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Dive into the research topics where Adam Penn-Nicholson is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam Penn-Nicholson.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Comparing the ex vivo fitness of CCR5-tropic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 isolates of subtypes B and C.

Sarah C. Ball; Awet Abraha; Kalonji R. Collins; Andre J. Marozsan; Heather Baird; Miguel E. Quiñones-Mateu; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Michael Murray; Nathalie Richard; Michael A. Lobritz; Peter A. Zimmerman; Tatsuyoshi Kawamura; Andrew Blauvelt; Eric J. Arts

ABSTRACT Continual human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolution and expansion within the human population have led to unequal distribution of HIV-1 group M subtypes. In particular, recent outgrowth of subtype C in southern Africa, India, and China has fueled speculation that subtype C isolates may be more fit in vivo. In this study, nine subtype B and six subtype C HIV-1 isolates were added to peripheral blood mononuclear cell cultures for a complete pairwise competition experiment. All subtype C HIV-1 isolates were less fit than subtype B isolates (P < 0.0001), but intrasubtype variations in HIV-1 fitness were not significant. Increased fitness of subtype B over subtype C was also observed in primary CD4+ T cells and macrophages from different human donors but not in skin-derived human Langerhans cells. Detailed analysis of the retroviral life cycle during several B and C virus competitions indicated that the efficiency of host cell entry may have a significant impact on relative fitness. Furthermore, phyletic analyses of fitness differences suggested that, for a recombined subtype B/C HIV-1 isolate, higher fitness mapped to the subtype B env gene rather than the subtype C gag and pol genes. These results suggest that subtype B and C HIV-1 may be transmitted with equal efficiency (Langerhans cell data) but that subtype C isolates may be less fit following initial infection (T-cell and macrophage data) and may lead to slower disease progression.


The Lancet | 2016

A blood RNA signature for tuberculosis disease risk: a prospective cohort study

Adam Penn-Nicholson; Thomas J. Scriba; Ethan Thompson; Sara Suliman; Lynn M. Amon; Hassan Mahomed; Mzwandile Erasmus; Wendy Whatney; Gregory D. Hussey; Deborah Abrahams; Fazlin Kafaar; Tony Hawkridge; Suzanne Verver; E. Jane Hughes; Martin O. C. Ota; Jayne S. Sutherland; Rawleigh Howe; Hazel M. Dockrell; W. Henry Boom; Bonnie Thiel; Tom H. M. Ottenhoff; Harriet Mayanja-Kizza; Amelia C. Crampin; Katrina Downing; Mark Hatherill; Joe Valvo; Smitha Shankar; Shreemanta K. Parida; Stefan H. E. Kaufmann; Gerhard Walzl

BACKGROUND Identification of blood biomarkers that prospectively predict progression of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection to tuberculosis disease might lead to interventions that combat the tuberculosis epidemic. We aimed to assess whether global gene expression measured in whole blood of healthy people allowed identification of prospective signatures of risk of active tuberculosis disease. METHODS In this prospective cohort study, we followed up healthy, South African adolescents aged 12-18 years from the adolescent cohort study (ACS) who were infected with M tuberculosis for 2 years. We collected blood samples from study participants every 6 months and monitored the adolescents for progression to tuberculosis disease. A prospective signature of risk was derived from whole blood RNA sequencing data by comparing participants who developed active tuberculosis disease (progressors) with those who remained healthy (matched controls). After adaptation to multiplex quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR), the signature was used to predict tuberculosis disease in untouched adolescent samples and in samples from independent cohorts of South African and Gambian adult progressors and controls. Participants of the independent cohorts were household contacts of adults with active pulmonary tuberculosis disease. FINDINGS Between July 6, 2005, and April 23, 2007, we enrolled 6363 participants from the ACS study and 4466 from independent South African and Gambian cohorts. 46 progressors and 107 matched controls were identified in the ACS cohort. A 16 gene signature of risk was identified. The signature predicted tuberculosis progression with a sensitivity of 66·1% (95% CI 63·2-68·9) and a specificity of 80·6% (79·2-82·0) in the 12 months preceding tuberculosis diagnosis. The risk signature was validated in an untouched group of adolescents (p=0·018 for RNA sequencing and p=0·0095 for qRT-PCR) and in the independent South African and Gambian cohorts (p values <0·0001 by qRT-PCR) with a sensitivity of 53·7% (42·6-64·3) and a specificity of 82·8% (76·7-86) in the 12 months preceding tuberculosis. INTERPRETATION The whole blood tuberculosis risk signature prospectively identified people at risk of developing active tuberculosis, opening the possibility for targeted intervention to prevent the disease. FUNDING Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, Aeras, the European Union, and the South African Medical Research Council.Background Identification of blood biomarkers that prospectively predict progression of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection to tuberculosis disease may lead to interventions that impact the epidemic. Methods Healthy, M. tuberculosis infected South African adolescents were followed for 2 years; blood was collected every 6 months. A prospective signature of risk was derived from whole blood RNA-Sequencing data by comparing participants who ultimately developed active tuberculosis disease (progressors) with those who remained healthy (matched controls). After adaptation to multiplex qRT-PCR, the signature was used to predict tuberculosis disease in untouched adolescent samples and in samples from independent cohorts of South African and Gambian adult progressors and controls. The latter participants were household contacts of adults with active pulmonary tuberculosis disease. Findings Of 6,363 adolescents screened, 46 progressors and 107 matched controls were identified. A 16 gene signature of risk was identified. The signature predicted tuberculosis progression with a sensitivity of 66·1% (95% confidence interval, 63·2–68·9) and a specificity of 80·6% (79·2–82·0) in the 12 months preceding tuberculosis diagnosis. The risk signature was validated in an untouched group of adolescents (p=0·018 for RNA-Seq and p=0·0095 for qRT-PCR) and in the independent South African and Gambian cohorts (p values <0·0001 by qRT-PCR) with a sensitivity of 53·7% (42·6–64·3) and a specificity of 82·8% (76·7–86) in 12 months preceding tuberculosis. Interpretation The whole blood tuberculosis risk signature prospectively identified persons at risk of developing active tuberculosis, opening the possibility for targeted intervention to prevent the disease. Funding Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, Aeras, the European Union and the South African Medical Research Council (detail at end of text).


