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Anita Jones

Researcher at Queensland University of Technology

Publications -  5
Citations -  208

Anita Jones is an academic researcher from Queensland University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ross River virus & Gene. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 183 citations.

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Defective Interfering Viral Particles in Acute Dengue Infections

TL;DR: In this article, short fragments of dengue virus (DENV) RNA containing only key regulatory elements at the 3' and 5' ends of the genome were recovered from the sera of patients infected with any of the four DENV serotypes.
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Molecular evolutionary dynamics of Ross River virus and implications for vaccine efficacy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provided novel Ross River virus (RRV) genome sequences and investigated the evolutionary dynamics of RRV from time-structured E2 gene datasets, concluding that vaccination against RRV is unlikely to result in the rapid antigenic evolution that could compromise the future efficacy of current RRV vaccines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lineage replacement accompanying duplication and rapid fixation of an RNA element in the nsP3 gene in a species of alphavirus.

TL;DR: A sequence of thirty-six nucleotides in the nsP3 gene of Ross River virus (RRV), coding for the amino acid sequence HADTVSLDSTVS, was duplicated some time between 1969 and 1979 coinciding with the appearance of a new lineage of this virus and with a major outbreak of Epidemic Polyarthritis among residents of the Pacific Islands as discussed by the authors.

Lineage replacement accompanying duplication and rapid fixation of an RNA element in the nsP3 gene in a species of alphavirus

TL;DR: The fixation of duplications and insertions in 3′ region of nsP3 genes from all lineages of alphaviruses, suggests they provide some fitness advantage.

Defective interfering viral particles in acute dengue infections

TL;DR: The internal genomic deletions described here are the most extensive defects observed in DENV and may be part of a much broader disease attenuating process that is mediated by defective viruses.