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Dive into the research topics where Jay V. DePasse is active.

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Featured researches published by Jay V. DePasse.


BMC Genomics | 2008

Viral genome sequencing by random priming methods

Appolinaire Djikeng; Rebecca A. Halpin; Ryan Kuzmickas; Jay V. DePasse; Jeremy I. Feldblyum; Naomi Sengamalay; Claudio L. Afonso; Xinsheng Zhang; Norman G Anderson; Elodie Ghedin; David J. Spiro

BackgroundMost emerging health threats are of zoonotic origin. For the overwhelming majority, their causative agents are RNA viruses which include but are not limited to HIV, Influenza, SARS, Ebola, Dengue, and Hantavirus. Of increasing importance therefore is a better understanding of global viral diversity to enable better surveillance and prediction of pandemic threats; this will require rapid and flexible methods for complete viral genome sequencing.ResultsWe have adapted the SISPA methodology [1–3] to genome sequencing of RNA and DNA viruses. We have demonstrated the utility of the method on various types and sources of viruses, obtaining near complete genome sequence of viruses ranging in size from 3,000–15,000 kb with a median depth of coverage of 14.33. We used this technique to generate full viral genome sequence in the presence of host contaminants, using viral preparations from cell culture supernatant, allantoic fluid and fecal matter.ConclusionThe method described is of great utility in generating whole genome assemblies for viruses with little or no available sequence information, viruses from greatly divergent families, previously uncharacterized viruses, or to more fully describe mixed viral infections.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Deep Sequencing Reveals Mixed Infection with 2009 Pandemic Influenza A (H1N1) Virus Strains and the Emergence of Oseltamivir Resistance

Elodie Ghedin; Jennifer Laplante; Jay V. DePasse; David E. Wentworth; Roberto P. Santos; Martha L. Lepow; Joanne Porter; Kathleen A. Stellrecht; Xudong Lin; Darwin Operario; Sara B. Griesemer; Adam Fitch; Rebecca A. Halpin; Timothy B. Stockwell; David J. Spiro; Edward C. Holmes; Kirsten St. George

Mixed infections with seasonal influenza A virus strains are a common occurrence and an important source of genetic diversity. Prolonged viral shedding, as observed in immunocompromised individuals, can lead to mutational accumulation over extended periods. Recently, drug resistance was reported in immunosuppressed patients infected with the 2009 pandemic influenza A (H1N1) virus within a few days after oseltamivir treatment was initiated. To better understand the evolution and emergence of drug resistance in these circumstances, we used a deep sequencing approach to survey the viral population from an immunosuppressed patient infected with H1N1/2009 influenza and treated with neuraminidase inhibitors. This patient harbored 3 genetic variants from 2 phylogenetically distinct viral clades of pandemic H1N1/2009, strongly suggestive of mixed infection. Strikingly, one of these variants also developed drug resistance de novo in response to oseltamivir treatment. Immunocompromised individuals may, therefore, constitute an important source of genetic and phenotypic diversity, both through mixed infection and de novo mutation.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Mixed Infection and the Genesis of Influenza Virus Diversity

Elodie Ghedin; Adam Fitch; Alex Boyne; Sara B. Griesemer; Jay V. DePasse; Jayati Bera; Xu Zhang; Rebecca A. Halpin; Marita Smit; Lance C. Jennings; Kirsten St. George; Edward C. Holmes; David J. Spiro

ABSTRACT The emergence of viral infections with potentially devastating consequences for human health is highly dependent on their underlying evolutionary dynamics. One likely scenario for an avian influenza virus, such as A/H5N1, to evolve to one capable of human-to-human transmission is through the acquisition of genetic material from the A/H1N1 or A/H3N2 subtypes already circulating in human populations. This would require that viruses of both subtypes coinfect the same cells, generating a mixed infection, and then reassort. Determining the nature and frequency of mixed infection with influenza virus is therefore central to understanding the emergence of pandemic, antigenic, and drug-resistant strains. To better understand the potential for such events, we explored patterns of intrahost genetic diversity in recently circulating strains of human influenza virus. By analyzing multiple viral genome sequences sampled from individual influenza patients we reveal a high level of mixed infection, including diverse lineages of the same influenza virus subtype, drug-resistant and -sensitive strains, those that are likely to differ in antigenicity, and even viruses of different influenza virus types (A and B). These results reveal that individuals can harbor influenza viruses that differ in major phenotypic properties, including those that are antigenically distinct and those that differ in their sensitivity to antiviral agents.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Sequence Analysis of In Vivo Defective Interfering-Like RNA of Influenza A H1N1 Pandemic Virus

Kazima Saira; Xudong Lin; Jay V. DePasse; Rebecca A. Halpin; Alan Twaddle; Timothy B. Stockwell; Brian Angus; Alessandro Cozzi-Lepri; Marina Delfino; Vivien G. Dugan; Dominic E. Dwyer; Matthew S. Freiberg; Andrzej Horban; Marcelo Losso; Ruth Lynfield; Deborah Wentworth; Edward C. Holmes; Richard T. Davey; David E. Wentworth; Elodie Ghedin

