Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where David Parnham is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by David Parnham.


Journal of General Virology | 2002

Transmission of prion diseases by blood transfusion

Nora Hunter; James Foster; Angela Chong; Sandra McCutcheon; David Parnham; Samantha L. Eaton; Calum MacKenzie; Fiona Houston

Attempts to detect infectivity in the blood of humans and animals affected with transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs or prion diseases) have often been inconclusive because of the limitations of cross-species bioassays and the small volumes of blood that can be injected by the intracerebral route. A model has been developed for the experimental study of TSE transmission by blood transfusion using sheep experimentally infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) or natural scrapie as donors and susceptible scrapie-free sheep as recipients. Donors and recipients of the same species greatly increase the sensitivity of the bioassay and in sheep large volumes of blood can be injected by the intravenous (i.v.) route. Transmission of BSE to a single animal using this approach was reported recently. This study confirms this result with a second transmission of BSE and four new cases of transmission of natural scrapie. Positive transmissions occurred with blood taken at pre-clinical and clinical stages of infection. Initial studies indicate that following such infection by the i.v. route, deposition of the abnormal prion protein isoform, PrP(Sc), in peripheral tissues may be much more limited than is seen following oral infection. These results confirm the risks of TSE infection via blood products and suggest that the measures taken to restrict the use of blood in the UK have been fully justified.


Veterinary Record | 2001

Clinical signs, histopathology and genetics of experimental transmission of BSE and natural scrapie to sheep and goats.

J. Foster; David Parnham; A. Chong; Wilfred Goldmann; Nora Hunter

This paper compares the clinical signs, histopathology, detection of PrPSc protein and PrP genetics of the transmission of BSE to sheep and goats, with the effects of the transmission of natural scrapie from a brain homogenate from a single sheep. After intracerebral and oral inoculations there were similarities in the clinical signs due to the two sources of infection, but there were differences in pathology at the end stage of disease and in the genotypes of the sheep which succumbed to the challenges. The incubation period of BSE was associated with the sheep PrP codon 171 genotype, but the natural scrapie source, despite inducing disease only in known susceptible genotypes, showed no clear association with PrP genotype.


Journal of General Virology | 2001

Distribution of the prion protein in sheep terminally affected with BSE following experimental oral transmission.

J. Foster; David Parnham; Nora Hunter; Moira E. Bruce

This study has examined the distribution of PrPSc in sheep by immunocytochemistry of tissues recovered from terminally affected animals following their experimental infection by the oral route with BSE. Despite a wide range of incubation period lengths, affected sheep showed a similar distribution of high levels of PrPSc throughout the central nervous system. PrPSc was also found in the lymphoid system, including parts of the digestive tract, and some components of the peripheral nervous system. These abundant PrPSc deposits in sheep in regions outside the central nervous system are in direct contrast with cattle infected with BSE, which show barely detectable levels of PrPSc in peripheral tissues. A number of genetically susceptible, challenged animals appear to have survived.


Veterinary Research | 2011

Caprine prion gene polymorphisms are associated with decreased incidence of classical scrapie in goat herds in the United Kingdom

Wilfred Goldmann; Kelly Ryan; Paula Stewart; David Parnham; Rosa Xicohtencatl; Nora Fernandez; Ginny C. Saunders; Otto Windl; Lorenzo González; Alex Bossers; James Foster

