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Featured researches published by Philip J. Whitfield.


Electrophoresis | 2008

Metabolic fingerprinting of Schistosoma mansoni infection in mice urine with capillary electrophoresis.

Isabel Garcia-Perez; Philip J. Whitfield; Ann Bartlett; Santiago Angulo; Cristina Legido-Quigley; Melissa Hanna-Brown; Coral Barbas

Schistosoma mansoni infection in mice has been fingerprinted using CE to study the capabilities of this technique as a diagnostic tool for this parasitic disease. Two modes of separation were used in generating the electrophoretic data, with each untreated urine sample the following methods were applied: (i) a fused‐silica capillary, operating with an applied potential of 18 kV, in micellar EKC (MEKC) and (ii) a polyacrylamide‐coated capillary, operating with an applied potential of −20 kV under zonal CZE conditions. By combining normal and reverse polarities in the data treatment we have extracted more information from the samples, which is a better approach for CE metabolomics. The traditional problems associated with variability in electrophoretic peak migration times for analytes were countered by using a dynamic programming algorithm for the electropherograms alignment. Principal component analyses of these aligned electropherograms and partial least square discriminant analysis (PLS‐DA) data are shown to provide a valuable means of rapid and sample classification. This approach may become an important tool for the identification of biomarkers, diagnosis and disease surveillance.


Journal of Ethnopharmacology | 1995

The plant molluscicide Millettia thonningii (Leguminosae) as a topical antischistosomal agent

S. Perrett; Philip J. Whitfield; L. Sanderson; A. Bartlett

The West African legume Millettia thonningii is used in Ghana as an anthelmintic and as a purgative agent. A chloroform extract of the seeds of Millettia thonningii which is known to be molluscicidal and cercaricidal was topically applied to mouse skin 2 and 24 h prior to exposure to Schistosoma mansoni cercariae. The presence of Millettia thonningii extract components on the surface of the skin appeared to be effective in preventing subsequent establishment of infection. The compound responsible for the activity is thought to be the isoflavonoid alpinumisoflavone.


Parasitology | 1994

Attenuation of Schistosoma mansoni cercariae with a molluscicide derived from Millettia thonningii.

S. Perrett; Philip J. Whitfield; A. Bartlett; L. Sanderson

A chloroform extract of molluscicidal plant secondary compounds from the seeds of a West African legume Millettia thonningii was used to attenuate cercariae of Schistosoma mansoni prior to infection of NMRI female mice. Exposure of cercariae to 0.3, 0.6, 1.3, 2.5, 10 or 20 mg/l concentrations of extract for 30 min, immediately before standardized infection, was associated with a concentration-dependent decline in worm establishment at 55 days post-infection. The mean numbers of adult worms established declined from about 17 worms/mouse with control cercariae and those exposed to 0.3 mg/l Millettia to 0.1 worms/mouse after 10 mg/l pre-treatment. Mice exposed to cercariae after 20 mg/l pre-treatment had no adult worms at 55 days post-infection. The activities of cercariae 30 min after exposure to Millettia extract at concentrations up to 2.5 mg/l were similar to those of control larvae: none was immobile. Exposure to higher concentrations of Millettia progressively reduced swimming activity and increased the proportion of immobile cercariae. After pretreatment with 20 mg/l Millettia the majority of larvae were immobile. Levels of anti-parasite antibodies (estimated by ELISA assay using an adult worm-based antigen preparation) rose between 21 and 55 days p.i. with control cercariae and those pre-treated with 2.5 mg/l Millettia. After 5 mg/l pre-treatment, cercariae induced a reduced antibody rise, while mice exposed to cercariae after 10 mg/l pre-treatment showed no rise in anti-parasite antibody levels. These results are discussed in the context of protocols which could possibly use Millettia-attenuated cercariae to induce useful levels of protection in mice towards further cercarial challenge.


Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry | 2003

Demethylation of 2,4-dimethoxyquinolines: the synthesis of atanine

Keith Jones; Xavier Roset; Sharon Rossiter; Philip J. Whitfield

The synthesis of the quinoline alkaloid atanine 6, by selective demethylation of the 2,4-dimethoxyquinoline 11 is presented. An alternative demethylation utilising a thiolate anion leads to the regioisomeric 4-hydroxyquinoline 13.


