17 results on '"Sheila Keating"'
Search Results
2. Ethnicity, sex, and age are determinants of red blood cell storage and stress hemolysis: results of the REDS-III RBC-Omics study
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Tamir Kanias, Marion C. Lanteri, Grier P. Page, Yuelong Guo, Stacy M. Endres, Mars Stone, Sheila Keating, Alan E. Mast, Ritchard G. Cable, Darrell J. Triulzi, Joseph E. Kiss, Edward L. Murphy, Steve Kleinman, Michael P. Busch, and Mark T. Gladwin
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Specialties of internal medicine ,RC581-951 - Abstract
Abstract: Genetic polymorphisms in blood donors may contribute to donor-specific differences in the survival of red blood cells (RBCs) during cold storage and after transfusion. Genetic variability is anticipated to be high in donors with racial admixture from malaria endemic regions such as Africa and Asia. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that donor genetic background, reflected by sex and self-reported ethnicity, significantly modulates RBC phenotypes in storage. High throughput hemolysis assays were developed and used to evaluate stored RBC samples from 11 115 African American, Asian, white, and Hispanic blood donors from 4 geographically diverse regions in the United States. Leukocyte-reduced RBC concentrate-derived samples were stored for 39 to 42 days (1-6°C) and then evaluated for storage, osmotic, and oxidative hemolysis. Male sex was strongly associated with increased susceptibility to all 3 hemolysis measures (P < .0001). African American background was associated with resistance to osmotic hemolysis compared with other racial groups (adjusted P < .0001). Donor race/ethnicity was also associated with extreme (>1%) levels of storage hemolysis exceeding US Food and Drug Administration regulations for transfusion (hemolysis >1% was observed in 3.51% of Asian and 2.47% of African American donors vs 1.67% of white donors). These findings highlight the impact of donor genetic traits on measures of RBC hemolysis during routine cold storage, and they support current plans for genome-wide association studies, which may help identify hereditable variants with substantive effects on RBC storage stability and possibly posttransfusion outcomes.
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- 2017
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3. Neutralizing Monoclonal Antibodies Block Chikungunya Virus Entry and Release by Targeting an Epitope Critical to Viral Pathogenesis
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Jing Jin, Nathan M. Liss, Dong-Hua Chen, Maofu Liao, Julie M. Fox, Raeann M. Shimak, Rachel H. Fong, Daniel Chafets, Sonia Bakkour, Sheila Keating, Marina E. Fomin, Marcus O. Muench, Michael B. Sherman, Benjamin J. Doranz, Michael S. Diamond, and Graham Simmons
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Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
We evaluated the mechanism by which neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies inhibit chikungunya virus (CHIKV) infection. Potently neutralizing antibodies (NAbs) blocked infection at multiple steps of the virus life cycle, including entry and release. Cryo-electron microscopy structures of Fab fragments of two human NAbs and chikungunya virus-like particles showed a binding footprint that spanned independent domains on neighboring E2 subunits within one viral spike, suggesting a mechanism for inhibiting low-pH-dependent membrane fusion. Detailed epitope mapping identified amino acid E2-W64 as a critical interaction residue. An escape mutation (E2-W64G) at this residue rendered CHIKV attenuated in mice. Consistent with these data, CHIKV-E2-W64G failed to emerge in vivo under the selection pressure of one of the NAbs, IM-CKV063. As our study suggests that antibodies engaging the residue E2-W64 can potently inhibit CHIKV at multiple stages of infection, antibody-based therapies or immunogens that target this region might have protective value.
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- 2015
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4. The infection staging and profile of genotypic distribution and drug resistance mutation among the human immunodeficiency virus-1 infected blood donors from five Chinese blood centers, 2012-2014.
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Peibin Zeng, Yu Liu, Miao He, Jingxing Wang, Sheila Keating, Wei Mao, Mei Huang, Hongli Ma, Weilan He, Xinhong Bi, Dan Liao, Michael Busch, Paul Ness, Jing Liu, Hua Shan, and NHLBI Recipient Epidemiology and Donor Evaluation Study-III program
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The increasing complexity and diversity of the human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infections challenge the disease control and anti-retrovirus treatment in China. The infection stages and molecular characteristics of HIV-1 from infected Chinese blood donors were examined to shed light on the HIV genotype distribution and the status of drug resistance mutations (DRMs) in the changing HIV epidemic in China. Western blot (WB) confirmed HIV-1 positive plasma samples were collected from blood donors at five Chinese blood centers from April 16, 2012, through June 30, 2014. The HIV infection stages were determined using the Lag-avidity assay. HIV Pol regions including whole protease and partial reverse transcriptase (RT) were amplified and sequenced to establish the profile of genotype distribution and drug resistance mutations (DRMs). Viral loads were determined using the ROCHE COBAS system. Of the 259 HIV-1 positive samples tested by the Lag-avidity assay, 23.6% (61/259) were identified as recent infections. A total of 205 amplified sequences displayed the following genotype distributions: circulating recombinant form (CRF) 07_BC (61.5%), CRF08_BC (8.3%), CRF01_AE (20%), B (6.3%), and 01B (3.9%). There was no significant difference in genotype distribution between recent and long-term infections. 31 DRMs were identified from 27 samples including four protease inhibitors (PIs) accessory DRMs, two PIs major DRMs (M46I), two nucleoside RT inhibitors DRMs (K219R and K70Q), and 23 nonnucleoside RT inhibitors DRMs. 27 samples had DRMs, yielding a drug resistance prevalence of 13.2% (27/205). Our findings provide important information for developing strategies for comprehensive HIV control and improving anti-retroviral treatment in China.
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- 2017
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5. Human Galectin-9 Is a Potent Mediator of HIV Transcription and Reactivation.
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Mohamed Abdel-Mohsen, Leonard Chavez, Ravi Tandon, Glen M Chew, Xutao Deng, Ali Danesh, Sheila Keating, Marion Lanteri, Michael L Samuels, Rebecca Hoh, Jonah B Sacha, Philip J Norris, Toshiro Niki, Cecilia M Shikuma, Mitsuomi Hirashima, Steven G Deeks, Lishomwa C Ndhlovu, and Satish K Pillai
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Identifying host immune determinants governing HIV transcription, latency and infectivity in vivo is critical to developing an HIV cure. Based on our recent finding that the host factor p21 regulates HIV transcription during antiretroviral therapy (ART), and published data demonstrating that the human carbohydrate-binding immunomodulatory protein galectin-9 regulates p21, we hypothesized that galectin-9 modulates HIV transcription. We report that the administration of a recombinant, stable form of galectin-9 (rGal-9) potently reverses HIV latency in vitro in the J-Lat HIV latency model. Furthermore, rGal-9 reverses HIV latency ex vivo in primary CD4+ T cells from HIV-infected, ART-suppressed individuals (p = 0.002), more potently than vorinostat (p = 0.02). rGal-9 co-administration with the latency reversal agent "JQ1", a bromodomain inhibitor, exhibits synergistic activity (p
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- 2016
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6. Extensive Genetic Diversity of HIV-1 in Incident and Prevalent Infections among Malaysian Blood Donors: Multiple Introductions of HIV-1 Genotypes from Highly Prevalent Countries.
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Wei Zhen Chow, Abdul Hamid Bon, Sheila Keating, Fread Anderios, Hazwan Abdul Halim, Yutaka Takebe, Adeeba Kamarulzaman, Michael P Busch, and Kok Keng Tee
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Transfusion-transmissible infections including HIV-1 continue to pose major risks for unsafe blood transfusions due to both window phase infections and divergent viruses that may not be detected by donor screening assays. Given the recent emergence of several HIV-1 circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) in high-risk populations in the Southeast Asia region, we investigated the genetic diversity of HIV-1 among the blood donors in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. A total of 211 HIV-positive plasma samples detected among 730,188 donations to the National Blood Centre between 2013 and 2014 were provided (90.5% male, median age: 27.0 years old). Recent or long-term infection status at the time of donation was determined using a limiting antigen avidity enzyme immunoassay (LAg-Avidity EIA). HIV-1 gag-pol genes were amplified and sequenced from residual plasma for 149 cases followed by genotype determination using phylogenetic and recombination analyses. Transmitted antiretroviral resistance mutations were not observed among the blood donors, among which 22.7% were classified as recent or incident infections. Major circulating HIV-1 genotypes determined by neighbour-joining phylogenetic inference included CRF01_AE at 40.9% (61/149), CRF33_01B at 21.5% (32/149), and subtype B at 10.1% (15/149). Newly-described CRFs including CRF54_01B circulated at 4.0%, CRF74_01B at 2.0%, and CRF53_01B and CRF48_01B at 0.7% each. Interestingly, unique HIV-1 genotypes including African subtype G (8.7%), CRF45_cpx (1.3%), CRF02_AG (0.7%) and CRF07_BC (0.7%) from China were detected for the first time in the country. A cluster of subtype G sequences formed a distinct founder sub-lineage within the African strains. In addition, 8.7% (13/149) of HIV-infected donors had unique recombinant forms (URFs) including CRF01_AE/B' (4.7%), B'/C (2.7%) and B'/G (1.3%) recombinants. Detailed analysis identified similar recombinant structures with shared parental strains among the B'/C and B'/G URFs, some of which were sequenced from recently infected individuals, indicating the possible emergence and on-going spread of foreign clades of CRF candidates among the local population. The findings demonstrate extensive molecular complexity of HIV-1 among the infected blood donors in Malaysia, driven in part by the increased spread of recently described CRFs and multiple introductions of previously unreported genotypes from highly prevalent countries.
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- 2016
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7. Performance of rapid point-of-care and laboratory tests for acute and established HIV infection in San Francisco.
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Christopher D Pilcher, Brian Louie, Shelley Facente, Sheila Keating, John Hackett, Ana Vallari, Chris Hall, Teri Dowling, Michael P Busch, Jeffrey D Klausner, Frederick M Hecht, Sally Liska, and Mark W Pandori
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundCurrent laboratory and point-of-care tests for HIV detect different analytes and use different sample types. Some have fast turnaround times (MethodsWe analyzed 21,234 consecutive HIV tests with venous blood obtained by San Francisco HIV testing programs from 2003 to 2008. For a subset, oral fluid (n = 6446) or fingerstick blood (n = 8127) samples were also obtained for rapid testing. In all cases, HIV status was determined using an HIV antibody-plus-RNA test algorithm. We assessed how the screening antibody tests performed individually versus the gold standard of the full algorithm. We then evaluated the potential ability of other tests (including new tests) to detect more cases, by re-testing all specimens that had negative/discrepant antibody results on initial screening.FindingsThe antibody-RNA algorithm identified 58 acute and 703 established HIV infection cases. 1(st)-generation (Vironostika) and 3(rd)-generation (Genetic Systems) immunoassays had 92 and 96 percent sensitivity, respectively. The Oraquick rapid test had clinical sensitivity of only 86 percent on oral fluid samples, but 92 percent on finger-stick blood. Newer 4(th)-generation, antigen-antibody combo rapid immunoassay (ARCHITECT) detected HIV in 87 percent of all the acute cases that had been missed by one of the previous screening assays. A point-of-care 4(th) generation antigen-antibody combo rapid test (Determine) detected about 54 percent of such acute cases.ConclusionsOur study suggests that some rapid antibody blood tests will give similar case detection to laboratory antibody tests, but that oral fluid testing greatly reduces ability to detect HIV. New 4(th)-generation combo tests can detect the majority of acute infections detectable by HIV RNA but with rapid results. Using these tests as a primary screening assay in high-risk HIV testing programs could reduce or eliminate the need for HIV RNA testing.
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- 2013
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8. Inter-laboratory assessment of a prototype multiplex kit for determination of recent HIV-1 infection.
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Kelly A Curtis, Andrew F Longosz, M Susan Kennedy, Sheila Keating, John Heitman, Oliver Laeyendecker, and S Michele Owen
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Accurate and reliable laboratory-based assays are needed for estimating HIV-1 incidence from cross-sectional samples. We recently described the development of a customized, HIV-1-specific Bio-Plex assay that allows for the measurement of HIV-specific antibody levels and avidity to multiple analytes for improved HIV-1 incidence estimates. METHODS:To assess intra- and inter-laboratory assay performance, prototype multiplex kits were developed and evaluated by three distinct laboratories. Longitudinal seroconversion specimens were tested in parallel by each laboratory and kit performance was compared to that of an in-house assay. Additionally, the ability of the kit to distinguish recent from long-term HIV-1 infection, as compared to the in-house assay, was determined by comparing the reactivity of known recent (infected 12 months) drug naïve specimens. RESULTS:Although the range of reactivity for each analyte varied between the prototype kit and in-house assay, a measurable distinction in reactivity between recent and long-term specimens was observed with both assays in all three laboratories. Additionally, kit performance was consistent between all three laboratories. The intra-assay coefficient of variation (CV), between sample replicates for all laboratories, ranged from 0.5% to 6.1%. The inter-laboratory CVs ranged from 8.5% to 21.3% for gp160-avidity index (a) and gp120-normalized mean fluorescent intensity (MFI) value (n), respectively. CONCLUSION:We demonstrate the feasibility of producing a multiplex kit for measuring HIV antibody levels and avidity, with the potential for improved incidence estimates based on multi-analyte algorithms. The availability of a commercial kit will facilitate the transfer of technology among diverse laboratories for widespread assay use.
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- 2013
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9. Challenges in detecting HIV persistence during potentially curative interventions: a study of the Berlin patient.
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Steven A Yukl, Eli Boritz, Michael Busch, Christopher Bentsen, Tae-Wook Chun, Daniel Douek, Evelyn Eisele, Ashley Haase, Ya-Chi Ho, Gero Hütter, J Shawn Justement, Sheila Keating, Tzong-Hae Lee, Peilin Li, Danielle Murray, Sarah Palmer, Christopher Pilcher, Satish Pillai, Richard W Price, Meghan Rothenberger, Timothy Schacker, Janet Siliciano, Robert Siliciano, Elizabeth Sinclair, Matt Strain, Joseph Wong, Douglas Richman, and Steven G Deeks
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
There is intense interest in developing curative interventions for HIV. How such a cure will be quantified and defined is not known. We applied a series of measurements of HIV persistence to the study of an HIV-infected adult who has exhibited evidence of cure after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant from a homozygous CCR5Δ32 donor. Samples from blood, spinal fluid, lymph node, and gut were analyzed in multiple laboratories using different approaches. No HIV DNA or RNA was detected in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), spinal fluid, lymph node, or terminal ileum, and no replication-competent virus could be cultured from PBMCs. However, HIV RNA was detected in plasma (2 laboratories) and HIV DNA was detected in the rectum (1 laboratory) at levels considerably lower than those expected in ART-suppressed patients. It was not possible to obtain sequence data from plasma or gut, while an X4 sequence from PBMC did not match the pre-transplant sequence. HIV antibody levels were readily detectable but declined over time; T cell responses were largely absent. The occasional, low-level PCR signals raise the possibility that some HIV nucleic acid might persist, although they could also be false positives. Since HIV levels in well-treated individuals are near the limits of detection of current assays, more sensitive assays need to be developed and validated. The absence of recrudescent HIV replication and waning HIV-specific immune responses five years after withdrawal of treatment provide proof of a clinical cure.
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- 2013
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10. A randomised, double-blind, controlled vaccine efficacy trial of DNA/MVA ME-TRAP against malaria infection in Gambian adults.
