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Featured researches published by Miranda E. Vidgen.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Routes of Hendra Virus Excretion in Naturally-Infected Flying-Foxes: Implications for Viral Transmission and Spillover Risk

Daniel Edson; Hume E. Field; Lee McMichael; Miranda E. Vidgen; Lauren Goldspink; Alice Broos; Deb Melville; Joanna Kristoffersen; Carol de Jong; Amanda McLaughlin; Rodney Davis; Nina Kung; David Jordan; Peter D. Kirkland; Craig A. Smith

Pteropid bats or flying-foxes (Chiroptera: Pteropodidae) are the natural host of Hendra virus (HeV) which sporadically causes fatal disease in horses and humans in eastern Australia. While there is strong evidence that urine is an important infectious medium that likely drives bat to bat transmission and bat to horse transmission, there is uncertainty about the relative importance of alternative routes of excretion such as nasal and oral secretions, and faeces. Identifying the potential routes of HeV excretion in flying-foxes is important to effectively mitigate equine exposure risk at the bat-horse interface, and in determining transmission rates in host-pathogen models. The aim of this study was to identify the major routes of HeV excretion in naturally infected flying-foxes, and secondarily, to identify between-species variation in excretion prevalence. A total of 2840 flying-foxes from three of the four Australian mainland species (Pteropus alecto, P. poliocephalus and P. scapulatus) were captured and sampled at multiple roost locations in the eastern states of Queensland and New South Wales between 2012 and 2014. A range of biological samples (urine and serum, and urogenital, nasal, oral and rectal swabs) were collected from anaesthetized bats, and tested for HeV RNA using a qRT-PCR assay targeting the M gene. Forty-two P. alecto (n = 1410) had HeV RNA detected in at least one sample, and yielded a total of 78 positive samples, at an overall detection rate of 1.76% across all samples tested in this species (78/4436). The rate of detection, and the amount of viral RNA, was highest in urine samples (>serum, packed haemocytes >faecal >nasal >oral), identifying urine as the most plausible source of infection for flying-foxes and for horses. Detection in a urine sample was more efficient than detection in urogenital swabs, identifying the former as the preferred diagnostic sample. The detection of HeV RNA in serum is consistent with haematogenous spread, and with hypothesised latency and recrudesence in flying-foxes. There were no detections in P. poliocephalus (n = 1168 animals; n = 2958 samples) or P. scapulatus (n = 262 animals; n = 985 samples), suggesting (consistent with other recent studies) that these species are epidemiologically less important than P. alecto in HeV infection dynamics. The study is unprecedented in terms of the individual animal approach, the large sample size, and the use of a molecular assay to directly determine infection status. These features provide a high level of confidence in the veracity of our findings, and a sound basis from which to more precisely target equine risk mitigation strategies.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Natural Hendra Virus Infection in Flying-Foxes - Tissue Tropism and Risk Factors

Lauren Goldspink; Daniel Edson; Miranda E. Vidgen; John Bingham; Hume E. Field; Craig S. Smith

Hendra virus (HeV) is a lethal zoonotic agent that emerged in 1994 in Australia. Pteropid bats (flying-foxes) are the natural reservoir. To date, HeV has spilled over from flying-foxes to horses on 51 known occasions, and from infected horses to close-contact humans on seven occasions. We undertook screening of archived bat tissues for HeV by reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). Tissues were tested from 310 bats including 295 Pteropodiformes and 15 Vespertilioniformes. HeV was detected in 20 individual flying-foxes (6.4%) from various tissues including spleen, kidney, liver, lung, placenta and blood components. Detection was significantly higher in Pteropus Alecto and P. conspicillatus, identifying species as a risk factor for infection. Further, our findings indicate that HeV has a predilection for the spleen, suggesting this organ plays an important role in HeV infection. The lack of detections in the foetal tissues of HeV-positive females suggests that vertical transmission is not a regular mode of transmission in naturally infected flying-foxes, and that placental and foetal tissues are not a major source of infection for horses. A better understanding of HeV tissue tropism will strengthen management of the risk of spillover from flying-foxes to horses and ultimately humans.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Discovering the recondite secondary metabolome spectrum of Salinispora species: a study of inter-species diversity.

Utpal Bose; Amitha K. Hewavitharana; Miranda E. Vidgen; Yi Kai Ng; P. Nicholas Shaw; John A. Fuerst; Mark P. Hodson

Patterns of inter-species secondary metabolite production by bacteria can provide valuable information relating to species ecology and evolution. The complex nature of this chemical diversity has previously been probed via directed analyses of a small number of compounds, identified through targeted assays rather than more comprehensive biochemical profiling approaches such as metabolomics. Insights into ecological and evolutionary relationships within bacterial genera can be derived through comparative analysis of broader secondary metabolite patterns, and this can also eventually assist biodiscovery search strategies for new natural products. Here, we investigated the species-level chemical diversity of the two marine actinobacterial species Salinispora arenicola and Salinispora pacifica, isolated from sponges distributed across the Great Barrier Reef (GBR), via their secondary metabolite profiles using LC-MS-based metabolomics. The chemical profiles of these two species were obtained by UHPLC-QToF-MS based metabolic profiling. The resultant data were interrogated using multivariate data analysis methods to compare their (bio)chemical profiles. We found a high level of inter-species diversity in strains from these two bacterial species. We also found rifamycins and saliniketals were produced exclusively by S. arenicola species, as the main secondary metabolites differentiating the two species. Furthermore, the discovery of 57 candidate compounds greatly increases the small number of secondary metabolites previously known to be produced by these species. In addition, we report the production of rifamycin O and W, a key group of ansamycin compounds, in S. arenicola for the first time. Species of the marine actinobacteria harbour a much wider spectrum of secondary metabolites than suspected, and this knowledge may prove a rich field for biodiscovery as well as a database for understanding relationships between speciation, evolution and chemical ecology.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2012

Diversity and distribution of the bioactive actinobacterial genus Salinispora from sponges along the Great Barrier Reef

Miranda E. Vidgen; John N. A. Hooper; John A. Fuerst


10th World Sponge Conference | 2017

Cinachyrella: integrated approaches to taxonomy

Kathryn A. Hall; Miranda E. Vidgen; John N. A. Hooper


The 9th International Sponge Conference | 2013

Chemical diversity of marine bacteria Salinispora arenicola and "Salinispora pacifica" associated with the host sponges Dercitus xanthus and Cinahyrella australiensis

Utpal Bose; Mark P. Hodson; Miranda E. Vidgen; Nick Shaw; John A. Fuerst; Amitha K. Hewavitharana


FEMS 2013: 5th Congress of European Microbiologists | 2013

Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry metabolomic profiling to explore inter-species diversity in the genus Salinispora

Utpal Bose; Amitha K. Hewavitharana; Miranda E. Vidgen; P. N. Shaw; John A. Fuerst; Mark P. Hodson


9th Annual Conference of the Metabolomics Society | 2013

Patterns of chemical diversity on sponge associated marine bacteria

Utpal Bose; Mark P. Hodson; Miranda E. Vidgen; P. Nicholas Shaw; John A. Fuerst; Amitha K. Hewavitharana


Reviews on Clinical Pharmacology and Drug Therapy | 2012

VARIATION OF SECONDARY METABOLITE PROFILES OF SALINISPORA SPECIES WITH THEIR GEOGRAPHICAL ORIGIN

Amitha K. Hewavitharana; Utpal Bose; Miranda E. Vidgen; P. N. Shaw; John A. Fuerst


Archive | 2012

Genetic and chemical diversity of the actinobacterial genus Salinispora isolated from Great Barrier Reef sponges.

Miranda E. Vidgen

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John A. Fuerst

University of Queensland

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Utpal Bose

University of Queensland

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Mark P. Hodson

University of Queensland

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P. N. Shaw

University of Queensland

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Nick Shaw

University of Queensland

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Yi Kai Ng

University of Queensland

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