Publications by authors named "N J Enright"

Bacterial populations that originate from a single bacterium are not strictly clonal and often contain subgroups with distinct phenotypes. Bacteria can generate heterogeneity through phase variation-a preprogrammed, reversible mechanism that alters gene expression levels across a population. One well-studied type of phase variation involves enzyme-mediated inversion of specific regions of genomic DNA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Climate change, with warming and drying weather conditions, is reducing the growth, seed production, and survival of fire-adapted plants in fire-prone regions such as Mediterranean-type ecosystems. These effects of climate change on local plant demographics have recently been shown to reduce the persistence time of local populations of the fire-killed shrub dramatically. In principle, extinctions of local populations may be partly compensated by recolonization events through long-distance dispersal mechanisms of seeds, such as post-fire wind and bird-mediated dispersal, facilitating persistence in spatially structured metapopulations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: To determine the interrater reliability (IRR) of thyroid eye disease (TED) photographic assessment using the VISA classification. To assess whether a VISA grading atlas improves ophthalmology trainees' performance in photographic assessment of TED.

Methods: A prospective, partially randomized, international study conducted from September 2021 to May 2022.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Certain bacterial colonists induce a highly specific T cell response. A hallmark of this encounter is that adaptive immunity develops preemptively, in the absence of an infection. However, the functional properties of colonist-induced T cells are not well defined, limiting our ability to understand anticommensal immunity and harness it therapeutically.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Neurological COVID-19 disease has been reported widely, but published studies often lack information on neurological outcomes and prognostic risk factors. We aimed to describe the spectrum of neurological disease in hospitalised COVID-19 patients; characterise clinical outcomes; and investigate factors associated with a poor outcome.

Methods: We conducted an individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis of hospitalised patients with neurological COVID-19 disease, using standard case definitions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF