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Dive into the research topics where George J. Dawson is active.

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Featured researches published by George J. Dawson.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Discovery of a Novel Human Pegivirus in Blood Associated with Hepatitis C Virus Co-Infection.

M. Berg; Deanna Lee; Kelly E. Coller; Matthew Frankel; Andrew Aronsohn; Kevin Cheng; Kenn Forberg; M. Marcinkus; Samia N. Naccache; George J. Dawson; Catherine A. Brennan; Donald M. Jensen; John Hackett; Charles Y. Chiu

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) and human pegivirus (HPgV), formerly GBV-C, are the only known human viruses in the Hepacivirus and Pegivirus genera, respectively, of the family Flaviviridae. We present the discovery of a second pegivirus, provisionally designated human pegivirus 2 (HPgV-2), by next-generation sequencing of plasma from an HCV-infected patient with multiple bloodborne exposures who died from sepsis of unknown etiology. HPgV-2 is highly divergent, situated on a deep phylogenetic branch in a clade that includes rodent and bat pegiviruses, with which it shares <32% amino acid identity. Molecular and serological tools were developed and validated for high-throughput screening of plasma samples, and a panel of 3 independent serological markers strongly correlated antibody responses with viral RNA positivity (99.9% negative predictive value). Discovery of 11 additional RNA-positive samples from a total of 2440 screened (0.45%) revealed 93–94% nucleotide identity between HPgV-2 strains. All 12 HPgV-2 RNA-positive cases were identified in individuals also testing positive for HCV RNA (12 of 983; 1.22%), including 2 samples co-infected with HIV, but HPgV-2 RNA was not detected in non-HCV-infected individuals (p<0.0001), including those singly infected by HIV (p = 0.0075) or HBV (p = 0.0077), nor in volunteer blood donors (p = 0.0082). Nine of the 12 (75%) HPgV-2 RNA positive samples were reactive for antibodies to viral serologic markers, whereas only 28 of 2,429 (1.15%) HPgV-2 RNA negative samples were seropositive. Longitudinal sampling in two individuals revealed that active HPgV-2 infection can persist in blood for at least 7 weeks, despite the presence of virus-specific antibodies. One individual harboring both HPgV-2 and HCV RNA was found to be seronegative for both viruses, suggesting a high likelihood of simultaneous acquisition of HCV and HPgV-2 infection from an acute co-transmission event. Taken together, our results indicate that HPgV-2 is a novel bloodborne infectious virus of humans and likely transmitted via the parenteral route.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2016

Role of Serologic and Molecular Diagnostic Assays in Identification and Management of Hepatitis C Virus Infection

Gavin Cloherty; Andrew H. Talal; Kelly E. Coller; Corklin Steinhart; John Hackett; George J. Dawson; Juergen Rockstroh; Jordan J. Feld

ABSTRACT The drugs available for the treatment of hepatitis C virus (HCV) have evolved to provide shorter treatment duration and higher rates of sustained virologic response (SVR), and the role of HCV infection diagnostic tests has had to evolve in order to meet changing clinical needs. This review gives an overview on the role of HCV infection diagnostic testing (molecular and serological tools) used in the diagnosis and management of HCV infection. All of this critical information guides physician decisions to optimize patient clinical outcomes. Also discussed is the future direction of diagnostic testing in the context of further advances in drug development.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2016

Antibodies to the Novel Human Pegivirus 2 Are Associated with Active and Resolved Infections

Kelly E. Coller; Michael Berg; Matthew Frankel; Kenn Forberg; Rita Surani; Charles Y. Chiu; John Hackett; George J. Dawson

ABSTRACT A novel blood-borne human pegivirus (HPgV), HPgV-2, was recently identified in hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected individuals and individuals who had received multiple transfusions. Robust serological assays capable of detecting antibodies in HPgV-2-infected individuals are needed to establish global seroprevalence rates and potential disease associations. The two objectives of this study were to determine the utility of mammalian cell-expressed HPgV-2 E2 glycoprotein or bacterium-expressed nonstructural protein 4AB (NS4AB) in detecting past or present infections and to compare the total prevalence (antibody and RNA positive) of HPgV-2 with that of the other human pegivirus, HPgV-1 (GB virus C [GBV-C]). HPgV-2 E2 antibodies were detected in 13 (92.86%) of 14 HPgV-2-viremic cases, and NS4AB antibodies were detected in 8 (57.14%) of 14 cases. The HPgV-2 seroprevalence was significantly higher (P < 0.0001) among HCV-infected individuals (3.31% [24 of 726 samples]) than among non-HCV-infected individuals (0.30% [4 of 1,348 samples]). Of 31 anti-E2-positive samples, 22 had supplemental supporting data; 12 samples were HPgV-2 RNA positive and 10 nonviremic samples were antibody positive for peptides or NS4AB. The total prevalence of HPgV-1 (35.00%) was significantly higher than that of HPgV-2 (1.33%) in all populations tested (P < 0.0001). For HPgV-1, codetection of antibodies to E2 and RNA was infrequent (5.88%). In contrast, antibodies to E2 were detected in most HPgV-2-viremic individuals (92.86%), as is observed among individuals chronically infected with HCV, most of whom are antibody positive for HCV E2. Our studies indicate that HPgV-2 circulates with HCV and displays a profile similar to the serological profile of HCV-infected persons, although the pathogenicity of this virus has yet to be established.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Hepatitis C RNA assay differences in results: Potential implications for shortened therapy and determination of Sustained Virologic Response.

Gavin Cloherty; Stéphane Chevaliez; Christoph Sarrazin; Christine Herman; Vera Holzmayer; George J. Dawson; Benjamin Maasoumy; Johannes Vermehren; Heiner Wedemeyer; Jordan J. Feld; Jean-Michel Pawlotsky

Approval of Ledipasvir/Sofosbuvir for the treatment of chronic hepatitis C (HCV) includes the truncation of therapy from 12 to 8 weeks in treatment naïve, non-cirrhotic patients with baseline HCV RNA levels <6 million IU/mL (6.8 log10 IU/mL). The aim of this study was to evaluate this clinical cutoff with a different widely used commercially available HCV RNA test. Results from samples tested prospectively with Roche High Pure TaqMan HCV 2.0 test (HPS) were compared to those tested retrospectively with the Abbott RealTime HCV RNA test (ART). Using 6 million IU/mL as the cut-off, pre-treatment results were concordant in 70.4% of cases. When results with the same test measured at screening and baseline, clinical decisions could be impacted in 14.4% and 6.2% of cases for HPS and ART respectively. Using only HCV RNA cutoff of 6 million IU/mL, 29.55% of subjects would receive a different and potentially incorrect treatment duration based solely on HCV RNA test method used. A further 6–14% of subjects would have treatment decision change based on the day the sample was taken.


Archive | 2013

HCV ANTIGEN-ANTIBODY COMBINATION ASSAY AND METHODS AND COMPOSITIONS FOR USE THEREIN

George J. Dawson; Suresh M. Desai; Robin A. Gutierrez; A. Scott Muerhoff; John Prostko


Archive | 2011

Materials and methods for assay of anti-hepatitis c virus (hcv) antibodies

Thomas P. Leary; Robin A. Gutierrez; A. Scott Muerhoff; George J. Dawson; Suresh M. Desai; Dinesh O. Shah


Archive | 2010

Nucleotide and amino acid sequences encoding an exported protein 1 derived from plasmodium vivax and uses thereof

Larry G. Birkenmeyer; Ruthie E. Coffey; George J. Dawson; Suresh M. Desai; Bruce J. Dille; Anthony S. Muerhoff


Journal of Hepatology | 2016

Discovery of a Novel Human Pegivirus in Blood Associated with Hepatitis C Virus Co-Infection

M. Berg; Deanna Lee; Kelly E. Coller; Matthew Frankel; Andrew Aronsohn; Kevin Cheng; Kenn Forberg; M. Marcinkus; Samia N. Naccache; George J. Dawson; Catherine A. Brennan; Donald M. Jensen; John Hackett; Charles Y. Chiu


Archive | 2009

Plasmodium malariae and Plasmodium ovale genes and uses thereof

Larry G. Birkenmeyer; Anthony S. Muerhoff; Suresh M. Desai; George J. Dawson; Bruce J. Dille


Archive | 2007

Indirectly labelled assay conjugates and methods of preparing and using same

Anthony S. Muerhoff; Suresh M. Desai; Thomas P. Leary; George J. Dawson; Robin A. Gutierrez

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Kevin Cheng

University of California

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John Hackett

Johns Hopkins University

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Kenn Forberg

University of California

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M. Berg

University of California

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Larry G. Birkenmeyer

National Institutes of Health

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