Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Wayne D. Crill is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Wayne D. Crill.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Localization and Characterization of Flavivirus Envelope Glycoprotein Cross-Reactive Epitopes

Wayne D. Crill; Gwong-Jen J. Chang

ABSTRACT The flavivirus E glycoprotein, the primary antigen that induces protective immunity, is essential for membrane fusion and mediates binding to cellular receptors. Human flavivirus infections stimulate virus species-specific as well as flavivirus cross-reactive immune responses. Flavivirus cross-reactive antibodies in human sera create a serious problem for serodiagnosis, especially for secondary flavivirus infections, due to the difficulty of differentiating primary from secondary cross-reactive serum antibodies. The presence of subneutralizing levels of flavivirus cross-reactive serum antibodies may result in a dramatic increase in the severity of secondary flavivirus infections via antibody-dependent enhancement. An understanding of flavivirus E-glycoprotein cross-reactive epitopes is therefore critical for improving public health responses to these serious diseases. We identified six E-glycoprotein residues that are incorporated into three distinct flavivirus cross-reactive epitopes. Two of these epitopes which are recognized by distinct monoclonal antibodies contain overlapping continuous residues located within the highly conserved fusion peptide. The third epitope consists of discontinuous residues that are structurally related to the strictly conserved tryptophan at dengue virus serotype 2 E-glycoprotein position 231.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Humoral immune responses of dengue fever patients using epitope-specific serotype-2 virus-like particle antigens.

Wayne D. Crill; Holly R. Hughes; Mark J. Delorey; Gwong-Jen J. Chang

Dengue virus (DENV) is a serious mosquito-borne pathogen causing significant global disease burden, either as classic dengue fever (DF) or in its most severe manifestation dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Nearly half of the worlds population is at risk of dengue disease and there are estimated to be millions of infections annually; a situation which will continue to worsen with increasing expansion of the mosquito vectors and epidemic DF/DHF. Currently there are no available licensed vaccines or antivirals for dengue, although significant effort has been directed toward the development of safe and efficacious dengue vaccines for over 30 years. Promising vaccine candidates are in development and testing phases, but a better understanding of immune responses to DENV infection and vaccination is needed. Humoral immune responses to DENV infection are complex and may exacerbate pathogenicity, yet are essential for immune protection. In this report, we develop DENV-2 envelope (E) protein epitope-specific antigens and measure immunoglobulin responses to three distinct epitopes in DENV-2 infected human serum samples. Immunoglobulin responses to DENV-2 infection exhibited significant levels of individual variation. Antibody populations targeting broadly cross-reactive epitopes centered on the fusion peptide in structural domain II were large, highly variable, and greater in primary than in secondary DENV-2 infected sera. E protein domain III cross-reactive immunoglobulin populations were similarly variable and much larger in IgM than in IgG. DENV-2 specific domain III IgG formed a very small proportion of the antibody response yet was significantly correlated with DENV-2 neutralization, suggesting that the highly protective IgG recognizing this epitope in murine studies plays a role in humans as well. This report begins to tease apart complex humoral immune responses to DENV infection and is thus important for improving our understanding of dengue disease and immunological correlates of protection, relevant to DENV vaccine development and testing.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2007

Differentiation of West Nile and St. Louis Encephalitis Virus Infections by Use of Noninfectious Virus-Like Particles with Reduced Cross-Reactivity

Jill A. Roberson; Wayne D. Crill; Gwong-Jen J. Chang

ABSTRACT Differential diagnosis of St. Louis encephalitis virus (SLEV) and West Nile virus (WNV) infections can be complicated due to the high degree of cross-reactivity observed in most serodiagnostic assays. In an effort to provide a more specific diagnostic test, we developed virus-like particle (VLP) antigens with reduced cross-reactivity for both SLEV and WNV by identifying and mutating envelope protein amino acids within the cross-reactive epitopes of VLP expression plasmids. To determine the serodiagnostic discriminatory ability of the antigens with reduced cross-reactivity, a panel of 134 human serum samples collected predominately from North American patients with SLEV or WNV infections was used to evaluate the performance of these novel antigens in imunoglobulin M antibody-capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays. Positive/negative ratios and the resulting diagnostic classifications were compared between the mutant and the wild-type (WT) VLPs. The mutant VLP antigens were more specific, with higher positive predictive values and higher likelihood ratios than the WT VLP antigens. Both the SLEV and WNV mutant VLPs greatly reduced the observed cross-reactivity, significantly increasing the specificity and sensitivity of the assay. The use of these novel VLP antigens with reduced cross-reactivity in these serodiagnostic assays and others should lead to more accurate diagnoses of current infections, thereby reducing the need for time-consuming and cumbersome confirmatory plaque-reduction neutralization tests to differentiate between SLEV and WNV infections in North America.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2012

Sculpting humoral immunity through dengue vaccination to enhance protective immunity

Wayne D. Crill; Holly R. Hughes; Nicole B. Trainor; Brent S. Davis; Matt T. Whitney; Gwong-Jen J. Chang

