Daniel O'Connor
BSc AFHEA MSc DPhil (OXON)
Associate Professor | Head of Bioinformatics
Daniel has both a wet-laboratory and bioinformatics background, his main research interests relate to the analysis of contemporary, high-dimensional datasets (e.g. genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic) to elucidate the molecular determinants of vaccine responses.
UTILISING THE SYSTEMS TOOLKIT TO ELUCIDATE THE MECHANISMS UNDERLYING RESPONSES TO INFANT IMMUNISATION
Vaccine responses and the persistence of vaccine-immunity vary considerably between individuals, this is particularly relevant in childhood, as infants generally have lower magnitude immune responses that wane more rapidly than adults. My research utilises contemporary methods, such as genome-wide genotyping and next-generation sequencing, to explore the mechanisms underlying immunological and physiological responses to childhood vaccinations.
Key publications
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Gene expression profiling reveals insights into infant immunological and febrile responses to group B meningococcal vaccine.
Journal article
O'Connor D. et al, (2020), Mol Syst Biol, 16
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Common Genetic Variations Associated with the Persistence of Immunity following Childhood Immunization
Journal article
O'Connor D. et al, (2019), Cell Reports
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RNA2HLA: HLA-based quality control of RNA-seq datasets
Journal article
Chelysheva I. et al, (2021), Briefings in Bioinformatics
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The effect of H1N1 vaccination on serum miRNA expression in children: A tale of caution for microRNA microarray studies.
Journal article
Drury RE. et al, (2019), PLoS One, 14
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High-dimensional assessment of B-cell responses to quadrivalent meningococcal conjugate and plain polysaccharide vaccine.
Journal article
O'Connor D. et al, (2017), Genome Med, 9, 11 - 11
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Changes in epigenetic profiles throughout early childhood and their relationship to the response to pneumococcal vaccination
Journal article
Pischedda S. et al, (2021), Clinical Epigenetics, 13
Recent publications
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Association between disease severity and co-detection of respiratory pathogens in infants with RSV infection
Preprint
Lin G-L. et al, (2023)
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Correction to: Febrile illness in high-risk children: a prospective, international observational study.
Journal article
van der Velden FJS. et al, (2023), Eur J Pediatr, 182, 555 - 556
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Transcriptomic response and immunological responses to chimpanzee adenovirus- and MVA viral-vectored vaccines for RSV in healthy adults.
Journal article
Green C. et al, (2023), Clin Exp Immunol