Maureen Carey

Maureen Carey
University of Virginia | UVa · Microbiology, Immunology and Cancer Biology (MIC)

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32
Publications
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491
Citations

Publications

Publications (32)
Article
Full-text available
Background: Malaria remains a major public health burden and resistance has emerged to every antimalarial on the market, including the frontline drug, artemisinin. Our limited understanding of Plasmodium biology hinders the elucidation of resistance mechanisms. In this regard, systems biology approaches can facilitate the integration of existing e...
Article
Full-text available
Protozoan parasites cause diverse diseases with large global impacts. Research on the pathogenesis and biology of these organisms is limited by economic and experimental constraints. Accordingly, studies of one parasite are frequently extrapolated to infer knowledge about another parasite, across and within genera. Model in vitro or in vivo systems...
Article
Full-text available
Construction and analysis of genome-scale metabolic models (GEMs) is a well-established systems biology approach that can be used to predict metabolic and growth phenotypes. The ability of GEMs to produce mechanistic insight into microbial ecological processes makes them appealing tools that can open a range of exciting opportunities in microbiome...
Article
Full-text available
Background: The protozoan parasites in the Cryptosporidium genus cause both acute diarrheal disease and subclinical (i.e. non-diarrheal) disease. It is unclear if the microbiota can influence the manifestation of diarrhea during a Cryptosporidium infection. Methods: To characterize the role of the gut microbiota in diarrheal cryptosporidiosis, t...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background The protozoan parasites in the Cryptosporidium genus cause both acute diarrheal disease and subclinical (i.e. non-diarrheal) disease. It is unclear if the microbiota can influence the manifestation of diarrhea during a Cryptosporidium infection. Methods To characterize the role of the gut microbiota in diarrheal cryptosporidiosis, the m...
Article
Full-text available
Standardization of data and models facilitates effective communication, especially in computational systems biology. However, both the development and consistent use of standards and resources remain challenging. As a result, the amount, quality, and format of the information contained within systems biology models are not consistent and therefore...
Preprint
Full-text available
Protozoan parasites cause diverse diseases with large global impacts. Research on the pathogenesis and biology of these organisms is limited by economic and experimental constraints. Accordingly, studies of one parasite are frequently extrapolated to infer knowledge about another parasite, across and within genera. Model in vitro or in vivo systems...
Preprint
Full-text available
Members of the Lactobacillus genus are frequently utilized in the probiotic industry with many species conferring demonstrated health benefits; however, these effects are largely strain-dependent. We designed a method called PROTEAN (Probabilistic Reconstruction Of constituent Anabolic Networks) to computationally analyze the genomic annotations an...
Preprint
Full-text available
Standardization of data and models facilitates effective communication, especially in computational systems biology. However, both the development and consistent use of standards and resources remains challenging. As a result, the amount, quality, and format of the information contained within systems biology models are not consistent and therefore...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Malaria is a major global health problem, with the Plasmodium falciparum protozoan parasite causing the most severe form of the disease. Prevalence of drug-resistant P. falciparum highlights the need to understand the biology of resistance and to identify novel combination therapies that are effective against resistant parasites. Resis...
Article
Full-text available
Antimalarial resistance is a major obstacle in the eradication of the human malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum. Genome amplifications, a type of DNA copy number variation (CNV), facilitate overexpression of drug targets and contribute to parasite survival. Long monomeric A/T tracks are found at the breakpoints of many Plasmodium resistance-con...
Preprint
Full-text available
Malaria is a major global health problem, with the Plasmodium falciparum protozoan parasite causing the most severe form of the disease. Prevalence of drug-resistant P. falciparum highlights the need to understand the biology of resistance and to identify novel combination therapies that are effective against resistant parasites. Resistance has com...
Article
Full-text available
The diversity and number of species present within microbial communities create the potential for a multitude of interspecies metabolic interactions. Here, we develop, apply, and experimentally test a framework for inferring metabolic mechanisms associated with interspecies interactions. We perform pairwise growth and metabolome profiling of co-cul...
Article
Full-text available
Molecular characterization of pathogens such as the malaria parasite can lead to improved biological understanding and novel treatment strategies. However, the distinctive biology of the Plasmodium parasite, including its repetitive genome and the requirement for growth within a host cell, hinders progress toward these goals. Untargeted metabolomic...
Preprint
Full-text available
Metabolomics is increasingly popular for the study of many pathogens. For the malaria parasite, Plasmodium falciparum , both targeted and untargeted metabolite detection has improved our understanding of pathogenesis, host-parasite interactions, and antimalarial drug treatment and resistance. However, purification and analysis procedures for perfor...
Preprint
Full-text available
Metabolic interactions among species are ubiquitous in nature, and the fitness costs and benefits they impose often reinforce and stabilize them over time. These interactions are of particular importance in the human gut, where they have functions ranging from enhancing digestion to preventing (or exacerbating) infections. The diversity and sheer n...
Preprint
Full-text available
BACKGROUND Malaria remains a major public health burden and resistance has emerged to every antimalarial on the market, including the frontline drug artemisinin. Our limited understanding of Plasmodium biology hinders the elucidation of resistance mechanisms. In this regard, systems biology approaches can facilitate the integration of existing expe...
Article
Full-text available
Previous data obtained in our laboratory suggested that there may be constitutive signaling through the myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88 (Myd88)-dependent signaling cascade in murine mammary carcinoma. Here, we extended these findings by showing that, in the absence of an added Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonist, the myddosome complex...
Article
Full-text available
Unlabelled: There is an emerging paradigm that the human microbiome is central to many aspects of health and may have a role in preventing enteric infection. Entamoeba histolytica is a major cause of amebic diarrhea in developing countries. It colonizes the colon lumen in close proximity to the gut microbiota. Interestingly, not all individuals ar...
Article
Previous data in our lab suggested that there may be constitutive signaling through the Myd88 signaling cascade in murine mammary carcinoma. Here we extend these findings by showing that the myddosome complex is preformed in the tumor cells. Using co-immunoprecipitation we found Myd88 associated with IRAK2 and IRAK4. After screening many different...
Article
Previously we reported that Myd88 contributed to growth, metastasis, and expression of CCL2 and CCL5 by mammary carcinoma implying that constitutive signaling through Myd88 contributes to tumor progression. To begin to decipher downstream effects of Myd88 signaling in the tumor cells we used RNA interference and a Myd88 inhibitory peptide and then...

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