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McAdam, Alexander

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McAdam

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Alexander

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McAdam, Alexander

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Now showing 1 - 6 of 6
  • Publication

    A High-Throughput Screen Identifies a New Natural Product with Broad-Spectrum Antibacterial Activity

    (Public Library of Science, 2012) Ymele-Leki, Patrick; Cao, Shugeng; Sharp, Jared D'Alonzo; Lambert, Kathleen G; McAdam, Alexander; Husson, Robert N; Tamayo, Giselle; Clardy, Jon; Watnick, Paula

    Due to the inexorable invasion of our hospitals and communities by drug-resistant bacteria, there is a pressing need for novel antibacterial agents. Here we report the development of a sensitive and robust but low-tech and inexpensive high-throughput metabolic screen for novel antibiotics. This screen is based on a colorimetric assay of pH that identifies inhibitors of bacterial sugar fermentation. After validation of the method, we screened over 39,000 crude extracts derived from organisms that grow in the diverse ecosystems of Costa Rica and identified 49 with reproducible antibacterial effects. An extract from an endophytic fungus was further characterized, and this led to the discovery of three novel natural products. One of these, which we named mirandamycin, has broad-spectrum antibacterial activity against (Escherichia) (coli), (Pseudomonas) (aeruginosa), (Vibrio) (cholerae), methicillin-resistant (Staphylococcus) (aureus), and (Mycobacterium) (tuberculosis). This demonstrates the power of simple high throughput screens for rapid identification of new antibacterial agents from environmental samples.

  • Publication

    ASM Journals Eliminate Impact Factor Information from Journal Websites

    (American Society for Microbiology, 2016) Casadevall, Arturo; Bertuzzi, Stefano; Buchmeier, Michael J.; Davis, Roger J.; Drake, Harold; Fang, Ferric C.; Gilbert, Jack; Goldman, Barbara M.; Imperiale, Michael J.; Matsumura, Philip; McAdam, Alexander; Pasetti, Marcela F.; Sandri-Goldin, Rozanne M.; Silhavy, Thomas; Rice, Louis; Young, Jo-Anne H.; Shenk, Thomas

    Many scientists attempt to publish their work in a journal with the highest possible journal impact factor (IF). Despite widespread condemnation of the use of journal IFs to assess the significance of published work, these numbers continue to be widely misused in publication, hiring, funding, and promotion decisions (1, 2).

  • Publication

    ASM Journals Eliminate Impact Factor Information from Journal Websites

    (American Society for Microbiology, 2016) Casadevall, Arturo; Bertuzzi, Stefano; Buchmeier, Michael J.; Davis, Roger J.; Drake, Harold; Fang, Ferric C.; Gilbert, Jack; Goldman, Barbara M.; Imperiale, Michael J.; Matsumura, Philip; McAdam, Alexander; Pasetti, Marcela F.; Sandri-Goldin, Rozanne M.; Silhavy, Thomas; Rice, Louis; Young, Jo-Anne H.; Shenk, Thomas
  • Publication

    Genetic variation of a bacterial pathogen within individuals with cystic fibrosis provides a record of selective pressures

    (2014) Lieberman, Tami; Flett, Kelly; Yelin, Idan; Martin, Thomas; McAdam, Alexander; Priebe, Gregory; Kishony, Roy

    Advances in sequencing have enabled the identification of mutations acquired by bacterial pathogens during infection1-10. However, it remains unclear whether adaptive mutations fix in the population or lead to pathogen diversification within the patient11,12. Here, we study the genotypic diversity of Burkholderia dolosa within people with cystic fibrosis by re-sequencing individual colonies and whole populations from single sputum samples. Extensive intra-sample diversity reveals that mutations rarely fix within a patient's pathogen population—instead, diversifying lineages coexist for many years. When strong selection is acting on a gene, multiple adaptive mutations arise but neither sweeps to fixation, generating lasting allele diversity that provides a recorded signature of past selection. Genes involved in outer-membrane components, iron scavenging and antibiotic resistance all showed this signature of within-patient selection. These results offer a general and rapid approach for identifying selective pressures acting on a pathogen in individual patients based on single clinical samples.

  • Publication

    Epidemiology and risk factors for Staphylococcus aureus colonization in children in the post-PCV7 era

    (Springer Science + Business Media, 2009) Lee, Grace; Huang, Susan Jen; Rifas-Shiman, Sheryl; Hinrichsen, Virginia L; Pelton, Stephen I; Kleinman, Kenneth Paul; Hanage, William; Lipsitch, Marc; McAdam, Alexander; Finkelstein, Jonathan

    BACKGROUND: The incidence of community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has risen dramatically in the U.S., particularly among children. Although Streptococcus pneumoniae colonization has been inversely associated with S. aureus colonization in unvaccinated children, this and other risk factors for S. aureus carriage have not been assessed following widespread use of the heptavalent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV7). Our objectives were to (1) determine the prevalence of S. aureus and MRSA colonization in young children in the context of widespread use of PCV7; and (2) examine risk factors for S. aureus colonization in the post-PCV7 era, including the absence of vaccine-type S. pneumoniae colonization. METHODS: Swabs of the anterior nares (S. aureus) were obtained from children enrolled in an ongoing study of nasopharyngeal pneumococcal colonization of healthy children in 8 Massachusetts communities. Children 3 months to <7 years of age seen for well child or sick visits in primary care offices from 11/03-4/04 and 10/06-4/07 were enrolled. S. aureus was identified and antibiotic susceptibility testing was performed. Epidemiologic risk factors for S. aureus colonization were collected from parent surveys and chart reviews, along with data on pneumococcal colonization. Multivariate mixed model analyses were performed to identify factors associated with S. aureus colonization. RESULTS: Among 1,968 children, the mean age (SD) was 2.7 (1.8) years, 32% received an antibiotic in the past 2 months, 2% were colonized with PCV7 strains and 24% were colonized with non-PCV7 strains. The prevalence of S. aureus colonization remained stable between 2003-04 and 2006-07 (14.6% vs. 14.1%), while MRSA colonization remained low (0.2% vs. 0.9%, p = 0.09). Although absence of pneumococcal colonization was not significantly associated with S. aureus colonization, age (6-11 mo vs. > or =5 yrs, OR 0.39 [95% CI 0.24-0.64]; 1-1.99 yrs vs. > or =5 yrs, OR 0.35 [0.23-0.54]; 2-2.99 yrs vs. > or =5 yrs, OR 0.45 [0.28-0.73]; 3-3.99 yrs vs. > or =5 yrs, OR 0.53 [0.33-0.86]) and recent antibiotic use were significant predictors in multivariate models. CONCLUSION: In Massachusetts, S. aureus and MRSA colonization remained stable from 2003-04 to 2006-07 among children <7 years despite widespread use of pneumococcal conjugate vaccine. S. aureus nasal colonization varies by age and is inversely correlated with recent antibiotic use.

  • Publication

    Relative Impact of Influenza and Respiratory Syncytial Virus in Young Children

    (American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2009-12) Bourgeois, Florence; Valim, Clarissa; McAdam, Alexander; Mandl, Kenneth

    OBJECTIVE We measured the relative impact of influenza and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infections in young children in terms of emergency department (ED) visits, clinical care requirements, and overall resource use.

    METHODS Patients who were aged ≤7 years and treated in the ED of a tertiary care pediatric hospital for an acute respiratory infection were enrolled during 2 winter seasons between 2003 and 2005. We quantified health care resource use for children with influenza or RSV infections, and extrapolated results to estimate the national resource use associated with influenza and RSV infections.

    RESULTS Nationally, an estimated 10.2 ED visits per 1000 children were attributable to influenza and 21.5 visits per 1000 to RSV. Children who were aged 0 to 23 months and infected with RSV had the highest rate of ED visits with 64.4 visits per 1000 children. Significantly more children required hospitalization as a result of an RSV infection compared with influenza, with national hospitalization rates of 8.5 and 1.4 per 1000 children, respectively. The total number of workdays missed yearly by caregivers of children who required ED care was 246 965 days for influenza infections and 716 404 days for RSV infections.

    CONCLUSION For young children, RSV is associated with higher rates of ED visits, hospitalization, and caregiver resource use than is influenza. Our results provide data on the large number of children who receive outpatient care for influenza and RSV illnesses and serve to inform analyses of prevention programs and treatments for both influenza and RSV disease.