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Featured researches published by Barbara J. Harris.


Journal of Virology | 2011

Confirmation of Putative HIV-1 Group P in Cameroon

Ana Vallari; Vera Holzmayer; Barbara J. Harris; Julie Yamaguchi; Charlotte Ngansop; Florence Makamche; Dora Mbanya; Lazare Kaptue; Nicaise Ndembi; Lutz Gürtler; Sushil G. Devare; Catherine A. Brennan

ABSTRACT We report the second human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) belonging to the new HIV type 1 (HIV-1) group P lineage that is closely related to the simian immunodeficiency virus found in gorillas. This virus was identified in an HIV-seropositive male hospital patient in Cameroon, confirming that the group P virus is circulating in humans. Results from screening 1,736 HIV-seropositive specimens collected in Cameroon indicate that HIV-1 group P infections are rare, accounting for only 0.06% of HIV infections. Despite its rarity, group P shows evidence of adaptation to humans.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2008

The prevalence of diverse HIV-1 strains was stable in Cameroonian blood donors from 1996 to 2004.

Catherine A. Brennan; Pierre Bodelle; Ruthie Coffey; Sushil G. Devare; Alan M. Golden; John Hackett; Barbara J. Harris; Vera Holzmayer; Ka-Cheung Luk; Gerald Schochetman; Priscilla Swanson; Julie Yamaguchi; Ana Vallari; Nicaise Ndembi; Charlotte Ngansop; Florence Makamche; Dora Mbanya; Lutz Gürtler; Leopold Zekeng; Lazare Kaptue

Objective:The HIV epidemic in Cameroon is characterized by a high level of strain diversity despite a relatively low prevalence of infection. In this study, HIV strains infecting blood donors in Cameroon were characterized to determine the prevalence of subtypes and intersubtype recombinants and if strain prevalence was changing over time. Methods:From 1996 through 2004, 676 HIV-infected blood donations were collected at blood banks in Douala and Yaoundé, Cameroon. A subset of the HIV-1 group M strains (n = 574) were classified based on phylogenetic analysis of viral sequences from the gag p24, pol integrase, and env gp41 regions. Results:HIV-1 group M accounted for 97.3% (n = 658) of infections, whereas group O was present in 2.2% (n = 15) and HIV-2 in 0.4% (n = 3). Within the group M infections, 14 subtypes and circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) and unique recombinant forms (URFs) were identified. Overall, CRF02_AG accounted for 58.2% of infections, URFs 14.8%, and levels of subtypes, A, B, C, D, F2, and G, and CRFs, 01, 06, 09, 11, 13, 22, and 37, varied from 0.2% to 6.1%. Evaluation of HIV strains present in the donor population over this 9-year period showed no substantial changes in the proportion of infections caused by each subtype and CRF, the percentage of intersubtype recombinants, or the strain composition of the URFs. Conclusions:HIV-1 strain diversity in Cameroon did not significantly change, suggesting a mature and relatively stable epidemic.


Journal of Virological Methods | 2000

Quantification of HIV-1 group M (subtypes A-G) and group O by the LCx HIV RNA quantitative assay.

Priscilla Swanson; Barbara J. Harris; Vera Holzmayer; Sushil G. Devare; Gerald Schochetman; John Hackett

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) genetic diversity presents a challenge to nucleic acid-based assays with regard to sensitivity of detection and accuracy of quantification. The Abbott LCx HIV RNA Quantitative assay (LCx(R) HIV assay), a competitive RT-PCR targeting the pol integrase region, was evaluated using a panel of 297 HIV-1 seropositive plasma samples from Cameroon, Uganda, Brazil, Thailand, Spain, Argentina and South Africa. The panel included group M subtypes A-G, mosaics, and group O based on sequence analysis of gag p24, pol integrase, and env gp41. The LCx HIV assay quantified 290 (97.6%) of the samples, including all the group O samples tested. In comparison, the Roche AMPLICOR HIV-1 MONITOR test versions 1.0 and 1.5 quantified 67.3 and 94.6% of the samples, respectively. No group O specimens were quantified by either version of AMPLICOR HIV-1 MONITOR. Seven specimens were below the detectable limits of all the three assays. The LCx HIV assay had fewer nucleotide mismatches at primer/probe binding sites as compared with both AMPLICOR HIV-1 MONITOR tests. The high degree of nucleotide conservation within the pol target region enables the LCx HIV assay to efficiently quantify the HIV-1 subtypes A-G and the most genetically diverse HIV-1, group O.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Hepatitis B genotypes and surface antigen mutants present in Pakistani blood donors

Barbara J. Harris; Vera Holzmayer; Huma Qureshi; Mohammad Ayyub Khan; Saleem Ahmed Khan; Nuzhat Salamat; Sarfaraz Jafri; Catherine A. Brennan

Background The prevalence of chronic Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) infection is 2–4% in the Pakistani population, defining Pakistan as an intermediate prevalence country. In this study, hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) reactive blood donations were screened using a combination of serological and molecular methods to identify immune escape HBV mutant strains and to determine the HBV genotypes and subtypes present in Pakistan. Methods Blood donations were collected at the Armed Forces Institute of Transfusion (AFIT) located in northern Pakistan and the Hussaini Blood Bank (HBB) located in the south. From 2009 to 2013 a total of 706,575 donations were screened with 2.04% (14,409) HBsAg reactive. A total of 2055 HBsAg reactive specimens, were collected and screened using a monoclonal antibody based research assay to identify immune escape mutants followed by PCR amplification and DNA sequencing to identify the mutation present. DNA sequences obtained from 192 specimens, including mutant candidates and wild type strains, were analyzed for escape mutations, genotype, and HBsAg subtype. Results Mutations were identified in approximately 14% of HBsAg reactive donations. Mutations at HBsAg amino acid positions 143–145 are the most common (46%) with the mutation serine 143 to leucine the most frequently occurring change (28%). While regional differences were observed, the most prevalent HBV strains are subgenotypes of D with subgenotype D1/subtype ayw2 accounting for the majority of infections; 90.2% at AFIT and 52.5% at HBB. Conclusions The high frequency of immune escape HBV mutants in HBV infected Pakistani blood donors highlights the need for more studies into the prevalence of escape mutants. Differences between vaccinated and unvaccinated populations, the correlation of escape mutant frequency with genotype, and impact of escape mutations in different genotype backgrounds on the performance of commercially available HBsAg assays represent avenues for further investigation.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2006

HIV global surveillance: Foundation for retroviral discovery and assay development

Catherine A. Brennan; Pierre Bodelle; Ruthie Coffey; Barbara J. Harris; Vera Holzmayer; Ka-Cheung Luk; Priscilla Swanson; Julie Yamaguchi; Ana Vallari; Sushil G. Devare; Gerald Schochetman; John Hackett


Archive | 2002

Amplification and detection reagents for hiv-1

Barbara J. Harris; John R. Hackett; Priscilla Swanson; Klara Abravaya; Sushil G. Devare; Jacek J. Gorzowski; Claudia Esping; Ning Tang


Journal of Medical Virology | 2006

The first B/G intersubtype recombinant form of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV‐1) identified in Germany was undetected or underquantitated by some commercial viral load assays

Inge von Truchsess; Barbara J. Harris; Hermann M. Schätzl; John Hackett


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2005

Genomic Characterization of a Novel HIV Type 1 B/G Intersubtype Recombinant Strain from an Injecting Drug User in Germany

Barbara J. Harris; Inge von Truchsess; Hermann M. Schätzl; Sushil G. Devare; John Hackett


AIDS Research and Human Retroviruses | 2017

ARCHITECT HIV Combo Ag/Ab® and RealTime® HIV-1 assays detect diverse HIV strains in clinical specimens

Mary A Rodgers; Ana Vallari; Julie Yamaguchi; Vera Holzmayer; Barbara J. Harris; Coumba Toure-Kane; Souleymane Mboup; Samar Badreddine; Carole P. McArthur; Nicaise Ndembi; Dora Mbanya; Lazare Kaptue; Gavin Cloherty


Archive | 2002

Amplifikation und Detektion von Reagenzien für HIV-1

Barbara J. Harris; John R. Hackett; Priscilla Swanson; Klara Abravaya; Sushil G. Devare; Jacek J. Gorzowski; Claudia Esping; Ning Tang

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John Hackett

Johns Hopkins University

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Gerald Schochetman

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Dora Mbanya

University of Yaoundé

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Coumba Toure-Kane

Cheikh Anta Diop University

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