Jorge Del-Pozo
University of Edinburgh
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jorge Del-Pozo.
Science | 2016
Charlotte Avanzi; Jorge Del-Pozo; Andrej Benjak; Karen Stevenson; Victor R. Simpson; Philippe Busso; Joyce McLuckie; Chloé Loiseau; Colin Lawton; Janne Schoening; Darren Shaw; Jérémie Piton; Lucio Vera-Cabrera; Jesús Salvador Velarde-Félix; Fergal McDermott; Stephen V. Gordon; Stewart T. Cole; Anna Meredith
British squirrels infected with leprosy With the exception of armadillos in the Americas, leprosy infections are considered almost exclusively restricted to humans. Avanzi et al. examined warty growths on the faces and extremities of red squirrels in the British Isles and found that two species of leprosy-causing organisms were to blame (see the Perspective by Stinear and Brosch). Mycobacterium leprae in the southern population of Brownsea Island squirrels originated from a medieval human strain. M. lepromatosis was found in red squirrels from elsewhere in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Human leprosy is proving hard to eradicate, despite available drugs. Perhaps other wildlife species are also reservoirs for this stubborn disease. Science, this issue p. 744; see also p. 702 More than 20% of red squirrel cadavers from the United Kingdom and Ireland have been found with leprosy. Leprosy, caused by infection with Mycobacterium leprae or the recently discovered Mycobacterium lepromatosis, was once endemic in humans in the British Isles. Red squirrels in Great Britain (Sciurus vulgaris) have increasingly been observed with leprosy-like lesions on the head and limbs. Using genomics, histopathology, and serology, we found M. lepromatosis in squirrels from England, Ireland, and Scotland, and M. leprae in squirrels from Brownsea Island, England. Infection was detected in overtly diseased and seemingly healthy animals. Phylogenetic comparisons of British and Irish M. lepromatosis with two Mexican strains from humans show that they diverged from a common ancestor around 27,000 years ago, whereas the M. leprae strain is closest to one that circulated in Medieval England. Red squirrels are thus a reservoir for leprosy in the British Isles.
The Journal of Physiology | 2012
Sebastien A. Rider; Carl Tucker; Jorge Del-Pozo; Kirsten N. Rose; Calum A. MacRae; Matthew A. Bailey; John J. Mullins
Key points • The anatomical structures and discrete nephric regions of the pronephric zebrafish kidney are similar to those of the mammalian nephron. • Renal blood supply and subsequent renal filtration rate are both key determinants of kidney function. • Our study developed classical functional assays for larval zebrafish that effectively model the effects of the nephrotoxin gentamicin and high salt loading. • The techniques demonstrate the disruption in ion and water balance resulting from reduced cardiovascular flow and renal filtration rate. • The ability to measure cardio‐renal function in zebrafish offers advantages associated with the fish model to gain a wider understanding of kidney physiology.
Veterinary Pathology | 2017
Jorge Del-Pozo; N. Mishra; R. Kabuusu; S. Cheetham; A. Eldar; E. Bacharach; W. I. Lipkin; Hugh W. Ferguson
Using transmission electron microscopy (TEM), the presented work expands on the ultrastructural findings of an earlier report on “syncytial hepatitis,” a novel disease of tilapia (SHT). Briefly, TEM confirmed the presence of an orthomyxovirus-like virus within the diseased hepatocytes but not within the endothelium. This was supported by observing extracellular and intracellular (mostly intraendosomal), 60–100 nm round virions with a trilaminar capsid containing up to 7 electron-dense aggregates. Other patterns noted included enveloped or filamentous virions and virion-containing cytoplasmic membrane folds, suggestive of endocytosis. Patterns atypical for orthymyxovirus included the formation of syncytia and the presence of virions within the perinuclear cisternae (suspected to be the Golgi apparatus). The ultrastructural morphology of SHT-associated virions is similar to that previously reported for tilapia lake virus (TiLV). A genetic homology was investigated using the available reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) probes for TiLV and comparing clinically sick with clinically normal fish and negative controls. By RT-PCR analysis, viral nucleic acid was detected only in diseased fish. Taken together, these findings strongly suggest that a virus is causally associated with SHT, that this virus shares ultrastructural features with orthomyxoviruses, and it presents with partial genetic homology with TiLV (190 nucleotides).
PLOS ONE | 2014
Sebastian Pieperhoff; Kathryn S. Wilson; James Baily; Kim de Mora; Sana Maqsood; Sharron Vass; Jonathan M. Taylor; Jorge Del-Pozo; Calum A. MacRae; John J. Mullins; Martin A. Denvir
The zebrafish is increasingly used for cardiovascular genetic and functional studies. We present a novel protocol to maintain and monitor whole isolated beating adult zebrafish hearts in culture for long-term experiments. Excised whole adult zebrafish hearts were transferred directly into culture dishes containing optimized L-15 Leibovitz growth medium and maintained for 5 days. Hearts were assessed daily using video-edge analysis of ventricle function using low power microscopy images. High-throughput histology techniques were used to assess changes in myocardial architecture and cell viability. Mean spontaneous Heart rate (HR, min−1) declined significantly between day 0 and day 1 in culture (96.7±19.5 to 45.2±8.2 min−1, mean±SD, p = 0.001), and thereafter declined more slowly to 27.6±7.2 min−1 on day 5. Ventricle wall motion amplitude (WMA) did not change until day 4 in culture (day 0, 46.7±13.0 µm vs day 4, 16.9±1.9 µm, p = 0.08). Contraction velocity (CV) declined between day 0 and day 3 (35.6±14.8 vs 15.2±5.3 µms−1, respectively, p = 0.012) while relaxation velocity (RV) declined quite rapidly (day 0, 72.5±11.9 vs day 1, 29.5±5.8 µms−1, p = 0.03). HR and WMA responded consistently to isoproterenol from day 0 to day 5 in culture while CV and RV showed less consistent responses to beta-agonist. Cellular architecture and cross-striation pattern of cardiomyocytes remained unchanged up to day 3 in culture and thereafter showed significant deterioration with loss of striation pattern, pyknotic nuclei and cell swelling. Apoptotic markers within the myocardium became increasingly frequent by day 3 in culture. Whole adult zebrafish hearts can be maintained in culture-medium for up to 3 days. However, after day-3 there is significant deterioration in ventricle function and heart rate accompanied by significant histological changes consistent with cell death and loss of cardiomyocyte cell integrity. Further studies are needed to assess whether this preparation can be optimised for longer term survival.
Veterinary Pathology | 2013
Erika Abbondati; Jorge Del-Pozo; T. M. Hoather; Fernando Constantino-Casas; Jane Dobson
Tumor hypoxia has been associated with increased malignancy, likelihood of metastasis, and increased resistance to radiotherapy and chemotherapy in human medicine. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) is a key transcription factor that is induced by tumor hypoxia and regulates the pathways involved in cellular response and adaptation to the hostile tumor microenvironment. HIF-1 induces transcription of different proteins, including Ca-IX and Glut-1, which are considered endogenous markers of chronic hypoxia in solid tumors in humans. In this study, sections from 40 canine sarcomas (20 histiocytic sarcomas and 20 low-grade soft-tissue sarcomas) were immunostained for these markers. Expression of Glut-1 was scored based on percentage of positive staining cells (0 = <1%; 1 = 1%–50%; 2 = >50%) and intensity of cellular staining (1 = weak; 2 = strong); Ca-IX was scored based on percentage of positive cells (0 = <1%; 1 = 1%–30%; 2 = >30%). Intratumoral microvessel density was measured using CD31 to assess intratumoral neoangiogenesis. Histiocytic sarcomas showed statistically significant higher Glut-1 immunoreactivity and angiogenesis than did low-grade soft-tissue sarcomas. Intratumoral microvessel density in histiocytic sarcomas was positively associated with Glut-1 immunoreactivity score. These findings suggest a potential role of hypoxia in the biology of these tumors and may provide a base for investigation of the potential prognostic use of these markers in naturally occurring canine tumors.
Veterinary Pathology | 2010
Jorge Del-Pozo; Margaret Crumlish; J. F. Turnbull; Hugh W. Ferguson
Rainbow trout gastroenteritis (RTGE) is an emerging syndrome linked to the presence of large numbers of the segmented filamentous bacterium “Candidatus arthromitus” within the intestine. The present study examined the histopathological changes of the digestive tract of 152 trout with gross lesions typical of RTGE. Histopathology showed that 129 of 152 fish (85%) affected with RTGE had segmented filamentous bacteria in the distal intestine and/or pyloric caeca. The presence and number of segmented filamentous bacteria were always significantly higher (P < .001) in pyloric caeca, thereby suggesting the preferred site for these bacteria. Histopathological changes included enterocyte detachment and congestion of the lamina propria and adventitial layers. Samples from 6 RTGE-affected trout were examined using scanning and transmission electron microscopy, revealing a close interaction of segmented filamentous bacteria with the mucosa of distal intestine and pyloric caeca, with the presence of bacterial attachment sites, and with associated morphological changes of the apical membrane of enterocytes. Despite these interactions, segmented filamentous bacteria were not always adjacent to the areas with pathological changes, suggesting that if these organisms play a role in the pathogenesis of RTGE, extracellular products may be involved. Ultrastructural changes included loss of microvillar structure, membrane blebbing, hydropic mitochondrial damage, and basal hydropic degeneration of enterocytes, which frequently resulted in disruption of tight junctions and enterocyte detachment. The resulting exposure of large areas of lamina propria probably resulted in the compromise of the host osmotic balance and the facilitation of the entry of secondary pathogens.
Journal of Comparative Pathology | 2013
Jorge Del-Pozo; S Girling; Joyce McLuckie; Erika Abbondati; Karen Stevenson
This report describes an unusual presentation of paratuberculosis in a captive, 4-year-old female tundra reindeer (Rangifer tarandus tarandus). The gross and histological presentation was consistent with clinical paratuberculosis as previously reported for other ruminants, with poor body condition, subcutaneous oedema, granulomatous ileitis (multibacillary), mesenteric lymphadenitis and hepatitis. However, this animal also presented with unusual lung lesions, with necrosis and mineralization similar to that reported for Mycobacterium bovis in other wild and domestic ruminants. The presence of DNA of Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis was confirmed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in intestine and lung tissue (IS900, Hsp65) and PCR tests for the detection of Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex and other members of the M. avium complex were negative.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Mara Artibani; Andrew H. Sims; Joan Slight; Stuart A. Aitken; Anna Thornburn; Morwenna Muir; Valerie G. Brunton; Jorge Del-Pozo; Linda Morrison; Elad Katz; Nicholas D. Hastie; Peter Hohenstein
WT1 is a transcription factor which regulates the epithelial-mesenchymal balance during embryonic development and, if mutated, can lead to the formation of Wilms’ tumour, the most common paediatric kidney cancer. Its expression has also been reported in several adult tumour types, including breast cancer, and usually correlates with poor outcome. However, published data is inconsistent and the role of WT1 in this malignancy remains unclear. Here we provide a complete study of WT1 expression across different breast cancer subtypes as well as isoform specific expression analysis. Using in vitro cell lines, clinical samples and publicly available gene expression datasets, we demonstrate that WT1 plays a role in regulating the epithelial-mesenchymal balance of breast cancer cells and that WT1-expressing tumours are mainly associated with a mesenchymal phenotype. WT1 gene expression also correlates with CYP3A4 levels and is associated with poorer response to taxane treatment. Our work is the first to demonstrate that the known association between WT1 expression in breast cancer and poor prognosis is potentially due to cancer-related epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and poor chemotherapy response.
Equine Veterinary Education | 2018
Stephen Drew; Lucinda Meehan; Richard Reardon; Bruce McGorum; Padraic Dixon; Jorge Del-Pozo
A 14-year-old Connemara cross gelding presented with abnormal respiratory noise and exercise intolerance. Upper airway endoscopy, ultrasonography, radiography and computed tomography revealed a large mass within the left guttural pouch causing marked left dorsal nasopharyngeal collapse and displacement and compression of the right guttural pouch. The horse was subjected to euthanasia and a post-mortem examination confirmed the above findings. Histological and immunohistochemical examinations of the mass confirmed a diagnosis of guttural pouch leiomyosarcoma, a lesion previously unreported at this site.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Patricia A Noguera; Bianka Grunow; Matthias Klinger; Katherine Lester; Bertrand Collet; Jorge Del-Pozo
Development of Salmon Cardiac Primary Cultures (SCPCs) from Atlantic salmon pre-hatch embryos and their application as in vitro model for cardiotropic viral infection research are described. Producing SCPCs requires plating of trypsin dissociated embryos with subsequent targeted harvest from 24h up to 3 weeks, of relevant tissues after visual identification. SCPCs are then transferred individually to chambered wells for culture in isolation, with incubation at 15–22°. SCPCs production efficiency was not influenced by embryo’s origin (0.75/ farmed or wild embryo), but mildly influenced by embryonic developmental stage (0.3 decline between 380 and 445 accumulated thermal units), and strongly influenced by time of harvest post-plating (0.6 decline if harvested after 72 hours). Beating rate was not significantly influenced by temperature (15–22°) or age (2–4 weeks), but was significantly lower on SCPCs originated from farmed embryos with a disease resistant genotype (F = 5.3, p<0.05). Two distinct morphologies suggestive of an ex vivo embryonic heart and a de novo formation were observed sub-grossly, histologically, ultra-structurally and with confocal microscopy. Both types contained cells consistent with cardiomyocytes, endothelium, and fibroblasts. Ageing of SCPCs in culture was observed with increased auto fluorescence in live imaging, and as myelin figures and cellular degeneration ultra-structurally. The SCPCs model was challenged with cardiotropic viruses and both the viral load and the mx gene expression were measurable along time by qPCR. In summary, SCPCs represent a step forward in salmon cardiac disease research as an in vitro model that partially incorporates the functional complexity of the fish heart.