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Dive into the research topics where R.L. de Swart is active.

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Featured researches published by R.L. de Swart.


Aquatic Toxicology | 1996

Suppression of natural killer cell activity in harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) fed Baltic Sea herring

Peter S. Ross; R.L. de Swart; Helga H. Timmerman; P.J.H. Reijnders; J.G. Vos; H. van Loveren; A.D.M.E. Osterhaus

Mass mortalities among marine mammal populations in recent years have raised questions about a possible contributory role of contaminants accumulated through the marine food chain. While viruses were shown to be the primary cause of the outbreaks, an immunotoxic action by organochlorine chemicals in affected animals could not be ruled out. We carried out a 212-year immunotoxicological experiment in which two groups of 11 harbour seals each were fed herring from either the relatively contaminated Baltic Sea or the relatively uncontaminated Atlantic Ocean. Seals in the Baltic Sea group accumulated 3–4 times higher levels of Ah-receptor-mediated 2,3,7,8-TCDD Toxic Equivalents in blubber than did their Atlantic counterparts following 2 years on the respective diets. Blood was sampled a total of 17 times during the course of the experiment for immunological evaluation, during which time the natural cytotoxic activity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells isolated from seals fed Baltic Sea herring declined to a level approximately 25% lower than that observed in seals fed Atlantic herring (P < 0.01). Natural killer (NK) cell activity has not been previously described for a marine mammal species. We characterized the natural cytotoxic activity of harbour seal peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), and found this to be interleukin-2 (IL-2) responsive, sensitive to antibody anti-asialo GM1, and it was higher against a virus-infected target cell, like NK cells described for other mammals. As NK cells are leukocytes which play an important role in the first line of defence against viruses, the observed impairment of NK cell activity in the seals feeding on the Baltic Sea herring suggests that exposure to contaminants may have an adverse effect on the defence against virus infections in seals inhabiting polluted waters in Europe. This may therefore have affected the severity of the infections, the survival rates and the spread of infections during recent epizootics.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2000

Type 1-like immune response is found in children with respiratory syncytial virus infection regardless of clinical severity

A.H. Brandenburg; Alex KleinJan; B. van het Land; Henriëtte A. Moll; H.H. Timmerman; R.L. de Swart; H. J. Neijens; Wytske J. Fokkens; A.D.M.E. Osterhaus

The immunological response of infants younger than six months to infection with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) was studied in relation to clinical severity. IL‐6 and IL‐8 were found more frequently and at higher levels in the plasma samples of more severely ill patients and no significant differences were found in the levels of cytokines differentiating between Type 1 and Type 2 responses. Cellular infiltrates in nasopharyngeal washings consisted mainly of polymorphonuclear granulocytes and monocytes. Eosinophils, IgE positive cells and tryptase positive cells were found sporadically. Analyses of RSV stimulated T cell cultures established from peripheral blood mononuclear cells, for intracellular and secreted cytokines showed that, irrespective of clinical severity, the responses were dominated by the production of IFN‐γ, and that only low levels of IL‐4 and IL‐10 were detectable. Collectively these data do not indicate an association between clinical severity and a Type 2‐like T cell response. J. Med. Virol. 62:267–277, 2000.


The Lancet | 2000

Measles in a Dutch hospital introduced by an immunocompromised infant from Indonesia infected with a new virus genotype

R.L. de Swart; Pme Wertheim-van Dlllen; Rs van Binnendijk; Claude P. Muller; J Frenkel; Adme Osterhaus

A fatal measles case in an immunocompromised Indonesian child was associated with nosocomial transmission to health care workers. The virus isolated proved to represent a new genotype within clade G.