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Vasee S Moorthy, Egeruan B Imoukhuede, Paul Milligan, Kalifa Bojang, Sheila Keating, Pauline Kaye, Margaret Pinder, Sarah C Gilbert, Gijs Walraven, Brian M Greenwood, and Adrian S V Hill
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Medicine - Abstract
Many malaria vaccines are currently in development, although very few have been evaluated for efficacy in the field. Plasmodium falciparum multiple epitope (ME)- thrombospondin-related adhesion protein (TRAP) candidate vaccines are designed to potently induce effector T cells and so are a departure from earlier malaria vaccines evaluated in the field in terms of their mechanism of action. ME-TRAP vaccines encode a polyepitope string and the TRAP sporozoite antigen. Two vaccine vectors encoding ME-TRAP, plasmid DNA and modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA), when used sequentially in a prime-boost immunisation regime, induce high frequencies of effector T cells and partial protection, manifest as delay in time to parasitaemia, in a clinical challenge model.A total of 372 Gambian men aged 15-45 y were randomised to receive either DNA ME-TRAP followed by MVA ME-TRAP or rabies vaccine (control). Of these men, 296 received three doses of vaccine timed to coincide with the beginning of the transmission season (141 in the DNA/MVA group and 155 in the rabies group) and were followed up. Volunteers were given sulphadoxine/pyrimethamine 2 wk before the final vaccination. Blood smears were collected weekly for 11 wk and whenever a volunteer developed symptoms compatible with malaria during the transmission season. The primary endpoint was time to first infection with asexual P. falciparum. Analysis was per protocol. DNA ME-TRAP and MVA ME-TRAP were safe and well-tolerated. Effector T cell responses to a non-vaccine strain of TRAP were 50-fold higher postvaccination in the malaria vaccine group than in the rabies vaccine group. Vaccine efficacy, adjusted for confounding factors, was 10.3% (95% confidence interval, -22% to +34%; p = 0.49). Incidence of malaria infection decreased with increasing age and was associated with ethnicity.DNA/MVA heterologous prime-boost vaccination is safe and highly immunogenic for effector T cell induction in a malaria-endemic area. But despite having produced a substantial reduction in liver-stage parasites in challenge studies of non-immune volunteers, this first generation T cell-inducing vaccine was ineffective at reducing the natural infection rate in semi-immune African adults.
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- 2004
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11. Adiposity and depressive symptoms in women with and without HIV infection. The Women’s Interagency HIV Study
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Jeremy Weedon, Susan Holman, Howard Minkoff, Deborah Gustafson, Sheila Keating, and Anna Y. Groysman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Waist ,business.industry ,Adipokine ,Women's Interagency HIV Study ,Overweight ,Anthropometry ,Logistic regression ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Depression is a common neuropsychiatric disorder in women, particularly among women with HIV infection. The association of adiposity with depressive symptoms in adult women is unclear. We evaluated the cross-sectional association of depressive symptoms measured using the Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression scale (CES-D) score, with anthropometric (body mass index, waist-to-hip ratio and waist circumference) and metabolic (adipokines: leptin, total adiponectin, and high molecular weight adiponectin) adiposity measures. This was accomplished in HIV-infected or at-risk HIV-uninfected participants at the Brooklyn, New York site of the Women’s Interagency HIV Study. Participants (250 HIV+, 107 HIV-; average age 38.9 years), with measured levels of leptin and adiponectins were included. Adiposity measures were considered as continuous and categorical variables. A clinically relevant depressive symptom burden was defined as CES-D > 16. Spearman correlations, T-tests, multivariable linear and logistic regression models, and Receiver Operating Characteristic tests were used. Neither anthropometric nor metabolic adiposity measures were associated with depressive symptoms in this sample. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the association between depressive symptoms and anthropometric and metabolic adiposity measures in HIV-infected or HIV-uninfected women. Despite null findings, these results contribute to our understanding of adiposity-associated risk related to neuropsychiatric outcomes in at risk women.
