Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Raymond N. Allan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Raymond N. Allan.


Nature Reviews Microbiology | 2017

Targeting microbial biofilms: current and prospective therapeutic strategies

Hyun Koo; Raymond N. Allan; Robert P. Howlin; Paul Stoodley; Luanne Hall-Stoodley

Biofilm formation is a key virulence factor for a wide range of microorganisms that cause chronic infections. The multifactorial nature of biofilm development and drug tolerance imposes great challenges for the use of conventional antimicrobials and indicates the need for multi-targeted or combinatorial therapies. In this Review, we focus on current therapeutic strategies and those under development that target vital structural and functional traits of microbial biofilms and drug tolerance mechanisms, including the extracellular matrix and dormant cells. We emphasize strategies that are supported by in vivo or ex vivo studies, highlight emerging biofilm-targeting technologies and provide a rationale for multi-targeted therapies aimed at disrupting the complex biofilm microenvironment.


Journal of Infection | 2014

New approaches to the treatment of biofilm-related infections

Matthew Wilkins; Luanne Hall-Stoodley; Raymond N. Allan; Saul N. Faust

Bacteria causing chronic infections predominately grow as surface-attached, sessile communities known as biofilms. Biofilm-related infections including cystic fibrosis lung infection, chronic and recurrent otitis media, chronic wounds and implant- and catheter-associated infections, are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality and financial cost. Chronic biofilm-based infections are recalcitrant to conventional antibiotic therapy and are often unperturbed by host immune responses such as phagocytosis, despite a sustained presence of host inflammation. The diagnosis of clinically important biofilm infections is often difficult as Kochs postulates are rarely met. If treatment is required, surgical removal of the infected implant, or debridement of wound or bone, is the most efficient means of eradicating a clinically significant biofilm. New approaches to treatment are under investigation.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Pronounced metabolic changes in adaptation to biofilm growth by Streptococcus pneumoniae

Raymond N. Allan; Paul Skipp; Johanna M.C. Jefferies; Stuart C. Clarke; Saul N. Faust; Luanne Hall-Stoodley; Jeremy S. Webb

Streptococcus pneumoniae accounts for a significant global burden of morbidity and mortality and biofilm development is increasingly recognised as important for colonization and infection. Analysis of protein expression patterns during biofilm development may therefore provide valuable insights to the understanding of pneumococcal persistence strategies and to improve vaccines. iTRAQ (isobaric tagging for relative and absolute quantification), a high-throughput gel-free proteomic approach which allows high resolution quantitative comparisons of protein profiles between multiple phenotypes, was used to interrogate planktonic and biofilm growth in a clinical serotype 14 strain. Comparative analyses of protein expression between log-phase planktonic and 1-day and 7-day biofilm cultures representing nascent and late phase biofilm growth were carried out. Overall, 244 proteins were identified, of which >80% were differentially expressed during biofilm development. Quantitatively and qualitatively, metabolic regulation appeared to play a central role in the adaptation from the planktonic to biofilm phenotype. Pneumococci adapted to biofilm growth by decreasing enzymes involved in the glycolytic pathway, as well as proteins involved in translation, transcription, and virulence. In contrast, proteins with a role in pyruvate, carbohydrate, and arginine metabolism were significantly increased during biofilm development. Downregulation of glycolytic and translational proteins suggests that pneumococcus adopts a covert phenotype whilst adapting to an adherent lifestyle, while utilization of alternative metabolic pathways highlights the resourcefulness of pneumococcus to facilitate survival in diverse environmental conditions. These metabolic proteins, conserved across both the planktonic and biofilm phenotypes, may also represent target candidates for future vaccine development and treatment strategies. Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD001182.


Molecular Therapy | 2017

Low-dose nitric oxide as targeted anti-biofilm adjunctive therapy to treat chronic Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection in cystic fibrosis

Robert P. Howlin; Katrina Cathie; Luanne Hall-Stoodley; Victoria Cornelius; Caroline M Duignan; Raymond N. Allan; Bernadette O. Fernandez; Nicolas Barraud; Kenneth D. Bruce; Johanna M. C. Jefferies; Michael J. Kelso; Staffan Kjelleberg; Scott A. Rice; Geraint B. Rogers; Sandra Pink; Caroline A. Smith; Priya Sukhtankar; Rami J. Salib; Julian Legg; Mary P. Carroll; T. Daniels; Martin Feelisch; Paul Stoodley; Stuart C. Clarke; Gary Connett; Saul N. Faust; Jeremy S. Webb

Despite aggressive antibiotic therapy, bronchopulmonary colonization by Pseudomonas aeruginosa causes persistent morbidity and mortality in cystic fibrosis (CF). Chronic P. aeruginosa infection in the CF lung is associated with structured, antibiotic-tolerant bacterial aggregates known as biofilms. We have demonstrated the effects of non-bactericidal, low-dose nitric oxide (NO), a signaling molecule that induces biofilm dispersal, as a novel adjunctive therapy for P. aeruginosa biofilm infection in CF in an ex vivo model and a proof-of-concept double-blind clinical trial. Submicromolar NO concentrations alone caused disruption of biofilms within ex vivo CF sputum and a statistically significant decrease in ex vivo biofilm tolerance to tobramycin and tobramycin combined with ceftazidime. In the 12-patient randomized clinical trial, 10 ppm NO inhalation caused significant reduction in P. aeruginosa biofilm aggregates compared with placebo across 7 days of treatment. Our results suggest a benefit of using low-dose NO as adjunctive therapy to enhance the efficacy of antibiotics used to treat acute P. aeruginosa exacerbations in CF. Strategies to induce the disruption of biofilms have the potential to overcome biofilm-associated antibiotic tolerance in CF and other biofilm-related diseases.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

Low Concentrations of Nitric Oxide Modulate Streptococcus pneumoniae Biofilm Metabolism and Antibiotic Tolerance

Raymond N. Allan; Samantha Morgan; Sanjita Brito-Mutunayagam; Paul Skipp; Martin Feelisch; Stephen M. Hayes; William Hellier; Stuart C. Clarke; Paul Stoodley; Andrea Burgess; Hasnaa Ismail-Koch; Rami J. Salib; Jeremy S. Webb; Saul N. Faust; Luanne Hall-Stoodley

ABSTRACT Streptococcus pneumoniae is one of the key pathogens responsible for otitis media (OM), the most common infection in children and the largest cause of childhood antibiotic prescription. Novel therapeutic strategies that reduce the overall antibiotic consumption due to OM are required because, although widespread pneumococcal conjugate immunization has controlled invasive pneumococcal disease, overall OM incidence has not decreased. Biofilm formation represents an important phenotype contributing to the antibiotic tolerance and persistence of S. pneumoniae in chronic or recurrent OM. We investigated the treatment of pneumococcal biofilms with nitric oxide (NO), an endogenous signaling molecule and therapeutic agent that has been demonstrated to trigger biofilm dispersal in other bacterial species. We hypothesized that addition of low concentrations of NO to pneumococcal biofilms would improve antibiotic efficacy and that higher concentrations exert direct antibacterial effects. Unlike in many other bacterial species, low concentrations of NO did not result in S. pneumoniae biofilm dispersal. Instead, treatment of both in vitro biofilms and ex vivo adenoid tissue samples (a reservoir for S. pneumoniae biofilms) with low concentrations of NO enhanced pneumococcal killing when combined with amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, an antibiotic commonly used to treat chronic OM. Quantitative proteomic analysis using iTRAQ (isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation) identified 13 proteins that were differentially expressed following low-concentration NO treatment, 85% of which function in metabolism or translation. Treatment with low-concentration NO, therefore, appears to modulate pneumococcal metabolism and may represent a novel therapeutic approach to reduce antibiotic tolerance in pneumococcal biofilms.


