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Featured researches published by J. Templeton.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2010

Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli Genotyping by High-Resolution Melting Analysis of a flaA Fragment

Shreema Merchant-Patel; P. J. Blackall; J. Templeton; Erin P. Price; Steven Y. C. Tong; Flavia Huygens; Philip M. Giffard

ABSTRACT The highly variable flagellin-encoding flaA gene has long been used for genotyping Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli. High-resolution melting (HRM) analysis is emerging as an efficient and robust method for discriminating DNA sequence variants. The objective of this study was to apply HRM analysis to flaA-based genotyping. The initial aim was to identify a suitable flaA fragment. It was found that the PCR primers commonly used to amplify the flaA short variable repeat (SVR) yielded a mixed PCR product unsuitable for HRM analysis. However, a PCR primer set composed of the upstream primer used to amplify the fragment used for flaA restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis and the downstream primer used for flaA SVR amplification generated a very pure PCR product, and this primer set was used for the remainder of the study. Eighty-seven C. jejuni and 15 C. coli isolates were analyzed by flaA HRM and also partial flaA sequencing. There were 47 flaA sequence variants, and all were resolved by HRM analysis. The isolates used had previously also been genotyped using single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), binary markers, CRISPR HRM, and flaA RFLP. flaA HRM analysis provided resolving power multiplicative to the SNPs, binary markers, and CRISPR HRM and largely concordant with the flaA RFLP. It was concluded that HRM analysis is a promising approach to genotyping based on highly variable genes.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Survival of Campylobacter spp. in Darkling Beetles (Alphitobius diaperinus) and Their Larvae in Australia

J. Templeton; Amanda J. De Jong; P. J. Blackall; J.K. Miflin

ABSTRACT Campylobacter infection is the most frequently reported notifiable food-borne disease in humans in Australia. Our studies investigated the persistence of Campylobacter spp. in or on darkling beetles (Alphitobius diaperinus) and their larvae. Our results in analyses with chickens confirm that, unless very short turnaround times are used (<72 h), beetles colonized in one production cycle (i.e., one batch of chickens) are most unlikely to still be colonized during the next cycle of chickens.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2008

Characterisation of chicken Campylobacter jejuni isolates using resolution optimised single nucleotide polymorphisms and binary gene markers

Shreema Merchant-Patel; P. J. Blackall; J. Templeton; Erin P. Price; J.K. Miflin; Flavia Huygens; Philip M. Giffard

The principal objective of this study was to determine if Campylobacter jejuni genotyping methods based upon resolution optimised sets of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and binary genetic markers were capable of identifying epidemiologically linked clusters of chicken-derived isolates. Eighty-eight C. jejuni isolates of known flaA RFLP type were included in the study. They encompassed three groups of ten isolates that were obtained at the same time and place and possessed the same flaA type. These were regarded as being epidemiologically linked. Twenty-six unlinked C. jejuni flaA type I isolates were included to test the ability of SNP and binary typing to resolve isolates that were not resolved by flaA RFLP. The remaining isolates were of different flaA types. All isolates were typed by real-time PCR interrogation of the resolution optimised sets of SNPs and binary markers. According to each typing method, the three epidemiologically linked clusters were three different clones that were well resolved from the other isolates. The 26 unlinked C. jejuni flaA type I isolates were resolved into 14 SNP-binary types, indicating that flaA typing can be unreliable for revealing epidemiological linkage. Comparison of the data with data from a fully typed set of isolates associated with human infection revealed that abundant lineages in the chicken isolates that were also found in the human isolates belonged to clonal complex (CC) -21 and CC-353, with the usually rare C-353 member ST-524 being especially abundant in the chicken collection. The chicken isolates selected to be diverse according to flaA were also diverse according to SNP and binary typing. It was observed that CC-48 was absent in the chicken isolates, despite being very common in Australian human infection isolates, indicating that this may be a major cause of human disease that is not chicken associated.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016

Novel anti-campylobacter compounds identified using high throughput screening of a pre-selected enriched small molecules library

Anand Kumar; Mary Drozd; Ruby Pina-Mimbela; Xiulan Xu; Yosra A. Helmy; Janet Antwi; James R. Fuchs; Corey Nislow; J. Templeton; P. J. Blackall; Gireesh Rajashekara

Campylobacter is a leading cause of foodborne bacterial gastroenteritis worldwide and infections can be fatal. The emergence of antibiotic-resistant Campylobacter spp. necessitates the development of new antimicrobials. We identified novel anti-Campylobacter small molecule inhibitors using a high throughput growth inhibition assay. To expedite screening, we made use of a “bioactive” library of 4182 compounds that we have previously shown to be active against diverse microbes. Screening for growth inhibition of Campylobacter jejuni, identified 781 compounds that were either bactericidal or bacteriostatic at a concentration of 200 μM. Seventy nine of the bactericidal compounds were prioritized for secondary screening based on their physico-chemical properties. Based on the minimum inhibitory concentration against a diverse range of C. jejuni and a lack of effect on gut microbes, we selected 12 compounds. No resistance was observed to any of these 12 lead compounds when C. jejuni was cultured with lethal or sub-lethal concentrations suggesting that C. jejuni is less likely to develop resistance to these compounds. Top 12 compounds also possessed low cytotoxicity to human intestinal epithelial cells (Caco-2 cells) and no hemolytic activity against sheep red blood cells. Next, these 12 compounds were evaluated for ability to clear C. jejuni in vitro. A total of 10 compounds had an anti-C. jejuni effect in Caco-2 cells with some effective even at 25 μM concentrations. These novel 12 compounds belong to five established antimicrobial chemical classes; piperazines, aryl amines, piperidines, sulfonamide, and pyridazinone. Exploitation of analogs of these chemical classes may provide Campylobacter specific drugs that can be applied in both human and animal medicine.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2007

Antibiotic resistance in Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli isolated from poultry in the South-East Queensland region

J.K. Miflin; J. Templeton; P. J. Blackall


Australian Veterinary Journal | 2007

Detection of Helicobacter pullorum in meat chickens in Australia

K. A. Miller; Linda L. Blackall; J.K. Miflin; J. Templeton; P. J. Blackall


TropAg2017, International Tropical Agriculture Conference | 2017

Potential pathogens identified from lung samples from pigs with pleurisy at an abattoir in Queensland, Australia

C. Turni; T. S. Barnes; J. Meers; C. R. Parke; R. Singh; J. Templeton; N. K. Mone; P. McKenzie; P. J. Blackall


ASM 2017 Hobart | 2017

Virulence gene typing of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli using a novel PCR-microsphere approach

Fang Liang; J. Templeton; P. J. Blackall; Ross Barnard


XXV World’s Poultry Congress | 2016

Species identification of Campylobacter spp and close relatives using a microsphere-PCR method

Fang Liang; J. Templeton; P. J. Blackall; Ross Barnard


Australasian Poultry Veterinary Alliance Meeting. | 2016

Rapid detection and genotyping of thermophilic Campylobacter spp and close relatives.

Fang Liang; J. Templeton; Ross Barnard; P. J. Blackall

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P. J. Blackall

University of Queensland

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Shreema Merchant-Patel

Queensland University of Technology

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Fang Liang

University of Queensland

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J.K. Miflin

Animal Research Institute

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Ross Barnard

University of Queensland

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Erin P. Price

University of the Sunshine Coast

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Flavia Huygens

Queensland University of Technology

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C. Turni

University of Queensland

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