Kym Lowry
Queensland University of Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Kym Lowry.
Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2004
Hlaing Myat Thu; Kym Lowry; Thein Thein Myint; Than Nu Shwe; Aye Maung Han; Kyu Kyu Khin; Kyaw Zin Thant; Soe Thein; John Aaskov
In 2001, Myanmar (Burma) had its largest outbreak of dengue—15,361 reported cases of dengue hemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome (DHF/DSS), including 192 deaths. That year, 95% of dengue viruses isolated from patients were serotype 1 viruses belonging to two lineages that had diverged from an earlier, now extinct, lineage sometime before 1998. The ratio of DHF to DSS cases in 2001 was not significantly different from that in 2000, when 1,816 cases of DHF/DSS were reported and dengue 1 also was the most frequently isolated serotype. However, the 2001 ratio was significantly higher than that in 1998 (also an outbreak year) and in 1999, when all four serotypes were detected and serotypes 1, 2, and 3 were recovered in similar numbers. The large number of clinical cases in 2001 may have been due, in part, to a preponderance of infections with dengue 1 viruses.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Dongsheng Li; William B. Lott; Kym Lowry; Anita Jones; Hlaing Myat Thu; John Aaskov
While much of the genetic variation in RNA viruses arises because of the error-prone nature of their RNA-dependent RNA polymerases, much larger changes may occur as a result of recombination. An extreme example of genetic change is found in defective interfering (DI) viral particles, where large sections of the genome of a parental virus have been deleted and the residual sub-genome fragment is replicated by complementation by co-infecting functional viruses. While most reports of DI particles have referred to studies in vitro, there is some evidence for the presence of DI particles in chronic viral infections in vivo. In this study, short fragments of dengue virus (DENV) RNA containing only key regulatory elements at the 3′ and 5′ ends of the genome were recovered from the sera of patients infected with any of the four DENV serotypes. Identical RNA fragments were detected in the supernatant from cultures of Aedes mosquito cells that were infected by the addition of sera from dengue patients, suggesting that the sub-genomic RNA might be transmitted between human and mosquito hosts in defective interfering (DI) viral particles. In vitro transcribed sub-genomic RNA corresponding to that detected in vivo could be packaged in virus like particles in the presence of wild type virus and transmitted for at least three passages in cell culture. DENV preparations enriched for these putative DI particles reduced the yield of wild type dengue virus following co-infections of C6–36 cells. This is the first report of DI particles in an acute arboviral infection in nature. The internal genomic deletions described here are the most extensive defects observed in DENV and may be part of a much broader disease attenuating process that is mediated by defective viruses.
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2006
Goutam Podder; Robert F. Breiman; Tasnim Azim; Hlaing Myat Thu; Niluka Velathanthiri; Le Quynh Mai; Kym Lowry; John Aaskov
Dengue and dengue hemorrhagic fever re-emerged in Bangladesh in 2000 and 2001 and nearly all viruses isolated were dengue type 3. Phylogenetic analyses of the envelope genes of examples of these viruses indicated that they were most closely related to recently emerged dengue type 3 viruses from neighboring Thailand and Myanmar but distinct from those from India and Sri Lanka. Since this strain of dengue virus type 3 had not been associated with unusual patterns of disease in Thailand or Myanmar, it suggested that the outbreak in Bangladesh was due to local factors after the introduction of viruses from countries to the east rather than to the evolution of an unusually virulent strain of virus in Bangladesh.
Science | 2006
John Aaskov; Katie Buzacott; Hlaing Myat Thu; Kym Lowry; Edward C. Holmes
Virology | 2004
Atchareeya A-nuegoonpipat; Alain Berlioz-Arthaud; Vincent T. K. Chow; Tim Endy; Kym Lowry; Le Quynh Mai; Truong Uyen Ninh; Alyssa T. Pyke; Mark Reid; Jean-Marc Reynes; Se-Thoe Su Yun; Hlaing Myat Thu; Sook-San Wong; Edward C. Holmes; John Aaskov
Virology | 2005
Hlaing Myat Thu; Kym Lowry; Limin Jiang; Thaung Hlaing; Edward C. Holmes; John Aaskov
American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 2006
Mark Reid; Donna Mackenzie; Andrew Baron; Natalie Lehmann; Kym Lowry; John Aaskov; Farshad Guirakhoo; Thomas P. Monath
Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2006
John Aaskov; Katie Buzacott; Hlaing Myat Thu; Kym Lowry; Edward C. Holmes
Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2011
Dongsheng Li; William B. Lott; Kym Lowry; Anita Jones; Hlaing Myat Thu; John Aaskov
Faculty of Science and Technology; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2011
John Aaskov; Anita Jones; Wilson Choi; Kym Lowry