ABSTRACT Influenza virus defective interfering (DI) particles are naturally occurring noninfectious virions typically generated during in vitro serial passages in cell culture of the virus at a high multiplicity of infection. DI particles are recognized for the role they play in inhibiting viral replication and for the impact they have on the production of infectious virions. To date, influenza virus DI particles have been reported primarily as a phenomenon of cell culture and in experimentally infected embryonated chicken eggs. They have also been isolated from a respiratory infection of chickens. Using a sequencing approach, we characterize several subgenomic viral RNAs from human nasopharyngeal specimens infected with the influenza A(H1N1)pdm09 virus. The distribution of these in vivo-derived DI-like RNAs was similar to that of in vitro DIs, with the majority of the defective RNAs generated from the PB2 (segment 1) of the polymerase complex, followed by PB1 and PA. The lengths of the in vivo-derived DI-like segments also are similar to those of known in vitro DIs, and the in vivo-derived DI-like segments share internal deletions of the same segments. The presence of identical DI-like RNAs in patients linked by direct contact is compatible with transmission between them. The functional role of DI-like RNAs in natural infections remains to be established.


BMC Public Health | 2013

FRED (A Framework for Reconstructing Epidemic Dynamics): an open-source software system for modeling infectious diseases and control strategies using census-based populations

John J. Grefenstette; Shawn T. Brown; Roni Rosenfeld; Jay V. DePasse; Nathan Stone; Phillip Cooley; William D. Wheaton; Alona Fyshe; David Galloway; Anuroop Sriram; Hasan Guclu; Thomas Abraham; Donald S. Burke

BackgroundMathematical and computational models provide valuable tools that help public health planners to evaluate competing health interventions, especially for novel circumstances that cannot be examined through observational or controlled studies, such as pandemic influenza. The spread of diseases like influenza depends on the mixing patterns within the population, and these mixing patterns depend in part on local factors including the spatial distribution and age structure of the population, the distribution of size and composition of households, employment status and commuting patterns of adults, and the size and age structure of schools. Finally, public health planners must take into account the health behavior patterns of the population, patterns that often vary according to socioeconomic factors such as race, household income, and education levels.ResultsFRED (a Framework for Reconstructing Epidemic Dynamics) is a freely available open-source agent-based modeling system based closely on models used in previously published studies of pandemic influenza. This version of FRED uses open-access census-based synthetic populations that capture the demographic and geographic heterogeneities of the population, including realistic household, school, and workplace social networks. FRED epidemic models are currently available for every state and county in the United States, and for selected international locations.ConclusionsState and county public health planners can use FRED to explore the effects of possible influenza epidemics in specific geographic regions of interest and to help evaluate the effect of interventions such as vaccination programs and school closure policies. FRED is available under a free open source license in order to contribute to the development of better modeling tools and to encourage open discussion of modeling tools being used to evaluate public health policies. We also welcome participation by other researchers in the further development of FRED.


Nature Genetics | 2016

Quantifying influenza virus diversity and transmission in humans.

Leo Lit Man Poon; Timothy Song; Roni Rosenfeld; Xudong Lin; Matthew B. Rogers; Bin Zhou; Robert Sebra; Rebecca A. Halpin; Yi Guan; Alan Twaddle; Jay V. DePasse; Timothy B. Stockwell; David E. Wentworth; Edward C. Holmes; Benjamin D. Greenbaum; J. S. M. Peiris; Benjamin J. Cowling; Elodie Ghedin

Influenza A virus is characterized by high genetic diversity. However, most of what is known about influenza evolution has come from consensus sequences sampled at the epidemiological scale that only represent the dominant virus lineage within each infected host. Less is known about the extent of within-host virus diversity and what proportion of this diversity is transmitted between individuals. To characterize virus variants that achieve sustainable transmission in new hosts, we examined within-host virus genetic diversity in household donor-recipient pairs from the first wave of the 2009 H1N1 pandemic when seasonal H3N2 was co-circulating. Although the same variants were found in multiple members of the community, the relative frequencies of variants fluctuated, with patterns of genetic variation more similar within than between households. We estimated the effective population size of influenza A virus across donor-recipient pairs to be approximately 100–200 contributing members, which enabled the transmission of multiple lineages, including antigenic variants.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012

Presence of Oseltamivir-Resistant Pandemic A/H1N1 Minor Variants Before Drug Therapy With Subsequent Selection and Transmission

Elodie Ghedin; Edward C. Holmes; Jay V. DePasse; Lady Tatiana Pinilla; Adam Fitch; Marie Eve Hamelin; Jesse Papenburg; Guy Boivin

A small proportion (1%-1.5%) of 2009 pandemic influenza A/H1N1 virus strains (A[H1N1]pdm09) are oseltamivir resistant, almost exclusively because of a H275Y mutation in the neuraminidase protein. However, many individuals infected with resistant strains had not received antivirals. Whether drug-resistant viruses are initially present as minor variants in untreated individuals before they emerge as the dominant strain in a virus population is of great importance for predicting the speed at which resistance will arise. To address this issue, we used ultra-deep sequencing of viral populations from serial nasopharyngeal specimens from an immunocompromised child and from 2 individuals in a household outbreak. We observed that the Y275 mutation was present as a minor variant in infected hosts before the onset of therapy. We also found evidence for the transmission of this drug-resistant variant with drug-susceptible viruses. These observations provide important information on the relative fitness of the Y275 mutation in the absence of oseltamivir treatment.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Evolutionary history and attenuation of myxoma virus on two continents.