Dengue viruses (DENV) are the most important mosquito transmitted viral pathogens infecting humans. DENV infection produces a spectrum of disease, most commonly causing a self-limiting flu-like illness known as dengue fever; yet with increased frequency, manifesting as life-threatening dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF). Waning cross-protective immunity from any of the four dengue serotypes may enhance subsequent infection with another heterologous serotype to increase the probability of DHF. Decades of effort to develop dengue vaccines are reaching the finishing line with multiple candidates in clinical trials. Nevertheless, concerns remain that imbalanced immunity, due to the prolonged prime-boost schedules currently used in clinical trials, could leave some vaccinees temporarily unprotected or with increased susceptibility to enhanced disease. Here we develop a DENV serotype 1 (DENV-1) DNA vaccine with the immunodominant cross-reactive B cell epitopes associated with immune enhancement removed. We compare wild-type (WT) with this cross-reactivity reduced (CRR) vaccine and demonstrate that both vaccines are equally protective against lethal homologous DENV-1 challenge. Under conditions mimicking natural exposure prior to acquiring protective immunity, WT vaccinated mice enhanced a normally sub-lethal heterologous DENV-2 infection resulting in DHF-like disease and 95% mortality in AG129 mice. However, CRR vaccinated mice exhibited redirected serotype-specific and protective immunity, and significantly reduced morbidity and mortality not differing from naїve mice. Thus, we demonstrate in an in vivo DENV disease model, that non-protective vaccine-induced immunity can prime vaccinees for enhanced DHF-like disease and that CRR DNA immunization significantly reduces this potential vaccine safety concern. The sculpting of immune memory by the modified vaccine and resulting redirection of humoral immunity provide insight into DENV vaccine-induced immune responses.


Journal of General Virology | 2012

Mutation analysis of the cross-reactive epitopes of Japanese encephalitis virus envelope glycoprotein.

Shyan-Song Chiou; Yi-Chin Fan; Wayne D. Crill; Ruey-Yi Chang; Gwong-Jen J. Chang

Group and serocomplex cross-reactive epitopes have been identified in the envelope (E) protein of several flaviviruses and have proven critical in vaccine and diagnostic antigen development. Here, we performed site-directed mutagenesis across the E gene of a recombinant expression plasmid that encodes the Japanese encephalitis virus (JEV) premembrane (prM) and E proteins and produces JEV virus-like particles (VLPs). Mutations were introduced at I135 and E138 in domain I; W101, G104, G106 and L107 in domain II; and T305, E306, K312, A315, S329, S331, G332 and D389 in domain III. None of the mutant JEV VLPs demonstrated reduced activity to the five JEV type-specific mAbs tested. Substitutions at W101, especially W101G, reduced reactivity dramatically with all of the flavivirus group cross-reactive mAbs. The group and JEV serocomplex cross-reactive mAbs examined recognized five and six different overlapping epitopes, respectively. Among five group cross-reactive epitopes, amino acids located in domains I, II and III were involved in one, five and three epitopes, respectively. Recognition by six JEV serocomplex cross-reactive mAbs was reduced by amino acid substitutions in domains II and III. These results suggest that amino acid residues located in the fusion loop of E domain II are the most critical for recognition by group cross-reactive mAbs, followed by residues of domains III and I. The amino acid residues of both domains II and III of the E protein were shown to be important in the binding of JEV serocomplex cross-reactive mAbs.


Journal of General Virology | 2007

A detailed mutagenesis study of flavivirus cross-reactive epitopes using West Nile virus-like particles.

Wayne D. Crill; Nicole B. Trainor; Gwong-Jen J. Chang


Virology | 2007

Mutation analysis of the fusion domain region of St. Louis encephalitis virus envelope protein

Nicole B. Trainor; Wayne D. Crill; Jill A. Roberson; Gwong-Jen J. Chang


Archive | 2005

Localization and characterization of flavivirus envelope glycoprotein cross-reactive epitopes and methods for their use

Gwong-Jen J. Chang; Wayne D. Crill


Archive | 2012

DENGUE VIRUS E-GLYCOPROTEIN POLYPEPTIDES CONTAINING MUTATIONS THAT ELIMINATE IMMUNODOMINANT CROSS-REACTIVE EPITOPES

Gwong-Jen J. Chang; Wayne D. Crill; Holly R. Hughes; Brent S. Davis


Future Virology | 2015

Can reductions in the cross-reactivity of flavivirus structural proteins lead to improved safety and immunogenicity of tetravalent dengue vaccine?

Day-Yu Chao; Wayne D. Crill; Brent S. Davis; Gwong-Jen J. Chang

Collaboration


Dive into the Wayne D. Crill's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gwong-Jen J. Chang

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brent S. Davis

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Holly R. Hughes

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nicole B. Trainor

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shyan-Song Chiou

National Chung Hsing University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jill A. Roberson

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Day-Yu Chao

National Taiwan University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ruey-Yi Chang

National Dong Hwa University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yi-Chin Fan

National Chung Hsing University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge