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Molecular indices of viral disease development applied to discover emerging disease etiology
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Journal of AIDS & Clinical Research

ISSN: 2155-6113

Open Access

Molecular indices of viral disease development applied to discover emerging disease etiology


Joint Event on 9th International Conference on Emerging Infectious Diseases & 6th World Congress on Control and Prevention of HIV/AIDS, STDs & STIs

August 27-28, 2018 | Zurich, Switzerland

Kristina M. Miller

Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Canada

Keynote: J AIDS Clin Res

Abstract :

Climate change enhances vulnerability of organisms to stress and disease, which can result in volatility in survival and ultimately population decline for many species. Emerging infectious diseases have been resolved in some cases, but understanding their disease etiology can be difficult in instances where morbidity and mortality are not readily observable. Sensitive technologies to detect early stages of disease development in live-sampled organisms, and the ability to differentiate pathogen carrier states from active disease states are required to demonstrate impacts of infectious diseases in wild populations. We present the discovery and validation of host transcriptional biomarkers capable of distinguishing the presence of an active viral disease state (VDD) from latent viral infections, and viral versus bacterial disease states in salmon. Biomarker discovery was conducted through meta-analysis of published and in-house microarray data, and validation performed on independent datasets including disease challenge studies and farmed diagnoses of various viral, bacterial, and parasitic diseases. We demonstrate that the VDD biomarker panel is predictive of disease development across RNA-viral species, salmon species, and salmon tissues, and can recognize a viral disease state in cultured and wild-migrating salmon. Application of this technology has led to the discovery of eight novel salmon viruses in British Columbia alone. Biomarkers resolved in our study on salmon were highly overlapping with those based on similar human viral influenza research, suggesting a highly conserved suite of host genes associated with viral disease that may be applicable across a broad range of vertebrate taxa.

Biography :

Kristina Miller holds a PhD from Stanford University (1992) and is currently the Head of Genetics and Genomics at Fisheries and Oceans Canada. She is also an adjunct professor at UBC. Dr. Miller is on the editorial board for Immuno genetics, Facets and Coastal Marine Fisheries Journal. She has over 120 primary publications in the fields of genetics, genomics, immune genetics, and disease.

E-mail: Kristi.saunders@dfo-mpo.gc.ca

 

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Citations: 5264

Journal of AIDS & Clinical Research received 5264 citations as per Google Scholar report

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