Nature Communications | 2016

T-cell activation is an immune correlate of risk in BCG vaccinated infants

Helen A. Fletcher; Margaret Ann Snowden; Bernard Landry; W Rida; Iman Satti; Stephanie A. Harris; Magali Matsumiya; Rachel Tanner; Matthew K. O'Shea; Dheenadhayalan; L Bogardus; Lisa Stockdale; Leanne Marsay; Agnieszka Chomka; Rachel Harrington-Kandt; Zita-Rose Manjaly-Thomas; Naranbhai; Elena Stylianou; Fatoumatta Darboe; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Elisa Nemes; M Hatheril; Gregory D. Hussey; Hassan Mahomed; M. Tameris; Jb McClain; Thomas G. Evans; Willem A. Hanekom; Tom Scriba; Helen McShane

Vaccines to protect against tuberculosis (TB) are urgently needed. We performed a case–control analysis to identify immune correlates of TB disease risk in Bacille Calmette–Guerin (BCG) immunized infants from the MVA85A efficacy trial. Among 53 TB case infants and 205 matched controls, the frequency of activated HLA-DR+ CD4+ T cells associates with increased TB disease risk (OR=1.828, 95% CI=1.25–2.68, P=0.002, FDR=0.04, conditional logistic regression). In an independent study of Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected adolescents, activated HLA-DR+ CD4+ T cells also associate with increased TB disease risk (OR=1.387, 95% CI=1.068–1.801, P=0.014, conditional logistic regression). In infants, BCG-specific T cells secreting IFN-γ associate with reduced risk of TB (OR=0.502, 95% CI=0.29–0.86, P=0.013, FDR=0.14). The causes and impact of T-cell activation on disease risk should be considered when designing and testing TB vaccine candidates for these populations.


Vaccine | 2011

A complex adenovirus vaccine against chikungunya virus provides complete protection against viraemia and arthritis.

Danher Wang; Andreas Suhrbier; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Jan Woraratanadharm; Joy Gardner; Min Luo; Thuy Le; Itaru Anraku; Michael Sakalian; David Einfeld; John Y. Dong

Chikungunya virus, a mosquito-borne alphavirus, recently caused the largest epidemic ever seen for this virus. Chikungunya disease primarily manifests as a painful and debilitating arthralgia/arthritis, and no effective drug or vaccine is currently available. Here we describe a recombinant chikungunya virus vaccine comprising a non-replicating complex adenovirus vector encoding the structural polyprotein cassette of chikungunya virus. A single immunisation with this vaccine consistently induced high titres of anti-chikungunya virus antibodies that neutralised both an old Asian isolate and a Réunion Island isolate from the recent epidemic. The vaccine also completely protected mice against viraemia and arthritic disease caused by both virus isolates.


