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Featured researches published by James Ironside.


Nature | 1997

Transmissions to mice indicate that 'new variant' CJD is caused by the BSE agent

M. E. Bruce; Robert G. Will; James Ironside; I. McConnell; D. Drummond; A. Suttie; L. McCardle; A. Chree; James Hope; C. Birkett; S. Cousens; H. Fraser; C. J. Bostock

There are many strains of the agents that cause transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSEs) or ‘prion’ diseases. These strains are distinguishable by their disease characteristics in experimentally infected animals, in particular the incubation periods and neuropathology they produce in panels of inbred mouse strains. We have shown that the strain of agent from cattle affected by bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) produces a characteristic pattern of disease in mice that is retained after experimental passage through a variety of intermediate species. This BSE ‘signature’ has also been identified in transmissions to mice of TSEs of domestic cats and two exotic species of ruminant,, providing the first direct evidence for the accidental spread of a TSE between species. Twenty cases of a clinically and pathologically atypical form of Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD), referred to as ‘new variant’ CJD (vCJD), have been recognized in unusually young people in the United Kingdom, and a further case has been reported in France. This has raised serious concerns that BSE may have spread to humans, putatively by dietary exposure. Here we report the interim results of transmissions of sporadic CJD and vCJD to mice. Our data provide strong evidence that the same agent strain is involved in both BSE and vCJD.


The Lancet | 1999

Investigation of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and other human prion diseases with tonsil biopsy samples

Andrew F. Hill; Rj Butterworth; Susan Joiner; Graham Stuart Jackson; Dafydd Thomas; Adam Frosh; N Tolley; Je Bell; M Spencer; Andrew J. King; S Al-Sarraj; James Ironside; Peter L. Lantos; John Collinge

BACKGROUND Prion diseases are associated with the accumulation of an abnormal isoform of cellular prion protein (PrPSc), which is the principal constituent of prions. Prions replicate in lymphoreticular tissues before neuroinvasion, suggesting that lymphoreticular biopsy samples may allow early diagnosis by detection of PrPSc. Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (variant CJD) is difficult to distinguish from common psychiatric disorders in its early stages and definitive diagnosis has relied on neuropathology. We studied lymphoreticular tissues from a necropsy series and assessed tonsillar biopsy samples as a diagnostic investigation for human prion disease. METHODS Lymphoreticular tissues (68 tonsils, 64 spleens, and 40 lymph nodes) were obtained at necropsy from patients affected by prion disease and from neurological and normal controls. Tonsil biopsy sampling was done on 20 patients with suspected prion disease. Tissues were analysed by western blot to detect and type PrPSc, by PrP immunohistochemistry, or both. FINDINGS All lymphoreticular tissues obtained at necropsy from patients with neuropathologically confirmed variant CJD, but not from patients with other prion diseases or controls, were positive for PrPSc. In addition, PrPSc typing revealed a consistent pattern (designated type 4t) different from that seen in variant CJD brain (type 4) or in brain from other CJD subtypes (types 1-3). Tonsil biopsy tissue was positive in all eight patients with an adequate biopsy sample and whose subsequent course has confirmed, or is highly consistent with, a diagnosis of variant CJD and negative in all patients subsequently confirmed to have other diagnoses. INTERPRETATION We found that if, in the appropriate clinical context, a tonsil biopsy sample was positive for PrPSc, variant CJD could be diagnosed, which obviates the need for a brain biopsy sample to be taken. Our results also show that variant CJD has a different pathogenesis to sporadic CJD.


The Journal of Pathology | 2004

Prevalence of lymphoreticular prion protein accumulation in UK tissue samples.

David A. Hilton; Azra C. Ghani; Lisa Conyers; Philip Edwards; Linda McCardle; Diane Ritchie; Mark Penney; Doha Hegazy; James Ironside

This study aims to provide an estimate of the number of individuals in the UK who may be incubating variant Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease and at risk of causing iatrogenic spread of the disease. Lymphoreticular accumulation of prion protein is a consistent feature of variant Creutzfeldt‐Jakob at autopsy and has also been demonstrated in the pre‐clinical phase. Immunohistochemical accumulation of prion protein in the lymphoreticular system remains the only technique that has been shown to predict neurological disease reliably in animal prion disorders. In this study, immunohistochemistry was used to demonstrate the presence of prion protein, with monoclonal antibodies KG9 and 3F4, in surgically removed tonsillectomy and appendicectomy specimens. The samples were collected from histopathology departments across the UK and anonymised prior to testing. Samples were tested from 16 703 patients (14 964 appendectomies, 1739 tonsillectomies), approximately 60% of whom were from the age group 20–29 years at operation. Twenty‐five per cent of the samples were excluded from the final analyses because they contained inadequate amounts of lymphoid tissue. Three appendicectomy samples showed lymphoreticular accumulation of prion protein, giving an estimated prevalence of 3/12 674 or 237 per million (95% CI 49–692 per million). The pattern of lymphoreticular accumulation in two of these samples was dissimilar from that seen in known cases of variant Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease. Although it is uncertain whether immunohistochemical accumulation of prion protein in the lymphoreticular system is specific for variant Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease, it has not been described in any other disease, including other forms of human prion disease or a range of inflammatory and infective conditions. These findings reinforce the importance of measures taken by the UK Department of Health to reduce the risk of spread of variant Creutzfeldt‐Jakob via blood products and surgical instruments, and of the urgency to proceed with large‐scale screening of fresh tonsil specimens for the presence of prion protein. Copyright


Brain Pathology | 1995

Neuropathological Diagnostic-criteria for Creutzfeldt-jakob-disease (cjd) and Other Human Spongiform Encephalopathies (prion Diseases)

Herbert Budka; Adriano Aguzzi; Paul Brown; Jean-Marie Brucher; Orso Bugiani; Filippo Gullotta; Matti Haltia; Jean-Jacques Hauw; James Ironside; Kurt Jellinger; Hans A. Kretzschmar; Peter L. Lantos; Carlo Masullo; Wolfgang Schlote; Jun Tateishi; Roy O. Weller

Neuropathological diagnostic criteria for Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease (CJD) and other human transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (prion diseases) are proposed for the following disease entities: CJD ‐ sporadic, iatrogenic (recognised risk) or familial (same disease in 1st degree relative): spongiform encephalopathy in cerebral and/or cerebellar cortex and/or subcortical grey matter; or encephalopathy with prion protein (PrP) immuno‐reactivity (plaque and/or diffuse synaptic and/or patchy/perivacuolar types). Gerstmann‐Sträussler‐Scheinker disease (GSS) (in family with dominantly inherited progressive ataxia and/or dementia): encephalo(myelo)pathy with multicentric PrP plaques. Familial fatal insomnia (FFI) (in member of a family with PRNP178 mutation): thalamic degeneration, variable spongiform change in cerebrum. Kuru (in the Fore population).


Annals of Neurology | 2000

Diagnosis of new variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

Robert G. Will; Martin Zeidler; G. Stewart; M.-A. Macleod; James Ironside; Simon Cousens; Jan Mackenzie; K. Estibeiro; Alison Green; Richard Knight

As of December 31, 1998, 35 deaths had been attributed to new variant Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease (nvCJD) in the United Kingdom, of which 33 cases had been neuropathologically confirmed and 2 classified as probable nvCJD. Fifteen cases were male and 20 female. The median illness duration was 14 months (range, 8–38 months) and the median age at death was 29 years (range, 18–53 years). The clinical features were consistent with previous descriptions. In nearly all cases, there were early psychiatric symptoms after a median period of 6 months ataxia developed, followed by involuntary movements and cognitive impairment. Electroencephalograms did not show the “typical” appearances found in sporadic CJD, about half the cases tested had a positive 14‐3‐3 immunoassay, and over 70% of cases had bilateral pulvinar high signal on magnetic resonance brain scanning. Prion protein gene analysis showed that all cases were homozygous for methionine at codon 129. Diagnostic criteria for nvCJD have been formulated, which have a high sensitivity and specificity. Ann Neurol 2000;47:575–582


The Lancet | 2000

The pulvinar sign on magnetic resonance imaging in variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.

Martin Zeidler; Robin Sellar; Donald A. Collie; Richard Knight; G. Stewart; Margaret-Ann Macleod; James Ironside; Simon Cousens; Alan F C Colchester; Donald M Hadley; Robert G. Will

BACKGROUND There is a need for an accurate non-invasive diagnostic test for variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD). We investigated the sensitivity and specificity of bilateral pulvinar high signal on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for the diagnosis of vCJD. METHODS MRI from patients with vCJD and controls (patients with suspected CJD) were analysed. Scans were reviewed on two separate occasions by two neuroradiologists and scored for the distribution of changes, and likely final diagnosis. Scans from vCJD cases were reassessed to reach a consensus on all abnormalities. FINDINGS We analysed 36 patients and 57 controls. vCJD patients were correctly identified based on bilateral pulvinar high signal in 29 of 36 and 32 of 36 cases on the first assessment by the two radiologists, and 32 of 36 and 31 of 36 on their second assessment. Bilateral increased pulvinar signal was identified in one of 57 and one of 57 controls on the first assessment and two of 57 and three of 57 controls on the second assessment. These reported changes in controls were graded as minimal/equivocal in six of seven patients and moderate in one (<0.5% of all control assessments). 80% of the assessments in vCJD cases were graded as moderate or substantial. On consensus review, 28 of 36 cases and none of 57 controls had prominent bilateral pulvinar signal-sensitivity 78% (95% CI 60-90%) and specificity 100% (95% CI 94-100%). Other common MRI features of vCJD were medial thalamic and periaqueductal grey matter high signal, and the notable absence of cerebral atrophy. Pulvinar high signal correlated with histological gliosis. INTERPRETATION In the appropriate clinical context the MRI identification of bilaterally increased pulvinar signal is a useful non-invasive test for the diagnosis of vCJD.


Nature Medicine | 2003

A prion protein epitope selective for the pathologically misfolded conformation

Eustache Paramithiotis; Marc Pinard; Trebor Lawton; Sylvie LaBoissiere; Valerie Leathers; Wen Quan Zou; Lisa Estey; Julie Lamontagne; Marty Lehto; Leslie H. Kondejewski; Maria Papadopoulos; Ashkan Haghighat; Stephen J. Spatz; Mark Head; Robert G. Will; James Ironside; Katherine I. O'Rourke; Quentin J. Tonelli; Harry Ledebur; Avi Chakrabartty; Neil R. Cashman

Conformational conversion of proteins in disease is likely to be accompanied by molecular surface exposure of previously sequestered amino-acid side chains. We found that induction of β-sheet structures in recombinant prion proteins is associated with increased solvent accessibility of tyrosine. Antibodies directed against the prion protein repeat motif, tyrosine-tyrosine-arginine, recognize the pathological isoform of the prion protein but not the normal cellular isoform, as assessed by immunoprecipitation, plate capture immunoassay and flow cytometry. Antibody binding to the pathological epitope is saturable and specific, and can be created in vitro by partial denaturation of normal brain prion protein. Conformation-selective exposure of Tyr-Tyr-Arg provides a probe for the distribution and structure of pathologically misfolded prion protein, and may lead to new diagnostics and therapeutics for prion diseases.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2003

Results of a Randomized Study of Preradiation Chemotherapy Versus Radiotherapy Alone for Nonmetastatic Medulloblastoma: The International Society of Paediatric Oncology/United Kingdom Children’s Cancer Study Group PNET-3 Study

Roger E. Taylor; Clifford C. Bailey; Kath Robinson; Claire Weston; David W. Ellison; James Ironside; Helen Lucraft; Richard J. Gilbertson; D. Tait; David Walker; Barry Pizer; John Imeson; Linda S Lashford

PURPOSE To determine whether preradiotherapy (RT) chemotherapy would improve outcome for Chang stage M0-1 medulloblastoma when compared with RT alone. Chemotherapy comprised vincristine 1.5 mg/m2 weekly for 10 weeks and four cycles of etoposide 100 mg/m2 daily for 3 days, and carboplatin 500 mg/m2 daily for 2 days alternating with cyclophosphamide 1.5 g/m2. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patients aged 3 to 16 years inclusive were randomly assigned to receive 35 Gy craniospinal RT with a 20 Gy posterior fossa boost, or chemotherapy followed by RT. RESULTS Of 217 patients randomly assigned to treatment, 179 were eligible for analysis (chemotherapy + RT, 90 patients; RT alone, 89 patients). Median age was 7.67 years, and median follow-up was 5.40 years. Overall survival (OS) at 3 and 5 years was 79.5% and 70.7%, respectively. Event-free survival (EFS) at 3 and 5 years was 71.6% and 67.0%, respectively. EFS was significantly better for chemotherapy and RT (P =.0366), with EFS of 78.5% at 3 years and 74.2% at 5 years compared with 64.8% at 3 years and 59.8% at 5 years for RT alone. There was no statistically significant difference in 3-year and 5-year OS between the two arms (P =.0928). Multivariate analysis identified use of chemotherapy (P =.0248) and time to complete RT (P =.0100) as having significant effect on EFS. CONCLUSION This is the first large multicenter randomized study to demonstrate improved EFS for chemotherapy compared with RT alone. It is anticipated that this regimen could reduce ototoxicity and nephrotoxicity compared with cisplatin-containing schedules. The importance of avoiding interruptions to RT has been confirmed.


The Lancet | 2000

Reversion of prion protein conformational changes by synthetic b-sheet breaker peptides

Claudio Soto; Richard J. Kascsak; Gabriela P. Saborio; Pierre Aucouturier; Thomas Wisniewski; Frances Prelli; Regina Kascsak; Enrique Méndez; David A. Harris; James Ironside; Fabrizio Tagliavini; Richard I. Carp; Blas Frangione

BACKGROUND Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies are associated with a structural transition in the prion protein that results in the conversion of the physiological PrPc to pathological PrP(Sc). We investigated whether this conformational transition can be inhibited and reversed by peptides homologous to the PrP fragments implicated in the abnormal folding, which contain specific residues acting as beta-sheet blockers (beta-sheet breaker peptides). METHODS We studied the effect of a 13-residue beta-sheet breaker peptide (iPrP13) on the reversion of the abnormal structure and properties of PrP(Sc) purified from the brains of mice with experimental scrapie and from human beings affected by sporadic and variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. In a cellular model of familial prion disease, we studied the effect of the peptide in the production of the abnormal form of PrP in intact cells. The influence of the peptide on prion infectivity was studied in vivo by incubation time assays in mice with experimental scrapie. FINDINGS The beta-sheet breaker peptide partly reversed in-vitro PrP(Sc) to a biochemical and structural state similar to that of PrPc. The effect of the peptide was also detected in intact cells. Treatment of prion infectious material with iPrP13 delayed the appearance of clinical symptoms and decreased infectivity by 90-95% in mice with experimental scrapie. INTERPRETATION Beta-sheet breaker peptides reverse PrP conformational changes implicated in the pathogenesis of spongiform encephalopathies. These peptides or their derivatives provide a useful tool to study the role of PrP conformation and might represent a novel therapeutic approach for prion-related disorders.


The Lancet | 2001

Detection of variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease infectivity in extraneural tissues

Moira E. Bruce; Irene McConnell; Robert G. Will; James Ironside

Abnormal accumulations of prion protein (PrP) can be detected in the spleen, lymph nodes, and tonsils of patients with variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD). Therefore, it has been assumed, but not shown, that these tissues harbour infectivity, which in turn presents the potential for iatrogenic spread through surgery. Here, we show and measure levels of infectivity in spleen and tonsil from two patients with vCJD, by bioassay in intracerebrally inoculated RIII mice. Similar bioassays failed to detect infectivity in buffy coat and plasma.

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Mark Head

University of Edinburgh

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Jean Manson

University of Edinburgh

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Jeanne E. Bell

Western General Hospital

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Helen Yull

University of Edinburgh

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