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Featured researches published by Jonathan Caplin.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2003

Comparison of enterococcal populations in animals, humans, and the environment - a European study

Inger Kühn; Aina Iversen; Lars G. Burman; Barbro Olsson-Liljequist; A. Franklin; Maria Finn; Frank Møller Aarestrup; Anne Mette Seyfarth; Anicet R. Blanch; X. Vilanova; Huw Taylor; Jonathan Caplin; Miguel A. Moreno; Lucas Domínguez; Inmaculada Herrero; Roland Möllby

The objectives of the present study were to generate knowledge of enterococcal populations in the food chain, by studying the population structure (in measures of abundance and diversity) among enterococci in different geographical regions and in different parts of the food chain, as well as the similarities between different enterococcal populations. Altogether, 2868 samples were collected from humans (healthy and hospitalised individuals and clinical isolates), animals (slaughterhouse carcasses and farm animals), and the environment (pig farms, sewage, and surface water) in four European countries-Sweden, Denmark, UK, and Spain. The samples were characterised with regard to presence and numbers of enterococci, and eight (for faecal samples) or 24 (for environmental samples) isolates per sample were phenotyped and preliminarily identified with the PhP-RF system. In total, more than 20,000 isolates were typed. A majority of the samples (77%) showed the presence of presumed enterococci. The diversities of enterococci in environmental samples were generally high, and also faecal samples normally showed presence of more than one enterococcal strain. The most common species found were Enterococcus faecium (33%), E. faecalis (29%), and E. hirae (24%), but different enterococcal populations differed in their species distribution. Clinical isolates, hospitalised patients, and hospital sewage in Sweden showed a clear dominance of E. faecalis (80%, 57%, and 54%, respectively) whereas healthy individuals and urban sewage contained less E. faecalis (39% and 40%, respectively). The species distribution among isolates from slaughterhouses varied between animal species and also between countries, but E. faecalis seemed to be mainly associated with broiler, and E. hirae with cattle and pigs. The results from the study have indicated a simplified method to study the diversity of bacterial populations. Instead of collecting many samples and analysing one or a few isolates per sample, it is possible to collect fewer samples and analyse several isolates per sample. Both approaches yielded similar information on the diversity of the populations. Another useful information was that since samples from hospital sewage, urban sewage, and manure contained enterococcal populations that reflected those in faecal samples of hospitalised patients, healthy humans, and animals, respectively, such samples may be used as pooled faecal samples and may replace cumbersome samplings from many individuals.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Occurrence and Relatedness of Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococci in Animals, Humans, and the Environment in Different European Regions

Inger Kühn; Aina Iversen; Maria Finn; Christina Greko; Lars G. Burman; Anicet R. Blanch; X. Vilanova; Albert Manero; Huw Taylor; Jonathan Caplin; Lucas Domínguez; Inmaculada Herrero; Miguel A. Moreno; Roland Möllby

ABSTRACT Vancomycin-resistant enterococcci (VRE) in Europe are thought to have emerged partly due to the use of the glycopeptide avoparcin in animal husbandry. We compared the occurrence of VRE in geographical regions of Europe in which until 1997 large amounts of avoparcin were used (Spain, United Kingdom, and Denmark) with the occurrence of VRE in Sweden, where avoparcin was banned in 1986. We also studied the relatedness between VRE strains from different regions and habitats. In total, 2,580 samples were collected from humans, animals, and the environment (soil, sewage, recipient water). VRE resistant to 20 μg/ml vancomycin were identified in 8.2% of the samples and were found most frequently in raw and treated urban sewage samples (means, 71% and 36% of the samples, respectively), pig manure (17%), and hospital sewage (16%). The proportions of VRE-positive sewage samples were similar in Sweden, Spain, and the United Kingdom, whereas pig feces and manure were more often positive in Spain than in Sweden (30% versus 1%). Most VRE were Enterococcus faecium carrying vanA, and computerized biochemical phenotyping of the isolates of different ecological origins showed a high degree of polyclonality. In conclusion, it seems that animal-associated VRE probably reflect the former use of avoparcin in animal production, whereas VRE in human-associated samples may be a result of antibiotic use in hospitals. Since there seems to be a reservoir of the resistance genes in all countries studied, precautions must be taken to limit the use of antibiotics and antibiotic-like feed additives.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2003

Comparison of enterococcal populations related to urban and hospital wastewater in various climatic and geographic European regions

Anicet R. Blanch; Jonathan Caplin; Aina Iversen; Inger Kühn; Albert Manero; Huw Taylor; X. Vilanova

Aims: Scarce knowledge about the distribution of enterococci species in wastewaters limits any statement on their reliability as faecal indicators or the implications of antibiotic resistance transmission by these organisms through the water cycle. Enterococci have been involved in nosocomial infections and the spreading of antibiotic resistance through the food chain. The species distribution of enterococci and the presence of resistant strains to vancomycin and erythromycin were analysed in more than 400 raw and treated urban wastewaters, surface waters receiving these treated wastewaters and hospital wastewaters from three European countries.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2000

Epidemiology and ecology of enterococci, with special reference to antibiotic resistant strains, in animals, humans and the environment. Example of an ongoing project within the European research programme.

Inger Kühn; Aina Iversen; Lars G. Burman; Barbro Olsson-Liljequist; A. Franklin; Maria Finn; Frank Møller Aarestrup; Anne Mette Seyfarth; Anicet R. Blanch; Huw Taylor; Jonathan Caplin; Miguel A. Moreno; Lucas Domínguez; Roland Möllby

The objectives of the present study are to generate knowledge of the ecology and epidemiology of enterococci in the food chain by studying the following: (1) the population structure (in measures of abundance, number of vancomycin resistant strains, antibiotic resistance patterns, diversity, and stability) among enterococcal populations in different geographical regions and in different links of the food chain (2) possible transmission of strains through the food chain and between hospital environments and the food chain (3) the association between vancomycin resistance and individual strains of enterococci and (4) the diversity of the drug resistance genes in enterococci. So far, 1578 samples have been collected from different countries within the EU (Sweden, Denmark, UK and Spain), and from different habitats (pig farms, carcasses in slaughter houses, soil, manure, water, sewage, and humans). Total and vancomycin resistant enterococcal populations in each sample have been enumerated and more than 12000 isolates have been characterised by phenotyping. Representative isolates are further species identified and characterised by genotyping and MIC determination and from antibiotic resistant isolates the resistance genes are characterised.


Nature Communications | 2013

Genome signature-based dissection of human gut metagenomes to extract subliminal viral sequences

Lesley A. Ogilvie; Lucas D. Bowler; Jonathan Caplin; Cinzia Dedi; David Diston; Elizabeth Cheek; Huw Taylor; James Ebdon; Brian V. Jones

Bacterial viruses (bacteriophages) have a key role in shaping the development and functional outputs of host microbiomes. Although metagenomic approaches have greatly expanded our understanding of the prokaryotic virosphere, additional tools are required for the phage-oriented dissection of metagenomic data sets, and host-range affiliation of recovered sequences. Here we demonstrate the application of a genome signature-based approach to interrogate conventional whole-community metagenomes and access subliminal, phylogenetically targeted, phage sequences present within. We describe a portion of the biological dark matter extant in the human gut virome, and bring to light a population of potentially gut-specific Bacteroidales-like phage, poorly represented in existing virus like particle-derived viral metagenomes. These predominantly temperate phage were shown to encode functions of direct relevance to human health in the form of antibiotic resistance genes, and provided evidence for the existence of putative ‘viral-enterotypes’ among this fraction of the human gut virome.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Comparative (Meta)genomic Analysis and Ecological Profiling of Human Gut-Specific Bacteriophage φB124-14

Lesley A. Ogilvie; Jonathan Caplin; Cinzia Dedi; David Diston; Elizabeth Cheek; Lucas D. Bowler; Huw Taylor; James Ebdon; Brian V. Jones

Bacteriophage associated with the human gut microbiome are likely to have an important impact on community structure and function, and provide a wealth of biotechnological opportunities. Despite this, knowledge of the ecology and composition of bacteriophage in the gut bacterial community remains poor, with few well characterized gut-associated phage genomes currently available. Here we describe the identification and in-depth (meta)genomic, proteomic, and ecological analysis of a human gut-specific bacteriophage (designated φB124-14). In doing so we illuminate a fraction of the biological dark matter extant in this ecosystem and its surrounding eco-genomic landscape, identifying a novel and uncharted bacteriophage gene-space in this community. φB124-14 infects only a subset of closely related gut-associated Bacteroides fragilis strains, and the circular genome encodes functions previously found to be rare in viral genomes and human gut viral metagenome sequences, including those which potentially confer advantages upon phage and/or host bacteria. Comparative genomic analyses revealed φB124-14 is most closely related to φB40-8, the only other publically available Bacteroides sp. phage genome, whilst comparative metagenomic analysis of both phage failed to identify any homologous sequences in 136 non-human gut metagenomic datasets searched, supporting the human gut-specific nature of this phage. Moreover, a potential geographic variation in the carriage of these and related phage was revealed by analysis of their distribution and prevalence within 151 human gut microbiomes and viromes from Europe, America and Japan. Finally, ecological profiling of φB124-14 and φB40-8, using both gene-centric alignment-driven phylogenetic analyses, as well as alignment-free gene-independent approaches was undertaken. This not only verified the human gut-specific nature of both phage, but also indicated that these phage populate a distinct and unexplored ecological landscape within the human gut microbiome.


Biotechnology Journal | 2016

Silk route to the acceptance and re-implementation of bacteriophage therapy

Zemphira Alavidze; Rustam I. Aminov; Alexander Betts; Marjorie Bardiau; Laurent Bretaudeau; Jonathan Caplin; Nino Chanishvili; Aidan Coffey; Ian Cooper; Daniel De Vos; Jir Doskar; Ville-Petri Friman; Naomi Hoyle; Nino Karanadze; D I Kurtboke; Mzia Kutateladze; Shawna McCallin; Maya Merabishvili; George Mgaloblishvili; Lia Nadareishvili; Nikoloz Nikolaishvili; Dea Nizharadze; Pantucek Roman; Jean-Paul Pirnay; Grégory Resch; Christine Rohde; Wilbert Sybesma; Teona Shulaia; Marina Tediashvili; Aleksandre Ujmajuridze

This multidisciplinary expert panel opinion on bacteriophage therapy has been written in the context of a society that is confronted with an ever-increasing number of antibiotic resistant bacteria. To avoid the return to a pre-antibiotic era, alternative treatments are urgently needed. The authors aim to contribute to the opinion formation of relevant stakeholders on how to potentially develop an infrastructure and legislation that paves the way for the acceptance and re-implementation of bacteriophage therapy.


The Journal of Antibiotics | 2018

Silk Route to the Acceptance and Re-Implementation of Bacteriophage Therapy—Part II

Wilbert Sybesma; Christine Rohde; Pavol Bárdy; Jean-Paul Pirnay; Ian Cooper; Jonathan Caplin; Nina Chanishvili; Aidan Coffey; Daniel De Vos; Amber Scholz; Shawna McCallin; Hilke Püschner; Roman Pantucek; Rustam I. Aminov; Jiří Doškař; D. Kurtbӧke

This perspective paper follows up on earlier communications on bacteriophage therapy that we wrote as a multidisciplinary and intercontinental expert-panel when we first met at a bacteriophage conference hosted by the Eliava Institute in Tbilisi, Georgia in 2015. In the context of a society that is confronted with an ever-increasing number of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, we build on the previously made recommendations and specifically address how the Nagoya Protocol might impact the further development of bacteriophage therapy. By reviewing a number of recently conducted case studies with bacteriophages involving patients with bacterial infections that could no longer be successfully treated by regular antibiotic therapy, we again stress the urgency and significance of the development of international guidelines and frameworks that might facilitate the legal and effective application of bacteriophage therapy by physicians and the receiving patients. Additionally, we list and comment on several recently started and ongoing clinical studies, including highly desired double-blind placebo-controlled randomized clinical trials. We conclude with an outlook on how recently developed DNA editing technologies are expected to further control and enhance the efficient application of bacteriophages.


Microbiology Australia | 2017

Application of bacteriophages

Rustam I. Aminov; Jonathan Caplin; Nina Chanishvili; Aidan Coffey; Ian Cooper; Daniel De Vos; Jiří Doškař; Ville-Petri Friman; İpek Kurtbӧke; Roman Pantucek; Jean-Paul Pirnay; Grégory Resch; Christine Rohde; Wilbert Sybesma; Johannes Wittmann

The emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and decrease in the discovery rate of novel antibiotics takes mankind back to the ‘pre-antibiotic era’ and search for alternative treatments. Bacteriophages have been one of promising alternative agents which can be utilised for medicinal and biological control purposes in agriculture and related fields. The idea to treat bacterial infections with phages came out of the pioneering work of Felix d‘Herelle but this was overshadowed by the success of antibiotics. Recent renewed interest in phage therapy is dictated by its advantages most importantly by their specificity against the bacterial targets. This prevents complications such as antibiotic-induced dysbiosis and secondary infections. This article is compiled by the participants of the Expert Round Table conference ‘Bacteriophages as tools for therapy, prophylaxis and diagnostics’ (19–21 October 2015) at the Eliava Institute of Bacteriophage, Microbiology and Virology, Tbilisi, Georgia. The first paper from the Round Table was published in the Biotechnology Journal1. This In Focus article expands from this paper and includes recent developments reported since then by the Expert Round Table participants, including the implementation of the Nagoya Protocol for the applications of bacteriophages.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2016

The application of phage-based faecal pollution markers to predict the concentration of adenoviruses in mussels (Mytilus edulis) and their overlying waters

Adewale Olalemi; Sarah Purnell; Jonathan Caplin; James Ebdon; Huw Taylor

This study set out to determine whether phage‐based indicators may provide a ‘low‐tech’ alternative to existing approaches that might help maintain the microbial safety of shellfish and their overlying waters.

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Huw Taylor

University of Brighton

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Ian Cooper

University of Brighton

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James Ebdon

University of Brighton

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Daniel De Vos

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Jean-Paul Pirnay

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Aidan Coffey

Cork Institute of Technology

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