Publications by authors named "A Caulfield"

Article Synopsis
  • Neonatal immune systems (NIS) are often thought to be underdeveloped, but recent research shows that neonatal mice can effectively clear a specific strain of Bordetella pertussis (Bp) better than adults, suggesting that their immune response can be quite strong despite potential weaknesses.
  • The study found that neutrophils play a crucial role in rapidly clearing this Bp strain, as depleting or blocking them hindered the immune response in neonatal mice.
  • Complement proteins also independently support the clearance process; without them, neonates struggled to recruit neutrophils, but treatment with these proteins restored their ability to fight the infection, implying that pertussis toxin can disrupt the efficient functioning of the NIS.
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As of 2024, SARS-CoV-2 continues to propagate and drift as an endemic virus, impacting healthcare for years. The largest sequencing initiative for any species was initiated to combat the virus, tracking changes over time at a full virus base-pair resolution. The SARS-CoV-2 sequencing represents a unique opportunity to understand selective pressures and viral evolution but requires cross-disciplinary approaches from epidemiology to functional protein biology.

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The efficacy of the adaptive immune system in the middle ear (ME) is well established, but the mechanisms are not as well defined as those of gastrointestinal or respiratory tracts. While cellular elements of the adaptive response have been detected in the MEs following infections (or intranasal immunizations), their specific contributions to protecting the organ against reinfections are unknown. How immune protection mechanisms of the MEs compares with those in the adjacent and attached upper and lower respiratory airways remains unclear.

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is the highly transmissible etiologic agent of pertussis, a severe respiratory disease that causes particularly high morbidity and mortality in infants and young children. Commonly known as "whooping cough," pertussis is one of the least controlled vaccine-preventable diseases worldwide with several countries experiencing recent periods of resurgence despite broad immunization coverage. While current acellular vaccines prevent severe disease in most cases, the immunity they confer wanes rapidly and does not prevent sub clinical infection or transmission of the bacterium to new and vulnerable hosts.

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The increased susceptibility of neonates to specific pathogens has previously been attributed to an underdeveloped immune system. More recent data suggest neonates have effective protection against most pathogens but are particularly susceptible to those that target immune functions specific to neonates. (), the causative agent of "whooping cough", causes more serious disease in infants attributed to its production of pertussis toxin (PTx), although the neonate-specific immune functions it targets remain unknown.

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