Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:R. I. Glass)
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1W. J. Martin, 2nd ; R. I. Glass ; J. M. Balbus ; F. S. Collins
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2011Staff ViewPublication Date: 2011-10-15Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Air Pollution, Indoor/*prevention & control ; Child ; Child, Preschool ; Commerce ; Cooking/economics/*instrumentation/methods ; Developing Countries ; Energy-Generating Resources ; Female ; Humans ; Infant ; Male ; Pneumonia/epidemiology/*prevention & control ; Program Evaluation ; *Public Health ; Public-Private Sector Partnerships ; Respiratory Tract Diseases/epidemiology/*prevention & control ; Risk Management ; *Smoke/adverse effects/prevention & control ; United NationsPublished by: -
2F. S. Collins ; J. M. Anderson ; C. P. Austin ; J. F. Battey ; L. S. Birnbaum ; J. P. Briggs ; J. A. Clayton ; B. Cuthbert ; R. W. Eisinger ; A. S. Fauci ; J. I. Gallin ; G. H. Gibbons ; R. I. Glass ; M. M. Gottesman ; P. A. Gray ; E. D. Green ; F. B. Greider ; R. Hodes ; K. L. Hudson ; B. Humphreys ; S. I. Katz ; G. F. Koob ; W. J. Koroshetz ; M. S. Lauer ; J. R. Lorsch ; D. R. Lowy ; J. J. McGowan ; D. M. Murray ; R. Nakamura ; A. Norris ; E. J. Perez-Stable ; R. I. Pettigrew ; W. T. Riley ; G. P. Rodgers ; P. A. Sieving ; M. J. Somerman ; C. Y. Spong ; L. A. Tabak ; N. D. Volkow ; E. L. Wilder
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Published 2016Staff ViewPublication Date: 2016-03-26Publisher: American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)Print ISSN: 0036-8075Electronic ISSN: 1095-9203Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyComputer ScienceMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; Biomedical Research/*economics ; Humans ; National Institutes of Health (U.S.)/*economicsPublished by: -
3Staff View
Publication Date: 2015-11-19Publisher: Nature Publishing Group (NPG)Print ISSN: 0028-0836Electronic ISSN: 1476-4687Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Adult ; *Aging ; Biomedical Research/economics/organization & administration ; *Brain Diseases/economics ; Child ; Developing Countries/economics ; Humans ; Infant ; International Cooperation ; National Institutes of Health (U.S.)/organization & administration ; United StatesPublished by: -
4P. Y. Collins ; V. Patel ; S. S. Joestl ; D. March ; T. R. Insel ; A. S. Daar ; W. Anderson ; M. A. Dhansay ; A. Phillips ; S. Shurin ; M. Walport ; W. Ewart ; S. J. Savill ; I. A. Bordin ; E. J. Costello ; M. Durkin ; C. Fairburn ; R. I. Glass ; W. Hall ; Y. Huang ; S. E. Hyman ; K. Jamison ; S. Kaaya ; S. Kapur ; A. Kleinman ; A. Ogunniyi ; A. Otero-Ojeda ; M. M. Poo ; V. Ravindranath ; B. J. Sahakian ; S. Saxena ; P. A. Singer ; D. J. Stein
Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
Published 2011Staff ViewPublication Date: 2011-07-08Publisher: Nature Publishing Group (NPG)Print ISSN: 0028-0836Electronic ISSN: 1476-4687Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: *Global Health ; Humans ; Mental Disorders/economics/epidemiology/prevention & control ; Mental Health/*statistics & numerical data ; Substance-Related Disorders/economics/epidemiology ; World Health OrganizationPublished by: -
5Jin, Q. ; Ward, R. L. ; Knowlton, D. R. ; Gabbay, Y. B. ; Linhares, A. C. ; Rappaport, R. ; Woods, P. A. ; Glass, R. I. ; Gentsch, J. R.
Springer
Published 1996Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary A large placebo-controlled efficacy trial of the rhesus tetravalent (RRV-TV) and serotype G1 monovalent (RRV-S1) rotavirus vaccines was conducted in 1991–1992 at 24 sites across the United States. Protection was 49% and 54% against all diarrhea but 80% and 69% against very severe gastroenteritis for the two vaccines, respectively. Post-vaccination neutralizing antibody titers to the G1 Wa strain, whose VP7 protein is nearly identical to that of the D strain of rotavirus contained in both vaccines, did not correlate with protection against subsequent illness with G1 strains. This result raised the possibility that in infants who developed post-vaccination neutralizing antibody to Wa, breakthrough (i.e., vaccine failure—the occurrence of rotavirus diarrhea after immunization) may have been due to infection by G1 strains that were sufficiently antigenically distinct from the vaccine strain to evade the neutralizing antibodies elicited by vaccination. To test this hypothesis, we initially compared post-vaccination neutralizing antibody titers of vaccinees against Wa and G1 breakthrough strains using sera from subjects who experienced breakthrough. Post-immunization neutralizing antibody titers to Wa elicited by vaccination were significantly (P〈0.001) greater than to the breakthrough strains subsequently obtained from these subjects. This difference did not, however, correlate with lack of protection since similar differences in titer to Wa and breakthrough strains were found using post-vaccination sera from vaccinees who either experienced asymptomatic rotavirus infections or no infections. To determine the genetic basis for these differences, we compared the VP7 gene sequences of Wa with vaccine strain D, 12 G1 breakthrough strains, and 3 G1 control strains isolated during the same trial from placebo recipients. All breakthrough strains were distinct from Wa and D in antigenically important regions throughout the VP7 protein, but these differences were conserved between breakthrough and placebo strains. Furthermore, a comparative analysis of the deduced amino sequences from VP7 genes of G1 rotaviruses from 12 countries indicated that four distinct lineages have evolved. All breakthrough and control strains from the U.S. vaccine trial were in a lineage different from strain D, the serotype G1 vaccine strain. Although the overall results do not support our original hypothesis that immune selection of antigenically distinct escape mutants led to vaccine breakthrough in subjects with a neutralization response to Wa, it cannot be excluded that breakthrough could be partially due to antigenic differences in the VP7 proteins of currently circulating G1 strains.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
6Jiang, B. ; Tsunemitsu, H. ; Dennehy, P. H. ; Oishi, I. ; Brown, D. ; Schnagl, R. D. ; Oseto, M. ; Fang, Z. -Y. ; Avendano, L. F. ; Saif, L. J. ; Glass, R. I.
Springer
Published 1996Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary Group C rotaviruses have been identified recently from fecal samples of children with diarrhea in the United States. Using reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and sequence analysis, we sequenced gene 8s encoding VP7 from two U.S. strains (RI-1 and RI-2), and eight other strains isolated from patients on four continents, and compared these with the sequences of four published strains. The gene 8s of the 14 strains were remarkably conserved in size and in predicted primary and secondary structures. When the sequences of the human VP7s were compared with that of the prototype porcine Cowden strain, six regions were found variable in both deduced primary and predicted secondary structures, four of which were predicted to be hydrophilic and might determine serotype specificity. Gene 8 of the human S-1 strain was further characterized by expression in recombinant baculoviruses. The expressed product was immunogenic but failed to elicit neutralizing antibodies. Our sequence analysis indicates that all the human strains characterized to date belong to a single G genotype, which may constitute a single G serotype, pending further antigenic analysis. Whether the human strains and the Cowden strain are the same serotype remains to be determined.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
7Leite, J. P. G. ; Ando, T. ; Noel, J. S. ; Jiang, B. ; Humphrey, C. D. ; Lew, J. F. ; Green, K. Y. ; Glass, R. I. ; Monroe, S. S.
Springer
Published 1996Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary Toronto virus (TV), previously called “minireovirus,” a human calicivirus classified as genogroup 2 and phylogenetic type P2-A, was originally described in association with diarrhea in children. The second open reading frame, encoding the capsid protein of TV24, was expressed in a baculovirus recombinant. The recombinant baculovirus produced a protein (rTV) with an apparent molecular mass of 58 kDa that self-assembled into virus-like particles ∼ 30 nm in diameter with a density of 1.29 g/ml. Antigenic and immunogenic characteristics of these particles were determined by protein immunoblot, immunoprecipitation, and enzyme immunoassay. Seroconversion to the rTV protein was detected in 6 of 8 (75%) patients from a recent outbreak of gastroenteritis associated with a virus of similar phylogenetic type. These results confirm and extend the previous reports of the expression of the Norwalk and Mexico virus capsid proteins.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
8Fang, Z. -Y. ; Monroe, S. S. ; Dong, H. ; Penaranda, M. ; Wen, L. ; Gouvea, V. ; Allen, J. R. ; Hung, T. ; Glass, R. I.
Springer
Published 1992Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary Adult diarrhea rotavirus (ADRV) has caused epidemics of diarrhea in China since 1982 and remains the only group B rotavirus associated with widespread disease in humans. We recently characterized the proteins of ADRV and have now proceeded to identify the gene segments encoding each protein. Viral RNA transcripts were synthesized in vitro with the endogenous viral RNA polymerase and separated by electrophoresis in agarose. The individual transcripts were translated in a cell-free system using nuclease-treated rabbit reticulocyte lysates. The translation products were compared with polypeptides found in purified virus and were characterized by SDS-PAGE, immunoprecipitation, and Western blot analysis using antisera to double- and single-shelled virions, virus cores, and monoclonal antibodies. Furthermore, individual RNA transcripts were hybridized to total dsRNA to determine their genomic origin. Based on this analysis, the core polypeptides VP1, VP2 and VP3 are encoded by segments 1, 2, and 3, respectively. The main polypeptides in the inner capsid, VP6, and the outer capsid, VP4 and VP7, are encoded by segments 6, 4, and 8 respectively. Segments 5, 7, and 9 code for 60, 45, and 30 kDa nonstructural polypeptides. Two other nonstructural polypeptides (24 and 25 kDa) are derived from gene segment 11. Gene segment 10 codes for a 26 kDa polypeptide that is precipitated with serum to ADRV and may be a structural protein VP9. With this exception, gene coding assignments of ADRV are comparable to those of the group A rotaviruses. Our results have clear implications for further work in cloning, sequencing, and expression genes of ADRV and can provide direction towards understanding the origin and the evolution of this virus.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
9Holmes, J. L. ; Kirkwood, C. D. ; Gerna, G. ; Clemens, J. D. ; Rao, M. R. ; Naficy, A. B. ; Abu-Elyazeed, R. ; Savarino, S. J. ; Glass, R. I. ; Gentsch, J. R.
Springer
Published 1999Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary. We report the first detection of P[14], G8 rotaviruses isolated in Egypt from the stool of children participating in a 3 year study of rotavirus epidemiology. Two strains, EGY1850 and EGY2295, were characterized by a serotyping enzyme immunoassay (EIA), virus neutralization, and sequence analysis of the genes encoding VP7 and the VP8* portion of the VP4 gene. These two strains shared a high level of homology of their VP7s (87.8% nucleotide [nt], 97.2% amino acid [aa]) and VP4s (89.6% nt, 97.1% aa) and had the highest VP7 identity to serotype G8 (〉82% nt, 〉92% aa) and VP4 identity to genotype P[14] (≥81% nt, 〉91% aa) strains. Serological results with a VP7 G8-specific and VP4 P[14]-specific neutralizing monoclonal antibodies supported the genetic classification of EGY1850 and EGY2295 as P[14], G8. Genogroup analysis supports earlier findings that human G8 rotaviruses may be genetically related to bovine rotaviruses. These findings demonstrate that our understanding of the geographic distribution of rotavirus strains is incomplete, emphasize the need to monitor rota- virus serotypes, and extend the known distribution of serotype G8 and genotype P[14] strains in Africa.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
10Leite, J. P. G. ; Alfieri, A. A. ; Woods, P. A. ; Glass, R. I. ; Gentsch, J. R.
Springer
Published 1996Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary We used reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) to determine the P and G genotypes of 130 culture-adapted rotavirus strains isolated from 181 fecal specimens of children under 5 years of age from 9 states and the Federal District of Brazil. The 4 genotypes found most commonly worldwide were also common in Brazil and P[8]G1 was the most prevalent (43%), followed by P[4]G2 (12%), P[8]G3 (6%), and P[8]G4 (6%). However, unusual types P[8]G5, P[6]G2, P[9]G1, P[9]G3, and mixed infections were responsible for 12% and 21% of the cases, respectively. Genotype G5 strains were detected in specimens collected in all 9 areas surveyed from all 4 regions of Brazil. The unusual strain diversity in Brazil suggests that when tetravalent rotavirus vaccines currently being developed are introduced into Brazil, laboratory surveillance will be essential to monitor protection against unusual strains, particularly those of genotype 5, as well as emergence of novel reassortants that may evolve from the large pool of children with mixed infections.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
11Alfieri, A. A. ; Leite, J. P. G. ; Nakagomi, O. ; Kaga, E. ; Woods, P. A. ; Glass, R. I. ; Gentsch, J. R.
Springer
Published 1996Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary We report the molecular characterization of rotavirus genotype P[8]G5 strains found in fecal specimens collected in four different regions of Brazil, using digoxigenin (dig)-labeled oligonucleotide probes, sequence analysis, and RNA-RNA hybridization. The closest sequence relationships of the neutralization antigens of these strains were to the VP4 protein of P1A[8]G1 strain KU (93.3% identity in amino acids 11 to 282) and to the VP7 protein of G serotype 5 strain OSU (87.6% identity in amino acids 8 to 232). Based on VP7 sequence differences, we designed dig-probes that allowed us to discriminate porcine OSU-like strains from G5 strains isolated from Brazilian infants. The genetic relationships of two P[8]G5 isolates to other rotavirus genogroups were analyzed by RNA-RNA hybridization with [32P]-GTP probes representative of serotypes P1A[8]G1 (Wa), P[8]G3 (AU17), and P9[7]G5 (OSU). The Brazilian P[8]G5 strains showed sequence homology with genes of Wa-like and OSU-like strains, suggesting that these two strains were naturally occurring reassortants between members of the Wa and porcine rotavirus genogroups. The identification of these strains in diverse geographic areas of Brazil underscores their stability and demonstrates the emergence of clinically important rotavirus diarrhea strains by reassortment.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
12Ando, T. ; Mulders, M. N. ; Lewis, D. C. ; Estes, M. K. ; Monroe, S. S. ; Glass, R. I.
Springer
Published 1994Staff ViewISSN: 1432-8798Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: MedicineNotes: Summary We have used a reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction with nested sets of primers to determine the nucleotide sequences of a 166 base pair segment of the RNA polymerase region of seven strains of small round structured viruses (SRSVs) from the United Kingdom. These SRSV strains were previously classified by solid-phase immune electron microscopy into three antigenic types — UK2, UK3 and UK4, which are comparable to the prototype strains Norwalk virus, Hawaii agent, and Snow Mountain agents, respectively. Based on their sequences, the seven strains from the United Kingdom could be divided into two groups. The first group included two strains of the UK2 type along with Norwalk virus and Southampton virus and the second group included three strains of UK3 and two strains of UK4 types. Viruses in the first group showed 75.3%–77.1% nucleotide and 89.1%–94.6% amino acid identity with Norwalk virus while those of the second group showed 60.8%–63.3% nucleotide and 67.3%–69.1% amino acid identity. Nucleotide and amino acid identity within the second group ranged between 91.6%–99.4% and 96.4%–100%, respectively. These results suggest that the SRSVs antigenically related with Norwalk virus, Hawaii agent, and Snow Mountain agent, can be classified into two genotypes on the basis of their sequences in the RNA polymerase region.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: