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Featured researches published by Gm Taylor.


Microbiology | 1999

Genotypic analysis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from medieval human remains

Gm Taylor; M Goyal; Aj Legge; Rory J. Shaw; Douglas B. Young

Three medieval bone samples with osteological evidence of tuberculosis infection were analysed for the presence of DNA sequences from Mycobacterium tuberculosis using a series of PCRs. In each case amplification of IS6110 and part of the beta-subunit of RNA polymerase identified infection with a bacterium belonging to the M. tuberculosis complex. Amplification of the mtp40 genome fragment and the presence of a guanine residue at position 285 in the oxyR pseudogene, demonstrated the infecting strain to be similar to present day M. tuberculosis isolates rather than to Mycobacterium bovis. Spoligotyping, based on amplification of the direct repeat (DR) region of the mycobacterial genome, provided further evidence of similarity to M. tuberculosis and indicated a close relationship between isolates associated with two separate medieval burials. The study demonstrates the feasibility of amplifying multiple M. tuberculosis loci in ancient human remains and suggests important applications in the study of the palaeoepidemiology and virulence of tuberculosis in past populations.


Pediatric Nephrology | 1997

Charge and size selectivity of proteinuria in children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome

Gm Taylor; Neuhaus Tj; Shah; Dillon S; T M Barratt

Abstract. Experimental studies have pointed to charge selectivity as an important determinant of glomerular permeability to macromolecules. Loss of glomerular basement membrane (GBM) polyanion has been proposed as a cause of the selective proteinuria in minimal change nephrotic syndrome (MCNS). However, the presence of less-anionic albumin in urine than plasma from MCNS and focal and segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) patients has been interpreted both as evidence for partial maintenance of charge selectivity and for involvement of other pathogenic mechanisms. The exact role of charge selectivity in the pathogenesis of nephrotic proteinuria remains controversial. We have examined the clearance of endogenous proteins of differing size and charge in children with idiopathic nephrotic syndrome (NS). Chromatofocusing was used to determine the isoelectric points (pIs) of albumins in paired plasma and urine samples from patients with FSGS (n = 6) and MCNS (n = 6). Charge selectivity was assessed by comparing the pIs of the fractions with the highest albumin concentration (modal pI) in plasma and urine. The difference between the modal pIs was defined as the delta modal pI. Charge selectivity was also assessed from the albumin/transferrin and IgG4/IgG1 clearance ratios; size selectivity from the IgG1/albumin and IgG1/transferrin as well as the IgG4/albumin and IgG4/transferrin clearances. In children with FSGS, the mean (± SD) delta modal pI was  – 0.05 ± 0.16, and in MCNS  – 0.05 ± 0.11. Neither value differed significantly from zero. The albumin/transferrin clearance ratio showed no significant difference between FSGS and MCNS, but the IgG4/IgG1 clearance ratio was significantly higher in MCNS (P<0.05). Size selectivity was significantly reduced in FSGS compared with MCNS (for IgG1/transferrin P<0.01 and for IgG1/albumin P<0.05). For IgG4/transferrin and IgG4/albumin, P was <0.05. In conclusion, there was no evidence for residual charge selectivity in idiopathic NS associated with either MCNS or FSGS during nephrotic-range proteinuria. There was a significant loss of GBM size selectivity in children with FSGS with heavy proteinuria compared with children with MCNS with heavy proteinuria.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2001

Paleopathological and Biomolecular Study of Tuberculosis in a Medieval Skeletal Collection From England

Simon Mays; Gm Taylor; Aj Legge; Douglas B. Young; G Turner-Walker


Microbiology | 2007

First report of Mycobacterium bovis DNA in human remains from the Iron Age

Gm Taylor; Eileen Murphy; R. Hopkins; P. Rutland; Yuri Chistov


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2002

Investigation of the link between visceral surface rib lesions and tuberculosis in a Medieval skeletal series from England using ancient DNA.

Simon Mays; E. Fysh; Gm Taylor


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2006

Variable nucleotide tandem repeat (VNTR) typing of two palaeopathological cases of lepromatous leprosy from Mediaeval England

Gm Taylor; Claire Watson; Abigail Bouwman; Diana N. J. Lockwood; Simon Mays


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2002

Osteological and Biomolecular Study of Two Possible Cases of Hypertrophic Osteoarthropathy from Mediaeval England

Simon Mays; Gm Taylor


Microbiology | 2003

Koch's Bacillus - a look at the first isolate of Mycobacterium tuberculosis from a modern perspective

Gm Taylor; Graham R. Stewart; M. Cooke; S. Chaplin; S. Ladva; J. Kirkup; S. Palmer; Douglas B. Young


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2009

Tuberculosis among Iron Age individuals from Tyva, South Siberia: palaeopathological and biomolecular findings

Eileen Murphy; Yuri Chistov; R. Hopkins; P. Rutland; Gm Taylor


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2008

Suspected bacterial disease in two archaeological horse skeletons from southern England: palaeopathological and biomolecular studies

Robin Bendrey; Gm Taylor; Abigail Bouwman; J.P. Cassidy

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Eileen Murphy

Queen's University Belfast

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P. Rutland

University College London

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R. Hopkins

Imperial College London

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Dillon S

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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E. Fysh

Imperial College London

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