Denise Pallett
Mansfield University of Pennsylvania
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Featured researches published by Denise Pallett.
FEBS Letters | 2007
Thien Ho; Hui Wang; Denise Pallett; Tamas Dalmay
Small interfering (si)RNAs isolated from Brassica juncea leaves infected by Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) were characterized by cloning and sequencing. The TuMV siRNA population was dominated by 21 and 22‐nt long species originated mainly from the same siRNA hotspots, indicating operational similarity between the plant Dicer‐like (DCL) enzymes. Robust GC bias was observed for TuMV siRNAs versus the virus genome, indicating that DCL was more likely to target GC‐rich regions. Furthermore, dicot micro‐(mi)RNAs displayed higher GC% than their DCL1 substrate RNAs, implicating that the GC bias may be ancient, therefore may be important for the RNAi technology.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Hui Wang; Jiazheng Xie; Tim G. Shreeve; Jinmin Ma; Denise Pallett; Linda A. King; Robert D. Possee
We sequenced small (s) RNAs from field collected honeybees (Apis mellifera) and bumblebees ( Bombus pascuorum ) using the Illumina technology. The sRNA reads were assembled and resulting contigs were used to search for virus homologues in GenBank. Matches with Varroa destructor virus-1 (VDV1) and Deformed wing virus (DWV) genomic sequences were obtained for A. mellifera but not B . pascuorum . Further analyses suggested that the prevalent virus population was composed of VDV-1 and a chimera of 5’-DWV-VDV1-DWV-3’. The recombination junctions in the chimera genomes were confirmed by using RT-PCR, cDNA cloning and Sanger sequencing. We then focused on conserved short fragments (CSF, size > 25 nt) in the virus genomes by using GenBank sequences and the deep sequencing data obtained in this study. The majority of CSF sites confirmed conservation at both between-species (GenBank sequences) and within-population (dataset of this study) levels. However, conserved nucleotide positions in the GenBank sequences might be variable at the within-population level. High mutation rates (Pi>10%) were observed at a number of sites using the deep sequencing data, suggesting that sequence conservation might not always be maintained at the population level. Virus-host interactions and strategies for developing RNAi treatments against VDV1/DWV infections are discussed.
Environmental Health | 2009
Denise Pallett; Emily Soh; Mary-Lou Edwards; Kathleen M Bodey; Laurie Ck K. Lau; J. Ian Cooper; Peter H. Howarth; Andrew F. Walls; Hui Wang
BackgroundWild plants harbour a variety of viruses and these have the potential to alter the composition of pollen. The potential consequences of virus infection of grasses on pollen-induced allergic disease are not known.MethodsWe have collected pollen from Dactylis glomerata (cocksfoot; a grass species implicated as a trigger of allergic rhino-conjunctivitis) from Wytham Wood, Oxfordshire UK. Extracts were prepared from pollen from uninfected grass, and from grass naturally infected by the Cocksfoot streak potyvirus (CSV). Preparations of pollen from virus-infected and non-infected grasses were employed in skin testing 15 grass pollen-allergic subjects with hayfever. Allergen profiles of extracts were investigated by Western blotting for IgE with sera from allergic subjects.ResultsThe prevalence of CSV infection in cocksfoot grasses sampled from the study site varied significantly over an eight-year period, but infection rates of up to 70% were detected. Virus infection was associated with small alterations in the quantities of pollen proteins detected by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and in the patterns of allergens identified by Western blotting with IgE from grass pollen allergic subjects. For individual subjects there were differences in potencies of standardised extracts of pollen from virus-free and virus-infected plants as assessed by skin testing, though a consistent pattern was not established for the group of 15 subjects.ConclusionInfection rates for CSV in cocksfoot grass can be high, though variable. Virus-induced alterations in components of grass pollen have the potential to alter the allergenic potency.
Protein & Cell | 2010
Thien Ho; Liang Wang; Linfeng Huang; Zhigang Li; Denise Pallett; Tamas Dalmay; Kazusato Ohshima; John A. Walsh; Hui Wang
Plant Dicer-like (DCL) and Argonaute (AGO) are the key enzymes involved in anti-virus post-transcriptional gene silencing (AV-PTGS). Here we show that AV-PTGS exhibited nucleotide preference by calculating a relative AV-PTGS efficiency on processing viral RNA substrates. In comparison with genome sequences of dicot-infecting Turnip mosaic virus (TuMV) and monocot-infecting Cocksfoot streak virus (CSV), viral-derived small interfering RNAs (vsiRNAs) displayed positive correlations between AV-PTGS efficiency and G+C content (GC%). Further investigations on nucleotide contents revealed that the vsiRNA populations had G-biases. This finding was further supported by our analyses of previously reported vsiRNA populations in diverse plant-virus associations, and AGO associated Arabidopsis endogenous siRNA populations, indicating that plant AGOs operated with G-preference. We further propose a hypothesis that AV-PTGS imposes selection pressure(s) on the evolution of plant viruses. This hypothesis was supported when potyvirus genomes were analysed for evidence of GC elimination, suggesting that plant virus evolution to have low GC% genomes would have a unique function, which is to reduce the host AV-PTGS attack during infections.
Archives of Virology | 2005
Linfeng Huang; Martin Naylor; Denise Pallett; Jonathan Reeves; J. I. Cooper; Hui Wang
Summary.A sequence of 5723 nucleotides (GenBank accession number: AY695933) is reported for the RNA genome of an isolate of Carrot red leaf virus (CtRLV). The sequence is predicted to contain six large open reading frames and non coding sequences of 28 nucleotides at the 5′ end, 110 nucleotides at the 3′ end, and 215 nucleotides between the two main blocks of coding sequences. The 5′ coding region encodes two polypeptides with calculated molecular masses (Mr) of 28.6 kDa (P0) and 68.2 kDa (P1) that overlap in different reading frames. Circumstantially, the third ORF in the 5′ block is putatively translated by frameshift read-through to yield a polypeptide (P1 + P2) with a calculated Mr of 116.9 kDa. Frameshifting is predicted at a “shifty” sequence (GGGAAAC; nt 1523–1529) also found in most members of the genus Polerovirus. The C-terminal region of the 116.9 kDa polypeptide includes the consensus sequence for the viral RNA-directed RNA polymerase. The 3′ block of coding sequence defines three putative polypeptides of: 23.0 kDa (P3), 21.3 kDa (P4, in a different reading frame) and 77.2 kDa (P3 + P5, by read-through of P3) respectively. From the genome structure of CtRLV, it is suggested that this virus belongs to the genus Polerovirus, rather than either the genus Luteovirus or the genus Enamovirus.
Scientific Data | 2015
Matthew R. Evans; Aristides Moustakas; Gregory Carey; Yadvinder Malhi; Nathalie Butt; Sue Benham; Denise Pallett; Stefanie Schäfer
As part of a project to develop predictive ecosystem models of United Kingdom woodlands we have collated data from two United Kingdom woodlands - Wytham Woods and Alice Holt. Here we present data from 582 individual trees of eight taxa in the form of summary variables relating to the allometric relationships between trunk diameter, height, crown height, crown radius and trunk radial growth rate to the tree’s light environment and diameter at breast height. In addition the raw data files containing the variables from which the summary data were obtained. Large sample sizes with longitudinal data spanning 22 years make these datasets useful for future studies concerned with the way trees change in size and shape over their life-span.
Virology | 2015
Jinmin Ma; Denise Pallett; Hui Jiang; Yong Hou; Hui Wang
Plant Dicer-like (DCL) enzymes exhibit a GC-preference during anti-viral post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS), delivering an evolutionary selection pressure resulting in plant viruses with GC-poor genomes. However, some viruses, e.g. Turnip Yellow Mosaic Virus (TYMV, genus Tymovirus) have GC-rich genomes, raising the question as to whether or not DCL derived selection pressure affects these viruses. In this study we analyzed the virus-derived small interfering RNAs from TYMV-infected leaves of Brassica juncea showed that the TYMV population accumulated a mutational bias with AU replacing GC (GC-AU), demonstrating PTGS pressure. Interestingly, at the highly polymorphic sites the GC-AU bias was no longer observed. This suggests the presence of an unknown mechanism preventing mutational drift of the viral population and maintaining viral genome stability, despite the host PTGS pressure.
Archive | 2003
Alan J. Gray; Roger Daniels; Alan F. Raybould; Ian Cooper; Lindsay Maskell; Denise Pallett; Mary-Lou Edwards; Milo Thurston; Matthew Alexander
One of the most frequently raised concerns about the introduction of genetically modified crops is that transgenes may be transferred to wild relatives, resulting either in the disruption of natural patterns of genetic diversity by “pollution” of species gene pools or in the addition of traits which may cause wild plants to become weedy or invasive. This paper examines these ideas from the viewpoint of conservation genetics. We look first at what is known about genetic diversity in natural populations and the forces that shape it, and then consider some of the issues which arise from hybridisations between crops and their wild relatives. The problems of predicting which traits may confer weediness and the importance of taking a case-by-case approach are illustrated by some of our work on virus-resistance in wild Brassica species.
Journal of Virological Methods | 2006
Thien Ho; Denise Pallett; Rachel Rusholme; Tamas Dalmay; Hui Wang
Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts | 2014
Shelagh K. Malham; Paulina Rajko-Nenow; Eleanor R. Howlett; Karen Tuson; Tracy L. Perkins; Denise Pallett; Hui Wang; C.F. Jago; Davey L. Jones; James E. McDonald