Publications by authors named "JoAnn Coleman-McCray"

Article Synopsis
  • Development of broad-spectrum antiviral therapies, like 4'-fluorouridine (4'-FlU), is crucial for effectively responding to outbreaks and pandemics caused by emerging viruses, particularly those that cause hemorrhagic fevers, which have seen increasing morbidity and mortality rates.
  • 4'-FlU has shown antiviral activity against several hemorrhagic fever viruses in cell cultures and has demonstrated high efficacy in guinea pig models infected with lethal arenaviruses, maintaining its effectiveness at low doses.
  • When administered late in infection, 4'-FlU not only resolved clinical symptoms quickly but also showcased its potential as a therapeutic option with a broader application against various viral pathogens.
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Crimean-Congo haemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) causes human disease ranging from subclinical to a fatal haemorrhagic syndrome. Determinants of CCHF pathogenesis are largely unknown and animal models that recapitulate human disease are limited. A recently described mouse model uses a monoclonal antibody (mAb 5A3) targeting the interferon (IFN) alpha/beta receptor to suppress type I IFN responses, making animals transiently susceptible to infection.

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Nipah virus (NiV) causes near-annual outbreaks of fatal encephalitis and respiratory disease in South Asia with a high mortality rate (∼70%). Since there are no approved therapeutics for NiV disease in humans, the WHO has designated NiV and henipaviral diseases priority pathogens for research and development. We generated a new recombinant green fluorescent reporter NiV of the circulating Bangladesh genotype (rNiV-B-ZsG) and optimized it alongside our previously generated Malaysian genotype reporter counterpart (rNiV-M-ZsG) for antiviral screening in primary-like human respiratory cell types.

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Immunizing mice with Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) nucleoprotein (NP), glycoprotein precursor (GPC), or with the GP38 domain of GPC, can be protective when the proteins are delivered with viral vectors or as a DNA or RNA vaccine. Subunit vaccines are a safe and cost-effective alternative to some vaccine platforms, but Gc and Gn glycoprotein subunit vaccines for CCHFV fail to protect despite eliciting high levels of neutralizing antibodies. Here, we investigated humoral and cellular immune responses and the protective efficacy of recombinant NP, GP38, and GP38 forms (GP85 and GP160) associated with the highly glycosylated mucin-like (MLD) domain, as well as the NP + GP38 combination.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is a dangerous pathogen that lacks effective vaccines, making it a priority for the WHO, and previous studies showed that a specific VRP vaccine can protect mice if given at least 3 days before exposure.
  • - Research indicates that non-specific immune responses are inadequate for immediate protection against CCHFV, as seen when Lassa virus VRP failed to protect mice prior to infection.
  • - Vaccination with CCHF VRP at varying times before exposure (28, 14, 7, or 3 days) effectively reduced viral levels and disease markers, with longer intervals leading to better outcomes, emphasizing the importance of antibody responses for effective protection.
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Article Synopsis
  • CCHFV is a dangerous tick-borne virus with no approved treatments, and its L protein has a domain that interferes with immune responses, making it a potential drug target.
  • Researchers previously showed that a protein variant called CC4 can effectively inhibit CCHFV replication in lab settings.
  • In this study, they tested delivering CC4 using a modified adenovirus in mice, finding that while one injection method delivered the virus more effectively to the liver, it did not protect against lethal CCHFV infection.
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Type of feed is an important consideration in herbivore colony management, yet limited studies report on the effects of diet on common conditions such as urolithiasis in guinea pigs. Urolithiasis is a well-documented cause of lower urinary tract disease in guinea pigs, with calcium carbonate uroliths reported as the predominant calculi formed in the guinea pig urinary tract. A calcium-rich diet has been suggested as a risk factor for of urolithiasis, with numerous commercially available guinea pig diets formulated for adults avoiding ingredients that are higher in calcium.

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Several filoviruses, including Marburg virus (MARV), cause severe disease in humans and nonhuman primates (NHPs). However, the Egyptian rousette bat (ERB, ), the only known MARV reservoir, shows no overt illness upon natural or experimental infection, which, like other bat hosts of zoonoses, is due to well-adapted, likely species-specific immune features. Despite advances in understanding reservoir immune responses to filoviruses, ERB peripheral blood responses to MARV and how they compare to those of diseased filovirus-infected spillover hosts remain ill-defined.

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Nipah virus (NiV) is a highly pathogenic paramyxovirus. The Syrian hamster model recapitulates key features of human NiV disease and is a critical tool for evaluating antivirals and vaccines. Here we describe longitudinal humoral immune responses in NiV-infected Syrian hamsters.

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Reverse-transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays are frequently used to evaluate gene expression in animal model studies. Data analyses depend on normalization using a suitable reference gene (RG) to minimize effects of variation due to sample collection, sample processing, or experimental set-up. Here, we investigated the suitability of nine potential RGs in laboratory animals commonly used to study viral hemorrhagic fever infection.

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Nipah virus (NiV) causes a highly lethal disease in humans who present with acute respiratory or neurological signs. No vaccines against NiV have been approved to date. Here, we report on the clinical impact of a novel NiV-derived nonspreading replicon particle lacking the fusion (F) protein gene (NiVΔF) as a vaccine in three small animal models of disease.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on creating mouse-adapted Ebola virus (EBOV) strains, which include versions with fluorescent and bioluminescent reporter proteins for tracking infection.
  • The recombinant mouse-adapted EBOVs were found to have no negative impact on viral growth and caused high lethality rates in infected mice (100% for some strains, 73% for those with dual reporters).
  • The researchers successfully detected viral presence using advanced imaging techniques, supporting the utility of these adapted EBOV strains for further understanding Ebola pathology in animal models.
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Guinea pigs are important animal models for human disease, and both outbred and inbred lines are utilized in biomedical research. The optimal maintenance of guinea pig colonies, commercially and in research settings, relies on robust informed breeding programs, however, breeding data on specialized inbred strains are limited. Here, we investigated the effects of parental age, parity, and pairing approaches on mean total fetus count, percentage of female pups in the litter, and pup survival rate after 10 days in strain 13/N guinea pigs.

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Development of lethal models of Ebola virus disease has been achieved by the serial passage of virus isolates from human cases in mice and guinea pigs. Use of mice infected with non-adapted virus has been limited due to the absence of overt clinical disease. In recent years, newly recognized sequelae identified in human cases has highlighted the importance of continued investigations of non-lethal infection both in humans and animal models.

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Article Synopsis
  • Human infection with the recently identified Sosuga virus (SOSV) has only been documented in one person so far.
  • There are currently no animal models for SOSV, but researchers conducted experiments with Syrian hamsters to study the virus's behavior and effects.
  • The study found that hamsters can get infected with SOSV without showing noticeable symptoms or significant tissue damage.
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Syrian hamsters are a key animal model of SARS-CoV-2 and other respiratory viruses and are useful for the evaluation of associated medical countermeasures. Delivery of an infectious agent or intervention to the respiratory tract mirrors natural routes of exposure and allows for the evaluation of clinically relevant therapeutic administration. The data to support instillation or inoculation volumes are important both for optimal experimental design and to minimize or avoid effects of diluent alone, which may compromise both data interpretation and animal welfare.

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Lassa fever (LF) is endemic to broad regions of West Africa. Infection with Lassa virus (LASV), the etiologic agent of LF, results in a spectrum of clinical signs in humans, including severe and lethal hemorrhagic disease. Person-to-person transmission occurs through direct contact with body fluids or contaminated bedding and clothing.

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Defective interfering particles (DIs) contain a considerably smaller genome than the parental virus but retain replication competency. As DIs can directly or indirectly alter propagation kinetics of the parental virus, they offer a novel approach to antiviral therapy, capitalizing on knowledge from natural infection. However, efforts to translate inhibition to screening models remain limited.

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Lassa virus (LASV) causes mild to severe hemorrhagic fever disease in humans. Strain 13/N guinea pigs are highly susceptible to infection with LASV strain Josiah (clade IV), providing a critical model system for therapeutics and vaccine development. To develop additional models of disease, we detail the clinical course in guinea pigs infected with 5 geographically and genetically diverse LASV strains.

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Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) causes mild to severe and fatal disease in humans. Person-to-person transmission is common, necessitating the availability of rapidly deliverable therapeutic and prophylactic interventions to mitigate CCHFV spread. Previously, we showed complete protection using one dose of a viral replicon particle (VRP) vaccine administered 28 days before CCHFV challenge.

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Article Synopsis
  • Marburg virus (MARV) is highly virulent in primates, causing severe disease through immune suppression and inflammation, while causing little harm to its reservoir host, the Egyptian rousette bat (ERB).
  • Research using ERBs infected with a bat strain of MARV reveals that they activate antiviral genes but do not significantly induce proinflammatory genes, contrasting with immune responses seen in primates.
  • These findings provide evidence that the ERB's immune tolerance allows it to host MARV asymptomatically and offer insights into how different hosts respond to pathogens, which could inform future antiviral therapies.
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Sudden-onset sensorineuronal hearing loss (SNHL) is reported in approximately one-third of survivors of Lassa fever (LF) and remains the most prominent cause of Lassa virus (LASV)-associated morbidity in convalescence. Using a guinea pig model of LF, and incorporating animals from LASV vaccine trials, we investigated viral antigen distribution and histopathology in the ear of infected animals to elucidate the pathogenesis of hearing loss associated with LASV infection. Antigen was detected only in animals that succumbed to disease and was found within structures of the inner ear that are intimately associated with neural detection and/or translation of auditory stimuli and in adjacent vasculature.

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Inbred strain 13/N guinea pigs are used as small animal models for the study of hemorrhagic fever viruses. Coagulation abnormalities, including prolonged clotting times and bleeding, are characteristic of hemorrhagic fever in humans; patients often meet criteria for disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). Comprehensively evaluating coagulation function is critical in model development and studies of viral pathogenesis and therapeutic efficacy.

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Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever virus (CCHFV) is a tri-segmented, tick-borne nairovirus that causes disease of ranging severity in humans. The CCHFV M segment encodes a complex glycoprotein precursor (GPC) that undergoes extensive endoproteolytic cleavage, giving rise to two structural proteins (Gn and Gc) required for virus attachment and entry, and to multiple non-structural proteins (NSm, GP160, GP85, and GP38). The functions of these non-structural proteins remain largely unclear.

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Nipah virus (NiV) is a highly pathogenic zoonotic paramyxovirus that causes fatal encephalitis and respiratory disease in humans. There is currently no approved therapeutic for human use against NiV infection. Griffithsin (GRFT) is high-mannose oligosaccharide binding lectin that has shown in vivo broad-spectrum activity against viruses, including severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus, human immunodeficiency virus 1, hepatitis C virus, and Japanese encephalitis virus.

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