Thorax | 2017

Corticosteroids and infliximab impair the performance of interferon-γ release assays used for diagnosis of latent tuberculosis

Alexander J.P. Edwards; Yifang Gao; Raymond N. Allan; Darran Ball; Hans de Graaf; Tracy Coelho; Vanessa Clifford; Nigel Curtis; Anthony P. Williams; Saul N. Faust; Salah Mansour; Ben G. Marshall; Paul T. Elkington; Marc Tebruegge

The impact of immunosuppression on interferon-γ release assays and novel cytokine biomarkers of TB infection, mycobacteria-specific IL-2, IP-10 and TNF-α responses was investigated in an ex vivo model. Cytokine responses in standard QuantiFERON-TB Gold in-Tube (QFT-GIT) assays were compared with duplicate assays containing dexamethasone or infliximab. Dexamethasone converted QFT-GIT results from positive to negative in 30% of participants. Antigen-stimulated interferon-γ, IL-2 and TNF-α responses were markedly reduced, but IP-10 responses were preserved. Infliximab caused QFT-GIT result conversion in up to 30% of participants and substantial reductions in all cytokine responses. Therefore, corticosteroids and anti-TNF-α agents significantly impair interferon-γ release assay performance. IP-10 may be a more robust TB biomarker than interferon-γ in patients receiving corticosteroids.


Journal of Infection | 2015

Environmental temperature impacts on the performance of QuantiFERON-TB Gold In-Tube assays

Jessica Jarvis; Yifang Gao; Hans de Graaf; Sara Hughes; Raymond N. Allan; Anthony P. Williams; Ben G. Marshall; Paul T. Elkington; Saul N. Faust; Marc Tebruegge

We read with interest the recent article by Pan et alwhich highlighted that a substantial proportion of patients with pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis (TB) have false-negative interferon-gamma release assay (IGRA) results, showing that a negative IGRA result does not rule out active TB. Unfortunately the authors excluded indeterminate assay results from the analyses, despite those results posing a considerable dilemma for clinical management, as they confer no information about the patients TB infection status


Journal of global antimicrobial resistance | 2017

Reactive oxygen: a novel antimicrobial mechanism for targeting biofilm-associated infection

Matthew Dryden; Jonathan Cooke; Rami J. Salib; Rebecca Holding; Timothy C. Biggs; Ali A. Salamat; Raymond N. Allan; Rachel S. Newby; Fenella Halstead; Thomas Jon Hall; Sophie Constance Cox; Liam M. Grover; Zain Al-hindi; Lilyann Novak-Frazer; Malcolm D. Richardson

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) is a novel therapeutic strategy for topical or local application to wounds, mucosa or internal structures where there may be heavy bacterial bioburden with biofilm and chronic inflammation. Bacterial biofilms are a significant problem in clinical settings owing to their increased tolerance towards conventionally prescribed antibiotics and their propensity for selection of further antibacterial resistance. There is therefore a pressing need for the development of alternative therapeutic strategies that can improve antibiotic efficacy towards biofilms. ROS has been successful in treating chronic wounds and in clearing multidrug-resistant organisms, including methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), and carbapenemase-producing isolates from wounds and vascular line sites. There is significant antifungal activity of ROS against planktonic and biofilm forms. Nebulised ROS has been evaluated in limited subjects to assess reductions in bioburden in chronically colonised respiratory tracts. The antibiofilm activity of ROS could have great implications for the treatment of a variety of persistent respiratory conditions. Use of ROS on internal prosthetic devices shows promise. A variety of novel delivery mechanisms are being developed to apply ROS activity to different anatomical sites.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2016

Cephalosporin-3′-Diazeniumdiolate NO Donor Prodrug PYRRO-C3D Enhances Azithromycin Susceptibility of Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae Biofilms

Samuel A. Collins; Michael J. Kelso; Ardeshir Rineh; Nageshwar R. Yepuri; Janice Coles; Claire Jackson; Georgia D Halladay; Woolf T. Walker; Jeremy S. Webb; Luanne Hall-Stoodley; Gary Connett; Martin Feelisch; Saul N. Faust; Jane S. Lucas; Raymond N. Allan

ABSTRACT PYRRO-C3D is a cephalosporin-3-diazeniumdiolate nitric oxide (NO) donor prodrug designed to selectively deliver NO to bacterial infection sites. The objective of this study was to assess the activity of PYRRO-C3D against nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) biofilms and examine the role of NO in reducing biofilm-associated antibiotic tolerance. The activity of PYRRO-C3D on in vitro NTHi biofilms was assessed through CFU enumeration and confocal microscopy. NO release measurements were performed using an ISO-NO probe. NTHi biofilms grown on primary ciliated respiratory epithelia at an air-liquid interface were used to investigate the effects of PYRRO-C3D in the presence of host tissue. Label-free liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC/MS) proteomic analyses were performed to identify differentially expressed proteins following NO treatment. PYRRO-C3D specifically released NO in the presence of NTHi, while no evidence of spontaneous NO release was observed when the compound was exposed to primary epithelial cells. NTHi lacking β-lactamase activity failed to trigger NO release. Treatment significantly increased the susceptibility of in vitro NTHi biofilms to azithromycin, causing a log fold reduction (10-fold reduction or 1-log-unit reduction) in viability (P < 0.05) relative to azithromycin alone. The response was more pronounced for biofilms grown on primary respiratory epithelia, where a 2-log-unit reduction was observed (P < 0.01). Label-free proteomics showed that NO increased expression of 16 proteins involved in metabolic and transcriptional/translational functions. NO release from PYRRO-C3D enhances the efficacy of azithromycin against NTHi biofilms, putatively via modulation of NTHi metabolic activity. Adjunctive therapy with NO mediated through PYRRO-C3D represents a promising approach for reducing biofilm-associated antibiotic tolerance.


European Respiratory Journal | 2017

Primary ciliary dyskinesia ciliated airway cells show increased susceptibility to Haemophilus influenzae biofilm formation

Woolf T. Walker; Claire Jackson; Raymond N. Allan; Samuel A. Collins; Michael J. Kelso; Ardeshir Rineh; Nageshwar R. Yepuri; Ben Nicholas; Laurie Lau; David A. Johnston; Peter M. Lackie; Saul N. Faust; Jane S. Lucas; Luanne Hall-Stoodley

Non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) is the most common pathogen in primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) patients. We hypothesised that abnormal ciliary motility and low airway nitric oxide (NO) levels on airway epithelial cells from PCD patients might be permissive for NTHi colonisation and biofilm development. We used a primary epithelial cell co-culture model to investigate NTHi infection. Primary airway epithelial cells from PCD and non-PCD patients were differentiated to ciliation using an air–liquid interface culture and then co-cultured with NTHi. NTHi adherence was greater on PCD epithelial cells compared to non-PCD cells (p<0.05) and the distribution of NTHi on PCD epithelium showed more aggregated NTHi in biofilms (p<0.001). Apart from defective ciliary motility, PCD cells did not significantly differ from non-PCD epithelial cells in the degree of ciliation and epithelial integrity or in cytokine, LL-37 and NO production. Treatment of PCD epithelia using exogenous NO and antibiotic significantly reduced NTHi viability in biofilms compared with antibiotic treatment alone. Impaired ciliary function was the primary defect in PCD airway epithelium underlying susceptibility to NTHi biofilm development compared with non-PCD epithelium. Although NO responses were similar, use of targeted NO with antibiotics enhanced killing of NTHi in biofilms, suggesting a novel therapeutic approach. Ex vivo study shows PCD airways risk NTHi biofilm colonisation; novel NO drug overcomes antibiotic tolerance http://ow.ly/GrXC30e4Tqv

Collaboration


Dive into the Raymond N. Allan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Saul N. Faust

University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeremy S. Webb

University of Southampton

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rami J. Salib

University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martin Feelisch

University of Southampton

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marc Tebruegge

University of Southampton

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge