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Dive into the research topics where Joseph Prescott is active.

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Featured researches published by Joseph Prescott.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) Does Not Replicate in Syrian Hamsters

Emmie de Wit; Joseph Prescott; Laura Baseler; Trenton Bushmaker; Tina Thomas; Matthew G. Lackemeyer; Cynthia Martellaro; Shauna Milne-Price; Elaine Haddock; Bart L. Haagmans; Heinz Feldmann; Vincent J. Munster

In 2012 a novel coronavirus, MERS-CoV, associated with severe respiratory disease emerged in the Arabian Peninsula. To date, 55 human cases have been reported, including 31 fatal cases. Several of the cases were likely a result of human-to-human transmission. The emergence of this novel coronavirus prompts the need for a small animal model to study the pathogenesis of this virus and to test the efficacy of potential intervention strategies. In this study we explored the use of Syrian hamsters as a small animal disease model, using intratracheal inoculation and inoculation via aerosol. Clinical signs of disease, virus replication, histological lesions, cytokine upregulation nor seroconversion were observed in any of the inoculated animals, indicating that MERS-CoV does not replicate in Syrian hamsters.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Regulatory T cell-like responses in deer mice persistently infected with Sin Nombre virus.

Tony Schountz; Joseph Prescott; Ann C. Cogswell; Lauren Oko; Katy Mirowsky-Garcia; Alejandra P. Galvez; Brian Hjelle

Hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome is a zoonotic illness associated with a systemic inflammatory immune response, capillary leak, noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, and shock in humans. Cytokines, including TNF, IFN-γ, and lymphotoxin, are thought to contribute to its pathogenesis. In contrast, infected rodent reservoirs of hantaviruses experience few or no pathologic changes and the host rodent can remain persistently infected for life. Generally, it is unknown why such dichotomous immune responses occur between humans and reservoir hosts. Thus, we examined CD4+ T cell responses from one such reservoir, the deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus), infected with Sin Nombre virus. Proliferation responses to viral nucleocapsid antigen were relatively weak in T cells isolated from deer mice, regardless of acute or persistent infection. The T cells from acutely infected deer mice synthesized a broad spectrum of cytokines, including IFN-γ, IL-4, IL-5, and TGF-β1, but not TNF, lymphotoxin, or IL-17. However, in T cells from persistently infected deer mice, only TGF-β1 was expressed by all lines, whereas some expressed reduced levels of IFN-γ or IL-5. The Forkhead box P3 transcription factor, a marker of some regulatory T cells, was expressed by most of these cells. Collectively, these data suggest that TGF-β1-expressing regulatory T cells may play an important role in limiting immunopathology in the natural reservoir host, but this response may interfere with viral clearance. Such a response may have arisen as a mutually beneficial coadaptive evolutionary event between hantaviruses and their rodent reservoirs, so as to limit disease while also allowing the virus to persist.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2016

Nanopore Sequencing as a Rapidly Deployable Ebola Outbreak Tool

Thomas Hoenen; Allison Groseth; Kyle Rosenke; Robert J. Fischer; Andreas Hoenen; Seth Judson; Cynthia Martellaro; Darryl Falzarano; Andrea Marzi; R. Burke Squires; Kurt R. Wollenberg; Emmie de Wit; Joseph Prescott; David Safronetz; Trenton Bushmaker; Friederike Feldmann; Kristin L. McNally; Fatorma K. Bolay; Barry S. Fields; Tara K. Sealy; Mark Rayfield; Stuart T. Nichol; Kathryn C. Zoon; Moses Massaquoi; Vincent J. Munster; Heinz Feldmann

Rapid sequencing of RNA/DNA from pathogen samples obtained during disease outbreaks provides critical scientific and public health information. However, challenges exist for exporting samples to laboratories or establishing conventional sequencers in remote outbreak regions. We successfully used a novel, pocket-sized nanopore sequencer at a field diagnostic laboratory in Liberia during the current Ebola virus outbreak.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Rapid Nipah virus entry into the central nervous system of hamsters via the olfactory route.

Vincent J. Munster; Joseph Prescott; Trenton Bushmaker; Dan Long; Rebecca Rosenke; Tina Thomas; Dana P. Scott; Elizabeth R. Fischer; Heinz Feldmann; Emmie de Wit

Encephalitis is a hallmark of Nipah virus (NiV) infection in humans. The exact route of entry of NiV into the central nervous system (CNS) is unknown. Here, we performed a spatio-temporal analysis of NiV entry into the CNS of hamsters. NiV initially predominantly targeted the olfactory epithelium in the nasal turbinates. From there, NiV infected neurons were visible extending through the cribriform plate into the olfactory bulb, providing direct evidence of rapid CNS entry. Subsequently, NiV disseminated to the olfactory tubercle and throughout the ventral cortex. Transmission electron microscopy on brain tissue showed extravasation of plasma cells, neuronal degeneration and nucleocapsid inclusions in affected tissue and axons, providing further evidence for axonal transport of NiV. NiV entry into the CNS coincided with the occurrence of respiratory disease, suggesting that the initial entry of NiV into the CNS occurs simultaneously with, rather than as a result of, systemic virus replication.


Journal of Immunology | 2007

Early Innate Immune Responses to Sin Nombre Hantavirus Occur Independently of IFN Regulatory Factor 3, Characterized Pattern Recognition Receptors, and Viral Entry

Joseph Prescott; Pamela R. Hall; Virginie Bondu-Hawkins; Chunyan Ye; Brian Hjelle

Sin Nombre virus (SNV) is a highly pathogenic New World virus and etiologic agent of hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome. We have previously shown that replication-defective virus particles are able to induce a strong IFN-stimulated gene (ISG) response in human primary cells. RNA viruses often stimulate the innate immune response by interactions between viral nucleic acids, acting as a pathogen-associated molecular pattern, and cellular pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs). Ligand binding to PRRs activates transcription factors which regulate the expression of antiviral genes, and in all systems examined thus far, IFN regulatory factor 3 (IRF3) has been described as an essential intermediate for induction of ISG expression. However, we now describe a model in which IRF3 is dispensable for the induction of ISG transcription in response to viral particles. IRF3-independent ISG transcription in human hepatoma cell lines is initiated early after exposure to SNV virus particles in an entry- and replication-independent fashion. Furthermore, using gene knockdown, we discovered that this activation is independent of the best-characterized RNA- and protein-sensing PRRs including the cytoplasmic caspase recruitment domain-containing RNA helicases and the TLRs. SNV particles engage a heretofore unrecognized PRR, likely located at the cell surface, and engage a novel IRF3-independent pathway that activates the innate immune response.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2015

Postmortem Stability of Ebola Virus

Joseph Prescott; Trenton Bushmaker; Robert J. Fischer; Kerri L. Miazgowicz; Seth Judson; Vincent J. Munster

The ongoing Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa has highlighted questions regarding stability of the virus and detection of RNA from corpses. We used Ebola virus–infected macaques to model humans who died of Ebola virus disease. Viable virus was isolated <7 days posteuthanasia; viral RNA was detectable for 10 weeks.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2015

Ebola Virus Stability on Surfaces and in Fluids in Simulated Outbreak Environments.

Robert J. Fischer; Seth Judson; Kerri L. Miazgowicz; Trenton Bushmaker; Joseph Prescott; Vincent J. Munster

We evaluated the stability of Ebola virus on surfaces and in fluids under simulated environmental conditions for the climate of West Africa and for climate-controlled hospitals. This virus remains viable for a longer duration on surfaces in hospital conditions than in African conditions and in liquid than in dried blood.


Journal of Virology | 2010

Antagonism of Type I Interferon Responses by New World Hantaviruses

Jessica R. Levine; Joseph Prescott; Kyle S. Brown; Sonja M. Best; Hideki Ebihara; Heinz Feldmann

ABSTRACT Evasion of interferon (IFN)-mediated antiviral signaling is a common defense strategy for pathogenic RNA viruses. To date, research on IFN antagonism by hantaviruses is limited and has focused on only a subset of the numerous recognized hantavirus species. The host IFN response has two phases, an initiation phase, resulting in the induction of alpha/beta IFN (IFN-α/β), and an amplification phase, whereby IFN-α/β signals through the Jak/STAT pathway, resulting in the establishment of the cellular antiviral state. We examined interactions between these critical host responses and the New World hantaviruses. We observed delayed cellular responses in both Andes virus (ANDV)- and Sin Nombre virus (SNV)-infected A549 and Huh7-TLR3 cells. We found that IFN-β induction is inhibited by coexpression of ANDV nucleocapsid protein (NP) and glycoprotein precursor (GPC) and is robustly inhibited by SNV GPC alone. Downstream amplification by Jak/STAT signaling is also inhibited by SNV GPC and by either NP or GPC of ANDV. Therefore, ANDV- and SNV-encoded proteins have the potential for inhibiting both IFN-β induction and signaling, with SNV exhibiting the more potent antagonism ability. Herein we identify ANDV NP, a previously unrecognized inhibitor of Jak/STAT signaling, and show that IFN antagonism by ANDV relies on expression of both the glycoproteins and NP, whereas the glycoproteins appear to be sufficient for antagonism by SNV. These data suggest that IFN antagonism strategies by hantaviruses are quite variable, even between species with similar disease phenotypes, and may help to better elucidate species-specific pathogenesis.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2013

Comparison of the Pathogenicity of Nipah Virus Isolates from Bangladesh and Malaysia in the Syrian Hamster

Blair L. DeBuysscher; Emmie de Wit; Vincent J. Munster; Dana P. Scott; Heinz Feldmann; Joseph Prescott

Nipah virus is a zoonotic pathogen that causes severe disease in humans. The mechanisms of pathogenesis are not well described. The first Nipah virus outbreak occurred in Malaysia, where human disease had a strong neurological component. Subsequent outbreaks have occurred in Bangladesh and India and transmission and disease processes in these outbreaks appear to be different from those of the Malaysian outbreak. Until this point, virtually all Nipah virus studies in vitro and in vivo, including vaccine and pathogenesis studies, have utilized a virus isolate from the original Malaysian outbreak (NiV-M). To investigate potential differences between NiV-M and a Nipah virus isolate from Bangladesh (NiV-B), we compared NiV-M and NiV-B infection in vitro and in vivo. In hamster kidney cells, NiV-M-infection resulted in extensive syncytia formation and cytopathic effects, whereas NiV-B-infection resulted in little to no morphological changes. In vivo, NiV-M-infected Syrian hamsters had accelerated virus replication, pathology and death when compared to NiV-B-infected animals. NiV-M infection also resulted in the activation of host immune response genes at an earlier time point. Pathogenicity was not only a result of direct effects of virus replication, but likely also had an immunopathogenic component. The differences observed between NiV-M and NiV-B pathogeneis in hamsters may relate to differences observed in human cases. Characterization of the hamster model for NiV-B infection allows for further research of the strain of Nipah virus responsible for the more recent outbreaks in humans. This model can be used to study NiV-B pathogenesis, transmission, and countermeasures that could be used to control outbreaks.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Pathophysiology of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome in rhesus macaques

David Safronetz; Joseph Prescott; Friederike Feldmann; Elaine Haddock; Rebecca Rosenke; Atsushi Okumura; Douglas Brining; Eric Dahlstrom; Stephen F. Porcella; Hideki Ebihara; Dana P. Scott; Brian Hjelle; Heinz Feldmann

Significance Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) is a rare but often fatal disease caused by infection with New World hantaviruses. A limitation to understanding the pathogenesis of HPS and developing medical countermeasures against this disease is a lack of experimental disease models. In this study we describe the characterization of a novel nonhuman primate model of HPS. After infection with deer mouse-only–passaged Sin Nombre virus, macaques developed severe respiratory disease indicative of HPS. Viremia and hematological abnormalities were the earliest markers of ensuing disease, and the hyperpermeability associated with the onset of respiratory distress coincided with dysregulation of host responses exclusively in the pulmonary endothelium. This model will help advance our understanding of HPS and preclinical development of therapeutic strategies. The pathophysiology of hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) remains unclear because of a lack of surrogate disease models with which to perform pathogenesis studies. Nonhuman primates (NHP) are considered the gold standard model for studying the underlying immune activation/suppression associated with immunopathogenic viruses such as hantaviruses; however, to date an NHP model for HPS has not been described. Here we show that rhesus macaques infected with Sin Nombre virus (SNV), the primary etiological agent of HPS in North America, propagated in deer mice develop HPS, which is characterized by thrombocytopenia, leukocytosis, and rapid onset of respiratory distress caused by severe interstitial pneumonia. Despite establishing a systemic infection, SNV differentially activated host responses exclusively in the pulmonary endothelium, potentially the mechanism leading to acute severe respiratory distress. This study presents a unique chronological characterization of SNV infection and provides mechanistic data into the pathophysiology of HPS in a closely related surrogate animal model. We anticipate this model will advance our understanding of HPS pathogenesis and will greatly facilitate research toward the development of effective therapeutics and vaccines against hantaviral diseases.

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Heinz Feldmann

National Institutes of Health

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Vincent J. Munster

National Institutes of Health

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Dana P. Scott

National Institutes of Health

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David Safronetz

National Institutes of Health

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Emmie de Wit

National Institutes of Health

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Trenton Bushmaker

National Institutes of Health

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Darryl Falzarano

National Institutes of Health

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Elaine Haddock

National Institutes of Health

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Friederike Feldmann

National Institutes of Health

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Andrea Marzi

National Institutes of Health

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