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- 2018
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12. Computational analysis of antibody dynamics identifies recent HIV-1 infection
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Kelly E, Seaton, Nathan A, Vandergrift, Aaron W, Deal, Wes, Rountree, John, Bainbridge, Eduard, Grebe, David A, Anderson, Sheetal, Sawant, Xiaoying, Shen, Nicole L, Yates, Thomas N, Denny, Hua-Xin, Liao, Barton F, Haynes, Merlin L, Robb, Neil, Parkin, Breno R, Santos, Nigel, Garrett, Matthew A, Price, Denise, Naniche, Ann C, Duerr, Sheila, Keating, Dylan, Hampton, Shelley, Facente, Kara, Marson, Alex, Welte, Christopher D, Pilcher, Myron S, Cohen, and Georgia D, Tomaras
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Time Factors ,HIV Antigens ,Incidence ,Antibody Affinity ,Computational Biology ,HIV Infections ,HIV Antibodies ,Antigen-Antibody Reactions ,Technical Advance ,Immunoglobulin G ,HIV-1 ,Humans ,Biomarkers ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Accurate HIV-1 incidence estimation is critical to the success of HIV-1 prevention strategies. Current assays are limited by high false recent rates (FRRs) in certain populations and a short mean duration of recent infection (MDRI). Dynamic early HIV-1 antibody response kinetics were harnessed to identify biomarkers for improved incidence assays. We conducted retrospective analyses on circulating antibodies from known recent and longstanding infections and evaluated binding and avidity measurements of Env and non-Env antigens and multiple antibody forms (i.e., IgG, IgA, IgG3, IgG4, dIgA, and IgM) in a diverse panel of 164 HIV-1–infected participants (clades A, B, C). Discriminant function analysis identified an optimal set of measurements that were subsequently evaluated in a 324-specimen blinded biomarker validation panel. These biomarkers included clade C gp140 IgG3, transmitted/founder clade C gp140 IgG4 avidity, clade B gp140 IgG4 avidity, and gp41 immunodominant region IgG avidity. MDRI was estimated at 215 day or alternatively, 267 days. FRRs in untreated and treated subjects were 5.0% and 3.6%, respectively. Thus, computational analysis of dynamic HIV-1 antibody isotype and antigen interactions during infection enabled design of a promising HIV-1 recency assay for improved cross-sectional incidence estimation.
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- 2017
13. Differentiating pulmonary transfusion reactions using recipient and transfusion factors
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Nareg H, Roubinian, Mark R, Looney, Sheila, Keating, Daryl J, Kor, Clifford A, Lowell, Ognjen, Gajic, Rolf, Hubmayr, Michael, Gropper, Monique, Koenigsberg, Gregory A, Wilson, Michael, A Matthay, Pearl, Toy, and Edward L, Murphy
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Adult ,Male ,Logistic Models ,Acute Lung Injury ,Natriuretic Peptide, Brain ,Humans ,Transfusion Reaction ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Article ,Aged - Abstract
It is increasingly recognized that recipient risk factors play a prominent role in possible transfusion-related acute lung injury (pTRALI) and transfusion-associated circulatory overload (TACO). We hypothesized that both transfusion and recipient factors including natriuretic peptides could be used to distinguish TRALI from TACO and pTRALI.We performed a post hoc analysis of a case-control study of pulmonary transfusion reactions conducted at the University of California at San Francisco and Mayo Clinic, Rochester. We evaluated clinical data and brain natriuretic peptides (BNP) levels drawn after transfusion in patients with TRALI (n = 21), pTRALI (n = 26), TACO (n = 22), and controls (n = 24). Logistic regression and receiver operating characteristics curve analyses were used to determine the accuracy of clinical and biomarker predictors in differentiating TRALI from TACO and pTRALI.We found that pTRALI and TACO were associated with older age, higher fluid balance, and elevated BNP levels relative to those of controls and TRALI. The following variables were useful in distinguishing cases of pTRALI and TACO from TRALI: age more than 70 years, BNP levels more than 1000 pg/mL, 24-hour fluid balance of more than 3 L, and a lower number of transfused blood components. Using the above variables, our logistic model had a 91% negative predictive value in the differential diagnosis of TRALI.Models incorporating readily available clinical and biomarker data can be used to differentiate transfusion-related respiratory complications. Additional studies examining recipient risk factors and the likelihood of TRALI may be useful in decision making regarding donor white blood cell antibody testing.
