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Dive into the research topics where Lucile Warter is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucile Warter.


Blood | 2011

A reliable ex vivo invasion assay of human reticulocytes by Plasmodium vivax

Bruce Russell; Rossarin Suwanarusk; Céline Borlon; Fabio T. M. Costa; Cindy S. Chu; Marcus J. Rijken; Kanlaya Sriprawat; Lucile Warter; Esther G. L. Koh; Benoit Malleret; Yves Colin; Olivier Bertrand; John H. Adams; Umberto D'Alessandro; Georges Snounou; François Nosten; Laurent Rénia

Currently, there are no reliable RBC invasion assays to guide the discovery of vaccines against Plasmodium vivax, the most prevalent malaria parasite in Asia and South America. Here we describe a protocol for an ex vivo P vivax invasion assay that can be easily deployed in laboratories located in endemic countries. The assay is based on mixing enriched cord blood reticulocytes with matured, trypsin-treated P vivax schizonts concentrated from clinical isolates. The reliability of this assay was demonstrated using a large panel of P vivax isolates freshly collected from patients in Thailand.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Chikungunya virus neutralization antigens and direct cell-to-cell transmission are revealed by human antibody-escape mutants.

Chia Yin Lee; Y. L. K. Kam; Jan Fric; Benoit Malleret; Esther G. L. Koh; Celine Prakash; Wen Xu Huang; Wendy W. L. Lee; Cui Li Lin; Raymond T.P. Lin; Laurent Rénia; Cheng-I Wang; Lisa F. P. Ng; Lucile Warter

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an alphavirus responsible for numerous epidemics throughout Africa and Asia, causing infectious arthritis and reportedly linked with fatal infections in newborns and elderly. Previous studies in animal models indicate that humoral immunity can protect against CHIKV infection, but despite the potential efficacy of B-cell-driven intervention strategies, there are no virus-specific vaccines or therapies currently available. In addition, CHIKV has been reported to elicit long-lasting virus-specific IgM in humans, and to establish long-term persistence in non-human primates, suggesting that the virus might evade immune defenses to establish chronic infections in man. However, the mechanisms of immune evasion potentially employed by CHIKV remain uncharacterized. We previously described two human monoclonal antibodies that potently neutralize CHIKV infection. In the current report, we have characterized CHIKV mutants that escape antibody-dependent neutralization to identify the CHIKV E2 domain B and fusion loop “groove” as the primary determinants of CHIKV interaction with these antibodies. Furthermore, for the first time, we have also demonstrated direct CHIKV cell-to-cell transmission, as a mechanism that involves the E2 domain A and that is associated with viral resistance to antibody-dependent neutralization. Identification of CHIKV sub-domains that are associated with human protective immunity, will pave the way for the development of CHIKV-specific sub-domain vaccination strategies. Moreover, the clear demonstration of CHIKV cell-to-cell transmission and its possible role in the establishment of CHIKV persistence, will also inform the development of future anti-viral interventions. These data shed new light on CHIKV-host interactions that will help to combat human CHIKV infection and inform future studies of CHIKV pathogenesis.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Chikungunya Virus Envelope-Specific Human Monoclonal Antibodies with Broad Neutralization Potency

Lucile Warter; Chia Yin Lee; Rekha Thiagarajan; Marc Grandadam; Serge Lebecque; Raymond T.P. Lin; Sebastien Bertin-Maghit; Lisa F. P. Ng; Jean-Pierre Abastado; Philippe Desprès; Cheng-I Wang; Alessandra Nardin

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an alphavirus responsible for numerous epidemics in Africa and Asia. Infection by CHIKV is often characterized by long-lasting, incapacitating arthritis, and some fatal cases have been described among elderly and newborns. Currently, there is no available vaccine or specific treatment against CHIKV. Blood B cells from a donor with history of CHIKV infection were activated, immortalized, amplified, and cloned. Two human mAbs against CHIKV, 5F10 and 8B10, were identified, sequenced, and expressed in recombinant form for characterization. In a plaque reduction neutralization test, 5F10 and 8B10 show mean IC50 of 72 and 46 ng/ml, respectively. Moreover, both mAbs lead to a strong decrease in extracellular spreading of infectious viral particles from infected to uninfected cells. Importantly, the mAbs neutralize different CHIKV isolates from Singapore, Africa, and Indonesia, as well as O’nyong-nyong virus, but do not recognize other alphaviruses tested. Both mAbs are specific for the CHIKV envelope: 5F10 binds to the E2 glycoprotein ectodomain and 8B10 to E1 and/or E2. In conclusion, these two unique human mAbs strongly, broadly, and specifically neutralize CHIKV infection in vitro and might become possible therapeutic tools against CHIKV infection, especially in individuals at risk for severe disease. Importantly, these mAbs will also represent precious tools for future studies on host–pathogen interactions and the rational design of vaccines against CHIKV.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2013

Use of Human Monoclonal Antibodies to Treat Chikungunya Virus Infection

Jan Fric; Sebastien Bertin-Maghit; Cheng-I Wang; Alessandra Nardin; Lucile Warter

Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is an alphavirus prevalent in tropical regions. It causes an acute febrile disease that, in elderly individuals and newborns, is often associated with severe complications. We previously reported the isolation and characterization of 2 human monoclonal antibodies neutralizing CHIKV in vitro: 5F10 and 8B10. Here, we tested their efficacy in vivo as prophylactic and therapeutic treatments of CHIKV infection in AGR129 mice. In both settings, 5F10 and 8B10 were able to significantly delay CHIKV-driven lethality. Our results support the development of prophylactic and therapeutic treatments for CHIKV infection, using a combination of 5F10 and 8B10.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Plasmablasts Generated during Repeated Dengue Infection Are Virus Glycoprotein–Specific and Bind to Multiple Virus Serotypes

Meihui Xu; Vey Hadinoto; Ramapraba Appanna; Klas Joensson; Ying Xiu Toh; Thavamalar Balakrishnan; Swee Hoe Ong; Lucile Warter; Yee Sin Leo; Cheng-I Wang; Katja Fink

Dengue virus immune protection is specific to the serotype encountered and is thought to persist throughout one’s lifetime. Many serotype cross-reactive memory B cells isolated from humans with previous dengue infection are specific for the nonstructural and the prM structural viral proteins, and they can enhance infection in vitro. However, plasmablasts circulating in enormous numbers during acute secondary infection have not been studied. In this study, we analyzed single plasmablasts from two patients by sorting the cells for Ig sequence analysis and for recombinant expression of Abs. In contrast to memory B cells, most plasmablast-derived Abs bound to the structural E protein of dengue, and protection experiments in mice revealed that virus serotypes encountered during past infections were neutralized more efficiently than were the serotypes of the current infection. Together with genetic analyses, we show evidence that plasmablasts in dengue patients are a polyclonal pool of activated E protein–specific memory B cells and that their specificity is not representative of the serum Abs secreted by long-lived plasma cells in the memory phase. These results contribute to the understanding of the phenomenon of original antigenic sin in dengue.


Immunologic Research | 2012

Human poly- and cross-reactive anti-viral antibodies and their impact on protection and pathology

Lucile Warter; Ramapraba Appanna; Katja Fink

Anti-viral immune responses have been studied extensively in order to inform rational vaccine design. Following viral infection, the balance of pathologic and protective antibody responses in the host can critically influence clinical outcomes. Comparisons of the different classes of antibodies produced after acute or chronic viral infections have uncovered common features of anti-viral responses, but these analyses have also revealed temporal differences in neutralizing antibody production, variable neutralization potency and differential induction of cross-reactive antibodies. Cross-reactive antibodies are known to play crucial protective roles in host responses to chronic viral infections; recent studies in human immunodeficiency virus long-term controllers have identified a novel class of broadly neutralizing antibodies generated from highly mutated and selected memory B cells. Here, we summarize the various roles played by cross- and poly-reactive antibodies in acute and persistent viral infections, with a focus on the potential contribution of these antibodies to dengue virus (DENV) immunopathology and host protection. Since host antibodies profoundly alter the course of viral infections, effective DENV vaccine design will require a better understanding of the origin, affinity maturation and protective potential of the poly-reactive and cross-reactive antibodies induced by different interventions.


Archive | 2010

Binding molecules against Chikungunya virus and uses thereof

Lucile Warter; Jean-Pierre Abastado; Alessandra Nardin; Cheng-I Wang


Therapy | 2011

Could new antibodies be key to treating Chikungunya

Lucile Warter; Alessandra Nardin


Archive | 2011

Potency Neutralization Monoclonal Antibodies with Broad Chikungunya Virus Envelope-Specific Human

Cheng-I Wang; Alessandra Nardin; Lisa F. P. Ng; Jean-Pierre Abastado; Serge Lebecque; Raymond T.P. Lin; Lucile Warter; Chia Yin Lee; Rekha Thiagarajan


Archive | 2010

Bindemoleküle gegen Chikungunya-Virus und Verwendungen davon

Lucile Warter; Jean-Pierre Abastado; Alessandra Nardin; Cheng-I Wang

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Chia Yin Lee

Singapore Immunology Network

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Benoit Malleret

National University of Singapore

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Jan Fric

Singapore Immunology Network

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