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Dive into the research topics where Sharon Isern is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharon Isern.


Virology Journal | 2010

Neutralizing and non-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies against dengue virus E protein derived from a naturally infected patient.

John S. Schieffelin; Joshua M. Costin; Cindo O. Nicholson; Nicole M Orgeron; Krystal A. Fontaine; Sharon Isern; Scott F. Michael; James E. Robinson

BackgroundAntibodies produced in response to infection with any of the four serotypes of dengue virus generally provide homotypic immunity. However, prior infection or circulating maternal antibodies can also mediate a non-protective antibody response that can enhance the course of disease in a subsequent heterotypic infection. Naturally occurring human monoclonal antibodies can help us understand the protective and pathogenic roles of the humoral immune system in dengue virus infection.ResultsEpstein-Barr Virus (EBV) transformation of B cells isolated from the peripheral blood of a human subject with previous dengue infection was performed. B cell cultures were screened by ELISA for antibodies to dengue (DENV) envelope (E) protein. ELISA positive cultures were cloned by limiting dilution. Three IgG1 human monoclonal antibodies (HMAbs) were purified and their binding specificity to E protein was verified by ELISA and biolayer interferometry. Neutralization and enhancement assays were conducted in epithelial and macrophage-like cell lines, respectively. All three HMAbs bound to E from at least two of the four DENV serotypes, one of the HMAbs was neutralizing, and all were able to enhance DENV infection.ConclusionsHMAbs against DENV can be successfully generated by EBV transformation of B cells from patients at least two years after naturally acquired DENV infections. These antibodies show different patterns of cross-reactivity, neutralizing, and enhancement activity.


Clinical And Translational Immunology | 2016

Dengue virus antibodies enhance Zika virus infection

Lauren M. Paul; Eric R. Carlin; Meagan M. Jenkins; Amanda L. Tan; Carolyn M. Barcellona; Cindo O. Nicholson; Scott F. Michael; Sharon Isern

For decades, human infections with Zika virus (ZIKV), a mosquito‐transmitted flavivirus, were sporadic, associated with mild disease, and went underreported since symptoms were similar to other acute febrile diseases. Recent reports of severe disease associated with ZIKV have greatly heightened awareness. It is anticipated that ZIKV will continue to spread in the Americas and globally where competent Aedes mosquito vectors are found. Dengue virus (DENV), the most common mosquito‐transmitted human flavivirus, is both well‐established and the source of outbreaks in areas of recent ZIKV introduction. DENV and ZIKV are closely related, resulting in substantial antigenic overlap. Through antibody‐dependent enhancement (ADE), anti‐DENV antibodies can enhance the infectivity of DENV for certain classes of immune cells, causing increased viral production that correlates with severe disease outcomes. Similarly, ZIKV has been shown to undergo ADE in response to antibodies generated by other flaviviruses. We tested the neutralizing and enhancing potential of well‐characterized broadly neutralizing human anti‐DENV monoclonal antibodies (HMAbs) and human DENV immune sera against ZIKV using neutralization and ADE assays. We show that anti‐DENV HMAbs, cross‐react, do not neutralize, and greatly enhance ZIKV infection in vitro. DENV immune sera had varying degrees of neutralization against ZIKV and similarly enhanced ZIKV infection. Our results suggest that pre‐existing DENV immunity may enhance ZIKV infection in vivo and may lead to increased disease severity. Understanding the interplay between ZIKV and DENV will be critical in informing public health responses and will be particularly valuable for ZIKV and DENV vaccine design and implementation strategies.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Immune activation alters cellular and humoral responses to yellow fever 17D vaccine

Enoch Muyanja; Aloysius Ssemaganda; Pearline Ngauv; Rafael Cubas; Hélène Perrin; Divya Srinivasan; Glenda Canderan; Benton Lawson; Jakub Kopycinski; Amanda S. Graham; Dawne K. Rowe; Michaela J. Smith; Denis Gaucher; Sharon Isern; Scott F. Michael; Guido Silvestri; Thomas H. Vanderford; Erika Castro; Giuseppe Pantaleo; Joel Singer; Jill Gillmour; Noah Kiwanuka; Annet Nanvubya; Claudia Schmidt; Josephine Birungi; Josephine H. Cox; Elias K. Haddad; Pontiano Kaleebu; Patricia Fast; Rafick-Pierre Sekaly

BACKGROUND Defining the parameters that modulate vaccine responses in African populations will be imperative to design effective vaccines for protection against HIV, malaria, tuberculosis, and dengue virus infections. This study aimed to evaluate the contribution of the patient-specific immune microenvironment to the response to the licensed yellow fever vaccine 17D (YF-17D) in an African cohort. METHODS We compared responses to YF-17D in 50 volunteers in Entebbe, Uganda, and 50 volunteers in Lausanne, Switzerland. We measured the CD8+ T cell and B cell responses induced by YF-17D and correlated them with immune parameters analyzed by flow cytometry prior to vaccination. RESULTS We showed that YF-17D-induced CD8+ T cell and B cell responses were substantially lower in immunized individuals from Entebbe compared with immunized individuals from Lausanne. The impaired vaccine response in the Entebbe cohort associated with reduced YF-17D replication. Prior to vaccination, we observed higher frequencies of exhausted and activated NK cells, differentiated T and B cell subsets and proinflammatory monocytes, suggesting an activated immune microenvironment in the Entebbe volunteers. Interestingly, activation of CD8+ T cells and B cells as well as proinflammatory monocytes at baseline negatively correlated with YF-17D-neutralizing antibody titers after vaccination. Additionally, memory T and B cell responses in preimmunized volunteers exhibited reduced persistence in the Entebbe cohort but were boosted by a second vaccination. CONCLUSION Together, these results demonstrate that an activated immune microenvironment prior to vaccination impedes efficacy of the YF-17D vaccine in an African cohort and suggest that vaccine regimens may need to be boosted in African populations to achieve efficient immunity. TRIAL REGISTRATION Registration is not required for observational studies. FUNDING This study was funded by Canadas Global Health Research Initiative, Defense Threat Reduction Agency, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and United States Agency for International Development.


Nature | 2017

Zika virus evolution and spread in the Americas

Hayden C. Metsky; Christian B. Matranga; Shirlee Wohl; Stephen F. Schaffner; Catherine A. Freije; Sarah M. Winnicki; Kendra West; James Qu; Mary Lynn Baniecki; Adrianne Gladden-Young; Aaron E. Lin; Christopher Tomkins-Tinch; Simon H. Ye; Daniel J. Park; Cynthia Y. Luo; Kayla G. Barnes; Rickey R. Shah; Bridget Chak; Giselle Barbosa-Lima; Edson Delatorre; Yasmine Rangel Vieira; Lauren M. Paul; Amanda L. Tan; Carolyn M. Barcellona; Mario C. Porcelli; Chalmers Vasquez; Andrew Cannons; Marshall R. Cone; Kelly N. Hogan; Edgar W. Kopp

Although the recent Zika virus (ZIKV) epidemic in the Americas and its link to birth defects have attracted a great deal of attention, much remains unknown about ZIKV disease epidemiology and ZIKV evolution, in part owing to a lack of genomic data. Here we address this gap in knowledge by using multiple sequencing approaches to generate 110 ZIKV genomes from clinical and mosquito samples from 10 countries and territories, greatly expanding the observed viral genetic diversity from this outbreak. We analysed the timing and patterns of introductions into distinct geographic regions; our phylogenetic evidence suggests rapid expansion of the outbreak in Brazil and multiple introductions of outbreak strains into Puerto Rico, Honduras, Colombia, other Caribbean islands, and the continental United States. We find that ZIKV circulated undetected in multiple regions for many months before the first locally transmitted cases were confirmed, highlighting the importance of surveillance of viral infections. We identify mutations with possible functional implications for ZIKV biology and pathogenesis, as well as those that might be relevant to the effectiveness of diagnostic tests.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Mechanistic study of broadly neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies against dengue virus that target the fusion loop

Joshua M. Costin; Elena Zaitseva; Kristen M. Kahle; Cindo O. Nicholson; Dawne K. Rowe; Amanda S. Graham; Lindsey E. Bazzone; Greg Hogancamp; Marielys Figueroa Sierra; Rachel H. Fong; Sung-Tae Yang; Li Lin; James E. Robinson; Benjamin J. Doranz; Leonid V. Chernomordik; Scott F. Michael; John S. Schieffelin; Sharon Isern

ABSTRACT There are no available vaccines for dengue, the most important mosquito-transmitted viral disease. Mechanistic studies with anti-dengue virus (DENV) human monoclonal antibodies (hMAbs) provide a rational approach to identify and characterize neutralizing epitopes on DENV structural proteins that can serve to inform vaccine strategies. Here, we report a class of hMAbs that is likely to be an important determinant in the human humoral response to DENV infection. In this study, we identified and characterized three broadly neutralizing anti-DENV hMAbs: 4.8A, D11C, and 1.6D. These antibodies were isolated from three different convalescent patients with distinct histories of DENV infection yet demonstrated remarkable similarities. All three hMAbs recognized the E glycoprotein with high affinity, neutralized all four serotypes of DENV, and mediated antibody-dependent enhancement of infection in Fc receptor-bearing cells at subneutralizing concentrations. The neutralization activities of these hMAbs correlated with a strong inhibition of virus-liposome and intracellular fusion, not virus-cell binding. We mapped epitopes of these antibodies to the highly conserved fusion loop region of E domain II. Mutations at fusion loop residues W101, L107, and/or G109 significantly reduced the binding of the hMAbs to E protein. The results show that hMAbs directed against the highly conserved E protein fusion loop block viral entry downstream of virus-cell binding by inhibiting E protein-mediated fusion. Characterization of hMAbs targeting this region may provide new insights into DENV vaccine and therapeutic strategies.


Nature | 2017

Genomic epidemiology reveals multiple introductions of Zika virus into the United States

Nathan D. Grubaugh; Jason T. Ladner; Moritz U. G. Kraemer; Gytis Dudas; Amanda L. Tan; Karthik Gangavarapu; Michael R. Wiley; Stephen White; Julien Thézé; Diogo M. Magnani; Karla Prieto; Daniel Reyes; Andrea M. Bingham; Lauren M. Paul; Refugio Robles-Sikisaka; Glenn Oliveira; Darryl Pronty; Carolyn M. Barcellona; Hayden C. Metsky; Mary Lynn Baniecki; Kayla G. Barnes; Bridget Chak; Catherine A. Freije; Adrianne Gladden-Young; Andreas Gnirke; Cynthia Y. Luo; Bronwyn MacInnis; Christian B. Matranga; Daniel J. Park; James Qu

Zika virus (ZIKV) is causing an unprecedented epidemic linked to severe congenital abnormalities. In July 2016, mosquito-borne ZIKV transmission was reported in the continental United States; since then, hundreds of locally acquired infections have been reported in Florida. To gain insights into the timing, source, and likely route(s) of ZIKV introduction, we tracked the virus from its first detection in Florida by sequencing ZIKV genomes from infected patients and Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. We show that at least 4 introductions, but potentially as many as 40, contributed to the outbreak in Florida and that local transmission is likely to have started in the spring of 2016—several months before its initial detection. By analysing surveillance and genetic data, we show that ZIKV moved among transmission zones in Miami. Our analyses show that most introductions were linked to the Caribbean, a finding corroborated by the high incidence rates and traffic volumes from the region into the Miami area. Our study provides an understanding of how ZIKV initiates transmission in new regions.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2010

Structural Optimization and De Novo Design of Dengue Virus Entry Inhibitory Peptides

Joshua M. Costin; Ekachai Jenwitheesuk; Shee-Mei Lok; Elizabeth Hunsperger; Kelly A. Conrads; Krystal A. Fontaine; Craig R. Rees; Michael G. Rossmann; Sharon Isern; Ram Samudrala; Scott F. Michael

Viral fusogenic envelope proteins are important targets for the development of inhibitors of viral entry. We report an approach for the computational design of peptide inhibitors of the dengue 2 virus (DENV-2) envelope (E) protein using high-resolution structural data from a pre-entry dimeric form of the protein. By using predictive strategies together with computational optimization of binding “pseudoenergies”, we were able to design multiple peptide sequences that showed low micromolar viral entry inhibitory activity. The two most active peptides, DN57opt and 1OAN1, were designed to displace regions in the domain II hinge, and the first domain I/domain II beta sheet connection, respectively, and show fifty percent inhibitory concentrations of 8 and 7 µM respectively in a focus forming unit assay. The antiviral peptides were shown to interfere with virus:cell binding, interact directly with the E proteins and also cause changes to the viral surface using biolayer interferometry and cryo-electron microscopy, respectively. These peptides may be useful for characterization of intermediate states in the membrane fusion process, investigation of DENV receptor molecules, and as lead compounds for drug discovery.


Antiviral Research | 2011

Viral entry inhibitors block dengue antibody-dependent enhancement in vitro

Cindo O. Nicholson; Joshua M. Costin; Dawne K. Rowe; Li Lin; Ekachai Jenwitheesuk; Ram Samudrala; Sharon Isern; Scott F. Michael

Severe dengue virus (DENV) disease symptoms, including dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome, have been correlated with the presence of pre-existing antibodies that enhance rather than neutralize infections in Fc receptor bearing cells. These antibodies can originate from previous infection with a different serotype of dengue, or from waning antibody titers that occur in infants and young children as they are weaned from breast milk that contains protective dengue-specific antibodies. Despite the apparent importance of this antibody dependent enhancement (ADE) effect, there has been no description of any specific inhibitors of this process. We explored DENV entry inhibitors as a potential strategy to block ADE. Two different peptide entry inhibitors were tested for the ability to block antibody-mediated DENV-2 infection of human, FcRII bearing K562 cells in vitro. Both peptides were able to inhibit ADE, showing that entry inhibitors are possible candidates for the development of specific treatment for severe DENV infection.


Antiviral Research | 2008

In vitro inhibition of dengue virus entry by p-sulfoxy-cinnamic acid and structurally related combinatorial chemistries

Craig R. Rees; Joshua M. Costin; Ryan C. Fink; Matthew McMichael; Krystal A. Fontaine; Sharon Isern; Scott F. Michael

The anti-adhesive compound p-sulfoxy-cinnamic acid, zosteric acid (ZA), is derived from the temperate marine eelgrass, Zostera marina. ZA and five combinatorial chemistries based on ZA were evaluated for their anti-viral properties against dengue virus in a focus forming unit reduction assay. None of the compounds showed evidence of toxicity to the monkey kidney cell line LLCMK-2 over the concentration ranges tested. ZA showed a modest IC(50) of approximately 2.3 mM against DENV-2. Three other compounds showed IC(50) values of 2.5, 2.4, 0.3 mM, with a fourth not achieving a 50% inhibitory concentration against DENV-2. The most active compound, CF 238, showed IC(50) values of 24, 46, 14 and 47 microM against DENV-1, DENV-2, DENV-3 and DENV-4, respectively. CF 238 showed evidence of inhibition at an entry step in the viral life cycle and enhanced virus:cell binding as evidenced by a quantitative RT-PCR assay system. CF 238 may promote inappropriate virus:cell attachments common to all DENV strains that interfere with receptor interactions required for viral entry. These and other related chemistries may be useful as reagents for studying DENV entry, capturing and detecting DENV, and development of pharmaceuticals.


Nature microbiology | 2017

Prophage-mediated defence against viral attack and viral counter-defence

Rebekah M. Dedrick; Deborah Jacobs-Sera; Carlos Bustamante; Rebecca A. Garlena; Travis N. Mavrich; Welkin H. Pope; Juan C. Cervantes Reyes; Daniel A. Russell; Tamarah L. Adair; Richard Alvey; J. Alfred Bonilla; Jerald S. Bricker; Bryony R. Brown; Deanna Byrnes; Steven G. Cresawn; William B. Davis; Leon A. Dickson; Nicholas P. Edgington; Ann M. Findley; Urszula Golebiewska; Julianne H. Grose; Cory F. Hayes; Lee E. Hughes; Keith W. Hutchison; Sharon Isern; Allison Johnson; Margaret A. Kenna; Karen Klyczek; Catherine M. Mageeney; Scott F. Michael

Temperate phages are common, and prophages are abundant residents of sequenced bacterial genomes. Mycobacteriophages are viruses that infect mycobacterial hosts including Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis, encompass substantial genetic diversity and are commonly temperate. Characterization of ten Cluster N temperate mycobacteriophages revealed at least five distinct prophage-expressed viral defence systems that interfere with the infection of lytic and temperate phages that are either closely related (homotypic defence) or unrelated (heterotypic defence) to the prophage. Target specificity is unpredictable, ranging from a single target phage to one-third of those tested. The defence systems include a single-subunit restriction system, a heterotypic exclusion system and a predicted (p)ppGpp synthetase, which blocks lytic phage growth, promotes bacterial survival and enables efficient lysogeny. The predicted (p)ppGpp synthetase coded by the Phrann prophage defends against phage Tweety infection, but Tweety codes for a tetrapeptide repeat protein, gp54, which acts as a highly effective counter-defence system. Prophage-mediated viral defence offers an efficient mechanism for bacterial success in host–virus dynamics, and counter-defence promotes phage co-evolution.

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Scott F. Michael

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Joshua M. Costin

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Lauren M. Paul

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Amanda L. Tan

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Amanda S. Graham

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Cindo O. Nicholson

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Dawne K. Rowe

Florida Gulf Coast University

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Krystal A. Fontaine

Florida Gulf Coast University

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