The application of genetic breeding programmes to eradicate transmissible spongiform encephalopathies in goats is an important aim for reasons of animal welfare as well as human food safety and food security. Based on the positive impact of Prnp genetics on sheep scrapie in Europe in the past decade, we have established caprine Prnp gene variation in more than 1100 goats from the United Kingdom and studied the association of Prnp alleles with disease phenotypes in 150 scrapie-positive goats. This investigation confirms the association of the Met142 encoding Prnp allele with increased resistance to preclinical and clinical scrapie. It reveals a novel association of the Ser127 encoding allele with a reduced probability to develop clinical signs of scrapie in goats that are already positive for the accumulation of disease-specific prion protein in brain or periphery. A United Kingdom survey of Prnp genotypes in eight common breeds revealed eleven alleles in over thirty genotypes. The Met142 encoding allele had a high overall mean allele frequency of 22.6%, whereas the Ser127 encoding allele frequency was considerably lower with 6.4%. In contrast, a well known resistance associated allele encoding Lys222 was found to be rare (0.9%) in this survey. The analysis of Prnp genotypes in Mexican Criollas goats revealed nine alleles, including a novel Phe to Leu substitution in codon 201, confirming that high genetic variability of Prnp can be found in scrapie-free populations. Our study implies that it should be feasible to lower scrapie prevalence in goat herds in the United Kingdom by genetic selection.


Journal of General Virology | 2001

Partial dissociation of PrP(Sc) deposition and vacuolation in the brains of scrapie and BSE experimentally affected goats

James Foster; Wilfred Goldmann; David Parnham; A. Chong; Nora Hunter

The diagnosis of transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) depends on the detection of vacuolation in brain sections taken from affected individuals and/or the identification of the disease-associated isoform of the PrP (prion) protein (PrP(Sc)). During the course of an investigation, goats clinically affected following experimental infection with three different sources of TSE (SSBP/1, CH1641 and BSE) developed widespread vacuolar degeneration in the brain. With BSE, PrP(Sc) was clearly recognized in affected goat brain by immunocytochemistry (icc) and Western blotting, but in contrast the experimental scrapie sources SSBP/1 and CH1641 showed almost no or very little PrP(Sc) by icc. Western blot analysis of PrP(Sc) from BSE-affected and SSBP/1-affected goat brain showed that the protein was present in brain affected by both TSE sources, but could not be used to determine how much protein was present. It became clear that PrP(Sc) and vacuolation could be partially dissociated following challenge with two of the three TSE sources. Subtle differences in glycosylation patterns between BSE- and SSBP/1-associated PrP protein isoforms could also be recognized, although these experimentally generated results should not be regarded as a BSE/scrapie differential test. However, our study warns that the reliance on PrP(Sc) determination by icc alone as a means by which to diagnose TSE infection may generate false negative results.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Susceptibility of young sheep to oral infection with bovine spongiform encephalopathy decreases significantly after weaning.

Nora Hunter; Fiona Houston; James Foster; Wilfred Goldmann; D. Drummond; David Parnham; Iain Kennedy; Andrew Green; Paula Stewart; Angela Chong

ABSTRACT Bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) is a transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) (or prion disease) that is readily transmissible to sheep by experimental infection and has the shortest incubation period in animals with the ARQ/ARQ PRNP genotype (at codons 136, 154, and 171). Because it is possible that sheep in the United Kingdom could have been infected with BSE by being fed contaminated meat and bone meal supplements at the same time as cattle, there is considerable interest in the responses of sheep to BSE inoculation. Epidemiological evidence suggests that very young individuals are more susceptible to TSE infection; however, this has never been properly tested in sheep. In the present study, low doses of BSE were fed to lambs of a range of ages (∼24 h, 2 to 3 weeks, 3 months, and 6 months) and adult sheep. The incidence of clinical BSE disease after inoculation was high in unweaned lambs (∼24 h and 2 to 3 weeks old) but much lower in older weaned animals The incubation period was also found to be influenced by the genotype at codon 141 of the PRNP gene, as lambs that were LF heterozygotes had a longer mean incubation period than those that were homozygotes of either type. The results suggest that sheep in the United Kingdom would have been at high risk of BSE infection only if neonatal animals had inadvertently ingested contaminated supplementary foodstuffs.


Journal of General Virology | 1999

Experimentally induced bovine spongiform encephalopathy did not transmit via goat embryos

James Foster; William McKelvey; H. Fraser; A. Chong; Arlene Ross; David Parnham; Wilfred Goldmann; Nora Hunter

Goats are susceptible to experimental challenge with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). This study set out to investigate whether the transmission of BSE could occur in goats following the transfer of embryos from experimentally infected donor females into uninfected recipient females. The results showed no evidence of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy disease in any of the offspring which developed from embryos from infected donors, nor indeed in any of the recipient females used as surrogate dams. In addition, there was no indication of experimental BSE spreading as either a venereal infection to males used in mating or by maternal transmission to offspring born naturally to experimentally infected donors, although numbers were small.


Veterinary Record | 2006

Derivation of a scrapie-free sheep flock from the progeny of a flock affected by scrapie

J. Foster; C. McKenzie; David Parnham; D. Drummond; Wilfred Goldmann; E. Stevenson; Nora Hunter

The Cheviot flock at the Institute for Animal Healths Neuropathogenesis Unit (npu) has endemic scrapie, which affects primarily vrq/vrq sheep and at high frequency. A new flock with a full range of PrP genotypes, including the highly susceptible vrq/vrq, has been produced on a separate site, from animals in the npu breeding flock, and it remains scrapie-free after eight years. In contrast, in a parallel flock at the npu farm, scrapie has reappeared after five years, although the animals were kept in separate accommodation from the scrapie-affected sheep. During this time the npu breeding flock continued to have scrapie cases. Although it is known that highly susceptible sheep can remain free of infection in a clean environment, this is the first report of the infection being removed successfully from the bloodlines of scrapie-affected sheep. The results confirm that scrapie is not a genetic disease dependent only on the PrP gene sequence, but requires both genetic susceptibility and an infectious agent.


Veterinary Record | 2008

Atypical scrapie in a sheep in a closed uk flock with endemic classical natural scrapie

J. Foster; Lorna Toovey; C. McKenzie; Angela Chong; David Parnham; D. Drummond; Nora Hunter

NATURAL scrapie has affected sheep in Europe for at least 250 years ([Detwiler and Baylis 2003][1]) and its occurrence is now known to be associated with the PrP genotype of the sheep ([Hunter and others 1996][2]). The relative risk of scrapie for each genotype has been formalised in the National


Advances in Animal Biosciences | 2011

Caprine prion gene polymorphism (I142M) associated with low scrapie susceptibility shows high allele frequency in British goat herds

Kelly Ryan; Paula Bradford; James Foster; David Parnham; Alex Bossers; Wilfred Goldmann

References 1. De la Rua-Domenech R. et al. A review of the tuberculin tests,[gamma]-interferon assay and other ancillary diagnostic techniques. Res. Vet. Sci. 2006, 81: 190-210. 2. Bermingham M. et al. Genetics of tuberculosis in Irish Holstein-Friesian dairy herds. J. Dairy Sci. 2009, 92: 3447-3456. 3. Brotherstone S. et al. Evidence of genetic resistance of cattle to infection with Mycobacterium bovis. J. Dairy Sci. 2010, 93: 1234-1242. 4. Bermingham M. et al. Evidence for genetic variance in resistance to tuberculosis in Great Britain and Irish Holstein-Friesian populations. BMC Proc. 2011, 5: S15. 5. Clegg T. et al. Using latent class analysis to estimate the test characteristics of the interferon- test, the single intradermal comparative tuberculin test and a multiplex immunoassay under Irish conditions, Vet Microbiol. 2011, 15: 68-76. 6. Bishop S. & Woolliams J. On the genetic interpretation of disease data. PLoS ONE 2010, 5: e8940. 7. Hui S.L. & Walter S.D. Estimating the Error Rates of Diagnostic Tests. Biometrics 1980, 36: 167-17

Collaboration


Dive into the David Parnham's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nora Hunter

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Foster

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Drummond

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James Foster

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Angela Chong

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Chong

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge