20 results on '"Sarah Moller"'
Search Results
2. Effect of direct-acting antivirals on the titers of human pegivirus 1 during treatment of chronic hepatitis C patients
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Ulrik Fahnøe, Lone Wulff Madsen, Peer Brehm Christensen, Christina Søhoel Sølund, Sarah Mollerup, Mette Pinholt, Nina Weis, Anne Øvrehus, and Jens Bukh
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human pegivirus ,HPgV-1 ,hepatitis C virus ,HCV ,coinfection ,direct-acting antivirals ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Coinfections with human pegivirus 1 (HPgV-1) are common in chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients. However, little is known about whether HPgV-1 is affected by direct-acting antivirals during HCV treatment. Metagenomic analysis and reverse transcriptase-quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) were performed on RNA from the plasma of 88 selected chronic HCV patients undergoing medical treatment. Twenty (23%) of these HCV patients had HPgV-1 coinfections and were followed by RT-qPCR during treatment and follow-up to investigate HPgV-1 RNA titers. Recovered sequences could be assembled to complete HPgV-1 genomes, and most formed a genotype 2 subclade. All HPgV-1 viral genomic regions were under negative purifying selection. Glecaprevir/pibrentasvir treatment in five patients did not consistently lower the genome titers of HPgV-1. In contrast, a one log10 drop of HPgV-1 titers at week 2 was observed in 10 patients during treatment with sofosbuvir-containing regimens, sustained to the end of treatment (EOT) and in two cases decreasing to below the detection limit of the assay. For the five patients treated with ledipasvir/sofosbuvir with the inclusion of pegylated interferon, titers decreased to below the detection limit at week 2 and remained undetectable to EOT. Subsequently, the HPgV-1 titer rebounded to pretreatment levels for all patients. In conclusion, we found that HCV treatment regimens that included the polymerase inhibitor sofosbuvir resulted in decreases in HPgV-1 titers, and the addition of pegylated interferon increased the effect on patients with coinfections. This points to the high specificity of protease and NS5A inhibitors toward HCV and the more broad-spectrum activity of sofosbuvir and especially pegylated interferon.IMPORTANCEHuman pegivirus 1 coinfections are common in hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients, persisting for years. However, little is known about how pegivirus coinfections are affected by treatment with pangenotypic direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) against HCV. We identified human pegivirus by metagenomic analysis of chronic HCV patients undergoing protease, NS5A, and polymerase inhibitor treatment, in some patients with the addition of pegylated interferon, and followed viral kinetics of both viruses to investigate treatment effects. Only during HCV DAA treatment regimens that included the more broad-spectrum drug sofosbuvir could we detect a consistent decline in pegivirus titers that, however, rebounded to pretreatment levels after treatment cessation. The addition of pegylated interferon gave the highest effect with pegivirus titers decreasing to below the assay detection limit, but without clearance. These results reveal the limited effect of frontline HCV drugs on the closest related human virus, but sofosbuvir appeared to have the potential to be repurposed for other viral diseases.
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- 2024
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3. A trend analysis approach for air quality network data
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David C. Carslaw, Polly E. Lang, and Sarah Moller
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Pollutant ,Atmospheric Science ,Air pollutant concentrations ,Network data ,lcsh:QC851-999 ,Regression ,Trend analysis ,lcsh:Environmental pollution ,Statistics ,lcsh:TD172-193.5 ,Leverage (statistics) ,Environmental science ,lcsh:Meteorology. Climatology ,Air quality index ,NOx ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Trend analysis of air pollutant concentrations becomes problematic when applied to data from air quality monitoring networks containing time series of differing lengths. The average trend from such data can be misleading due to biases in the monitoring network. For example, if new monitoring sites located in more polluted locations are added to a network, the introduction of these time series can leverage the trend upwards. A method for resolving this problem was developed, using rolling window regression to recursively calculate the change in pollutant concentration as a function of time, which can be used as a proxy for the true trend. The efficacy of the method was established by conducting simulations with known trends. The rolling change trend was shown to more accurately reflect the true trend than simply averaging the time series. Application of the technique to estimate trends in NOx, NO2 and NO2/NOx concentrations at London roadside monitoring sites over the period 2000–2017 revealed clear differences from the simple average. In particular, a significant monotonic downward trend in NOx concentration was observed, in stark contrast to the average trend, which suggested little change in NOx concentration had occurred over the same period. By accurately representing trends using time series of different lengths, this method has the benefit of being able to describe changes in air quality for locations and time periods with otherwise insufficient data. Keywords: Air quality, Monitoring network, Trend analysis, Bias, Rolling regression
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- 2019
4. Quantifying the impact of BOReal forest fires on Tropospheric oxidants over the Atlantic using Aircraft and Satellites (BORTAS) experiment: design, execution and science overview
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Stephane Bauguitte, D. L. Waugh, Paul I. Palmer, K. M. Rotermund, Keith Tereszchuk, G. Forster, A. da Silva, M. Le Breton, Eleonora Aruffo, Sebastian O'Shea, R. Trigwell, Camille Pagniello, Ruth Purvis, E. Barrett, Michael E. Jenkin, D. Kindred, Mark D. Gibson, Debora Griffin, J. E. Franklin, J. Kliever, L. J. Bailey, Thomas J. Duck, Sarah Moller, Kimberly Strong, M. Maurice, James R. Hopkins, P. Di Carlo, Kaley A. Walker, Carl J. Percival, Stephan Matthiesen, Stephen J. Andrews, Peter F. Bernath, J. C. Young, Kevin Strawbridge, Detlev Helmig, Jason Hopper, Jeffrey R. Pierce, James D. Lee, David W. Tarasick, David Moore, K. R. Curry, Robert Owen, Andrew R. Rickard, David E. Oram, Lucy Chisholm, Cynthia H. Whaley, A. C. Lewis, S. Pawson, John Remedios, K. M. Sakamoto, L. Dan, Shalini Punjabi, Jonathan Taylor, Mark Parrington, and Dan Weaver
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Atmospheric Science ,Ozone ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,010501 environmental sciences ,Atmospheric sciences ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,Troposphere ,lcsh:Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Taiga ,Particulates ,lcsh:QC1-999 ,Aerosol ,Volcano ,chemistry ,Boreal ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,13. Climate action ,Environmental science ,Satellite ,lcsh:Physics - Abstract
We describe the design and execution of the BORTAS (Quantifying the impact of BOReal forest fires on Tropospheric oxidants using Aircraft and Satellites) experiment, which has the overarching objective of understanding the chemical aging of airmasses that contain the emission products from seasonal boreal wildfires and how these airmasses subsequently impact downwind atmospheric composition. The central focus of the experiment was a two-week deployment of the UK BAe-146-301 Atmospheric Research Aircraft (ARA) over eastern Canada. The planned July 2010 deployment of the ARA was postponed by 12 months because of activities related to the dispersal of material emitted by the Eyjafjallajökull volcano. However, most other planned model and measurement activities, including ground-based measurements at the Dalhousie University Ground Station (DGS), enhanced ozonesonde launches, and measurements at the Pico Atmospheric Observatory in the Azores, went ahead and constituted phase A of the experiment. Phase B of BORTAS in July 2011 included the same measurements, but included the ARA, special satellite observations and a more comprehensive measurement suite at the DGS. The high-frequency aircraft data provided a comprehensive snapshot of the pyrogenic plumes from wildfires. The coordinated ground-based and sonde data provided detailed but spatially-limited information that put the aircraft data into context of the longer burning season. We coordinated aircraft vertical profiles and overpasses of the NASA Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer and the Canadian Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment. These space-borne data, while less precise than other data, helped to relate the two-week measurement campaign to larger geographical and longer temporal scales. We interpret these data using a range of chemistry models: from a near-explicit gas-phase chemical mechanism, which tests out understanding of the underlying chemical mechanism, to regional and global 3-D models of atmospheric transport and lumped chemistry, which helps to assess the performance of the simplified chemical mechanism and effectively act as intermediaries between different measurement types. We also present an overview of some of the new science that has originated from this project from the mission planning and execution to the analysis of the ground-based, aircraft, and space-borne data.
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- 2013
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5. Urban case studies : general discussion
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Ruth Purvis, Neil M. Donahue, Zhe Tian, Andreas Wahner, Andreas N. Skouloudis, Xavier Querol, Tim P. Murrells, Zongbo Shi, Astrid Kiendler-Scharr, Timothy J. Wallington, Tzer Ren Ho, Franz M. Geiger, Urs Baltensperger, Spyros N. Pandis, Aurélie Charron, André S. H. Prévôt, María Cruz Minguillón, Nivedita K. Kumar, Costas Sioutas, C. N. Hewitt, Athanasia Vlachou, Markus Kalberer, Gary Fuller, Matthew Hort, Thomas Karl, William H. Brune, Francis D. Pope, Jose L. Jimenez, Dominik van Pinxteren, Simone M. Pieber, William J. Bloss, Martin M. Shafer, Alison S. Tomlin, E.J.S. Mitchell, Christian Ehlers, Claudia Mohr, Louisa Kramer, Sarah Moller, James D. Lee, Rob MacKenzie, Paul S. Monks, Gordon McFiggans, Rachel Dunmore, Brian C. McDonald, Dwayne E. Heard, David C. Carslaw, Roy M. Harrison, Eben S. Cross, Department of Chemistry, King‘s College London, University of Birmingham, Laboratoire Transports et Environnement (IFSTTAR/AME/LTE), and Institut Français des Sciences et Technologies des Transports, de l'Aménagement et des Réseaux (IFSTTAR)-Université de Lyon
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Aerosols ,[SPI.OTHER]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Other ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Mass Spectrometry ,TRAFFIC EMISSIONS ,Air Pollution ,POLLUTION ATMOSPHERIQUE ,Environmental science ,Nitrogen Oxides ,Particulate Matter ,[SDV.SPEE]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Santé publique et épidémiologie ,Cities ,URBAN ATMOSPHERE ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,EMISSION ,ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY ,MILIEU URBAIN ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Urban case studies: general discussion
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- 2016
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6. Overview: oxidant and particle photochemical processes above a south-east Asian tropical rainforest (the OP3 project): introduction, rationale, location characteristics and tools
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Paul I. Palmer, Eiko Nemitz, Ben Langford, Dwayne E. Heard, P. DiCarlo, Hilke Oetjen, M. Irwin, David Fowler, Paul S. Monks, Nicola Carslaw, Trevor Ingham, R. C. Pike, A. Karunaharan, James Dorsey, Roisin Commane, Claire E. Reeves, V. Nicolas-Perea, Graham P. Mills, Glenn Carver, Alastair C. Lewis, Alex Guenther, C. N. Hewitt, Martin Gallagher, Anoop S. Mahajan, S. F. Lim, Pawel K. Misztal, Carole Helfter, K. L. Furneaux, David E. Oram, M. P. Barkley, John M. C. Plane, S. Malpass, Fay Davies, Mathew J. Evans, James R. Hopkins, Gavin Phillips, Brian Davison, James D. Lee, D. J. Stewart, Daniel Stone, Hugh Coe, Gordon McFiggans, A. R. MacKenzie, John A. Pyle, Nick A. Chappell, Peter Edwards, Sarah Moller, Niall Robinson, C. Di Marco, Chris G. Collier, Lisa K. Whalley, Thomas A. M. Pugh, S. M. MacDonald, Xiaobo Yin, and Chris Jones
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Canopy ,Atmospheric Science ,Reactive nitrogen ,TRACE GASES ,Eddy covariance ,MONSOON MULTIDISCIPLINARY ANALYSIS ,Rainforest ,FLUX MEASUREMENTS ,VOLATILE ORGANIC-COMPOUNDS ,Photochemistry ,lcsh:QC1-999 ,Trace gas ,EDDY-COVARIANCE ,COMPOUND EMISSIONS ,Atmosphere ,lcsh:Chemistry ,lcsh:QD1-999 ,TROPOSPHERIC NITROGEN-DIOXIDE ,Climatology ,Atmospheric chemistry ,ISOPRENE EMISSIONS ,MASTER CHEMICAL MECHANISM ,lcsh:Physics ,Tropical rainforest ,MCM V3 PART - Abstract
In April–July 2008, intensive measurements were made of atmospheric composition and chemistry in Sabah, Malaysia, as part of the "Oxidant and particle photochemical processes above a South-East Asian tropical rainforest" (OP3) project. Fluxes and concentrations of trace gases and particles were made from and above the rainforest canopy at the Bukit Atur Global Atmosphere Watch station and at the nearby Sabahmas oil palm plantation, using both ground-based and airborne measurements. Here, the measurement and modelling strategies used, the characteristics of the sites and an overview of data obtained are described. Composition measurements show that the rainforest site was not significantly impacted by anthropogenic pollution, and this is confirmed by satellite retrievals of NO2 and HCHO. The dominant modulators of atmospheric chemistry at the rainforest site were therefore emissions of BVOCs and soil emissions of reactive nitrogen oxides. At the observed BVOC:NOx volume mixing ratio (~100 pptv/pptv), current chemical models suggest that daytime maximum OH concentrations should be ca. 105 radicals cm−3, but observed OH concentrations were an order of magnitude greater than this. We confirm, therefore, previous measurements that suggest that an unexplained source of OH must exist above tropical rainforest and we continue to interrogate the data to find explanations for this.
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- 2010
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7. Aircraft observations of the lower troposphere above a megacity: alkyl nitrate and ozone chemistry
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Jennifer B. A. Muller, Eleonora Aruffo, Shalini Punjabi, G. Forster, Hannah Walker, Daniel Stone, James R. Hopkins, Franco Giammaria, Claire E. Reeves, Michael Le Breton, Sarah Moller, Marcella Busilacchio, Cesare Dari-Salisburgo, Trevor Ingham, James D. Lee, Dwayne E. Heard, Fabio Biancofiore, Stephane Bauguitte, Stewart Vaughan, Rod Jones, Debbie O'Sullivan, Carl J. Percival, and Piero Di Carlo
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,Atmospheric Science ,Ozone ,Tropospheric chemistry ,Ozone production ,Urban pollution ,Plume ,Troposphere ,Atmosphere ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Nitrate ,Environmental chemistry ,Nitrogen oxide ,Alkyl ,NOx ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Within the framework of the RONOCO (ROle of Nighttime chemistry in controlling the Oxidising Capacity of the atmOsphere) campaign a daytime flight over the metropolitan area of London were carried out to study the nitrogen oxide chemistry and its role in the production and loss of ozone (O3) and alkyl and multifunctional nitrate (ΣANs). The FAAM BAe-146 aircraft, used for these observations, was equipped with instruments to measure the most relevant compounds that control the lower troposphere chemistry, including O3, NO, NO2, NO3, N2O5, HNO3, peroxy nitrates (ΣPNs), ΣANs, OH, and HO2. In the London's flight a strong ozone titration process was observed when flying above Reading (downwind of London) and when intercepting the London plume. The coupled cycles of NOx and HOx can have different terminations forming ΣPNs, ΣANs, HNO3 or peroxides (H2O2, ROOH) altering the O3 production. In the observations reported here, we found that a strong ozone titration (ΔO3 = −16 ppb), due to a rapid increase of NOx (ΔNOx = 27 ppb), corresponds also to a high increase of ΣANs concentrations (ΔΣANs = 3 ppb), and quite stable concentrations of HNO3 and ΣPNs. Unexpectedly, compared with other megacities, the production of ΣANs is similar to that of Ox (O3 + NO2), suggesting that in the London plume, at least during these observations, the formation of ΣANs effectively removes active NOx and hence reduces the amount of O3 production. In fact, we found that the ratio between the ozone production and the alkyl nitrates production (observed) approximate the unity; on the contrary the calculated ratio is 7. In order to explain this discrepancy, we made sensitivity tests changing the alkyl nitrates branching ratio for some VOCs and we investigated the impact of the unmeasured VOCs during the flight, founding that the calculated ratio decreases from 7 to 2 and that, in this condition, the major contribution to the ΣANs production is given by Alkanes. Observations and analysis reported here suggest that in the London plume the high NOx emissions and the chemistry of some VOCs (mainly Alkanes) produce high concentrations of ΣANs competing against the local ozone production.
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- 2014
8. Airborne observations of total alkyl nitrates during BORTAS campaign: analysis of the impact of forest fire emission on the Ox budget
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Aruffo, Eleonora, DI CARLO, Piero, Busilacchio, M., Biancofiore, F., Dari Salisburgo, C., Giammaria, F., Stephene, Bauguitte, James, Lee, Sarah, Moller, Ally, Lewis, Mark, Parrington, and Paul, Palmer
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- 2013
9. spa Typing of Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Based on Whole-Genome Sequencing: the Impact of the Assembler
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Sarah Mollerup, Peder Worning, Andreas Petersen, and Mette Damkjær Bartels
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MRSA ,WGS ,Sanger ,spa typing ,assembly ,SKESA ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Sequencing of the spa gene of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is used for assigning spa types to e.g., detect transmission and control outbreaks. Traditionally, spa typing is performed by Sanger sequencing but has in recent years been replaced by whole-genome sequencing (WGS) in some laboratories. Spa typing by WGS involves de novo assembly of millions of short sequencing reads into larger contiguous sequences, from which the spa type is then determined. The choice of assembly program therefore potentially impacts the spa typing result. In this study, WGS of 1,754 MRSA isolates was followed by de novo assembly using the assembly programs SPAdes (with two different sets of parameters) and SKESA. The spa types were assigned and compared to the spa types obtained by Sanger sequencing, regarding the latter as the correct spa types. SPAdes with the two different settings resulted in assembly of the correct spa type for 84.8% and 97.6% of the isolates, respectively, while SKESA assembled the correct spa type in 98.6% of cases. The misassembled spa types were generally two spa repeats shorter than the correct spa type and mainly included spa types with repetition of the same repeats. WGS-based spa typing is thus very accurate compared to Sanger sequencing, when the best assembly program for this purpose is used. IMPORTANCE spa typing of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) is widely used by clinicians, infection control workers, and researchers both in local outbreak investigations and as an easy way to communicate and compare MRSA types between laboratories and countries. Traditionally, spa types are determined by Sanger sequencing, but in recent years a whole-genome sequencing (WGS)-based approach has become increasingly used. In this study, we compared spa typing by WGS using different methods for assembling the genome from short sequencing reads and compared to Sanger sequencing as the gold standard. We find substantial differences in correct assembly of spa types between the assembly methods. Our findings are therefore important for the quality of WGS based spa typing data being exchanged by clinical microbiology laboratories.
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- 2022
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10. Nitrogen management is essential to prevent tropical oil palm plantations from causing ground-level ozone pollution
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A. R. MacKenzie, Mathew J. Evans, D. J. Stewart, S. F. Lim, Jambery Siong, Gavin Phillips, Pawel K. Misztal, Alastair C. Lewis, James Ryder, John A. Pyle, C. Di Marco, Martin Gallagher, C. E. Jones, James R. Hopkins, P. Di Carlo, Ben Langford, C. N. Hewitt, Sarah Moller, James Dorsey, Susan M. Owen, James D. Lee, Claire E. Reeves, David Fowler, David E. Oram, James B. McQuaid, Thomas A. M. Pugh, Eiko Nemitz, Paul S. Monks, and Ute Skiba
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Time Factors ,Aircraft ,Nitrogen ,Nitrogen Dioxide ,Rainforest ,Arecaceae ,Palm Oil ,Nitric Oxide ,Elaeis guineensis ,Hemiterpenes ,Ozone ,Air Pollution ,Pentanes ,Tropical climate ,Butadienes ,Plant Oils ,Peracetic Acid ,Air quality index ,Tropical Climate ,Multidisciplinary ,Geography ,biology ,Tropical agriculture ,Agroforestry ,business.industry ,Agriculture ,biology.organism_classification ,Biofuel ,Physical Sciences ,Monoterpenes ,Environmental science ,business - Abstract
More than half the world's rainforest has been lost to agriculture since the Industrial Revolution. Among the most widespread tropical crops is oil palm ( Elaeis guineensis ): global production now exceeds 35 million tonnes per year. In Malaysia, for example, 13% of land area is now oil palm plantation, compared with 1% in 1974. There are enormous pressures to increase palm oil production for food, domestic products, and, especially, biofuels. Greater use of palm oil for biofuel production is predicated on the assumption that palm oil is an “environmentally friendly” fuel feedstock. Here we show, using measurements and models, that oil palm plantations in Malaysia directly emit more oxides of nitrogen and volatile organic compounds than rainforest. These compounds lead to the production of ground-level ozone (O 3 ), an air pollutant that damages human health, plants, and materials, reduces crop productivity, and has effects on the Earth's climate. Our measurements show that, at present, O 3 concentrations do not differ significantly over rainforest and adjacent oil palm plantation landscapes. However, our model calculations predict that if concentrations of oxides of nitrogen in Borneo are allowed to reach those currently seen over rural North America and Europe, ground-level O 3 concentrations will reach 100 parts per billion (10 9 ) volume (ppbv) and exceed levels known to be harmful to human health. Our study provides an early warning of the urgent need to develop policies that manage nitrogen emissions if the detrimental effects of palm oil production on air quality and climate are to be avoided.
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- 2010
11. No Effect of Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG on Eradication of Colonization by Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcus faecium or Microbiome Diversity in Hospitalized Adult Patients
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Ingrid Maria Cecilia Rubin, Sarah Mollerup, Christa Broholm, Signe Boye Knudsen, Adam Baker, Morten Helms, Mona Katrine Alberthe Holm, Thomas Kallemose, Henrik Westh, Jenny Dahl Knudsen, Mette Pinholt, and Andreas Munk Petersen
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vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium ,gut microbiome ,Lactobacillus rhamnosus ,probiotics ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
ABSTRACT The purpose of this trial was to evaluate the efficacy of a 4-week supplementation of Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG) in eliminating the gastrointestinal carrier state of vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (VREfm) in hospitalized adults. The primary outcome of the study was the number of patients with cleared VREfm colonization after the 4-week intervention. Secondary outcomes were clearance of VREfm colonization at weeks 8, 16, and 24, number of VREfm infections (isolated from nonintestinal foci), and changes in fecal microbiome diversity after the intervention. The trial was a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in hospitalized adult VREfm carriers. Patients were enrolled and randomized to receive 60 billion CFU of LGG daily or placebo for 4 weeks. For a subgroup of patients, rectal swabs for VREfm were collected also at 8, 16, and 24 weeks and analyzed using shotgun metagenomics. Patients ingesting a minimum of 50% of the probiotic during the 4-week intervention were included in subsequent outcome analyses (48 of 81 patients). Twelve of 21 patients in the LGG group (57%) compared to 15 of 27 patients in the placebo group (56%) cleared their VREfm carriage. Eighteen patients completed the entire 24-week intervention with the same minimum compliancy. Of these, almost 90% in both groups cleared their VREfm carriage. We found a statistically significant difference between VREfm clearers and nonclearers regarding metronidazole and vancomycin usage as well as length of hospitalization after inclusion. The microbiome analyses revealed no significant difference in alpha diversity between the LGG and the placebo group. Beta diversity differed between the groups and the different time points. This study did not show an effect of LGG in eradication of VREfm after a 4-week intervention. IMPORTANCE Whereas other studies exploring the effect of L. rhamnosus in clearing VREfm from the intestine included children and adults, with a wider age range, our study consisted of a geriatric patient cohort. The natural clearance of VREfm in this study was almost 60% after 4 weeks, thus much higher than described previously. Also, this study characterizes the microbiome of VREfm patients in detail. This article showed no effect of the probiotic L. rhamnosus in clearing VREfm from the intestine of patients.
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- 2022
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12. Bacteraemia caused by Lactobacillus rhamnosus given as a probiotic in a patient with a central venous catheter: a WGS case report
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Ingrid Maria Cecilia Rubin, Lea Stevnsborg, Sarah Mollerup, Andreas Munk Petersen, and Mette Pinholt
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Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Summary: Introduction: Lactobacilli, especially Lactobacillus (L.) rhamnosus, are common and well-documented components of commercial probiotics [1]. Whole genome sequencing (WGS) is often used to compare bacterial genomes and their relatedness. In outbreak situations, it is used to investigate the transmission of pathogenic bacteria. WGS has also been used to determine safety in probiotics, by looking at potential virulence factors and resistance genes. Case presentation: This case report describes a 56-year old multi-traumatised, immunocompetent woman who was given L. rhamnosus GG as a probiotic, and later developed a blood stream infection with L. rhamnosus GG.The patient was fed by a nasogastric tube, and she also had a central venous catheter for parenteral feeding. When the patient developed diarrhoea after long-term hospitalisation, she was given L. rhamnosus GG, as a probiotic, which was standard care on the ward where she was hospitalised. In this case report we describe the use of WGS to demonstrate that a patient fed with L. rhamnosus GG as a probiotic, developed a blood stream infection with the same strain. Conclusion: In this case WGS was applied to show the relatedness of a probiotic and a pathogenic strain of L. rhamnosus GG. This case emphasises the need for caution when administering probiotics to patients with indwelling catheters. The patient was immunocompetent and she cleared the infection without the need for antibiotics.
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- 2022
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13. Cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are activated in cutaneous basal cell carcinoma and in the peritumoural skin
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Silje Haukali Omland, Erika Elgstrand Wettergren, Sarah Mollerup, Maria Asplund, Tobias Mourier, Anders Johannes Hansen, and Robert Gniadecki
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract Background Cutaneous basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the commonest cancer worldwide. BCC is locally invasive and the surrounding stromal microenvironment is pivotal for tumourigenesis. Cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) in the microenvironment are essential for tumour growth in a variety of neoplasms but their role in BCC is poorly understood. Methods Material included facial BCC and control skin from the peritumoural area and from the buttocks. With next-generation sequencing (NGS) we compared mRNA expression between BCC and peritumoural skin. qRT-PCR, immunohistochemical and immunofluorescent staining were performed to validate the NGS results and to investigate CAF-related cyto-and chemokines. Results NGS revealed upregulation of 65 genes in BCC coding for extracellular matrix components pointing at CAF-related matrix remodeling. qRT-PCR showed increased mRNA expression of CAF markers FAP-α, PDGFR-β and prolyl-4-hydroxylase in BCC. Peritumoural skin (but not buttock skin) also exhibited high expression of PDGFR-β and prolyl-4-hydroxylase but not FAP-α. We found a similar pattern for the CAF-associated chemokines CCL17, CCL18, CCL22, CCL25, CXCL12 and IL6 with high expression in BCC and peritumoural skin but absence in buttock skin. Immunofluorescence revealed correlation between FAP-α and PDGFR-β and CXCL12 and CCL17. Conclusion Matrix remodeling is the most prominent molecular feature of BCC. CAFs are present within BCC stroma and associated with increased expression of chemokines involved in tumour progression and immunosuppression (CXCL12, CCL17). Fibroblasts from chronically sun-exposed skin near tumours show gene expression patterns resembling that of CAFs, indicating that stromal fibroblasts in cancer-free surgical BCC margins exhibit a tumour promoting phenotype.
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- 2017
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14. Metagenomic analysis of viruses in toilet waste from long distance flights-A new procedure for global infectious disease surveillance.
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Mathis Hjort Hjelmsø, Sarah Mollerup, Randi Holm Jensen, Carlotta Pietroni, Oksana Lukjancenko, Anna Charlotte Schultz, Frank M Aarestrup, and Anders Johannes Hansen
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Human viral pathogens are a major public health threat. Reliable information that accurately describes and characterizes the global occurrence and transmission of human viruses is essential to support national and global priority setting, public health actions, and treatment decisions. However, large areas of the globe are currently without surveillance due to limited health care infrastructure and lack of international cooperation. We propose a novel surveillance strategy, using metagenomic analysis of toilet material from international air flights as a method for worldwide viral disease surveillance. The aim of this study was to design, implement, and evaluate a method for viral analysis of airplane toilet waste enabling simultaneous detection and quantification of a wide range of human viral pathogens. Toilet waste from 19 international airplanes was analyzed for viral content, using viral capture probes followed by high-throughput sequencing. Numerous human pathogens were detected including enteric and respiratory viruses. Several geographic trends were observed with samples originating from South Asia having significantly higher viral species richness as well as higher abundances of salivirus A, aichivirus A and enterovirus B, compared to samples originating from North Asia and North America. In addition, certain city specific trends were observed, including high numbers of rotaviruses in airplanes departing from Islamabad. Based on this study we believe that central sampling and analysis at international airports could be a useful supplement for global viral surveillance, valuable for outbreak detection and for guiding public health resources.
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- 2019
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15. High diversity of picornaviruses in rats from different continents revealed by deep sequencing
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Thomas Arn Hansen, Sarah Mollerup, Nam-phuong Nguyen, Nicole E White, Megan Coghlan, David E Alquezar-Planas, Tejal Joshi, Randi Holm Jensen, Helena Fridholm, Kristín Rós Kjartansdóttir, Tobias Mourier, Tandy Warnow, Graham J Belsham, Michael Bunce, Eske Willerslev, Lars Peter Nielsen, Lasse Vinner, and Anders Johannes Hansen
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cardiovirus ,metagenomics ,picornavirus ,Rattus norvegicus ,sequencing ,viral discovery ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Outbreaks of zoonotic diseases in humans and livestock are not uncommon, and an important component in containment of such emerging viral diseases is rapid and reliable diagnostics. Such methods are often PCR-based and hence require the availability of sequence data from the pathogen. Rattus norvegicus (R. norvegicus) is a known reservoir for important zoonotic pathogens. Transmission may be direct via contact with the animal, for example, through exposure to its faecal matter, or indirectly mediated by arthropod vectors. Here we investigated the viral content in rat faecal matter (n=29) collected from two continents by analyzing 2.2 billion next-generation sequencing reads derived from both DNA and RNA. Among other virus families, we found sequences from members of the Picornaviridae to be abundant in the microbiome of all the samples. Here we describe the diversity of the picornavirus-like contigs including near-full-length genomes closely related to the Boone cardiovirus and Theiler’s encephalomyelitis virus. From this study, we conclude that picornaviruses within R. norvegicus are more diverse than previously recognized. The virome of R. norvegicus should be investigated further to assess the full potential for zoonotic virus transmission.
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- 2016
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16. Evaluating the performance of low cost chemical sensors for air pollution research
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Alastair C. Lewis, Katie R. Smith, Matthew O. A. Ellis, Stefan R. Gillot, Peter Edwards, James D. Lee, Marvin D. Shaw, Mat J. Evans, Jack W. Buckley, Sarah Moller, and A.D. White
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Pollutant ,Pollution ,Emulation ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Air pollution ,010501 environmental sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,01 natural sciences ,Signal ,Automotive engineering ,Ambient air ,symbols.namesake ,13. Climate action ,medicine ,symbols ,Environmental science ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Gaussian process ,Air quality index ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,media_common - Abstract
Low cost pollution sensors have been widely publicized, in principle offering increased information on the distribution of air pollution and a democratization of air quality measurements to amateur users. We report a laboratory study of commonly-used electrochemical sensors and quantify a number of cross-interferences with other atmospheric chemicals, some of which become significant at typical suburban air pollution concentrations. We highlight that artefact signals from co-sampled pollutants such as CO2 can be greater than the electrochemical sensor signal generated by the measurand. We subsequently tested in ambient air, over a period of three weeks, twenty identical commercial sensor packages alongside standard measurements and report on the degree of agreement between references and sensors. We then explore potential experimental approaches to improve sensor performance, enhancing outputs from qualitative to quantitative, focusing on low cost VOC photoionization sensors. Careful signal handling, for example, was seen to improve limits of detection by one order of magnitude. The quantity, magnitude and complexity of analytical interferences that must be characterised to convert a signal into a quantitative observation, with known uncertainties, make standard individual parameter regression inappropriate. We show that one potential solution to this problem is the application of supervised machine learning approaches such as boosted regression trees and Gaussian processes emulation.
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17. Cutavirus in Cutaneous Malignant Melanoma
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Sarah Mollerup, Helena Fridholm, Lasse Vinner, Kristín Rós Kjartansdóttir, Jens Friis-Nielsen, Maria Asplund, Jose A.R. Herrera, Torben Steiniche, Tobias Mourier, Søren Brunak, Eske Willerslev, Jose M.G. Izarzugaza, Anders J. Hansen, and Lars P. Nielsen
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Cutavirus ,bufavirus ,viruses ,cancer ,malignant melanoma ,protoparvovirus ,Medicine ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 - Abstract
A novel human protoparvovirus related to human bufavirus and preliminarily named cutavirus has been discovered. We detected cutavirus in a sample of cutaneous malignant melanoma by using viral enrichment and high-throughput sequencing. The role of cutaviruses in cutaneous cancers remains to be investigated.
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- 2017
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18. Correction to: Cancer associated fibroblasts (CAFs) are activated in cutaneous basal cell carcinoma and in the peritumoural skin
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Silje Haukali Omland, Erika Elgstrand Wettergren, Sarah Mollerup, Maria Asplund, Tobias Mourier, Anders Johannes Hansen, and Robert Gniadecki
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Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,RC254-282 - Abstract
Abstract After publication of the original article [1] it was identified that order of the author list had been presented incorrectly. The author Robert Gniadecki’s surname was also incorrect in the original article.
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- 2018
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19. Target-dependent enrichment of virions determines the reduction of high-throughput sequencing in virus discovery.
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Randi Holm Jensen, Sarah Mollerup, Tobias Mourier, Thomas Arn Hansen, Helena Fridholm, Lars Peter Nielsen, Eske Willerslev, Anders Johannes Hansen, and Lasse Vinner
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Viral infections cause many different diseases stemming both from well-characterized viral pathogens but also from emerging viruses, and the search for novel viruses continues to be of great importance. High-throughput sequencing is an important technology for this purpose. However, viral nucleic acids often constitute a minute proportion of the total genetic material in a sample from infected tissue. Techniques to enrich viral targets in high-throughput sequencing have been reported, but the sensitivity of such methods is not well established. This study compares different library preparation techniques targeting both DNA and RNA with and without virion enrichment. By optimizing the selection of intact virus particles, both by physical and enzymatic approaches, we assessed the effectiveness of the specific enrichment of viral sequences as compared to non-enriched sample preparations by selectively looking for and counting read sequences obtained from shotgun sequencing. Using shotgun sequencing of total DNA or RNA, viral targets were detected at concentrations corresponding to the predicted level, providing a foundation for estimating the effectiveness of virion enrichment. Virion enrichment typically produced a 1000-fold increase in the proportion of DNA virus sequences. For RNA virions the gain was less pronounced with a maximum 13-fold increase. This enrichment varied between the different sample concentrations, with no clear trend. Despite that less sequencing was required to identify target sequences, it was not evident from our data that a lower detection level was achieved by virion enrichment compared to shotgun sequencing.
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- 2015
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20. Identification of Known and Novel Recurrent Viral Sequences in Data from Multiple Patients and Multiple Cancers
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Jens Friis-Nielsen, Kristín Rós Kjartansdóttir, Sarah Mollerup, Maria Asplund, Tobias Mourier, Randi Holm Jensen, Thomas Arn Hansen, Alba Rey-Iglesia, Stine Raith Richter, Ida Broman Nielsen, David E. Alquezar-Planas, Pernille V. S. Olsen, Lasse Vinner, Helena Fridholm, Lars Peter Nielsen, Eske Willerslev, Thomas Sicheritz-Pontén, Ole Lund, Anders Johannes Hansen, Jose M. G. Izarzugaza, and Søren Brunak
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sequence clustering ,taxonomic characterisation ,novel sequence identification ,next generation sequencing ,cancer causing viruses ,oncoviruses ,assay contamination ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Virus discovery from high throughput sequencing data often follows a bottom-up approach where taxonomic annotation takes place prior to association to disease. Albeit effective in some cases, the approach fails to detect novel pathogens and remote variants not present in reference databases. We have developed a species independent pipeline that utilises sequence clustering for the identification of nucleotide sequences that co-occur across multiple sequencing data instances. We applied the workflow to 686 sequencing libraries from 252 cancer samples of different cancer and tissue types, 32 non-template controls, and 24 test samples. Recurrent sequences were statistically associated to biological, methodological or technical features with the aim to identify novel pathogens or plausible contaminants that may associate to a particular kit or method. We provide examples of identified inhabitants of the healthy tissue flora as well as experimental contaminants. Unmapped sequences that co-occur with high statistical significance potentially represent the unknown sequence space where novel pathogens can be identified.
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- 2016
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