Nicholas Davis-Poynter
University of Queensland
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Featured researches published by Nicholas Davis-Poynter.
Journal of General Virology | 1994
Preetha Balan; Nicholas Davis-Poynter; Susanne Bell; Helen R. Atkinson; Helena Browne; Tony Minson
Mutants of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) lacking glycoproteins gG, gE, gI or the putative gJ were constructed by inserting a lacZ expression cassette within the US4, US8, US7 and US5 genes respectively. Revertant viruses were then constructed by rescue with a wild-type DNA fragment. Each of these mutant viruses, by comparison with the parental virus HSV-1 SC16, exhibited normal particle to infectivity ratios, and had no discernible phenotypic abnormalities in baby hamster kidney-21 cells following high or low multiplicity infections. Infection of mice by scarification of the ear with these mutant viruses showed the following. (i) Interruption of the US5 (gJ) gene has no effect on the ability of HSV-1 to multiply at the inoculation site or its ability to enter or multiply in the peripheral or central nervous system (CNS). This shows that the US5 gene provides a convenient site for the insertion of foreign genes for both in vitro and in vivo studies. (ii) Disruption of the US4 (gG) gene results in marginal attenuation in the mouse ear model. (iii) Disruption of the US7 (gI) or US8 (gE) genes results in pronounced attenuation; virus was rapidly cleared from the inoculation site and was barely detectable in sensory ganglia or in the CNS. The failure of gI-negative or gE-negative viruses to replicate efficiently at the inoculation site in vivo led to the investigation of virus behaviour in epithelial cells in vitro. Viruses lacking gE or gI adsorbed to and entered these cells at normal rates compared with the parental virus, but formed minute plaques. This is consistent with a failure of cell-to-cell spread by the cell contact route. This was confirmed by measurement of the rate of increase in infectious centre numbers following low multiplicity infections. The view that gE and gI influence interactions between cells at the plasma membrane was reinforced by showing that the introduction of disrupted gE or gI genes into a syncytial, but otherwise syngeneic, background resulted in a non-syncytial phenotype. We conclude that the gE-gI complex plays a part, at least in some cell types, in the interactions at the cell surface that allow transmission of the virus from infected to uninfected cells by cell contact. In syncytial strains this leads to uncontrolled membrane fusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Journal of Virology | 2006
J. Nugent; Ian Birch-Machin; K. C. Smith; J. A. Mumford; Z. Swann; J. R. Newton; R. J. Bowden; G. P. Allen; Nicholas Davis-Poynter
ABSTRACT Equid herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) can cause a wide spectrum of diseases ranging from inapparent respiratory infection to the induction of abortion and, in extreme cases, neurological disease resulting in paralysis and ultimately death. It has been suggested that distinct strains of EHV-1 that differ in pathogenic capacity circulate in the field. In order to investigate this hypothesis, it was necessary to identify genetic markers that allow subgroups of related strains to be identified. We have determined all of the genetic differences between a neuropathogenic strain (Ab4) and a nonneuropathogenic strain (V592) of EHV-1 and developed PCR/sequencing procedures enabling differentiation of EHV-1 strains circulating in the field. The results indicate the occurrence of several major genetic subgroups of EHV-1 among isolates recovered from outbreaks over the course of 30 years, consistent with the proposal that distinct strains of EHV-1 circulate in the field. Moreover, there is evidence that certain strain groups are geographically restricted, being recovered predominantly from outbreaks occurring in either North America or Europe. Significantly, variation of a single amino acid of the DNA polymerase is strongly associated with neurological versus nonneurological disease outbreaks. Strikingly, this variant amino acid occurs at a highly conserved position for herpesvirus DNA polymerases, suggesting an important functional role.
Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine | 2009
D.P. Lunn; Nicholas Davis-Poynter; M.J.B.F. Flaminio; David W. Horohov; K. Osterrieder; Nicola Pusterla; Hugh G.G. Townsend
Equine herpesvirus-1 is a highly prevalent and frequently pathogenic infection of equids. The most serious clinical consequences of infection are abortion and equine herpesvirus myeloencephalopathy (EHM). In recent years, there has been an apparent increase in the incidence of EHM in North America, with serious consequences for horses and the horse industry. This consensus statement draws together current knowledge in the areas of pathogenesis, strain variation, epidemiology, diagnostic testing, vaccination, outbreak prevention and control, and treatment.
PLOS Pathogens | 2007
Laura B. Goodman; Arianna Loregian; Gillian A. Perkins; J. Nugent; Elizabeth L. Buckles; Beatrice Mercorelli; Julia H. Kydd; Giorgio Palù; Ken C. Smith; Nikolaus Osterrieder; Nicholas Davis-Poynter
Infection with equid herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) leads to respiratory disease, abortion, and neurologic disorders in horses. Molecular epidemiology studies have demonstrated that a single nucleotide polymorphism resulting in an amino acid variation of the EHV-1 DNA polymerase (N752/D752) is significantly associated with the neuropathogenic potential of naturally occurring strains. To test the hypothesis that this single amino acid exchange by itself influences neuropathogenicity, we generated recombinant viruses with differing polymerase sequences. Here we show that the N752 mutant virus caused no neurologic signs in the natural host, while the D752 virus was able to cause inflammation of the central nervous system and ataxia. Neurologic disease induced by the D752 virus was concomitant with significantly increased levels of viremia (p = 0.01), but the magnitude of virus shedding from the nasal mucosa was similar between the N752 and D752 viruses. Both viruses replicated with similar kinetics in fibroblasts and epithelial cells, but exhibited differences in leukocyte tropism. Last, we observed a significant increase (p < 0.001) in sensitivity of the N752 mutant to aphidicolin, a drug targeting the viral polymerase. Our results demonstrate that a single amino acid variation in a herpesvirus enzyme can influence neuropathogenic potential without having a major effect on virus shedding from infected animals, which is important for horizontal spread in a population. This observation is very interesting from an evolutionary standpoint and is consistent with data indicating that the N752 DNA pol genotype is predominant in the EHV-1 population, suggesting that decreased viral pathogenicity in the natural host might not be at the expense of less efficient inter-individual transmission.
The EMBO Journal | 2003
Neil A. Bryant; Nicholas Davis-Poynter; Alain Vanderplasschen; Antonio Alcami
Mimicry of host chemokines and chemokine receptors to modulate chemokine activity is a strategy encoded by beta‐ and gammaherpesviruses, but very limited information is available on the anti‐chemokine strategies encoded by alphaherpesviruses. The secretion of chemokine binding proteins (vCKBPs) has hitherto been considered a unique strategy encoded by poxviruses and gammaherpesviruses. We describe a family of novel vCKBPs in equine herpesvirus 1, bovine herpesvirus 1 and 5, and related alphaherpesviruses with no sequence similarity to chemokine receptors or other vCKBPs. We show that glycoprotein G (gG) is secreted from infected cells, binds a broad range of chemokines with high affinity and blocks chemokine activity by preventing their interaction with specific receptors. Moreover, gG also blocks chemokine binding to glycosaminoglycans, an interaction required for the correct presentation and function of chemokines in vivo. In contrast to other vCKBPs, gG may also be membrane anchored and, consistently, we show chemokine binding activity at the surface of cells expressing full‐length protein. These alphaherpesvirus vCKBPs represent a novel family of proteins that bind chemokines both at the membrane and in solution.
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006
Charlotte Kelly; Maxine Bugg; Carl Robinson; Zoe Mitchell; Nicholas Davis-Poynter; J. Richard Newton; Keith A. Jolley; Martin C. J. Maiden; Andrew S. Waller
ABSTRACT Improved understanding of the epidemiology of Streptococcus equi transmission requires sensitive and portable subtyping methods that can rationally discriminate between strains. S. equi is highly homogeneous and cannot be distinguished by multilocus enzyme electrophoretic or multilocus sequence-typing methods that utilize housekeeping genes. However, on sequence analysis of the N-terminal region of the SeM genes of 60 S. equi isolates from 27 strangles outbreaks, we identified 21 DNA codon changes. These resulted in the nonsynonymous substitution of 18 amino acids and allowed the assignment of S. equi strains to 15 distinct subtypes. Our data suggest the presence of multiple epitopes across this region that are subjected to selective immune pressure (nonsynonymous-synonymous substitution rate [dN/dS] ratio = 3.054), particularly during the establishment of long-term S. equi infection. We further report the application of SeM gene subtyping as a method to investigate potential cases of disease related to administration of a live attenuated S. equi vaccine. SeM gene subtyping successfully differentiated between the vaccine strain and field strains of S. equi responsible for concurrent disease. These results were confirmed by the development and application of a PCR diagnostic test, which identifies the aroA partial gene deletion present in the Equilis StrepE vaccine strain. Although the vaccine strain was found to be responsible for injection site lesions, all seven outbreaks of strangles investigated in recently vaccinated horses were found to be due to concurrent infection with wild-type S. equi and not due to reversion of the vaccine strain.
Immunology and Cell Biology | 1996
Nicholas Davis-Poynter; Helen E. Farrell
Herpesviruses have acquired a variety of different mechanisms to avoid the damaging effects of host immunity. Frequently, these viruses subvert normal immune regulatory functions utilized by the host. The focus of this review is upon herpesvirus genes encoding known or potential immunomodulatory proteins. Areas covered include inhibition of complement and antibody function, herpesvirus‐encoded homologues of cytokines and chemokine receptors, and potential disruption of cellular recognition of virally infected targets.
Infection and Immunity | 2006
Andrea Hamilton; Carl Robinson; Iain C. Sutcliffe; Josh Slater; Duncan J. Maskell; Nicholas Davis-Poynter; Ken Smith; Andrew S. Waller; Dean J. Harrington
ABSTRACT Streptococcus equi is the causative agent of strangles, a prevalent and highly contagious disease of horses. Despite the animal suffering and economic burden associated with strangles, little is known about the molecular basis of S. equi virulence. Here we have investigated the contributions of a specific lipoprotein and the general lipoprotein processing pathway to the abilities of S. equi to colonize equine epithelial tissues in vitro and to cause disease in both a mouse model and the natural host in vivo. Colonization of air interface organ cultures after they were inoculated with a mutant strain deficient in the maturase lipoprotein (ΔprtM138-213, with a deletion of nucleotides 138 to 213) was significantly less than that for cultures infected with wild-type S. equi strain 4047 or a mutant strain that was unable to lipidate preprolipoproteins (Δlgt190-685). Moreover, mucus production was significantly greater in both wild-type-infected and Δlgt190-685-infected organ cultures. Both mutants were significantly attenuated compared with the wild-type strain in a mouse model of strangles, although 2 of 30 mice infected with the Δlgt190-685 mutant did still exhibit signs of disease. In contrast, only the ΔprtM138-213 mutant was significantly attenuated in a pony infection study, with 0 of 5 infected ponies exhibiting pathological signs of strangles compared with 4 of 4 infected with the wild-type and 3 of 5 infected with the Δlgt190-685 mutant. We believe that this is the first study to evaluate the contribution of lipoproteins to the virulence of a gram-positive pathogen in its natural host. These data suggest that the PrtM lipoprotein is a potential vaccine candidate, and further investigation of its activity and its substrate(s) are warranted.
Molecular Microbiology | 2008
Zoe Heather; Matthew T. G. Holden; Karen F. Steward; Julian Parkhill; Lijiang Song; Gregory L. Challis; Carl Robinson; Nicholas Davis-Poynter; Andrew S. Waller
In this study, we determined the function of a novel non‐ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) system carried by a streptococcal integrative conjugative element (ICE), ICESe2. The NRPS shares similarity with the yersiniabactin system found in the high‐pathogenicity island of Yersinia sp. and is the first of its kind to be identified in streptococci. We named the NRPS product ‘equibactin’ and genes of this locus eqbA–N. ICESe2, although absolutely conserved in Streptococcus equi, the causative agent of equine strangles, was absent from all strains of the closely related opportunistic pathogen Streptococcus zooepidemicus. Binding of EqbA, a DtxR‐like regulator, to the eqbB promoter was increased in the presence of cations. Deletion of eqbA resulted in a small‐colony phenotype. Further deletion of the irp2 homologue eqbE, or the genes eqbH, eqbI and eqbJ encoding a putative ABC transporter, or addition of the iron chelator nitrilotriacetate, reversed this phenotype, implicating iron toxicity. Quantification of 55Fe accumulation and sensitivity to streptonigrin suggested that equibactin is secreted by S. equi and that the eqbH, eqbI and eqbJ genes are required for its associated iron import. In agreement with a structure‐based model of equibactin synthesis, supplementation of chemically defined media with salicylate was required for equibactin production.
Neuroscience | 2012
Alice E. McGovern; Nicholas Davis-Poynter; Michael J. Farrell; Stuart B. Mazzone
Sensory input from the airways to suprapontine brain regions contributes to respiratory sensations and the regulation of respiratory function. However, relatively little is known about the central organization of this higher brain circuitry. We exploited the properties of the H129 strain of herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) to perform anterograde transneuronal tracing of the central projections of airway afferent nerve pathways. The extrathoracic trachea in Sprague-Dawley rats was inoculated with HSV-1 H129, and tissues along the neuraxis were processed for HSV-1 immunoreactivity. H129 infection appeared in the vagal sensory ganglia within 24 h and the number of infected cells peaked at 72 h. Brainstem nuclei, including the nucleus of the solitary tract and trigeminal sensory nuclei were infected within 48 h, and within 96 h infected cells were evident within the pons (lateral and medial parabrachial nuclei), thalamus (ventral posteromedial, ventral posterolateral, submedius, and reticular nuclei), hypothalamus (paraventricular and lateral nuclei), subthalamus (zona incerta), and amygdala (central and anterior amygdala area). At later times H129 was detected in cortical forebrain regions including the insular, orbital, cingulate, and somatosensory cortices. Vagotomy significantly reduced the number of infected cells within vagal sensory nuclei in the brainstem, confirming the main pathway of viral transport is through the vagus nerves. Sympathetic postganglionic neurons in the stellate and superior cervical ganglia were infected by 72 h, however, there was no evidence for retrograde transynaptic movement of the virus in sympathetic pathways in the central nervous system (CNS). These data demonstrate the organization of key structures within the CNS that receive afferent projections from the extrathoracic airways that likely play a role in the perception of airway sensations.