Chemosphere | 1995

Short term fasting does not aggravate immunosuppression in harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) with high body burdens of organochlorines

R.L. de Swart; Peter S. Ross; Helga H. Timmerman; W.C. Hijman; E.M. de Ruiter; A.K.D. Liem; A. Brouwer; H. van Loveren; P.J.H. Reijnders; J.G. Vos; A.D.M.E. Osterhaus

Two groups of 11 harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) with different body burdens of organochlorines were subjected to an experimental 15-day fasting period, during which they lost an average 16.5% of their body weights. Blood levels of the most persistent organochlorines showed an approximate twofold increase, while levels of aryl hydrocarbon receptor-binding organochlorines remained largely unaffected. Few differences in immunological parameters were observed between the two dietary groups. Numbers of circulating lymphocytes dropped to about 65% of the initial values and NK cell activity showed a slight increase in both groups. Mitogen- and antigen-induced lymphoproliferative responses of the Baltic group of seals remained within normal ranges. These results suggest that relatively short-term fasting periods do not present an additional immunotoxicological risk to seals with high body burdens of organochlorines.


Archives of Virology | 1993

Dolphin morbillivirus infection in different parts of the Mediterranean Sea

M.-F. Van Bressem; Ilona Visser; R.L. de Swart; Claes Örvell; L. Stanzani; E. Androukaki; K. Siakavara; A. D. M. E. Osterhaus

SummaryMorbillivirus were isolated from Mediterranean striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba) dying along the coasts of Italy and Greece in 1991. They were antigenically identical to the morbilliviruses isolated from striped dolphins in Spain in 1990.


Journal of Virology | 2000

HLA Class I-Restricted Cytotoxic T-Cell Epitopes of the Respiratory Syncytial Virus Fusion Protein

A.H. Brandenburg; L. de Waal; Helga H. Timmerman; P. Hoogerhout; R.L. de Swart; A.D.M.E. Osterhaus

ABSTRACT Virus-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) play a major role in the clearance of respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. We have generated cytotoxic T-cell clones (TCC) from two infants who had just recovered from severe RSV infection. These TCC were functionally characterized and used to identify HLA class I (B57 and C12)-restricted CTL epitopes of RSV.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Identification of a Common HLA-DP4-Restricted T-Cell Epitope in the Conserved Region of the Respiratory Syncytial Virus G Protein

L. de Waal; Selma Yüksel; A.H. Brandenburg; J. P. M. Langedijk; K. Sintnicolaas; Georges M. G. M. Verjans; A.D.M.E. Osterhaus; R.L. de Swart

ABSTRACT The cellular immune response to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is important in both protection and immunopathogenesis. In contrast to HLA class I, HLA class II-restricted RSV-specific T-cell epitopes have not been identified. Here, we describe the generation and characterization of two human RSV-specific CD4+-T-cell clones (TCCs) associated with type 0-like cytokine profiles. TCC 1 was specific for the matrix protein and restricted over HLA-DPB1*1601, while TCC 2 was specific for the attachment protein G and restricted over either HLA-DPB1*0401 or -0402. Interestingly, the latter epitope is conserved in both RSV type A and B viruses. Given the high allele frequencies of HLA-DPB1*0401 and -0402 worldwide, this epitope could be widely recognized and boosted by recurrent RSV infections. Indeed, peptide stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from healthy adults resulted in the detection of specific responses in 8 of 13 donors. Additional G-specific TCCs were generated from three of these cultures, which recognized the identical (n = 2) or almost identical (n = 1) HLA-DP4-restricted epitope as TCC 2. No significant differences were found between the capacities of cell lines obtained from infants with severe (n = 41) or mild (n = 46) RSV lower respiratory tract infections to function as antigen-presenting cells to the G-specific TCCs, suggesting that the severity of RSV disease is not linked to the allelic frequency of HLA-DP4. In conclusion, we have identified an RSV G-specific human T helper cell epitope restricted by the widely expressed HLA class II alleles DPB1*0401 and -0402. Its putative role in protection and/or immunopathogenesis remains to be determined.


Veterinary Quarterly | 1996

Impaired immunity in harbour seals (phoca vitulina) fed environmentally contaminated herring

R.L. de Swart; P.S. Ross; Joseph G. Vos; A.D.M.E. Osterhaus

In recent years, mass mortalities among seals and dolphins have been attributed to infections with different morbilliviruses. In all cases, these marine top predators were exposed to high levels of persistent lipophilic environmental contaminants accumulated through the food chain. This observation led to the hypothesis that a contaminant-related suppression of the immune system might have contributed to the severity of the virus outbreaks. We conducted a semi-field feeding experiment, in which we fed two groups of harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) fish with different levels of contaminants. During a period of 2 1/2 years, blood samples were taken at regular intervals, and the functioning of different compartments of the immune system was monitored and compared. We found impaired natural killer (NK) and specific T cell responses in the seals fed contaminated fish. This is the first demonstration of immunosuppression in mammals following chronic exposure to environmental contaminants at ambient environmental levels.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2002

