Browsing by Author "Barr J"
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- ItemAntibodies to henipavirus or henipa-like viruses in domestic pigs in Ghana, West Africa(Public Library of Science, 2011) Hayman DTS; Wang L-F; Barr J; Baker KS; Suu-Ire R; Broder CC; Cunningham AA; Wood JLNHenipaviruses, Hendra virus (HeV) and Nipah virus (NiV), have Pteropid bats as their known natural reservoirs. Antibodies against henipaviruses have been found in Eidolon helvum, an old world fruit bat species, and henipavirus-like nucleic acid has been detected in faecal samples from E. helvum in Ghana. The initial outbreak of NiV in Malaysia led to over 265 human encephalitis cases, including 105 deaths, with infected pigs acting as amplifier hosts for NiV during the outbreak. We detected non-neutralizing antibodies against viruses of the genus Henipavirus in approximately 5% of pig sera (Nā=ā97) tested in Ghana, but not in a small sample of other domestic species sampled under a E. helvum roost. Although we did not detect neutralizing antibody, our results suggest prior exposure of the Ghana pig population to henipavirus(es). Because a wide diversity of henipavirus-like nucleic acid sequences have been found in Ghanaian E. helvum, we hypothesise that these pigs might have been infected by henipavirus(es) sufficiently divergent enough from HeVor NiV to produce cross-reactive, but not cross-neutralizing antibodies to HeV or NiV.
- ItemNovel, potentially zoonotic paramyxoviruses from the African straw-colored fruit bat Eidolon helvum(American Society for Microbiology, 2013) Baker KS; Todd S; Marsh GA; Crameri G; Barr J; Kamins AO; Peel AJ; Yu M; Hayman DTS; Nadjm B; Mtove G; Amos B; Reyburn H; Nyarko E; Suu-Ire R; Murcia PR; Cunningham AA; Wood JLN; Wang L-FBats carry a variety of paramyxoviruses that impact human and domestic animal health when spillover occurs. Recent studies have shown a great diversity of paramyxoviruses in an urban-roosting population of straw-colored fruit bats in Ghana. Here, we investigate this further through virus isolation and describe two novel rubulaviruses: Achimota virus 1 (AchPV1) and Achimota virus 2 (AchPV2). The viruses form a phylogenetic cluster with each other and other bat-derived rubulaviruses, such as Tuhoko viruses, Menangle virus, and Tioman virus. We developed AchPV1- and AchPV2-specific serological assays and found evidence of infection with both viruses in Eidolon helvum across sub-Saharan Africa and on islands in the Gulf of Guinea. Longitudinal sampling of E. helvum indicates virus persistence within fruit bat populations and suggests spread of AchPVs via horizontal transmission. We also detected possible serological evidence of human infection with AchPV2 in Ghana and Tanzania. It is likely that clinically significant zoonotic spillover of chiropteran paramyxoviruses could be missed throughout much of Africa where health surveillance and diagnostics are poor and comorbidities, such as infection with HIV or Plasmodium sp., are common.
- ItemThe equine Hendra virus vaccine remains a highly effective preventative measure against infection in horses and humans: 'The imperative to develop a human vaccine for the Hendra virus in Australia'.(2016) Peel AJ; Field HE; Reid PA; Plowright RK; Broder CC; Skerratt LF; Hayman DTS; Restif O; Taylor M; Martin G; Crameri G; Smith I; Baker M; Marsh GA; Barr J; Breed AC; Wood JLN; Dhand N; Toribio J-A; Cunningham AA; Fulton I; Bryden WL; Secombe C; Wang L-F