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Dive into the research topics where Kevin C. Gough is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin C. Gough.


Journal of Applied Ecology | 2014

REVIEW: The detection of aquatic animal species using environmental DNA – a review of eDNA as a survey tool in ecology

Helen C. Rees; Ben C. Maddison; David J. Middleditch; James R. M. Patmore; Kevin C. Gough

Summary 1. Knowledge of species distribution is critical to ecological management and conservation biology. Effective management requires the detection of populations, which can sometimes be at low densities and is usually based on visual detection and counting. 2. Recently, there has been considerable interest in the detection of short species-specific environmental DNA (eDNA) fragments to allow aquatic species monitoring within different environments due to the potential of greater sensitivity over traditional survey methods which can be time-consuming and costly. 3. Environmental DNA analysis is increasingly being used in the detection of rare or invasive species and has also been applied to eDNA persistence studies and estimations of species biomass and distribution. When combined with next-generation sequencing methods, it has been demonstrated that entire faunas can be identified. 4. Different environments require different sampling methodologies, but there remain areas where laboratory methodologies could be standardized to allow results to be compared across studies. 5. Synthesis and applications. We review recently published studies that use eDNA to monitor aquatic populations, discuss the methodologies used and the application of eDNA analysis as a survey tool in ecology. We include innovative ideas for how eDNA can be used for conservation and management citing test cases, for instance, the potential for on-site analyses, including the application of eDNA analysis to carbon nanotube platforms or laser transmission spectroscopy to facilitate rapid on-site detections. The use of eDNA monitoring is already being adopted in the UK for ecological surveys.


Prion | 2010

Prion transmission: prion excretion and occurrence in the environment.

Kevin C. Gough; Ben C. Maddison

Prion diseases range from being highly infectious, for example scrapie and CWD which show facile transmission between susceptible individuals, to showing negligible horizontal transmission, such as BSE and CJD which are spread via food or iatrogenically respectively. Scrapie and CWD display considerable in vivo dissemination, with PrPSc and infectivity being found in a range of peripheral tissues. This in vivo dissemination appears to facilitate the recently reported excretion of prion through multiple routes such as from skin, faeces, urine, milk, nasal secretions, saliva and placenta. Furthermore, excreted scrapie and CWD agent is detected within environmental samples such as water and on the surfaces of inanimate objects. The cycle of ‘uptake of prion from the environment - widespread in vivo prion dissemination - prion excretion - prion persistence in the environment’ is likely to explain the facile transmission and maintenance of these diseases within wild and farmed populations over many years.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2010

Prions Are Secreted into the Oral Cavity in Sheep with Preclinical Scrapie

Ben C. Maddison; Helen C. Rees; Claire A. Baker; Maged Taema; Susan J Bellworthy; Leigh Thorne; Linda A. Terry; Kevin C. Gough

A major concern in prion disease transmission is the spread of the disease agent by means of secretions and excretions. We analyzed buccal swab samples obtained from preclinical scrapie-infected sheep by concentrating the collected prions on silicon dioxide, followed by amplification by serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification. Data clearly demonstrate that prions are present in buccal swab samples from sheep with a VRQ/VRQ PRNP genotype during preclinical scrapie infection. These data describe for the first time to our knowledge the secretion of prions into the oral cavity of sheep, a finding with implications for the transmission of ovine scrapie and very likely other prion diseases.


Journal of Virology | 2010

Environmental Sources of Scrapie Prions

Ben C. Maddison; Claire A. Baker; Linda A. Terry; Susan J Bellworthy; Leigh Thorne; Helen C. Rees; Kevin C. Gough

ABSTRACT Ovine scrapie and cervine chronic wasting disease show considerable horizontal transmission. Here we report that a scrapie-affected sheep farm has a widespread environmental contamination with prions. Prions were amplified by protein-misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) from seven of nine environmental swab samples taken, including those from metal, plastic, and wooden surfaces. Sheep had been removed from the areas from which the swabs were taken up to 20 days prior to sampling, indicating that prions persist for at least that long. These data implicate inanimate objects as environmental reservoirs for prion infectivity that are likely to contribute to facile disease transmission.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Prions Are Secreted in Milk from Clinically Normal Scrapie-Exposed Sheep

Ben C. Maddison; Claire A. Baker; Helen C. Rees; Linda A. Terry; Leigh Thorne; Susan J Bellworthy; Garry C. Whitelam; Kevin C. Gough

ABSTRACT The potential spread of prion infectivity in secreta is a crucial concern for prion disease transmission. Here, serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) allowed the detection of prions in milk from clinically affected animals as well as scrapie-exposed sheep at least 20 months before clinical onset of disease, irrespective of the immunohistochemical detection of protease-resistant PrPSc within lymphoreticular and central nervous system tissues. These data indicate the secretion of prions within milk during the early stages of disease progression and a role for milk in prion transmission. Furthermore, the application of sPMCA to milk samples offers a noninvasive methodology to detect scrapie during preclinical/subclinical disease.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2004

Isolation of recombinant antibodies against EspA and intimin of Escherichia coli O157 : H7

Sarah A. Kühne; William S. Hawes; Roberto M. La Ragione; Martin J. Woodward; Garry C. Whitelam; Kevin C. Gough

ABSTRACT Intimin, Tir, and EspA proteins are expressed by attaching-effacing Escherichia coli, which include enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic E. coli pathotypes. EspA proteins are part of the type three secretion system needle complex that delivers Tir to the host epithelial cell, while surface arrayed intimin docks the bacterium to the translocated Tir. This intimate attachment leads to attaching and effacing lesions. Recombinant forms of these effector proteins from enterohemorrhagic E. coli O157:H7 were produced by using E. coli expression vectors. Binding of intimin and Tir fragments in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISAs) demonstrated the interaction of intimin fragments containing the C-terminal 282 or 188 amino acids to a Tir fragment containing amino acid residues 258 to 361. Recombinant intimin and EspA proteins were used to elicit immune responses in rabbits and immune phage-display antibody libraries were produced. Screening of these immune libraries by conventional phage-antibody panning and colony filter screening produced a panel of antibodies with specificity for EspA or intimin. Antibodies recognizing different C-terminal epitopes on intimin bound specifically to the gamma intimin of O157:H7 and not to other classes of intimin. Antibodies recognizing EspA from E. coli O157 also recognized the protein from the eae-deficient O157 mutant DM3 and from E. coli O111. Anti-intimin antibodies were also produced as fusion proteins coupled to the reporter molecule alkaline phosphatase, allowing the one-step detection of γ intimin. The isolated recombinant monoclonal antibodies were functional in a range of assay formats, including ELISA, Western blotting, and dot blots, thus demonstrating their diagnostic potential.


Ecology and Evolution | 2014

The application of eDNA for monitoring of the Great Crested Newt in the UK

Helen C. Rees; Keith Bishop; David J. Middleditch; James R. M. Patmore; Ben C. Maddison; Kevin C. Gough

Current ecological surveys for great crested newts are time-consuming and expensive and can only be carried out within a short survey window. Additional survey methods which would facilitate the detection of rare or protected species such as the great crested newt (Triturus cristatus) would be extremely advantageous. Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis has been utilized for the detection of great crested newts in Denmark. Here, the same methodology has been applied to water samples taken from UK ponds concurrently with conventional field surveying techniques. Our eDNA analysis exhibited an 84% success rate with a kappa coefficient of agreement between field and eDNA surveys of 0.86. One pond determined to be negative for great crested newt by field survey was positive by eDNA analysis, revealing the potential for improved detection rates using this methodology. Analysis of water samples collected in late summer indicates that eDNA analysis could be used to detect great crested newt after the optimal survey window for current field techniques had passed. Consequently, eDNA analysis could augment currently stipulated techniques for great crested newt surveying as a relatively quick and inexpensive tool for collecting great crested newt presence and distribution data within the UK instead of or prior to full field surveys.


Veterinary Research | 2011

Detection of prions in the faeces of sheep naturally infected with classical scrapie

Linda A. Terry; Laurence C. Howells; Keith Bishop; Claire A. Baker; Sally J. Everest; Leigh Thorne; Ben C. Maddison; Kevin C. Gough

Classical scrapie is a naturally transmitted prion disease of sheep and goats. Contaminated environments may contribute to the spread of disease and evidence from animal models has implicated urine, blood, saliva, placenta and faeces as possible sources of the infection. Here we sought to determine whether sheep naturally infected with classical scrapie shed prions in their faeces. We used serial protein misfolding cyclic amplification (sPMCA) along with two extraction methods to examine faeces from sheep during both the clinical and preclinical phases of the disease and showed amplification of PrPSc in 7 of 15 and 14 of 14 sheep respectively. However PrPSc was not amplified from the faeces of 25 sheep not exposed to scrapie. These data represent the first demonstration of prion shedding in faeces from a naturally infected host and thus a likely source of prion contamination in the environment.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Molecular Profiling of Ovine Prion Diseases by Using Thermolysin-Resistant PrPSc and Endogenous C2 PrP Fragments

Jonathan P. Owen; Helen C. Rees; Ben C. Maddison; Linda A. Terry; Leigh Thorne; Roy Jackman; Garry C. Whitelam; Kevin C. Gough

ABSTRACT Disease-associated PrP fragments produced upon in vitro or in vivo proteolysis can provide significant insight into the causal strain of prion disease. Here we describe a novel molecular strain typing assay that used thermolysin digestion of caudal medulla samples to produce PrPres signatures on Western blots that readily distinguished experimental sheep bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) from classical scrapie. Furthermore, the accumulation of such PrPres species within the cerebellum also appeared to be dependent upon the transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE) strain, allowing discrimination between two experimental strains of scrapie and grouping of natural scrapie isolates into two profiles. The occurrence of endogenously produced PrP fragments, namely, glycosylated and unglycosylated C2, within different central nervous system (CNS) regions is also described; this is the first detailed description of such scrapie-associated fragments within a natural host. The advent of C2 fragments within defined CNS regions, compared between BSE and scrapie cases and also between two experimental scrapie strains, appeared to be largely dependent upon the TSE strain. The combined analyses of C2 fragments and thermolysin-resistant PrP species within caudal medulla, cerebellum, and spinal cord samples allowed natural scrapie isolates to be separated into four distinct molecular profiles: most isolates produced C2 and PrPres in all CNS regions, a second group lacked detectable cerebellar C2 fragments, one isolate lacked both cerebellar PrPres and C2, and a further isolate lacked detectable C2 within all three CNS regions and also lacked cerebellar PrPres. This CNS region-specific deposition of disease-associated PrP species may reflect the natural heterogeneity of scrapie strains in the sheep population in the United Kingdom.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 1999

Selection of phage antibodies to surface epitopes of Phytophthora infestans

Kevin C. Gough; Yi Li; Tristan J. Vaughan; Andrew James Williams; William Cockburn; Garry C. Whitelam

Antibodies specific for surface-exposed epitopes on germlings of the plant pathogen, Phytophthora infestans, were isolated from a diverse phage library displaying single-chain Fv (scFv) antibody fragments. The library was subpanned against external soluble components released from mycelia, sporangia and germlings and a discrete population of phage antibodies isolated. Binding of monoclonal phage antibodies was demonstrated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and diversity was established by BstNI restriction enzyme digest patterns. Antibodies were subcloned as fusions at the C-terminus of maltose binding protein (MBP) and expressed as soluble proteins in Escherichia coli. These antibody fusion proteins bound to P. infestans germlings and to mycelial homogenates from various Phytophthora species. The binding activities to mycelial homogenates of fungal species not belonging to the order Peronosporales were substantially lower. Several phage-displayed scFvs were used in conjunction with fluorescently labelled antiphage antibody to visualise the distribution of their cognate epitopes on the surface of the germlings. The combination of procedures developed here with Phytophthora demonstrates the potential of phage antibody technology in isolating antibodies to cell surface and external soluble components of pathogens, some of which may play a role in host/pathogen interactions.

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Helen C. Rees

University of Nottingham

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Keith Bishop

University of Nottingham

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Leigh Thorne

Veterinary Laboratories Agency

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Linda A. Terry

Veterinary Laboratories Agency

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