Measles in suburban Khartoum: an epidemiological and clinical study

Salah A. Ibrahim; O.M. Mustafa; Maowia M. Mukhtar; Ezzeldin Saleh; H.S. El Mubarak; Abdallah Abdallah; A. M. El-Hassan; A.D.M.E. Osterhaus; Jan Groen; R.L. de Swart; E. E. Zijlstra

Clinical and epidemiological data were collected from 187 clinically diagnosed measles patients in Haj Yousif area, suburban Khartoum. Laboratory tests confirmed the diagnosis in 141 (75%) of the cases, but demonstrated that in 46 (25%) patients the clinical symptoms were not caused by an acute measles virus (MV) infection. According to their vaccination card, 59% of the laboratory‐confirmed measles cases had been vaccinated for measles. Compared with non‐measles rash disease cases, confirmed measles cases more often had severe illness (P < 0.0001), were dehydrated (P=0.01) at presentation and less likely to recover without complications [OR 0.19 (95% CI 0.09, 0.39)]. There was no difference in death rate (P=0.20). Underweight [weight‐for‐age Z score (WAZ) ≤ −2 SD] was an independent predictor of recovery with complications [OR 0.4 (95% CI 0.2, 0.99)]. Severe measles cases (those who developed diarrhoea, pneumonia, otitis media, encephalitis or haemorrhagic rash) had similar vaccination rates and time intervals since vaccination as uncomplicated measles cases. Although severe measles had lower WAZ‐scores (P=0.004), none of the nutritional parameters studied were predictive of outcome. Mortality was higher in the severe measles group [OR 8.8 (95% CI 1.7, 85.2)]. In 11 of 141 confirmed measles cases serological evidence of a recent infection with another virus was found, most commonly varicella zoster virus and dengue virus; spotted fever and rubella were among the most frequent diagnoses in 17 of 47 cases of the non‐measles cases.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Recombinant Canine Distemper Virus Strain Snyder Hill Expressing Green or Red Fluorescent Proteins Causes Meningoencephalitis in the Ferret

Martin Ludlow; D.T. Nguyen; D. Silin; O. Lyubomska; R. de Vries; V. von Messling; Stephen McQuaid; R.L. de Swart; W. P. Duprex

ABSTRACT The propensity of canine distemper virus (CDV) to spread to the central nervous system is one of the primary features of distemper. Therefore, we developed a reverse genetics system based on the neurovirulent Snyder Hill (SH) strain of CDV (CDVSH) and show that this virus rapidly circumvents the blood-brain and blood-cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) barriers to spread into the subarachnoid space to induce dramatic viral meningoencephalitis. The use of recombinant CDVSH (rCDVSH) expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) or red fluorescent protein (dTomato) facilitated the sensitive pathological assessment of routes of virus spread in vivo. Infection of ferrets with these viruses led to the full spectrum of clinical signs typically associated with distemper in dogs during a rapid, fatal disease course of approximately 2 weeks. Comparison with the ferret-adapted CDV5804P and the prototypic wild-type CDVR252 showed that hematogenous infection of the choroid plexus is not a significant route of virus spread into the CSF. Instead, viral spread into the subarachnoid space in rCDVSH-infected animals was triggered by infection of vascular endothelial cells and the hematogenous spread of virus-infected leukocytes from meningeal blood vessels into the subarachnoid space. This resulted in widespread infection of cells of the pia and arachnoid mater of the leptomeninges over large areas of the cerebral hemispheres. The ability to sensitively assess the in vivo spread of a neurovirulent strain of CDV provides a novel model system to study the mechanisms of virus spread into the CSF and the pathogenesis of acute viral meningitis.

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A.D.M.E. Osterhaus

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Peter S. Ross

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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A.H. Brandenburg

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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H.S. El Mubarak

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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Helma W. Vos

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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L. de Waal

Erasmus University Rotterdam

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