while over 85% of pups survived to weaning when raised by wild-type (WT) females. Poor survival under the care of dKO mothers was unrelated to pup genotype. Moreover, pups from dKO dams survived when fostered by WT dams, suggesting the poor survival rate of dKO-raised litters was related to impaired maternal care by dKO dams. Nest building was similar between WT and dKO dams; however, some dKO females failed to retrieve any pups in a retrieval assay. Pups raised by dKO dams had smaller or absent milk spots and reduced weight, indicative of impaired nursing. Unlike WT females, postpartum dKO females showed erratic, panicked responses to cage disturbances. Virgin dKO females showed behavioral signs of anxiety and mania, which were not seen in mice lacking either Dgkh or Dgki alone. Our research indicates that combined deletion of Dgkh and Dgki impairs maternal behavior in the early postpartum period, and suggests female dKO mice model symptoms of mania and anxiety., (© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd and International Behavioural and Neural Genetics Society.)
- Published
- 2020
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30. Bilateral brain activity in auditory regions is necessary for successful vocal learning in songbirds.
- Author
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Pagliaro AH, Arya P, Piristine HC, Lord JS, and Gobes SMH
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Animals, Finches physiology, Male, Memory physiology, Songbirds physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Learning physiology, Neurons physiology, Vocalization, Animal physiology
- Abstract
In humans and songbirds, neuronal activation for language and song shifts from bilateral- or diffuse-activation to left-hemispheric dominance while proficiency increases. Further parallels exist at the behavioural level: unstructured juvenile vocalizations become highly stereotyped adult vocalizations through a process of trial and error learning. Greater left-hemispheric dominance in the songbird caudomedial Nidopallium (NCM), a Wernicke-like region, is related to better imitation of the tutor's song learned early in development, indicating a role for the left NCM in forming auditory memories. Here, we hypothesize that inhibition of the left NCM during interaction with a song tutor would impair imitation of the tutor's song more than inhibition of the right NCM. We infused a transient sodium channel blocker (TTX) immediately prior to tutoring sessions in either the left or right auditory lobule of previously isolated juvenile male zebra finches (Taeniopygia guttata). Upon maturation, both right-infused and left-infused birds' tutor song imitation was significantly impaired. Left-infused birds also showed less consistency in the rhythmic stability of their song as well as increased pitch, suggesting a subtle division of function between the left and right auditory lobules., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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31. Comments on T. De Meeûs et al.'s Article.
- Author
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Lord JS
- Subjects
- Animals, Trypanosomiasis, Trypanosomiasis, African, Tsetse Flies
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Muons at ISIS.
- Author
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Hillier AD, Lord JS, Ishida K, and Rogers C
- Abstract
For the last 30 years, muon experiments at ISIS pulsed neutron and muon facility at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Oxfordshire have been making a significant contribution to a number of scientific fields. The muon facilities at ISIS consist of eight experimental areas. The European Commission Muon facility consists of three experimental areas with a fixed momentum (28 MeV c
-1 ). The RIKEN-RAL facility has a variable momentum (17-90 MeV c-1 ) and a choice of negative or positive muons delivering muons to four experimental areas. There is also an area recently used for a muon ionization cooling experiment. In this paper, the ISIS pulsed muon facilities are reviewed, including the beam characteristics that could be useful for muography experiments.This article is part of the Theo Murphy meeting issue 'Cosmic-ray muography'., (© 2018 The Author(s).)- Published
- 2018
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33. Climate change and African trypanosomiasis vector populations in Zimbabwe's Zambezi Valley: A mathematical modelling study.
- Author
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Lord JS, Hargrove JW, Torr SJ, and Vale GA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Female, Humans, Population Dynamics, Temperature, Zimbabwe, Climate Change, Insect Vectors growth & development, Models, Biological, Trypanosomiasis, African epidemiology, Tsetse Flies growth & development
- Abstract
Background: Quantifying the effects of climate change on the entomological and epidemiological components of vector-borne diseases is an essential part of climate change research, but evidence for such effects remains scant, and predictions rely largely on extrapolation of statistical correlations. We aimed to develop a mechanistic model to test whether recent increases in temperature in the Mana Pools National Park of the Zambezi Valley of Zimbabwe could account for the simultaneous decline of tsetse flies, the vectors of human and animal trypanosomiasis., Methods and Findings: The model we developed incorporates the effects of temperature on mortality, larviposition, and emergence rates and is fitted to a 27-year time series of tsetse caught from cattle. These catches declined from an average of c. 50 flies per animal per afternoon in 1990 to c. 0.1 in 2017. Since 1975, mean daily temperatures have risen by c. 0.9°C and temperatures in the hottest month of November by c. 2°C. Although our model provided a good fit to the data, it cannot predict whether or when extinction will occur., Conclusions: The model suggests that the increase in temperature may explain the observed collapse in tsetse abundance and provides a first step in linking temperature to trypanosomiasis risk. If the effect at Mana Pools extends across the whole of the Zambezi Valley, then transmission of trypanosomes is likely to have been greatly reduced in this warm low-lying region. Conversely, rising temperatures may have made some higher, cooler, parts of Zimbabwe more suitable for tsetse and led to the emergence of new disease foci., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2018
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34. Geostatistical models using remotely-sensed data predict savanna tsetse decline across the interface between protected and unprotected areas in Serengeti, Tanzania.
- Author
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Lord JS, Torr SJ, Auty HK, Brock PM, Byamungu M, Hargrove JW, Morrison LJ, Mramba F, Vale GA, and Stanton MC
- Abstract
Monitoring abundance is essential for vector management, but it is often only possible in a fraction of managed areas. For vector control programmes, sampling to estimate abundance is usually carried out at a local-scale (10s km
2 ), while interventions often extend across 100s km2 . Geostatistical models have been used to interpolate between points where data are available, but this still requires costly sampling across the entire area of interest. Instead, we used geostatistical models to predict local-scale spatial variation in the abundance of tsetse-vectors of human and animal African trypanosomes-beyond the spatial extent of data to which models were fitted, in Serengeti, Tanzania.We sampled Glossina swynnertoni and Glossina pallidipes >10 km inside the Serengeti National Park (SNP) and along four transects extending into areas where humans and livestock live. We fitted geostatistical models to data >10 km inside the SNP to produce maps of abundance for the entire region, including unprotected areas.Inside the SNP, the mean number of G. pallidipes caught per trap per day in dense woodland was 166 (± 24 SE ), compared to 3 (±1) in grassland. Glossina swynnertoni was more homogenous with respective means of 15 (±3) and 15 (±8). In general, models predicted a decline in abundance from protected to unprotected areas, related to anthropogenic changes to vegetation, which was confirmed during field survey. Synthesis and applications . Our approach allows vector control managers to identify sites predicted to have relatively high tsetse abundance, and therefore to design and implement improved surveillance strategies. In East and Southern Africa, trypanosomiasis is associated with wilderness areas. Our study identified pockets of vegetation which could sustain tsetse populations in farming areas outside the Serengeti National Park. Our method will assist countries in identifying, monitoring and, if necessary, controlling tsetse in trypanosomiasis foci. This has specific application to tsetse, but the approach could also be developed for vectors of other pathogens.- Published
- 2018
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35. Photoexcited Muon Spin Spectroscopy: A New Method for Measuring Excess Carrier Lifetime in Bulk Silicon.