Vaccine | 2015

Safety and immunogenicity of candidate vaccine M72/AS01E in adolescents in a TB endemic setting

Adam Penn-Nicholson; Hennie Geldenhuys; Wivine Burny; Robbert G. van der Most; Cheryl L. Day; Erik Jongert; Philippe Moris; Mark Hatherill; Opokua Ofori-Anyinam; Willem A. Hanekom; Anne Bollaerts; Marie-Ange Demoitié; Angelique Kany Kany Luabeya; Evi De Ruymaeker; Michele Tameris; Didier Lapierre; Thomas J. Scriba

Background Vaccination that prevents tuberculosis (TB) disease, particularly in adolescents, would have the greatest impact on the global TB epidemic. Safety, reactogenicity and immunogenicity of the vaccine candidate M72/AS01E was evaluated in healthy, HIV-negative adolescents in a TB endemic region, regardless of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M.tb) infection status. Methods In a phase II, double-blind randomized, controlled study (NCT00950612), two doses of M72/AS01E or placebo were administered intramuscularly, one month apart. Participants were followed-up post-vaccination, for 6 months. M72-specific immunogenicity was evaluated by intracellular cytokine staining analysis of T cells and NK cells by flow cytometry. Results No serious adverse events were recorded. M72/AS01E induced robust T cell and antibody responses, including antigen-dependent NK cell IFN-γ production. CD4 and CD8 T cell responses were sustained at 6 months post vaccination. Irrespective of M.tb infection status, vaccination induced a high frequency of M72-specific CD4 T cells expressing multiple combinations of Th1 cytokines, and low level IL-17. We observed rapid boosting of immune responses in M.tb-infected participants, suggesting natural infection acts as a prime to vaccination. Conclusions The clinically acceptable safety and immunogenicity profile of M72/AS01E in adolescents living in an area with high TB burden support the move to efficacy trials.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2009

A Complex Adenovirus-Vectored Vaccine against Rift Valley Fever Virus Protects Mice against Lethal Infection in the Presence of Preexisting Vector Immunity

David H. Holman; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Danher Wang; Jan Woraratanadharm; Mary-Katherine Harr; Min Luo; Ellen M. Maher; Michael R. Holbrook; John Y. Dong

ABSTRACT Rift Valley fever virus (RVFV) has been cited as a potential biological-weapon threat due to the serious and fatal disease it causes in humans and animals and the fact that this mosquito-borne virus can be lethal in an aerosolized form. Current human and veterinary vaccines against RVFV, however, are outdated, inefficient, and unsafe. We have incorporated the RVFV glycoprotein genes into a nonreplicating complex adenovirus (CAdVax) vector platform to develop a novel RVFV vaccine. Mice vaccinated with the CAdVax-based vaccine produced potent humoral immune responses and were protected against lethal RVFV infection. Additionally, protection was elicited in mice despite preexisting immunity to the adenovirus vector.


Virology | 2006

Identification of critical determinants on ACE2 for SARS-CoV entry and development of a potent entry inhibitor

Dong P. Han; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Michael W. Cho

Abstract Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) is caused by a novel coronavirus, SARS-CoV. Virus entry into cells is mediated through interactions between spike (S) glycoprotein and angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2). Alanine scanning mutagenesis analysis was performed to identify determinants on ACE2 critical for SARS-CoV infection. Results indicated that charged amino acids between residues 22 and 57 were important, K26 and D30, in particular. Peptides representing various regions of ACE2 critical for virus infection were chemically synthesized and evaluated for antiviral activity. Two peptides (a.a. 22–44 and 22–57) exhibited a modest antiviral activity with IC50 of about 50 μM and 6 μM, respectively. One peptide comprised of two discontinuous segments of ACE2 (a.a. 22–44 and 351–357) artificially linked together by glycine, exhibited a potent antiviral activity with IC50 of about 0.1 μM. This novel peptide is a promising candidate as a therapeutic agent against this deadly emerging pathogen.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2015

Qualification of a whole blood intracellular cytokine staining assay to measure mycobacteria-specific CD4 and CD8 T cell immunity by flow cytometry.

Benjamin M. Kagina; Nazma Mansoor; Eloi P. Kpamegan; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Elisa Nemes; Erica Smit; Sebastian Gelderbloem; Andreia Soares; Brian Abel; Alana Keyser; Mzwandile Sidibana; Jane Hughes; Gilla Kaplan; Gregory D. Hussey; Willem A. Hanekom; Thomas J. Scriba

BACKGROUND Qualified or validated assays are essential in clinical trials. Short-term stimulation of whole blood and intracellular cytokine staining assay is commonly used to measure immunogenicity in tuberculosis vaccine clinical trials. Previously, the short-term stimulation process of whole blood with BCG was optimized. We aimed to qualify the intracellular cytokine staining process and assess the effects of long-term cryopreservation. Our hypotheses were that the assay is robust in the measurement of the mycobacteria-specific T cells, and long-term cryopreservation of fixed cells from stimulated whole blood would not compromise reliable measurement of mycobacteria induced CD4 T cell immunity. METHODS Whole blood from healthy adults was collected in sodium heparinized tubes. The blood was left unstimulated or stimulated with mycobacterial antigens or mitogens for 12h. Cells were harvested, fixed and multiple aliquots from each participant cryopreserved. Later, mycobacteria-specific CD4 and CD8 T cells expressing IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-2 and IL-17 were quantitated by flow cytometry. Assay performance characteristics evaluated included limit of quantification and detection, reproducibility, precision, robustness, specificity and sensitivity. To assess the effects of long-term cryopreservation, fixed cells from the stimulated bloods were analysed one week post-cryopreservation and at 3-month intervals over a 3-year period. RESULTS The limit of quantification for the different cytokines was variable: 0.04% for frequencies of IFN-γ- and IL-2-expressing T cells and less than 0.01% for TNF-α- and IL-17-expressing T cells. When measurement of the mycobacteria-specific T cells was assessed at levels above the detection limit, the whole blood intracellular cytokine assay showed high precision that was operator-independent. The assay was also robust: variation in staining conditions including temperature (4 °C or 20-23 °C) and time (45, 60 or 90 min) did not markedly affect quantification of specific T cells. Finally, prolonged periods of cryopreservation also did not significantly influence quantification of mycobacteria-specific CD4 T cells. CONCLUSIONS The whole blood intracellular cytokine assay is robust and reliable in quantification of the mycobacteria-specific T cells and is not significantly affected by cryopreservation of fixed cells.


Virology | 2008

Assessment of antibody responses against gp41 in HIV-1-infected patients using soluble gp41 fusion proteins and peptides derived from M group consensus envelope

Adam Penn-Nicholson; Dong P. Han; Soon J. Kim; Hanna Park; Rais Ansari; David C. Montefiori; Michael W. Cho

Abstract Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) transmembrane glycoprotein gp41 is targeted by broadly-reactive neutralizing antibodies 2F5 and 4E10, making it an attractive target for vaccine development. To better assess immunogenic properties of gp41, we generated five soluble glutathione S-transferase fusion proteins encompassing C-terminal 30, 64, 100, 142, or 172 (full-length) amino acids of gp41 ectodomain from M group consensus envelope sequence. Antibody responses in HIV-1-infected patients were evaluated using these proteins and overlapping peptides. We found (i) antibody responses against different regions of gp41 varied tremendously among individual patients, (ii) patients with stronger antibody responses against membrane-proximal external region exhibit broader and more potent neutralizing activity, and (iii) several patients mounted antibodies against epitopes that are near, or overlap with, those targeted by 2F5 or 4E10. These soluble gp41 fusion proteins could be an important source of antigens for future vaccine development efforts.


PLOS Pathogens | 2017

Sequential inflammatory processes define human progression from M. tuberculosis infection to tuberculosis disease

Thomas J. Scriba; Adam Penn-Nicholson; Smitha Shankar; Tom Hraha; Ethan Thompson; David Sterling; Elisa Nemes; Fatoumatta Darboe; Sara Suliman; Lynn M. Amon; Hassan Mahomed; Mzwandile Erasmus; Wendy Whatney; John L. Johnson; W. Henry Boom; Mark Hatherill; Joe Valvo; Mary De Groote; Urs A. Ochsner; Alan Aderem; Willem A. Hanekom

Our understanding of mechanisms underlying progression from Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection to pulmonary tuberculosis disease in humans remains limited. To define such mechanisms, we followed M. tuberculosis-infected adolescents longitudinally. Blood samples from forty-four adolescents who ultimately developed tuberculosis disease (“progressors”) were compared with those from 106 matched controls, who remained healthy during two years of follow up. We performed longitudinal whole blood transcriptomic analyses by RNA sequencing and plasma proteome analyses using multiplexed slow off-rate modified DNA aptamers. Tuberculosis progression was associated with sequential modulation of immunological processes. Type I/II interferon signalling and complement cascade were elevated 18 months before tuberculosis disease diagnosis, while changes in myeloid inflammation, lymphoid, monocyte and neutrophil gene modules occurred more proximally to tuberculosis disease. Analysis of gene expression in purified T cells also revealed early suppression of Th17 responses in progressors, relative to M. tuberculosis-infected controls. This was confirmed in an independent adult cohort who received BCG re-vaccination; transcript expression of interferon response genes in blood prior to BCG administration was associated with suppression of IL-17 expression by BCG-specific CD4 T cells 3 weeks post-vaccination. Our findings provide a timeline to the different immunological stages of disease progression which comprise sequential inflammatory dynamics and immune alterations that precede disease manifestations and diagnosis of tuberculosis disease. These findings have important implications for developing diagnostics, vaccination and host-directed therapies for tuberculosis. Trial registration Clincialtrials.gov, NCT01119521

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Elisa Nemes

University of Cape Town

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Erica Smit

University of Cape Town

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