![]() |
|||||||||||||
| |
|
|
|||||||||||
| |
|
||||||||||||
|
Scientists Discover New Virus Responsible for Deaths of Three Transplant Recipients from Single Donor in Victoria, Australia Scientists in the Jerome L. and Dawn Greene Infectious Disease Laboratory at the Mailman School and The previously unknown virus, which is related to lymphocytic choreomeningitis virus (LCMV), was found using rapid sequencing technology established by 454 Life Sciences and bioinformatics algorithms developed in the Greene Laboratory with support from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Known strains of LCMV have been implicated in a small number of cases of disease transmission by organ transplantation, however, the newly discovered virus is sufficiently different that it could not be detected using existing screening methods.
Ian Lipkin, MD, Jerome L. and Dawn Greene Professor of Epidemiology and professor of Neurology and Pathology, and director of the Greene Laboratory and principal investigator of the Northeast Biodefense Center, emphasized the importance of academic, public health, and industrial partnership in this work. “This was a team effort. Drs. Mike Catton and Julian Druce at the Victorian Infectious Disease Reference Laboratory reached out to us after a comprehensive state-of- the-art investigation failed to turn up leads,” stated Dr. Lipkin. “We succeeded in identifying the virus responsible for the deaths by building on their work and integrating the efforts of Gustavo Palacios, Sean Conlan, Thomas Briese and P-Lan Quan at Columbia and utilizing new tools for pathogen surveillance and discovery developed in the Greene Laboratory and 454 Life.”
|
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
| Send to a friend | Subscribe | Unsubscribe Copyright 2007 Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health |
|
||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
||||||