BBSRC Portfolio Analyser
Award details
IAH-funded Studentship: Mathematical modelling of the potential determinants of Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus induced lysis of bovine epithelial cells
Reference
BBS/E/I/00001397
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Dr Simon Gubbins
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution
The Pirbright Institute
Department
The Pirbright Institute Department
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
93,857
Status
Completed
Type
Institute Project
Start date
25/01/2010
End date
24/01/2014
Duration
48 months
Abstract
Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) causes an economically important disease of cloven-hoofed livestock. The virus primarily infects epithelial cells: on the skin around the feet and tongue the virus rapidly replicates, killing the cell and resulting in growing lesions. Eventually the immune response tends to clear the virus from the system and these symptoms gradually disappear. In the soft palate, however, lesions do not occur and the virus can persist inside cells long after the animal has recovered: this has implications for the control of the disease, especially if vaccination is used in an outbreak. An explanation for this bifurcation in behaviour would also contribute to the more general understanding of foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). The project aims to explain why such dramatically divergent virus behaviour occurs in fundamentally similar cells. Building on current theoretical work, a spatiallyexplicit mathematical description of epithelial tissue will be developed and the impact on virus dynamics of distinctive components analysed. This will allow likely factors which differentiate these epithelial regions to be investigated individually in a way not necessarily possible experimentally. Hypotheses postulated by the model will then be tested experimentally in-vitro, building on previous work at the Institute which includes the analysis of cytopathology and quantitative studies identifying early stage virus dynamics.
Summary
unavailable
Committee
Not funded via Committee
Research Topics
Animal Health, Microbiology
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
I accept the
terms and conditions of use
(opens in new window)
export PDF file
back to list
new search