Peter J. Kerr; Elodie Ghedin; Jay V. DePasse; Adam Fitch; Isabella M. Cattadori; Peter J. Hudson; David C. Tscharke; Andrew F. Read; Edward C. Holmes

The attenuation of myxoma virus (MYXV) following its introduction as a biological control into the European rabbit populations of Australia and Europe is the canonical study of the evolution of virulence. However, the evolutionary genetics of this profound change in host-pathogen relationship is unknown. We describe the genome-scale evolution of MYXV covering a range of virulence grades sampled over 49 years from the parallel Australian and European epidemics, including the high-virulence progenitor strains released in the early 1950s. MYXV evolved rapidly over the sampling period, exhibiting one of the highest nucleotide substitution rates ever reported for a double-stranded DNA virus, and indicative of a relatively high mutation rate and/or a continually changing selective environment. Our comparative sequence data reveal that changes in virulence involved multiple genes, likely losses of gene function due to insertion-deletion events, and no mutations common to specific virulence grades. Hence, despite the similarity in selection pressures there are multiple genetic routes to attain either highly virulent or attenuated phenotypes in MYXV, resulting in convergence for phenotype but not genotype.


Nature Communications | 2015

Identification of mammalian-adapting mutations in the polymerase complex of an avian H5N1 influenza virus

Andrew S. Taft; Makoto Ozawa; Adam Fitch; Jay V. DePasse; Peter Halfmann; Lindsay Hill-Batorski; Masato Hatta; Thomas C. Friedrich; Tiago J. S. Lopes; Eileen A. Maher; Elodie Ghedin; Catherine A. Macken; Gabriele Neumann; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

Avian influenza viruses of the H5N1 subtype pose a serious global health threat due to the high mortality (>60%) associated with the disease caused by these viruses and the lack of protective antibodies to these viruses in the general population. The factors that enable avian H5N1 influenza viruses to replicate in humans are not completely understood. Here we use a high-throughput screening approach to identify novel mutations in the polymerase genes of an avian H5N1 virus that confer efficient polymerase activity in mammalian cells. Several of the identified mutations (which have previously been found in natural isolates) increase viral replication in mammalian cells and virulence in infected mice compared with the wild-type virus. The identification of amino-acid mutations in avian H5N1 influenza virus polymerase complexes that confer increased replication and virulence in mammals is important for the identification of circulating H5N1 viruses with an increased potential to infect humans. Supplementary information The online version of this article (doi:10.1038/ncomms8491) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Genome Scale Evolution of Myxoma Virus Reveals Host-Pathogen Adaptation and Rapid Geographic Spread

Peter J. Kerr; Matthew B. Rogers; Adam Fitch; Jay V. DePasse; Isabella M. Cattadori; Alan Twaddle; Peter J. Hudson; David C. Tscharke; Andrew F. Read; Edward C. Holmes; Elodie Ghedin

ABSTRACT The evolutionary interplay between myxoma virus (MYXV) and the European rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus) following release of the virus in Australia in 1950 as a biological control is a classic example of host-pathogen coevolution. We present a detailed genomic and phylogeographic analysis of 30 strains of MYXV, including the Australian progenitor strain Standard Laboratory Strain (SLS), 24 Australian viruses isolated from 1951 to 1999, and three isolates from the early radiation in Britain from 1954 and 1955. We show that in Australia MYXV has spread rapidly on a spatial scale, with multiple lineages cocirculating within individual localities, and that both highly virulent and attenuated viruses were still present in the field through the 1990s. In addition, the detection of closely related virus lineages at sites 1,000 km apart suggests that MYXV moves freely in geographic space, with mosquitoes, fleas, and rabbit migration all providing means of transport. Strikingly, despite multiple introductions, all modern viruses appear to be ultimately derived from the original introductions of SLS. The rapidity of MYXV evolution was also apparent at the genomic scale, with gene duplications documented in a number of viruses. Duplication of potential virulence genes may be important in increasing the expression of virulence proteins and provides the basis for the evolution of novel functions. Mutations leading to loss of open reading frames were surprisingly frequent and in some cases may explain attenuation, but no common mutations that correlated with virulence or attenuation were identified.

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Shawn T. Brown

Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center

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Adam Fitch

University of Pittsburgh

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