Michael E. Jolley
Canadian Food Inspection Agency
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Featured researches published by Michael E. Jolley.
Preventive Veterinary Medicine | 2009
Bongo Naré Richard Ngandolo; Borna Müller; Colette Diguimbaye-Djaibé; Irene Schiller; Beatrice Marg-Haufe; Monica Cagiola; Michael E. Jolley; Om Surujballi; Ayayi Justin Akakpo; Bruno Oesch; Jakob Zinsstag
Effective surveillance of bovine tuberculosis (BTB) in developing countries where reliable data on disease prevalence is scarce or absent is a precondition for considering potential control options. We conducted a slaughterhouse survey to assess for the first time the burden of BTB in Southern Chad. Altogether, 954 slaughter animals were consecutively sampled and tested using the single intra-dermal comparative cervical tuberculin (SICCT) test, a recently developed fluorescence polarization assay (FPA) and routine abattoir meat inspection after slaughter. Gross visible lesions were detected in 11.3% (CI: 9.4-13.5%) of the animals examined and they were mostly located in the lymph nodes and the lung. Significantly more Mbororo zebus (15.0%) were affected by lesions than Arab zebus (9.9%; OR=2.20, CI: 1.41-3.41%; p<0.001). Of all animals tested, 7.7% (CI: 6.2-9.6%) reacted positively to SICCT if OIE guidelines were applied. However, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis using Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) infected animals as the positive population and lesion negative animals as the negative population, revealed a better SICCT performance if the cut-off value was decreased to >2mm. SICCT reactor prevalence rose to 15.5% (CI: 13.3-18.0%) and FPA did not perform better than SICCT, when this setting adapted cut-off was applied.
Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening | 2003
Mohammad Sarwar Nasir; Michael E. Jolley
Successful use of fluorescence polarization assays (FPAs) in human clinical, infectious disease, and drug discovery fields has prompted us to extend its use to the grain mycotoxin field. An antibody specific to a mycotoxin and a mycotoxin-fluorophore conjugate are developed. Free toxin (extracted from the grains with a suitable solvent) competes with the toxin-fluorophore conjugate for the antibody and a change in FP relative to the quantity of free toxin occurs. This change is compared to a standard curve obtained by using known quantities of toxin. The use of FP and toxin-fluorophore conjugates for the quantification of fumonisins, deoxynivalenol and aflatoxins is described. These assays are field portable, simple to perform, rapid and require no washing steps.
Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening | 2003
Michael E. Jolley; Mohammad Sarwar Nasir
Fluorescence Polarization Assays (FPAs) have been shown to have great utility in the detection of infectious diseases. Examples are presented of the use of O-polysaccharides (OPSs) for the detection of antibodies in serum, whole milk and whole blood to gram negative organisms (Brucella spp., Salmonella spp.). The use of proteins and peptides are also described for the detection of Mycobacterium bovis and Equine Infectious Anemia Virus. Fluorescence Polarization Inhibition Assays (FPIAs) are discussed for the specific and sensitive detection and quantitation of Salmonella spp. cells from culture. An example of the detection of enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHECS) by Strand Displacement Amplification (SDA), coupled with FP, down to the single cell level, within thirty minutes, is described.
Avian Diseases | 2002
Richard K. Gast; Mohammad Sarwar Nasir; Michael E. Jolley; Peter S. Holt; Henry D. Stone
SUMMARY. Detection of infected poultry flocks is essential for controlling eggborne transmission of Salmonella enteritidis to humans. The present study evaluated the detection of antibodies in the sera of experimentally infected chickens by a fluorescence polarization assay with a tracer prepared from the O-polysaccharide of S. enteritidis and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with an S. enteritidis flagellin antigen. In two trials, groups of specific-pathogen-free laying hens were infected orally with either 106 or 108 colony-forming units (CFU) of S. enteritidis (phage type 13a) or with 108 CFU of Salmonella typhimurium. Serum samples were collected before inoculation and at five subsequent weekly intervals. Both assays successfully detected the majority of hens infected with S. enteritidis at either dose level, but they also identified a substantial number of hens infected with S. typhimurium as seropositive. The fluorescence polarization test detected S. enteritidis infection significantly more often and cross-reacted with sera from hens infected with S. typhimurium significantly less often than the ELISA. The fluorescence polarization assay also offered advantages in terms of speed and methodologic simplicity.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2002
Mohammad Sarwar Nasir; Michael E. Jolley
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2001
Chris M. Maragos; Michael E. Jolley; Ronald D. Plattner; Mohammad Sarwar Nasir
Veterinary Microbiology | 2002
Michael E. Jolley; Mohammad Sarwar Nasir; Om Surujballi; Anna Romanowska; T. Renteria; Alfonso De la Mora; Ailam Lim; Steven R. Bolin; Anita Luise Michel; Miladin Kostovic; Edward C. Corrigan
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2000
Sarah Burroughs Tencza; Kazi Islam; Vandana Kalia; Mohammad Sarwar Nasir; Michael E. Jolley; Ronald C. Montelaro
Veterinary Microbiology | 2005
Dirk Deregt; Edward J. Dubovi; Michael E. Jolley; Phuong Nguyen; Kimberley M. Burton; Scott A. Gilbert
Archive | 1999
Ronald C. Montelaro; Sarah Burroughs Tencza; Michael E. Jolley; Mohammad Sarwar Nasir