11 research outputs found
A point-of-care lateral flow assay for neutralising antibodies against SARS-CoV-2
Background: As vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 are now being rolled out, a better understanding of immunity to the virus, whether from infection, or passive or active immunisation, and the durability of this protection is required. This will benefit from the ability to measure antibody-based protection to SARS-CoV-2, ideally with rapid turnaround and without the need for laboratory-based testing.
Methods: We have developed a lateral flow POC test that can measure levels of RBD-ACE2 neutralising antibody (NAb) from whole blood, with a result that can be determined by eye or quantitatively on a small instrument. We compared our lateral flow test with the gold-standard microneutralisation assay, using samples from convalescent and vaccinated donors, as well as immunised macaques.
Findings: We show a high correlation between our lateral flow test with conventional neutralisation and that this test is applicable with animal samples. We also show that this assay is readily adaptable to test for protection to newly emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants, including the beta variant which revealed a marked reduction in NAb activity. Lastly, using a cohort of vaccinated humans, we demonstrate that our whole-blood test correlates closely with microneutralisation assay data (specificity 100% and sensitivity 96% at a microneutralisation cutoff of 1:40) and that fingerprick whole blood samples are sufficient for this test.
Interpretation: Taken together, the COVID-19 NAb-testTM device described here provides a rapid readout of NAb based protection to SARS-CoV-2 at the point of care
Standardised Data on Initiatives – STARDIT: Beta Version
There is currently no standardised way to share information across disciplines about
initiatives, including felds such as health, environment, basic science, manufacturing, media and international
development. All problems, including complex global problems such as air pollution and pandemics require reliable
data sharing between disciplines in order to respond efectively. Current reporting methods also lack information
about the ways in which diferent people and organisations are involved in initiatives, making it difcult to collate
and appraise data about the most efective ways to involve diferent people. The objective of STARDIT (Standardised
Data on Initiatives) is to address current limitations and inconsistencies in sharing data about initiatives. The STARDIT
system features standardised data reporting about initiatives, including who has been involved, what tasks they did,
and any impacts observed. STARDIT was created to help everyone in the world fnd and understand information
about collective human actions, which are referred to as ‘initiatives’. STARDIT enables multiple categories of data to be
reported in a standardised way across disciplines, facilitating appraisal of initiatives and aiding synthesis of evidence
for the most effective ways for people to be involved in initiatives
Cytochromes P450 1A2 and 3A4 Catalyze the Metabolic Activation of Sunitinib
Sunitinib
is a multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor associated
with idiosyncratic hepatotoxicity. The mechanisms of this toxicity
are unknown. We hypothesized that sunitinib undergoes metabolic activation
to form chemically reactive, potentially toxic metabolites which may
contribute to development of sunitinib-induced hepatotoxicity. The
purpose of this study was to define the role of cytochrome P450 (P450)
enzymes in sunitinib bioactivation. Metabolic incubations were performed
using individual recombinant P450s, human liver microsomal fractions,
and P450-selective chemical inhibitors. Glutathione (GSH) and dansylated
GSH were used as trapping agents to detect reactive metabolite formation.
Sunitinib metabolites were analyzed by liquid chromatography–tandem
mass spectrometry. A putative quinoneimine–GSH conjugate (M5)
of sunitinib was detected from trapping studies with GSH and dansyl–GSH
in human liver microsomal incubations, and M5 was formed in an NADPH-dependent
manner. Recombinant P450 1A2 generated the highest levels of defluorinated
sunitinib (M3) and M5, with less formation by P450 3A4 and 2D6. P450
3A4 was the major enzyme forming the primary active metabolite <i>N</i>-desethylsunitinib (M1). In human liver microsomal incubations,
P450 3A inhibitor ketoconazole reduced formation of M1 by 88%, while
P450 1A2 inhibitor furafylline decreased generation of M5 by 62% compared
to control levels. P450 2D6 and P450 3A inhibition also decreased
M5 by 54 and 52%, respectively, compared to control. In kinetic assays,
recombinant P450 1A2 showed greater efficiency for generation of M3
and M5 compared to that of P450 3A4 and 2D6. Moreover, M5 formation
was 2.7-fold more efficient in human liver microsomal preparations
from an individual donor with high P450 1A2 activity compared to a
donor with low P450 1A2 activity. Collectively, these data suggest
that P450 1A2 and 3A4 contribute to oxidative defluorination of sunitinib
to generate a reactive, potentially toxic quinoneimine. Factors that
alter P450 1A2 and 3A activity may affect patient risk for sunitinib
toxicity
Standardised data on initiatives—STARDIT:Beta version
Background and objective
There is currently no standardised way to share information across disciplines about initiatives, including fields such as health, environment, basic science, manufacturing, media and international development. All problems, including complex global problems such as air pollution and pandemics require reliable data sharing between disciplines in order to respond effectively. Current reporting methods also lack information about the ways in which different people and organisations are involved in initiatives, making it difficult to collate and appraise data about the most effective ways to involve different people. The objective of STARDIT (Standardised Data on Initiatives) is to address current limitations and inconsistencies in sharing data about initiatives. The STARDIT system features standardised data reporting about initiatives, including who has been involved, what tasks they did, and any impacts observed. STARDIT was created to help everyone in the world find and understand information about collective human actions, which are referred to as ‘initiatives’. STARDIT enables multiple categories of data to be reported in a standardised way across disciplines, facilitating appraisal of initiatives and aiding synthesis of evidence for the most effective ways for people to be involved in initiatives. This article outlines progress to date on STARDIT; current usage; information about submitting reports; planned next steps and how anyone can become involved.
Method
STARDIT development is guided by participatory action research paradigms, and has been co-created with people from multiple disciplines and countries. Co-authors include cancer patients, people affected by rare diseases, health researchers, environmental researchers, economists, librarians and academic publishers. The co-authors also worked with Indigenous peoples from multiple countries and in partnership with an organisation working with Indigenous Australians.
Results and discussion
Over 100 people from multiple disciplines and countries have been involved in co-designing STARDIT since 2019. STARDIT is the first open access web-based data-sharing system which standardises the way that information about initiatives is reported across diverse fields and disciplines, including information about which tasks were done by which stakeholders. STARDIT is designed to work with existing data standards. STARDIT data will be released into the public domain (CC0) and integrated into Wikidata; it works across multiple languages and is both human and machine readable. Reports can be updated throughout the lifetime of an initiative, from planning to evaluation, allowing anyone to be involved in reporting impacts and outcomes. STARDIT is the first system that enables sharing of standardised data about initiatives across disciplines. A working Beta version was publicly released in February 2021 (ScienceforAll.World/STARDIT). Subsequently, STARDIT reports have been created for peer-reviewed research in multiple journals and multiple research projects, demonstrating the usability. In addition, organisations including Cochrane and Australian Genomics have created prospective reports outlining planned initiatives.
Conclusions
STARDIT can help create high-quality standardised information on initiatives trying to solve complex multidisciplinary global problems