- Author
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Yokoyama K, Lord JS, Miao J, Murahari P, and Drew AJ
- Abstract
We have measured excess carrier lifetime in silicon using photoexcited muon spin spectroscopy. Positive muons implanted deep in a wafer can interact with the optically injected excess carriers and directly probe the bulk carrier lifetime while minimizing the effect from surface recombination. The method is based on the relaxation rate of muon spin asymmetry, which depends on the excess carrier density. The underlying microscopic mechanism has been understood by simulating the four-state muonium model in Si under illumination. We apply the technique to different injection levels and temperatures, and demonstrate its ability for injection- and temperature-dependent lifetime spectroscopy.
- Published
- 2017
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36. Host-seeking efficiency can explain population dynamics of the tsetse fly Glossina morsitans morsitans in response to host density decline.
- Author
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Lord JS, Mthombothi Z, Lagat VK, Atuhaire F, and Hargrove JW
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Insect Vectors growth & development, Male, Models, Theoretical, Trypanosomiasis, African transmission, Tsetse Flies growth & development, Zimbabwe, Feeding Behavior, Insect Vectors physiology, Population Dynamics, Tsetse Flies physiology
- Abstract
Females of all blood-feeding arthropod vectors must find and feed on a host in order to produce offspring. For tsetse-vectors of the trypanosomes that cause human and animal African trypanosomiasis-the problem is more extreme, since both sexes feed solely on blood. Host location is thus essential both for survival and reproduction. Host population density should therefore be an important driver of population dynamics for haematophagous insects, and particularly for tsetse, but the role of host density is poorly understood. We investigate the issue using data on changes in numbers of tsetse (Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood) caught during a host elimination experiment in Zimbabwe in the 1960s. During the experiment, numbers of flies caught declined by 95%. We aimed to assess whether models including starvation-dependent mortality could explain observed changes in tsetse numbers as host density declined. An ordinary differential equation model, including starvation-dependent mortality, captured the initial dynamics of the observed tsetse population. However, whereas small numbers of tsetse were caught throughout the host elimination exercise, the modelled population went extinct. Results of a spatially explicit agent-based model suggest that this discrepancy could be explained by immigration of tsetse into the experimental plot. Variation in host density, as a result of natural and anthropogenic factors, may influence tsetse population dynamics in space and time. This has implications for Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense transmission. Increased tsetse mortality as a consequence of low host density may decrease trypanosome transmission, but hungrier flies may be more inclined to bite humans, thereby increasing the risk of transmission to humans. Our model provides a way of exploring the role of host density on tsetse population dynamics and could be incorporated into models of trypanosome transmission dynamics to better understand how spatio-temporal variation in host density impacts trypanosome prevalence in mammalian hosts.
- Published
- 2017
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37. Temporal mapping of photochemical reactions and molecular excited states with carbon specificity.
- Author
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Wang K, Murahari P, Yokoyama K, Lord JS, Pratt FL, He J, Schulz L, Willis M, Anthony JE, Morley NA, Nuccio L, Misquitta A, Dunstan DJ, Shimomura K, Watanabe I, Zhang S, Heathcote P, and Drew AJ
- Abstract
Photochemical reactions are essential to a large number of important industrial and biological processes. A method for monitoring photochemical reaction kinetics and the dynamics of molecular excitations with spatial resolution within the active molecule would allow a rigorous exploration of the pathway and mechanism of photophysical and photochemical processes. Here we demonstrate that laser-excited muon pump-probe spin spectroscopy (photo-μSR) can temporally and spatially map these processes with a spatial resolution at the single-carbon level in a molecule with a pentacene backbone. The observed time-dependent light-induced changes of an avoided level crossing resonance demonstrate that the photochemical reactivity of a specific carbon atom is modified as a result of the presence of the excited state wavefunction. This demonstrates the sensitivity and potential of this technique in probing molecular excitations and photochemistry.
- Published
- 2017
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38. The new high field photoexcitation muon spectrometer at the ISIS pulsed neutron and muon source.
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Yokoyama K, Lord JS, Murahari P, Wang K, Dunstan DJ, Waller SP, McPhail DJ, Hillier AD, Henson J, Harper MR, Heathcote P, and Drew AJ
- Abstract
A high power pulsed laser system has been installed on the high magnetic field muon spectrometer (HiFi) at the International Science Information Service pulsed neutron and muon source, situated at the STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK. The upgrade enables one to perform light-pump muon-probe experiments under a high magnetic field, which opens new applications of muon spin spectroscopy. In this report we give an overview of the principle of the HiFi laser system and describe the newly developed techniques and devices that enable precisely controlled photoexcitation of samples in the muon instrument. A demonstration experiment illustrates the potential of this unique combination of the photoexcited system and avoided level crossing technique.
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- 2016
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39. Sampling Design Influences the Observed Dominance of Culex tritaeniorhynchus: Considerations for Future Studies of Japanese Encephalitis Virus Transmission.
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Lord JS, Al-Amin HM, Chakma S, Alam MS, Gurley ES, and Pulliam JR
- Subjects
- Animals, Bangladesh epidemiology, Cattle, Culex virology, Disease Transmission, Infectious, Encephalitis Viruses, Japanese isolation & purification, Encephalitis, Japanese epidemiology, Encephalitis, Japanese transmission, Female, Humans, Male, Population Density, Selection Bias, Culex classification, Culex growth & development, Entomology methods
- Abstract
Mosquito sampling during Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV)-associated studies, particularly in India, has usually been conducted via aspirators or light traps to catch mosquitoes around cattle, which are dead-end hosts for JEV. High numbers of Culex tritaeniorhynchus, relative to other species, have often been caught during these studies. Less frequently, studies have involved sampling outdoor resting mosquitoes. We aimed to compare the relative abundance of mosquito species between these two previously used mosquito sampling methods. From September to December 2013 entomological surveys were undertaken in eight villages in a Japanese encephalitis (JE) endemic area of Bangladesh. Light traps were used to collect active mosquitoes in households, and resting boxes and a Bina Pani Das hop cage were used near oviposition sites to collect resting mosquitoes. Numbers of humans and domestic animals present in households where light traps were set were recorded. In five villages Cx. tritaeniorhynchus was more likely to be selected from light trap samples near hosts than resting collection samples near oviposition sites, according to log odds ratio tests. The opposite was true for Cx. pseudovishnui and Armigeres subalbatus, which can also transmit JEV. Culex tritaeniorhynchus constituted 59% of the mosquitoes sampled from households with cattle, 28% from households without cattle and 17% in resting collections. In contrast Cx. pseudovishnui constituted 5.4% of the sample from households with cattle, 16% from households with no cattle and 27% from resting collections, while Ar. subalbatus constituted 0.15%, 0.38%, and 8.4% of these samples respectively. These observations may be due to differences in timing of biting activity, host preference and host-seeking strategy rather than differences in population density. We suggest that future studies aiming to implicate vector species in transmission of JEV should consider focusing catches around hosts able to transmit JEV.
- Published
- 2016
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40. Rethinking Japanese Encephalitis Virus Transmission: A Framework for Implicating Host and Vector Species.
- Author
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Lord JS, Gurley ES, and Pulliam JR
- Subjects
- Animals, Humans, Culicidae virology, Disease Reservoirs, Disease Transmission, Infectious, Encephalitis, Japanese transmission, Encephalitis, Japanese veterinary, Insect Vectors, Zoonoses transmission
- Published
- 2015
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41. Spin dynamics in Na(4-x)Ir₃O₈ (x = 0.3 and 0.7) investigated by ²³Na NMR and μSR.
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Yoon S, Baek SH, Balodhi A, Lee WJ, Choi KY, Watanabe I, Lord JS, Büchner B, Suh BJ, and Singh Y
- Abstract
We report (23)Na nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and zero-field (ZF) and longitudinal-field (LF) muon spin relaxation (μSR) measurements of the depleted hyperkagome compounds Na(4-x)Ir3O8 (x = 0.3 and 0.7), which undergo an insulator-semimetal transition as a function of x. The (23)Na spin-lattice relaxation rates, T1(-1), follow a T(2.5) power law behavior at accessible temperatures of T = 120-350 K. A substantial temperature dependence of T1(-1) indicates the presence of gapped excitations at elevated temperatures through the transition to a semimetallic phase. ZF-μSR results reveal that hole-doping leads to a melting of quasi-static order to a dynamically fluctuating state. The very slow muon depolarization rate which varies hardly with temperature indicates that spins are close to an itinerant limit in the largest doping x = 0.7. The dynamic relaxation rates extracted from the LF-μSR spectra show a three-dimensional diffusive transport. Our combined NMR and μSR results suggest the occurrence of intriguing spin and charge excitations across the insulator-semimetal transition.
- Published
- 2015
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42. Role of underappreciated vectors in malaria transmission in an endemic region of Bangladesh-India border.
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Al-Amin HM, Elahi R, Mohon AN, Kafi MA, Chakma S, Lord JS, Khan WA, Haque R, Norris DE, and Alam MS
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- Animals, Bangladesh, Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, Female, India, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Protozoan Proteins metabolism, Seasons, Species Specificity, Anopheles parasitology, Insect Vectors parasitology, Malaria transmission, Plasmodium genetics
- Abstract
Background: Despite the efforts of the National Malaria Control Programme, malaria remains as an important public health problem in Bangladesh, particularly in the south-eastern region bordering India. Successful malaria control strategies rely on a detailed understanding of the underlying causes of malaria transmission. Here, an entomological survey was conducted in a malaria endemic area of Bangladesh bordering India to investigate the Anopheles mosquito community and assess their Plasmodium infection status., Methods: Monthly entomological collections were undertaken from October 2010 to September 2011 in five villages in the Matiranga sub-district, Khagrachari district in Bangladesh, bordering the Indian State of Tripura. CDC miniature light traps were placed inside houses to collect adult Anopheles mosquitoes. Following morphological and molecular identification of the female Anopheles mosquitoes collected, they were screened for circumsporozoite proteins (CSP) of Plasmodium falciparum (Pf), Plasmodium vivax-210 (Pv-210) and Plasmodium vivax-247 (Pv-247), by ELISA to determine natural infection rates. Variation in Anopheles species composition, relative abundance and Plasmodium infection rates were analysed between sampled villages., Results: A total of 2,027 female Anopheles were collected, belonging to 20 species. Anopheles nivipes was the most abundant species in our test villages during the peak malaria transmission season, and was observed sympatrically with An. philippinensis in the studied area. However, in the dry off-peak season, An. jeyporiensis was the most abundant species. Shannon's diversity index was highest in October (2.12) and evenness was highest in May (0.91). The CSP ELISA positive rate overall was 0.44%. Anopheles karwari (n=2), An. barbirostris s.l. (n=1) and An. vagus (n=1) were recorded positive for Pf. Anopheles kochi (n=1) was positive for Pv-210 while An. umbrosus (n=1), An. nivipes (n=1) and An. kochi (n=1) were positive for Pv-247. A mixed infection of Pf and Pv-247 was detected in An. barbirostris s.l.., Conclusion: High diversity of Anopheles species was observed in areas close to the international border where species that were underestimated for malaria transmission significantly outnumbered principal vector species and these may play a significantly heightened role in malaria transmission.
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- 2015
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43. Toxoplasma gondii: prevalence in species and genotypes of British bats (Pipistrellus pipistrellus and P. pygmaeus).
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Dodd NS, Lord JS, Jehle R, Parker S, Parker F, Brooks DR, and Hide G
- Subjects
- Animals, Bayes Theorem, Brain parasitology, Chi-Square Distribution, DNA Primers chemistry, DNA, Protozoan chemistry, DNA, Protozoan isolation & purification, Female, Gene Frequency, Genetics, Population, Genotyping Techniques veterinary, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Multigene Family, Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Prevalence, Sequence Alignment veterinary, Sequence Analysis, DNA veterinary, Toxoplasma genetics, Toxoplasmosis, Animal epidemiology, Toxoplasmosis, Animal transmission, United Kingdom epidemiology, Chiroptera parasitology, Toxoplasma classification, Toxoplasmosis, Animal parasitology
- Abstract
Few studies have investigated Toxoplasma gondii infections in bat populations and none have reported its presence in protected British bat species. Using a collection of dead/euthanased bats collected from Lancashire, UK, two species of bats (Pipistrellus pipistrellus and Pipistrellus pygmaeus) were tested using a highly sensitive SAG1-PCR method specific for detection of T. gondii DNA (n=77; 71 P. pipistrellus and 6 P. pygmaeus). Whilst some potential bias may exist in the sampling strategy, an overall prevalence of 10.39% (±6.06%; 95%CI) was detected. All P. pipistrellus, were also genotyped using eleven polymorphic microsatellite loci to determine their local population structure. The programme STRUCTURE revealed that the majority of individuals (83%) were derived from one interbreeding population, and the remaining individuals (17%) had mixed genetic origins. There was no significant difference in the frequency of T. gondii infection or geographical distribution between subclusters. As all British bats are insectivorous, the routes of infection with T. gondii remain elusive. However, the locally large and panmictic gene pool suggests that intraspecies transmission could be applicable., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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44. Hyperfine coupling constants of the cyclohexadienyl radical in benzene and dilute aqueous solution.
- Author
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McKenzie I, Scheuermann R, Cottrell SP, Lord JS, and Tucker IM
- Abstract
The muon hyperfine coupling constant (Aμ) of the muoniated cyclohexadienyl radical (C6H6Mu) has been directly measured in a 5 mM solution of benzene in water by the radio-frequency muon spin resonance (RF-μSR) technique. The relative shift of Aμ in aqueous solution compared with the value in neat benzene (ΔAμ/Aμ = +0.98(5)% at 293 K) can now be compared directly with theoretical predictions. Application of the RF-μSR method to other dilute systems will provide extremely important information on understanding solvent effects.
- Published
- 2013
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45. Reactive surface area of the Li(x)(Co(1/3)Ni(1/3)Mn(1/3))O2 electrode determined by μ(+)SR and electrochemical measurements.
- Author
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Sugiyama J, Mukai K, Harada M, Nozaki H, Miwa K, Shiotsuki T, Shindo Y, Giblin SR, and Lord JS
- Abstract
The self-diffusion coefficient of Li(+) ions (D(Li)) in the positive electrode material Li(x)(Co(1/3)Ni(1/3)Mn(1/3))O2 has been estimated by muon-spin relaxation (μ(+)SR) using powder samples with x = 1-0.49, which were prepared by an electrochemical reaction in a Li-ion battery. Here, since the implanted muons sense a slight change in the internal magnetic field due to Li-diffusion, μ(+)SR provides an intrinsic D(Li) through the temperature dependence of the nuclear field fluctuation rate (ν) [Sugiyama et al., Phys. Rev. Lett., 2009, 103, 147601]. Both D(Li) at 300 K and activation energy (E(a)) were estimated to be ∼2.9 × 10(-12) cm(2) s(-1) and 0.074 eV for the x = 1 sample, ∼11.0 × 10(-12) cm(2) s(-1) and 0.097 eV for x = 0.70, and ∼8.9 × 10(-12) cm(2) s(-1) and 0.062 eV for x = 0.49, assuming that the diffusing Li(+) ions mainly jump from a regular occupied site to a regular vacant site. The estimated D(Li) was smaller by roughly one order of magnitude than those for Li(x)CoO2 in the whole x range measured. Furthermore, by making comparison with D(Li) obtained by electrochemical measurements, the reactive surface area of the Li(x)(Co(1/3)Ni(1/3)Mn(1/3))O2 electrode in a liquid electrolyte was found to strongly depend on x particularly at x > 0.8.
- Published
- 2013
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46. Importance of spin-orbit interaction for the electron spin relaxation in organic semiconductors.
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Nuccio L, Willis M, Schulz L, Fratini S, Messina F, D'Amico M, Pratt FL, Lord JS, McKenzie I, Loth M, Purushothaman B, Anthony J, Heeney M, Wilson RM, Hernández I, Cannas M, Sedlak K, Kreouzis T, Gillin WP, Bernhard C, and Drew AJ
- Abstract
Despite the great interest organic spintronics has recently attracted, there is only a partial understanding of the fundamental physics behind electron spin relaxation in organic semiconductors. Mechanisms based on hyperfine interaction have been demonstrated, but the role of the spin-orbit interaction remains elusive. Here, we report muon spin spectroscopy and time-resolved photoluminescence measurements on two series of molecular semiconductors in which the strength of the spin-orbit interaction has been systematically modified with a targeted chemical substitution of different atoms at a particular molecular site. We find that the spin-orbit interaction is a significant source of electron spin relaxation in these materials.
- Published
- 2013
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47. Gapless spin liquid ground state in the S = 1/2 vanadium oxyfluoride kagome antiferromagnet [NH4]2[C7H14N][V7O6F18].
- Author
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Clark L, Orain JC, Bert F, De Vries MA, Aidoudi FH, Morris RE, Lightfoot P, Lord JS, Telling MT, Bonville P, Attfield JP, Mendels P, and Harrison A
- Abstract
The vanadium oxyfluoride [NH(4)](2)[C(7)H(14)N][V(7)O(6)F(18)] (DQVOF) is a geometrically frustrated magnetic bilayer material. The structure consists of S = 1/2 kagome planes of V(4+) d(1) ions with S = 1 V(3+) d(2) ions located between the kagome layers. Muon spin relaxation measurements demonstrate the absence of spin freezing down to 40 mK despite an energy scale of 60 K for antiferromagnetic exchange interactions. From magnetization and heat capacity measurements we conclude that the S = 1 spins of the interplane V(3+) ions are weakly coupled to the kagome layers, such that DQVOF can be viewed as an experimental model for S = 1/2 kagome physics, and that it displays a gapless spin liquid ground state.
- Published
- 2013
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48. Insight into lithium transport in lithium nitridometallate battery materials from muon spin relaxation.
- Author
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Powell AS, Stoeva Z, Lord JS, Smith RI, Gregory DH, and Titman JJ
- Abstract
Muon spin relaxation and powder neutron diffraction have been combined to study three lithium cobalt nitride battery materials. Neutron diffraction shows that these retain the P6/mmm space group of Li(3)N with Co located only on Li(1) sites. The lattice parameters vary smoothly with the degree of metal substitution, such that the [Li(2)N] layers expand while the layer separation contracts, as observed previously for similar series of Cu- and Ni-substituted materials. However, in contrast to the latter, the Li(3-x-y)Co(x)N phases exhibit Curie-Weiss paramagnetism and this prevents the use of nuclear magnetic resonance to measure Li(+) transport parameters. Therefore, muon spin relaxation has been employed here as an alternative technique to obtain quantitative information about Li(+) diffusion. Muon spin relaxation shows that Li(+) diffusion in Li(3-x-y)Co(x)N is anisotropic with transport confined to the [Li(2)N] plane at low temperature and exchange between Li(1) and Li(2) sites dominant at high temperature. By a comparison with previous studies some general trends have been established across a range of Cu-, Ni- and Co-substituted materials. For intra-layer diffusion E(a) decreases as metal substitution increases and the corresponding expansion of the layers results in a more open pathway for Li(+) diffusion. However, an optimal value of x is found with a ≈ 3.69 Å after which the concomitant contraction in layer spacing reduces the polarizability of the lattice framework.
- Published
- 2013
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49. Gastrointestinal helminths of pipistrelle bats (Pipistrellus pipistrellus/Pipistrellus pygmaeus) (Chiroptera: Vespertilionidae) of England.
- Author
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Lord JS, Parker S, Parker F, and Brooks DR
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Coinfection, England epidemiology, Female, Host-Parasite Interactions, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Population Dynamics, Prevalence, RNA, Helminth analysis, RNA, Ribosomal, 28S analysis, Trematoda genetics, Trematode Infections epidemiology, Trematode Infections parasitology, Chiroptera parasitology, Gastrointestinal Tract parasitology, Trematoda isolation & purification, Trematode Infections veterinary
- Abstract
Although bats are one of the most successful and diverse of mammalian orders, studies that focus upon bat endoparasites are limited. To further knowledge of bat parasitology, pipistrelle bats (Pipistrellus pipistrellus and P. pygmaeus) were acquired from across the Greater Manchester and Lancashire region of England and examined for gastrointestinal helminths using morphological and molecular analyses. Sixty-eight of 90 adult/juvenile bats (76% prevalence) were infected with at least 1 species of helminth and mean helminth abundance was 48·2 (+/-7·0). All helminths were digenean trematodes and the following species were identified in 51 P. pipistrellus specimens (prevalence in parentheses): Lecithodendrium linstowi (80·4%), L. spathulatum (19·6%), Prosthodendrium sp. (35·3%), Plagiorchis koreanus (29·4%) and Pycnoporus heteroporus (9·8%). Statistical analyses, incorporating multifactorial models, showed that male bats exhibited a significantly more aggregated helminth distribution and lower abundance than females. Positive associations were observed between L. linstowi and L. spathulatum, Prosthodendrium sp. and P. heteroporus and between L. spathulatum and P. koreanus. A revised phylogeny of bat-associated Lecithodendriidae, incorporating novel L. spathulatum and Prosthodendrium sp. 28S rRNA sequences, separated the controversial clade formed by L. linstowi and P. hurkovaae. Further studies are likely to assist the understanding of bat-parasite/pathogen relationships, helminth infracommunity structures and phylogenetics.
- Published
- 2012
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50. Muonium chemistry and spin dynamics in sulphur, modelling interstitial hydrogen.
- Author
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Cox SF, Lord JS, McKenzie I, Adjizian JJ, Heggie MI, Jayasooriya UA, Grinter R, and Reid ID
- Subjects
- Anisotropy, Biochemistry methods, Computer Simulation, Hydrogen Sulfide chemistry, Models, Statistical, Molecular Conformation, Semiconductors, Surface Properties, Temperature, Hydrogen chemistry, Mesons, Spectrophotometry methods
- Abstract
The nature of the elusive muonium centre in sulphur is re-examined in the light of new data on its level-crossing resonance and spin-lattice relaxation. The aim is to provide a model for the solid-state chemistry of interstitial hydrogen in this element, which is as yet unknown, as well as to solve one of the longest standing puzzles in μSR spectroscopy, namely the surprisingly strong depolarization of muons mimicking ion-implanted protons in this innocuous non-magnetic material. The paramagnetic muonium (and by inference hydrogen) centre is confirmed to have the character of a molecular radical, but with huge anisotropy at cryogenic temperatures and a striking shift of the resonance at ordinary temperatures, the hyperfine parameters appearing to collapse and vanish towards the melting point. New density-functional supercell calculations identify a number of possible structures for the defect centre, including a novel form of bond-centred muonium in a closed-ring S(8)Mu complex. Simulations of the spin dynamics and fits to the spectra suggest a dynamical equilibrium or chemical exchange between several configurations, with occupancy of the bond-centre site falling from unity at low cryogenic temperatures to zero near the melting point.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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