Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Deborah Ferguson is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Deborah Ferguson.


Journal of Virology | 2005

CD8+ Lymphocytes Do Not Mediate Protection against Acute Superinfection 20 Days after Vaccination with a Live Attenuated Simian Immunodeficiency Virus

Richard Stebbings; Neil Berry; Herman Waldmann; Pru Bird; Geoff Hale; Jim Stott; David North; Robin Hull; Joanna Hall; Jenny Lines; Stuart Brown; Nikki D'Arcy; Leanne Davis; William Elsley; Cherry Edwards; Deborah Ferguson; Jane F. Allen; Neil Almond

ABSTRACT In order to test the hypothesis that CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes mediate protection against acute superinfection, we depleted >99% of CD8+ lymphocytes in live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus macC8 (SIVmacC8) vaccinees from the onset of vaccination, maintained that depletion for 20 days, and then challenged with pathogenic, wild-type SIVmacJ5. Vaccinees received 5 mg per kg of humanized anti-CD8 monoclonal antibody (MAb) 1 h before inoculation, followed by the same dose again on days 3, 7, 10, 13, and 17. On day 13, peripheral CD8+ T lymphocytes were >99% depleted in three out of four anti-CD8 MAb-treated vaccinees. At this time attenuated SIVmacC8 viral RNA loads in anti-CD8 MAb-treated vaccinees were significantly higher than control vaccinees treated contemporaneously with nonspecific human immunoglobulin. Lymphoid tissue CD8+ T lymphocyte depletion was >99% in three out of four anti-CD8 MAb-treated vaccinees on the day of wild-type SIVmacJ5 challenge. All four control vaccinees and three out of four anti-CD8 MAb-treated vaccinees were protected against detectable superinfection with wild-type SIVmacJ5. Although superinfection with wild-type SIVmacJ5 was detected at postmortem in a single anti-CD8 MAb-treated vaccinee, this did not correlate with the degree of preceding CD8+ T lymphocyte depletion. Clearance of attenuated SIVmacC8 viremia coincided with recovery of normal CD8+ T lymphocyte counts between days 48 and 76. These results support the view that cytotoxic T lymphocytes are important for host-mediated control of SIV primary viremia but do not indicate a central role in protection against acute superinfection conferred by inoculation with live attenuated SIV.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Early Potent Protection against Heterologous SIVsmE660 Challenge Following Live Attenuated SIV Vaccination in Mauritian Cynomolgus Macaques

Neil Berry; Claire Ham; Edward T. Mee; Nicola J. Rose; Giada Mattiuzzo; Adrian Jenkins; Mark Page; William Elsley; Mark Robinson; Deborah Smith; Deborah Ferguson; Greg J. Towers; Neil Almond; Richard Stebbings

Background Live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) vaccines represent the most effective means of vaccinating macaques against pathogenic SIV challenge. However, thus far, protection has been demonstrated to be more effective against homologous than heterologous strains. Immune correlates of vaccine-induced protection have also been difficult to identify, particularly those measurable in the peripheral circulation. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we describe potent protection in 6 out of 8 Mauritian-derived cynomolgus macaques (MCM) against heterologous virus challenge with the pathogenic, uncloned SIVsmE660 viral stock following vaccination with live attenuated SIVmac251/C8. MCM provided a characterised host genetic background with limited Major Histocompatibility Complex (MHC) and TRIM5α allelic diversity. Early protection, observed as soon as 3 weeks post-vaccination, was comparable to that of 20 weeks vaccination. Recrudescence of vaccine virus was most pronounced in breakthrough cases where simultaneous identification of vaccine and challenge viruses by virus-specific PCR was indicative of active co-infection. Persistence of the vaccine virus in a range of lymphoid tissues was typified by a consistent level of SIV RNA positive cells in protected vaccinates. However, no association between MHC class I /II haplotype or TRIM5α polymorphism and study outcome was identified. Conclusion/Significance This SIV vaccine study, conducted in MHC-characterised MCM, demonstrated potent protection against the pathogenic, heterologous SIVsmE660 challenge stock after only 3 weeks vaccination. This level of protection against this viral stock by intravenous challenge has not been hitherto observed. The mechanism(s) of protection by vaccination with live attenuated SIV must account for the heterologous and early protection data described in this study, including those which relate to the innate immune system.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Early Biodistribution and Persistence of a Protective Live Attenuated SIV Vaccine Elicits Localised Innate Responses in Multiple Lymphoid Tissues

Deborah Ferguson; Giada Mattiuzzo; Claire Ham; Richard Stebbings; Bo Li; Nicola J. Rose; Edward T. Mee; Deborah Smith; Mark Page; Martin Cranage; Neil Almond; Greg J. Towers; Neil Berry

Vaccination of Mauritian cynomolgus macaques with the attenuated nef-truncated C8 variant of SIVmac251/32H (SIVmacC8) induces early, potent protection against pathogenic, heterologous challenge before the maturation of cognate immunity. To identify processes that contribute to early protection in this model the pathogenesis, anatomical distribution and viral vaccine kinetics were determined in relation to localised innate responses triggered by vaccination. The early biodistribution of SIVmacC8 was defined by rapid, widespread dissemination amongst multiple lymphoid tissues, detectable after 3 days. Cell-associated viral RNA dynamics identified mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) and spleen, as well as the gut mucosae, as early major contributors of systemic virus burden. Rapid, localised infection was populated by discrete foci of persisting virus-infected cells. Localised productive infection triggered a broad innate response, with type-1 interferon sensitive IRF-7, STAT-1, TRIM5α and ApoBEC3G genes all upregulated during the acute phase but induction did not prevent viral persistence. Profound changes in vaccine-induced cell-surface markers of immune activation were detected on macrophages, B-cells and dendritic cells (DC-SIGN, S-100, CD40, CD11c, CD123 and CD86). Notably, high DC-SIGN and S100 staining for follicular and interdigitating DCs respectively, in MLN and spleen were detected by 3 days, persisting 20 weeks post-vaccination. Although not formally evaluated, the early biodistribution of SIVmacC8 simultaneously targets multiple lymphoid tissues to induce strong innate immune responses coincident at the same sites critical for early protection from wild-type viruses. HIV vaccines which stimulate appropriate innate, as well as adaptive responses, akin to those generated by live attenuated SIV vaccines, may prove the most efficacious.


Journal of General Virology | 2015

Live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus vaccination confers superinfection resistance against macrophage-tropic and neurovirulent wild-type SIV challenge.

Neil Berry; Claire Ham; Jack Alden; Sean F. Clarke; Richard Stebbings; Jim Stott; Deborah Ferguson; Neil Almond

Vaccination with live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) in non-human primate species provides a means of characterizing the protective processes of retroviral superinfection and may lead to novel advances of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)/AIDS vaccine design. The minimally attenuated SIVmacC8 vaccine has been demonstrated to elicit early potent protection against pathogenic rechallenge with genetically diverse viral isolates in cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis). In this study, we have characterized further the biological breadth of this vaccine protection by assessing the ability of both the nef-disrupted SIVmacC8 and its nef-intact counterpart SIVmacJ5 viruses to prevent superinfection with the macrophage/neurotropic SIVmac239/17E-Fr (SIVmac17E-Fr) isolate. Inoculation with either SIVmacC8 or SIVmacJ5 and subsequent detailed characterization of the viral replication kinetics revealed a wide range of virus–host outcomes. Both nef-disrupted and nef-intact immunizing viruses were able to prevent establishment of SIVmac17E-Fr in peripheral blood and secondary lymphoid tissues. Differences in virus kinetics, indicative of an active process, identified uncontrolled replication in one macaque which although able to prevent SIVmac17E-Fr superinfection led to extensive neuropathological complications. The ability to prevent a biologically heterologous, CD4-independent/CCR5+ viral isolate and the macrophage-tropic SIVmac316 strain from establishing infection supports the hypothesis that direct target cell blocking is unlikely to be a central feature of live lentivirus vaccination. These data provide further evidence to demonstrate that inoculation of a live retroviral vaccine can deliver broad spectrum protection against both macrophage-tropic as well as lymphocytotropic viruses. These data add to our knowledge of live attenuated SIV vaccines but further highlight potential safety concerns of vaccinating with a live retrovirus.


Retrovirology | 2012

Heterologous protection elicited by candidate monomeric recombinant HIV-1 gp120 vaccine in the absence of cross neutralising antibodies in a macaque model

Mark Page; Richard Stebbings; Neil Berry; Robin Hull; Deborah Ferguson; Leanne Davis; Laura Duffy; William Elsley; Joanna Hall; Claire Ham; Mark Hassall; Bo Li; Edward T. Mee; Ruby Quartey-Papafio; Nicola J. Rose; Nathalie Louise Mathy; Gerald Voss; E J Stott; Neil Almond

BackgroundCurrent data suggest that an efficacious human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vaccine should elicit both adaptive humoral and cell mediated immune responses. Such a vaccine will also need to protect against infection from a range of heterologous viral variants. Here we have developed a simian-human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV) based model in cynomolgus macaques to investigate the breadth of protection conferred by HIV-1W61D recombinant gp120 vaccination against SHIVsbg and SHIVSF33 challenge, and to identify correlates of protection.ResultsHigh titres of anti-envelope antibodies were detected in all vaccinees. The antibodies reacted with both the homologous HIV-1W61D and heterologous HIV-1IIIB envelope rgp120 which has an identical sequence to the SHIVsbg challenge virus. Significant titres of virus neutralising antibodies were detected against SHIVW61D expressing an envelope homologous with the vaccine, but only limited cross neutralisation against SHIVsbg, SHIV-4 and SHIVSF33 was observed. Protection against SHIVsbg infection was observed in vaccinated animals but none was observed against SHIVSF33 challenge. Transfer of immune sera from vaccinated macaques to naive recipients did not confer protection against SHIVsbg challenge. In a follow-up study, T cell proliferative responses detected after immunisation with the same vaccine against a single peptide present in the second conserved region 2 of HIV-1 W61D and HIV-1 IIIB gp120, but not SF33 gp120.ConclusionsFollowing extended vaccination with a HIV-1 rgp120 vaccine, protection was observed against heterologous virus challenge with SHIVsbg, but not SHIVSF33. Protection did not correlate with serological responses generated by vaccination, but might be associated with T cell proliferative responses against an epitope in the second constant region of HIV-1 gp120. Broader protection may be obtained with recombinant HIV-1 envelope based vaccines formulated with adjuvants that generate proliferative T cell responses in addition to broadly neutralising antibodies.


Journal of Medical Primatology | 2007

Immunological responses and viral modulatory effects of vaccination with recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara (rMVA) expressing structural and regulatory transgenes of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVmac32H/J5M)

Neil Berry; Richard Stebbings; Stuart Brown; P. Christian; R. Thorstensson; R.K. Ahmed; Leanne Davis; Deborah Ferguson; N. D'Arcy; William Elsley; Robin Hull; Jenny Lines; Alison Wade-Evans; Jim Stott; Neil Almond

Background  The immunogenicity and protective efficacy of recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara (rMVA) vectors expressing structural (gag/pol, env) and regulatory (tat, rev, nef) genes of SIVmac251/32H‐J5 (rMVA‐J5) were assessed.


AIDS | 2016

Attenuated SIV causes persisting neuroinflammation in the absence of a chronic viral load and neurotoxic antiretroviral therapy

Deborah Ferguson; Sean F. Clarke; Neil G. Berry; Neil Almond

Objectives:Using simian models, where SIV chronic viral loads are naturally controlled in the absence of potentially neurotoxic therapies, we investigated the neuropathological events occurring during times of suppressed viraemia and when these events were initiated. Design:Cynomolgus macaques were infected with SIV strains that are naturally controlled to low levels of chronic viraemia. Study 1: animals were maintained up to 300 days after inoculation and analysed for viral-induced neuropathology following sustained suppression of chronic viral loads. Study 2: initiation and development of lesion was examined following 3, 10, 21, or 125 days SIVmacC8 infection. Methods:Formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded brain sections were analysed following immunohistochemical staining for simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) (KK41), blood–brain barrier leakage (ZO-1, fibrinogen), apoptosis (active caspase 3), neuroinflammation [GFAP, cyclooxygenase (COX)-1, COX-2], microglia and macrophage (Iba-1, CD68, and CD16), oligodendrocytes (CNPase1), MHC class II expression, and T cells (CD3 and CD8). Replicating SIV was detected through in-situ hybridization. Results:Study 1: neuroinflammation was present despite prolonged suppressed viraemia. Study 2: attenuated SIV entered the brain rapidly triggering acute phase neuroinflammatory responses. These did not return to naive levels and GFAP and COX-2 responses continued to develop during a chronic phase with a suppressed viral load. Conclusion:Neuroinflammatory responses similar to those in HIV neurocognitively impaired patients are present within macaque brains during prolonged periods of suppressed SIV viral load and in the absence of potentially neurotoxic antiretroviral drugs. These responses, initiated during acute infection, do not resolve despite the lack of on-going peripheral viraemia to potentially reseed the brain.


PLOS Pathogens | 2016

Role of Occult and Post-acute Phase Replication in Protective Immunity Induced with a Novel Live Attenuated SIV Vaccine

Neil Berry; Maria Manoussaka; Claire Ham; Deborah Ferguson; Hannah Tudor; Giada Mattiuzzo; Bep Klaver; Mark Page; Richard Stebbings; Atze T. Das; Ben Berkhout; Neil Almond; Martin Cranage

In order to evaluate the role of persisting virus replication during occult phase immunisation in the live attenuated SIV vaccine model, a novel SIVmac239Δnef variant (SIVrtTA) genetically engineered to replicate in the presence of doxycycline was evaluated for its ability to protect against wild-type SIVmac239. Indian rhesus macaques were vaccinated either with SIVrtTA or with SIVmac239Δnef. Doxycycline was withdrawn from 4 of 8 SIVrtTA vaccinates before challenge with wild-type virus. Unvaccinated challenge controls exhibited ~107 peak plasma viral RNA copies/ml persisting beyond the acute phase. Six vaccinates, four SIVmac239Δnef and two SIVrtTA vaccinates exhibited complete protection, defined by lack of wild-type viraemia post-challenge and virus-specific PCR analysis of tissues recovered post-mortem, whereas six SIVrtTA vaccinates were protected from high levels of viraemia. Critically, the complete protection in two SIVrtTA vaccinates was associated with enhanced SIVrtTA replication in the immediate post-acute vaccination period but was independent of doxycycline status at the time of challenge. Mutations were identified in the LTR promoter region and rtTA gene that do not affect doxycycline-control but were associated with enhanced post-acute phase replication in protected vaccinates. High frequencies of total circulating CD8+T effector memory cells and a higher total frequency of SIV-specific CD8+ mono and polyfunctional T cells on the day of wild-type challenge were associated with complete protection but these parameters were not predictive of outcome when assessed 130 days after challenge. Moreover, challenge virus-specific Nef CD8+ polyfunctional T cell responses and antigen were detected in tissues post mortem in completely-protected macaques indicating post-challenge control of infection. Within the parameters of the study design, on-going occult-phase replication may not be absolutely required for protective immunity.


Retrovirology | 2012

Intra-dermal immunisation with SIV gag-based vaccines alone inhibits acquisition of SIVmac251

Neil Almond; Richard Stebbings; Mark Page; B Li; Neil Berry; Claire Ham; Deborah Ferguson; Nicola J. Rose; Edward T. Mee; C Stahl-Hennig; George Dickson; T Athanasapoulos; Adel Benlahrech; Shanthi Herath; Andrea Meiser; Steven Patterson

Methods Groups of 8 macaques were immunised 3 times on weeks 0, 4, 8 with 100μg purified plasmid DNA designed to express SIVmac239 derived gag under the control of the CMV immediate early promoter. Three different SIV gag vaccines were compared. The DNA plasmids expressed native SIVmac239gag, ubiquinated SIVmac239 gag or fragmented, ubiquinated SIVmac239 gag derived peptides. On week 19, the groups were boosted with 10e7 infectious units recombinant Ad 5 expressing the same SIV Gag antigens. Cell mediated immunity was assessed after each immunisation and after virus challenge. At week 23, all vaccinated macaques, along with a group of naive challenge controls began 10 weekly, atraumatic challenges via the rectal mucosal with 150TCD50 SIVmac251.


Retrovirology | 2011

Anti-retroviral innate immune responses in multiple lymphoid tissues elicited by protective live attenuated SIV vaccination

Giada Mattiuzzo; Claire Ham; Deborah Ferguson; Nicola J. Rose; Martine Cranage; Neil Almond; Greg J. Towers; Neil Berry

Background Vaccination with live attenuated SIV confers potent protection against wild-type challenge, although correlates of adaptive immunity have not been reliably demonstrated. Despite safety concerns for this vaccine approach in humans, understanding the mechanism of this protection may inform and guide HIV vaccine design. In Mauritian-origin cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis), we have demonstrated early, potent protection against the heterologous SIVsmE660 virus stock following vaccination with the minimally attenuated SIVmac251/C8 vaccine [1]. Failure to associate correlates of protection with adaptive immune responses and the emergence of protection as early as 3 weeks post vaccination has led us to characterise antiretroviral innate immune responses in this model system.

Collaboration


Dive into the Deborah Ferguson's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Neil Almond

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Neil Berry

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Claire Ham

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Richard Stebbings

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark Page

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicola J. Rose

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William Elsley

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Edward T. Mee

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Giada Mattiuzzo

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge