Publications by authors named "P Boseley"

In a period where the proportion of culture confirmed cases in the UK has been steadily declining, diagnosis by PCR has been used to increase the number of confirmed cases and provide additional epidemiological data. This report presents a comparative evaluation of the fluorogenic probe-based 5' exonuclease assay (Taqman) using the Perkin-Elmer Applied Biosystems automated sequence detection system 7700 with previously reported polymerase chain reaction enzyme-linked immunosorbent (PCR ELISA) assays for the detection of meningococcal DNA in CSF, plasma and serum samples. Taqman assays developed were based on the detection of a meningococcal capsular transfer gene (ctrA), the insertion sequence IS1106 and the sialytransferase gene (siaD) for serogroup B and C determination and compared with similar assays in a PCR ELISA format.

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Fresh human peripheral blood mononuclear lymphocytes and lymphoblasts that had been grown for a period in T-cell growth-factor containing medium were stimulated with staphylococcal enterotoxin A plus mezerein to produce interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). Growing lymphoblasts produced peak levels of IFN-gamma much earlier after induction than fresh lymphocytes. Quantitation of the steady-state levels of IFN-gamma mRNA showed these to differ markedly between the two cell types over a period of time post-induction.

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The single-stranded DNA phage, M13 mp7 was used in the construction of an expression vector containing the coding sequence for mature interferon-beta (IFN-beta). Two clones expressed a fused polypeptide showing the biological and physicochemical properties of IFN-beta, despite the fact that the N-terminal amino acid sequence had been changed; 10(6) I.U.

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A strategy for local mutagenesis of DNA has been developed. The lac promoter in phage M13mp9 was replaced with the E. coli trp promoter.

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Cloned human interferon complementary DNAs were used as hybridization probes to detect interferon alpha and beta gene families in restriction endonuclease digests of total genomic DNA isolated from a wide range of vertebrates and invertebrates. A complex interferon-alpha multigene family was detected in all mammals examined, whereas there was little or no cross-hybridization of human interferon-alpha complementary DNA to non-mammalian vertebrates or invertebrates. In contrast, human interferon-beta complementary DNA detected one or two interferon-beta genes in all mammals tested, with the exception of the cow and the blackbuck, both of which possessed a complex interferon-beta multigene family which has presumably arisen by a recent series of gene duplications.

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