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- 2016
14. The effects of 22°C and 4°C storage of platelets on vascular endothelial integrity and function
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Gyulnar, Baimukanova, Byron, Miyazawa, Daniel R, Potter, Stuart L, Gibb, Sheila, Keating, Ali, Danesh, Ashley, Beyer, Yelena, Dayter, Roberta, Bruhn, Marcus O, Muench, Andrew P, Cap, Philip J, Norris, Philip, Spinella, Mitchell, Cohen, and Shibani, Pati
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Blood Platelets ,Male ,Hot Temperature ,Time Factors ,Mice, SCID ,Capillary Permeability ,Cold Temperature ,Mice ,Blood Preservation ,Mice, Inbred NOD ,Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells ,Animals ,Humans ,Female ,Endothelium, Vascular - Abstract
Although a majority of the studies conducted to date on platelet (PLT) storage have been focused on PLT hemostatic function, the effects of 4°C PLTs on regulation of endothelial barrier permeability are still not known. In this study, we compared the effects of room temperature (22°C) stored and (4°C) stored PLTs on the regulation of vascular endothelial cell (EC) permeability in vitro and in vivo.Day 1, Day 5, and Day 7 leukoreduced apheresis PLTs stored at 4 or 22°C were studied in vitro and in vivo. In vitro, PLT effects on EC permeability and barrier function, adhesion, and impedance aggregometry were investigated. In vivo, using a mouse model of vascular leak, attenuation of vascular leak and circulating PLT numbers were measured.Treatment of EC monolayers with Day 5 or Day 7 PLTs, stored at both 22°C and 4°C, resulted in similar decreases in EC permeability on average. However, analysis of individual samples revealed significant variation that was donor dependent. Additional in vitro measurements revealed a decrease in inflammatory mediators, nonspecific PLT-endothelial aggregation and attenuated loss of aggregation over time to TRAP, ASPI, ADP, and collagen with 4°C storage. In mice, while 22°C and 4°C PLTs both demonstrated significant protection against vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A)-induced vascular leak 22°C PLTs exhibited increased protection compared to 4°C PLTs. Systemic circulating levels of 4°C PLTs were decreased compared to 22°C PLTs.In vitro, 4°C-stored PLTs exhibit a greater capacity to inhibit EC permeability than 22°C-stored PLTs. In vivo, 22°C PLTs provide superior control of vascular leak induced by VEGF-A. This discrepancy may be due to increased clearance of 4°C PLTs from the systemic circulation.
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- 2016
15. Evaluation of a new feeding formula for sugar malabsorption
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Sheila Keating, John A. Walker-Smith, and Heather Paterson
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Diarrhea ,Malabsorption ,Hypokalemia ,Fructose ,Fats ,Malabsorption Syndromes ,medicine ,Humans ,Food science ,Sugar ,Child ,Food, Formulated ,business.industry ,Sodium ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Proteins ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Hypoglycemia ,Glucose ,Food ,Child, Preschool ,Potassium ,Carbohydrate Metabolism ,business ,Diet Therapy ,Follow-Up Studies - Published
- 1973
16. The induction and persistence of T cell IFN-γ responses after vaccination or natural exposure is suppressed by Plasmodium falciparum
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Bejon, P., Mwacharo, J., Kai, O., Todryk, S., Sheila Keating, Lowe, B., Lang, T., Mwangi, T. W., Gilbert, S. C., Peshu, N., Marsh, K., and Hill, A. V. S.
17. Erratum: Recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara expressing antigen 85A boosts BCG-primed and naturally acquired antimycobacterial immunity in humans (Nature Medicine (2004) 10 (1240-1244))
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Mcshane, H., Pathan, A. A., Sander, C. R., Sheila Keating, Gilbert, S. C., Huygen, K., Fletcher, H. A., and Hill, A. V. S.
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