Parasitology | 2003

Age-dependent survival and infectivity of Schistosoma mansoni cercariae.

Philip J. Whitfield; Ann Bartlett; N. Khammo; R. H. Clothier

The age dependency of the mortality, spontaneous de-tailing and infectivity of cercariae of Schistosoma mansoni has been determined at 25 degrees C. Infectivity was assessed with respect to stratum corneum-like differentiated human keratinocyte cultures (validated by comparison with fresh human skin samples) and displayed a complex age-dependent pattern. From 1 to 9 h post-emergence cercariae showed a plateau of maximal infectivity (around 90% attachment). Thereafter, infectivity declined. Immediately after release, infectivity at around 60% was significantly lower than the plateau values and this could be an adaptation for spatial dispersal of cercariae. Age-dependent patterns of cercarial mortality and spontaneous de-tailing closely mirrored the infectivity pattern except in relation to the low initial infectivity value. These findings suggest that, at a population level, the age-dependent decline in cercarial infectivity towards human skin is essentially driven by cercarial mortality. The recently described phenomenon of delayed tail loss (DTL) in S. mansoni cercariae infecting human skin is confirmed in the present study. For cercariae aged up to 13.5 h post-emergence, 90% or more of invading cercariae took their tails with them into the keratinocyte culture. The infection dynamics described in this study suggest that diurnally shed S. mansoni cercariae, with peak emergence around mid-day, will have near maximal infectivity towards humans in contact with water through all remaining daylight hours in the tropics.


Journal of Parasitology | 1995

Activity of the molluscicidal plant Millettia thonningii (Leguminosae) toward Biomphalaria glabrata eggs.

Simon S. H. Tang; Philip J. Whitfield; Sheena Perrett

A dichloromethane extract of the seeds of the molluscicidal west African legume Millettia thonningii was tested for ovicidal activity toward Biomphalaria glabrata egg masses. The extract was found to be highly ovicidal at concentrations as low as 5 mg/L. Embryonic development of the snails in egg masses was monitored using photomicrographs from which embryonic diameters were estimated. Such measurements revealed that ovicidal effects were developmentally stage specific and normally induced a curtailment of development during the gastrula to trochophore transition.


Parasitology | 2002

The attachment of Schistosoma mansoni cercariae to human skin cells.

N. Khammo; Ann Bartlett; R. H. Clothier; Philip J. Whitfield

Most of our knowledge about the process of penetration of skin, by cercariae of Schistosoma mansoni, has been gained from studies carried out in vivo with laboratory animals. Human skin is significantly different from that of other animals but there are obvious practical difficulties in directly studying attachment and penetration with human skin. Techniques have been developed which enable a 3-dimensional skin equivalent to be grown in tissue culture, made from different types of human skin cells. The aim of the present study was to investigate cercarial interactions with confluent cultures of the individual skin cell types that make up normal human skin and which will be used to construct a multi-component model. Cercariae behaved differently towards the various cell types tested. They responded least to monolayers of endothelial cells and most to primary keratinocytes, derived from human foreskin and differentiated at an air/liquid interface. This study demonstrates, therefore, that cercariae are capable of distinguishing between different types of skin cells and they preferentially attach to differentiated cells which form the epidermis.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2005

Synthesis and anthelmintic properties of arylquinolines with activity against drug resistant nematodes

Sharon Rossiter; Jean-Marie Peron; Philip J. Whitfield; Keith Jones


Phytotherapy Research | 1995

Anthelmintic and pesticidal activity of Acorus gramineus (Araceae) is associated with phenylpropanoid asarones

Sheena Perrett; Philip J. Whitfield


Phytotherapy Research | 1995

Aqueous degradation of isoflavonoids in an extract of Millettia thonningii (Leguminosae) which is larvicidal towards schistosomes

Sheena Perrett; Philip J. Whitfield

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Keith Jones

Institute of Cancer Research

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N. Khammo

University of Nottingham

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R. H. Clothier

University of Nottingham

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Sharon Rossiter

University College London

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