Vilas Mistry
University of Leicester
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Publication
Featured researches published by Vilas Mistry.
British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology | 2009
Neelam Potdar; R Singh; Vilas Mistry; Evans; Pb Farmer; Justin C. Konje; Cooke
Objective Investigation of increased oxidative stress in early pregnancy and association with an increased risk of small‐for‐gestational‐age (SGA) fetus.
Mutagenesis | 2012
Lykke Forchhammer; Clara Ersson; Steffen Loft; Lennart Möller; Roger W. L. Godschalk; Frederik J. Van Schooten; George D. D. Jones; Jennifer A. Higgins; Marcus S. Cooke; Vilas Mistry; Mahsa Karbaschi; Andrew R. Collins; Amaya Azqueta; David H. Phillips; Osman Sozeri; Michael N. Routledge; Kirsty Nelson-Smith; Patrizia Riso; Marisa Porrini; Giuseppe Matullo; Alessandra Allione; Maciej Stępnik; Magdalena Komorowska; João Paulo Teixeira; Solange Costa; L.A. Corcuera; Adela López de Cerain; Blanca Laffon; Vanessa Valdiglesias; Peter Møller
There are substantial inter-laboratory variations in the levels of DNA damage measured by the comet assay. The aim of this study was to investigate whether adherence to a standard comet assay protocol would reduce inter-laboratory variation in reported values of DNA damage. Fourteen laboratories determined the baseline level of DNA strand breaks (SBs)/alkaline labile sites and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (FPG)-sensitive sites in coded samples of mononuclear blood cells (MNBCs) from healthy volunteers. There were technical problems in seven laboratories in adopting the standard protocol, which were not related to the level of experience. Therefore, the inter-laboratory variation in DNA damage was only analysed using the results from laboratories that had obtained complete data with the standard comet assay protocol. This analysis showed that the differences between reported levels of DNA SBs/alkaline labile sites in MNBCs were not reduced by applying the standard assay protocol as compared with the laboratorys own protocol. There was large inter-laboratory variation in FPG-sensitive sites by the laboratory-specific protocol and the variation was reduced when the samples were analysed by the standard protocol. The SBs and FPG-sensitive sites were measured in the same experiment, indicating that the large spread in the latter lesions was the main reason for the reduced inter-laboratory variation. However, it remains worrying that half of the participating laboratories obtained poor results using the standard procedure. This study indicates that future comet assay validation trials should take steps to evaluate the implementation of standard procedures in participating laboratories.
Mutagenesis | 2013
Clara Ersson; Peter Møller; Lykke Forchhammer; Steffen Loft; Amaya Azqueta; Roger W. L. Godschalk; Frederik-Jan van Schooten; George D. D. Jones; Jennifer A. Higgins; Marcus S. Cooke; Vilas Mistry; Mahsa Karbaschi; David H. Phillips; Osman Sozeri; Michael N. Routledge; Kirsty Nelson-Smith; Patrizia Riso; Marisa Porrini; Giuseppe Matullo; Alessandra Allione; Maciej Stępnik; Magdalena Ferlińska; João Paulo Teixeira; Solange Costa; L.A. Corcuera; Adela López de Cerain; Blanca Laffon; Vanessa Valdiglesias; Andrew R. Collins; Lennart Möller
The alkaline comet assay is an established, sensitive method extensively used in biomonitoring studies. This method can be modified to measure a range of different types of DNA damage. However, considerable differences in the protocols used by different research groups affect the inter-laboratory comparisons of results. The aim of this study was to assess the inter-laboratory, intra-laboratory, sample and residual (unexplained) variations in DNA strand breaks and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (FPG)-sensitive sites measured by the comet assay by using a balanced Latin square design. Fourteen participating laboratories used their own comet assay protocols to measure the level of DNA strand breaks and FPG-sensitive sites in coded samples containing peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and the level of DNA strand breaks in coded calibration curve samples (cells exposed to different doses of ionising radiation) on three different days of analysis. Eleven laboratories found dose-response relationships in the coded calibration curve samples on two or three days of analysis, whereas three laboratories had technical problems in their assay. In the coded calibration curve samples, the dose of ionising radiation, inter-laboratory variation, intra-laboratory variation and residual variation contributed to 60.9, 19.4, 0.1 and 19.5%, respectively, of the total variation. In the coded PBMC samples, the inter-laboratory variation explained the largest fraction of the overall variation of DNA strand breaks (79.2%) and the residual variation (19.9%) was much larger than the intra-laboratory (0.3%) and inter-subject (0.5%) variation. The same partitioning of the overall variation of FPG-sensitive sites in the PBMC samples indicated that the inter-laboratory variation was the strongest contributor (56.7%), whereas the residual (42.9%), intra-laboratory (0.2%) and inter-subject (0.3%) variations again contributed less to the overall variation. The results suggest that the variation in DNA damage, measured by comet assay, in PBMC from healthy subjects is assay variation rather than variation between subjects.
Free Radical Research | 2008
Mark D. Evans; Rajinder Singh; Vilas Mistry; Karendeep Sandhu; Peter B. Farmer; Marcus S. Cooke
Non-invasive monitoring of oxidative stress is highly desirable. Urinary 7,8-8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2’-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG) is a biologically relevant and convenient analytical target. However, immunoassays can over-estimate levels of urinary 8-oxodG. Measurement of more than one DNA oxidation product in urine would be advantageous in terms of mechanistic information. Urines samples were analysed for 8-oxodG by solid-phase extraction/LC-MS/MS and ELISA. The solid-phase extraction/LC-MS/MS assay was also applied to the analysis of urinary 7,8-dihydro-8-oxo-2’-deoxyadenosine (8-oxodA). Concurring with previous reports, urinary 8-oxodG measured by ELISA was significantly higher than levels measured by LC-MS/MS. However, apparent improvement in the specificity of the commercially available Japanese Institute for the Control of Ageing (JaICA) ELISA brought mean LC-MS/MS and ELISA measurements of urinary 8-oxodG into agreement. Urinary 8-oxodA was undetectable in all urines, despite efficient recovery by solid phase extraction. Exploitation of the advantages of ELISA may be enhanced by a simple modification to the assay procedure, although chromatographic techniques still remain the ‘gold standard’ techniques for analysis of urinary 8-oxodG. Urinary 8-oxodA is either not present or below the limit of detection of the instrumentation.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2012
Patricia M.W. Lam; Vilas Mistry; Timothy H. Marczylo; Justin C. Konje; Mark D. Evans; Marcus S. Cooke
Interaction of reactive oxygen species with DNA results in a variety of modifications, including 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG), which has been extensively studied as a biomarker of oxidative stress. Oxidative stress is implicated in a number of pathophysiological processes relevant to obstetrics and gynecology; however, there is a lack of understanding as to the precise role of oxidative stress in these processes. We aimed to develop a rapid, validated assay for the accurate quantification of 8-oxodG in human urine using solid-phase extraction and ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (UHPLC–MS/MS) and then investigate the levels of 8-oxodG in several fluids of interest to obstetrics and gynecology. Using UHPLC–MS/MS, 8-oxodG eluted after 3.94 min with an RSD for 15 injections of 0.07%. The method was linear between 0.95 and 95 nmol/L with LOD and LOQ of 5 and 25 fmol on-column, respectively. Accuracy and precision were 98.7–101.0 and <10%, respectively, over three concentrations of 8-oxodG. Recovery from urine was 88% with intra- and interday variations of 4.0 and 10.2%, respectively. LOQ from urine was 0.9 pmol/ml. Rank order from the greatest to lowest 8-oxodG concentration was urine>seminal plasma>amniotic fluid>plasma>serum>peritoneal fluid, and it was not detected in saliva. Urine concentrations normalized to creatinine (n=15) ranged between 0.55 and 1.95 pmol/μmol creatinine. We describe, for the first time, 8-oxodG concentrations in human seminal plasma, peritoneal fluid, amniotic fluid, and breast milk, as well as in urine, plasma, and serum, using a rapid UHPLC–MS/MS method that will further facilitate biomonitoring of oxidative stress.
Biomarkers | 2009
Marcus S. Cooke; Lars Barregard; Vilas Mistry; Neelam Potdar; Rafal Rozalski; Daniel Gackowski; Agnieszka Siomek; Marek Foksinski; Peter Svoboda; Hiroshi Kasai; Justin C. Konje; Gerd Sallsten; Mark D. Evans; Ryszard Olinski
Urinary 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodGuo) is widely used as a marker of oxidative stress. Here we report the comparison of two, distinct chromatographic assays with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The chromatographic assays displayed good agreement (r =:0.89, p < 0.0001), whereas there was markedly worse, albeit still significant, agreement with the ELISA (high-pressure liquid chromatography followed by gas chromatography (HPLC-GC/MS), r = 0.43; HPLC with electrochemical detection (HPLC-EC), r = 0.56; p < 0.0001). Mean values differed significantly between the chromatographic assays and the ELISA (HPLC-GC/MS 3.86, HPLC-EC 4.20, ELISA 18.70 ng mg−1 creatinine; p < 0.0001). While it is reassuring to note good agreement between chromatographic assays, this study reveals significant short-comings in the ELISA, which brings into question its continued use in its present form.
Analytical Chemistry | 2017
Alexandra S. Whale; Alison S. Devonshire; George Karlin-Neumann; Jack Regan; Leanne Javier; Simon Cowen; Ana Fernandez-Gonzalez; Gerwyn M. Jones; Nicholas Redshaw; Julia Beck; Andreas W. Berger; Valérie Combaret; Nina Dahl Kjersgaard; Lisa Davis; Frederic Fina; Tim Forshew; Rikke Fredslund Andersen; Silvia Galbiati; Álvaro González Hernández; Charles A. Haynes; Filip Janku; Roger Lacave; Justin Lee; Vilas Mistry; Alexandra Pender; Anne Pradines; Charlotte Proudhon; Lao H. Saal; Elliot Stieglitz; Bryan C. Ulrich
This study tested the claim that digital PCR (dPCR) can offer highly reproducible quantitative measurements in disparate laboratories. Twenty-one laboratories measured four blinded samples containing different quantities of a KRAS fragment encoding G12D, an important genetic marker for guiding therapy of certain cancers. This marker is challenging to quantify reproducibly using quantitative PCR (qPCR) or next generation sequencing (NGS) due to the presence of competing wild type sequences and the need for calibration. Using dPCR, 18 laboratories were able to quantify the G12D marker within 12% of each other in all samples. Three laboratories appeared to measure consistently outlying results; however, proper application of a follow-up analysis recommendation rectified their data. Our findings show that dPCR has demonstrable reproducibility across a large number of laboratories without calibration. This could enable the reproducible application of molecular stratification to guide therapy and, potentially, for molecular diagnostics.
Toxicology Research | 2015
Mahsa Karbaschi; Salvador Macip; Vilas Mistry; Hussein H. K. Abbas; George J. Delinassios; Mark D. Evans; Antony R. Young; Marcus S. Cooke
Classically, the nucleotide excision repair (NER) of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) is a lengthy process (t1/2 > 48 h). Using the T4 endonuclease V-modified comet assay, we uniquely found a far more rapid repair of UVA-induced CPD (t1/2 = 4.5 h) in human skin keratinocytes. The repair of UVB-induced CPD began to slow within 1 h of irradiation, causing damage to persist for over 36 h. A similar trend was noted for the repair of oxidatively-modified purine nucleobases. Supportive of this differential repair, we noted an up-regulation of key genes associated with NER in UVA-irradiated cells, whereas the same genes were down regulated in UVB-irradiated cells. There were no significant differences in cell viability between the two treatments over the first 6 h post-irradiation, but after 24 h apoptosis had increased significantly in the UVB-irradiated cells. The role of apoptosis was confirmed using a pan-caspase inhibitor, which increased CPD repair, similar to that seen with UVA. These data indicate that the cellular ‘decision’ for apoptosis/DNA repair occurs far earlier than previously understood, and that the induction of apoptosis leads to lesion persistence, and not vice versa. This also highlights a new, potential increased carcinogenic risk from UVA-induced DNA damage as, rather than undergoing apoptosis, high levels of damage are tolerated and repaired, with the attendant risk of mutation.
Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2013
Lars Barregard; Peter Møller; Trine Henriksen; Vilas Mistry; Gudrun Koppen; Pavel Rossner; Radim J. Sram; Allan Weimann; Henrik E. Poulsen; Robert Nataf; Roberta Andreoli; Paola Manini; Tim Marczylo; Patricia M.W. Lam; Mark D. Evans; Hiroshi Kasai; Kazuaki Kawai; Yun-Shan Li; Kazuo Sakai; Rajinder Singh; Friederike Teichert; Peter B. Farmer; Rafal Rozalski; Daniel Gackowski; Agnieszka Siomek; Guillermo T. Sáez; Concha Cerdá; Karin Broberg; Christian H. Lindh; Mohammad Bakhtiar Hossain
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2006
Marcus S. Cooke; Rajinder Singh; Georgina K. Hall; Vilas Mistry; Tiago L. Duarte; Peter B. Farmer; Mark D. Evans