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1.
Vaccine ; 38(32): 4940-4943, 2020 07 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32535018

ABSTRACT

To determine the duration of immunity provided by the Hepatitis A vaccination (HepA), we evaluated a cohort of participants in Alaska 20 years after being immunized as infants. At recruitment, participants received two doses of inactivated HepA vaccine on one of three schedules. We conducted hepatitis A antibody (anti-HAV) testing for participants at the 20-year time-point. Seventy-five of the original 183 participants (41%) were available for follow-up. The overall anti-HAV geometric mean concentration was 29.9 mIU/mL (95% CI 22.4 mIU/mL, 39.7 mIU/mL) and 50 participants (68%) remained seropositive (titer ≥ 20 mIU/mL). Using a fractional polynomial model, the predicted percent seropositive at 25 years was 55.3%, 49.8% at 30 years and 45.7% at 35 years, suggesting that the percent sero-positive could drop below 50% earlier than previously expected. Further research is necessary to understand if protection continues after seropositivity diminishes or if a HepA booster dose may become necessary.


Subject(s)
Hepatitis A Vaccines , Hepatitis A , Alaska , Hepatitis A/prevention & control , Hepatitis A Antibodies , Humans , Immunization Schedule , Immunization, Secondary , Infant , Vaccination , Vaccines, Inactivated
2.
Clin Microbiol Infect ; 19(11): 1006-13, 2013 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23789639

ABSTRACT

Internet biosurveillance utilizes unstructured data from diverse web-based sources to provide early warning and situational awareness of public health threats. The scope of source coverage ranges from local media in the vernacular to international media in widely read languages. Internet biosurveillance is a timely modality that is available to government and public health officials, healthcare workers, and the public and private sector, serving as a real-time complementary approach to traditional indicator-based public health disease surveillance methods. Internet biosurveillance also supports the broader activity of epidemic intelligence. This overview covers the current state of the field of Internet biosurveillance, and provides a perspective on the future of the field.


Subject(s)
Biosurveillance/methods , Internet , Epidemiological Monitoring , Humans
3.
Euro Surveill ; 15(30)2010 Jul 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20684815

ABSTRACT

The emergence of the 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1) virus in North America and its subsequent global spread highlights the public health need for early warning of infectious disease outbreaks. Event-based biosurveillance, based on local- and regional-level Internet media reports, is one approach to early warning as well as to situational awareness. This study analyses media reports in Mexico collected by the Argus biosurveillance system between 1 October 2007 and 31 May 2009. Results from Mexico are compared with the United States and Canadian media reports obtained from the HealthMap system. A significant increase in reporting frequency of respiratory disease in Mexico during the 2008-9 influenza season relative to that of 2007-8 was observed (p<0.0001). The timing of events, based on media reports, suggests that respiratory disease was prevalent in parts of Mexico, and was reported as unusual, much earlier than the microbiological identification of the pandemic virus. Such observations suggest that abnormal respiratory disease frequency and severity was occurring in Mexico throughout the winter of 2008-2009, though its connection to the emergence of the 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1) virus remains unclear.


Subject(s)
Biosurveillance , Influenza A Virus, H1N1 Subtype , Influenza, Human/epidemiology , Pandemics , Respiration Disorders/epidemiology , Respiration Disorders/virology , Humans , Mexico/epidemiology
4.
Biochemistry ; 34(2): 481-9, 1995 Jan 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7819240

ABSTRACT

The propeptide binding/activation site on the vitamin K dependent carboxylase has been localized to a region of carboxylase between residues Arg +50 and Glu +225 by photoinactivation studies using [125I]tyrosyl-labeled benzoylphenylalanine (Bpa)-containing analogs of proFIX19, a peptide containing residues -18 to +1 of factor IX. Four proFIX19 analogs with Bpa substituents at -16, -13, -7, and -6 were synthesized. These peptides were specific photoinactivators of carboxylase and were used to label a His6-carboxylase construct produced in baculovirus-infected insect cells. Fragments of the labeled carboxylase produced by V8 protease digestion were analyzed by peptide-specific antibodies and by autoradiography. The propeptide recognition site was localized to the N-terminal one-third of the 94 kDa carboxylase. This is consistent with previous studies using a carboxylase substrate affinity label, N-(bromoacetyl)-FLEELY [Kuliopulos, A., Nelson, N.P., Yamada, M., Walsh, C.T., Furie, B., Furie, B.C., & Roth, D.A. (1994) J. Biol. Chem. 269, 21364-21370], indicating that the propeptide binding site and the FLEEL binding site are both located within the N-terminal one-third of the vitamin K dependent carboxylase.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Carbon Ligases , Factor IX/metabolism , Ligases/metabolism , Affinity Labels , Amino Acid Sequence , Ligases/antagonists & inhibitors , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptide Fragments/metabolism , Phenylalanine/analogs & derivatives , Photochemistry , Protein Binding , Protein Precursors/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Serine Endopeptidases , Vitamin K/metabolism
5.
J Biol Chem ; 269(33): 21364-70, 1994 Aug 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8063763

ABSTRACT

A recombinant His6-tagged vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylase has been produced in baculovirus-infected insect cells. The His6-carboxylase shares nearly identical kinetic properties with the wild-type enzyme from bovine liver microsomes. The His6-carboxylase was irreversibly inactivated by the N-bromoacetyl-FLEEL-125I-Y peptide substrate/affinity label under pseudo-first order conditions. This inactivation could be abolished by coincubation with a high affinity peptide substrate consistent with an active site-directed inactivation. The inactivated His6-carboxylase-Ac-FLEEL-125I-Y, purified under denaturing conditions by Ni-chelation chromatography followed by preparative polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, was subjected to proteolytic digestions with either Glu-C or Lys-C endoproteinases. The resulting polypeptide fragments were probed with three regiospecific antibodies which recognized epitopes present at the extreme N terminus (residues -23 to -13), at the hydrophobic N-terminal region (residues 86-99), and at the hydrophilic C-terminal region (residues 661-673). The site of attachment to the 125I-affinity label is located within the first 218 amino acid residues of the 758-residue carboxylase. This is the first evidence for the involvement of either the putative membrane-anchoring hydrophobic region (residues 50-314) or possibly the N-terminal hydrophilic region (residues 1-50) in gamma-carboxylation of glutamate-peptide substrates.


Subject(s)
Carbon-Carbon Ligases , Ligases/antagonists & inhibitors , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cattle , Cells, Cultured , Hydrolysis , Iodine Radioisotopes , Kinetics , Ligases/chemistry , Ligases/genetics , Ligases/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Moths , Protein Denaturation , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Substrate Specificity
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