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Dive into the research topics where Ying Xiu Toh is active.

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Featured researches published by Ying Xiu Toh.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

Rational Design of a Live Attenuated Dengue Vaccine: 2 '-O-Methyltransferase Mutants Are Highly Attenuated and Immunogenic in Mice and Macaques

Roland Züst; Hongping Dong; Xiao-Feng Li; David C. Chang; Bo Zhang; Thavamalar Balakrishnan; Ying Xiu Toh; Tao Jiang; Shi-Hua Li; Yong Qiang Deng; Brett R. Ellis; Esther M. Ellis; Michael Poidinger; Francesca Zolezzi; Cheng-Feng Qin; Pei Yong Shi; Katja Fink

Dengue virus is transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes and infects at least 100 million people every year. Progressive urbanization in Asia and South-Central America and the geographic expansion of Aedes mosquito habitats have accelerated the global spread of dengue, resulting in a continuously increasing number of cases. A cost-effective, safe vaccine conferring protection with ideally a single injection could stop dengue transmission. Current vaccine candidates require several booster injections or do not provide protection against all four serotypes. Here we demonstrate that dengue virus mutants lacking 2′-O-methyltransferase activity are highly sensitive to type I IFN inhibition. The mutant viruses are attenuated in mice and rhesus monkeys and elicit a strong adaptive immune response. Monkeys immunized with a single dose of 2′-O-methyltransferase mutant virus showed 100% sero-conversion even when a dose as low as 1,000 plaque forming units was administrated. Animals were fully protected against a homologous challenge. Furthermore, mosquitoes feeding on blood containing the mutant virus were not infected, whereas those feeding on blood containing wild-type virus were infected and thus able to transmit it. These results show the potential of 2′-O-methyltransferase mutant virus as a safe, rationally designed dengue vaccine that restrains itself due to the increased susceptibility to the hosts innate immune response.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Dengue virus activates polyreactive, natural IgG B cells after primary and secondary infection.

Thavamalar Balakrishnan; Dennis Berbulla Bela-ong; Ying Xiu Toh; Marie Flamand; Shamala Devi; Mickey Koh; Martin L. Hibberd; Eng Eong Ooi; Jenny Guek Hong Low; Yee Sin Leo; Feng Gu; Katja Fink

Background Dengue virus is transmitted by mosquitoes and has four serotypes. Cross-protection to other serotypes lasting for a few months is observed following infection with one serotype. There is evidence that low-affinity T and/or B cells from primary infections contribute to the severe syndromes often associated with secondary dengue infections. such pronounced immune-mediated enhancement suggests a dengue-specific pattern of immune cell activation. This study investigates the acute and early convalescent B cell response leading to the generation of cross-reactive and neutralizing antibodies following dengue infection. Methodology/Principal Findings We assayed blood samples taken from dengue patients with primary or secondary infection during acute disease and convalescence and compared them to samples from patients presenting with non-dengue related fever. Dengue induced massive early plasmablast formation, which correlated with the appearance of polyclonal, cross-reactive IgG for both primary and secondary infection. Surprisingly, the contribution of IgG to the neutralizing titer 4–7 days after fever onset was more than 50% even after primary infection. Conclusions/Significance Poly-reactive and virus serotype cross-reactive IgG are an important component of the innate response in humans during both primary and secondary dengue infection, and “innate specificities” seem to constitute part of the adaptive response in dengue. While of potential importance for protection during secondary infection, cross-reactive B cells will also compete with highly neutralizing B cells and possibly interfere with their development.


Journal of Virology | 2014

Type I Interferon Signals in Macrophages and Dendritic Cells Control Dengue Virus Infection: Implications for a New Mouse Model To Test Dengue Vaccines

Roland Züst; Ying Xiu Toh; Iris Valdés; Daniela Cerny; Julia Heinrich; Lisset Hermida; Ernesto Marcos; Gerardo Guillén; Ulrich Kalinke; Pei Yong Shi; Katja Fink

ABSTRACT Dengue virus (DENV) infects an estimated 400 million people every year, causing prolonged morbidity and sometimes mortality. Development of an effective vaccine has been hampered by the lack of appropriate small animal models; mice are naturally not susceptible to DENV and only become infected if highly immunocompromised. Mouse models lacking both type I and type II interferon (IFN) receptors (AG129 mice) or the type I IFN receptor (IFNAR−/− mice) are susceptible to infection with mouse-adapted DENV strains but are severely impaired in mounting functional immune responses to the virus and thus are of limited use for study. Here we used conditional deletion of the type I IFN receptor (IFNAR) on individual immune cell subtypes to generate a minimally manipulated mouse model that is susceptible to DENV while retaining global immune competence. Mice lacking IFNAR expression on CD11c+ dendritic cells and LysM+ macrophages succumbed completely to DENV infection, while mice deficient in the receptor on either CD11c+ or LysM+ cells were susceptible to infection but often resolved viremia and recovered fully from infection. Conditional IFNAR mice responded with a swift and strong CD8+ T-cell response to viral infection, compared to a weak response in IFNAR−/− mice. Furthermore, mice lacking IFNAR on either CD11c+ or LysM+ cells were also sufficiently immunocompetent to raise a protective immune response to a candidate subunit vaccine against DENV-2. These data demonstrate that mice with conditional deficiencies in expression of the IFNAR represent improved models for the study of DENV immunology and screening of vaccine candidates. IMPORTANCE Dengue virus infects 400 million people every year worldwide, causing 100 million clinically apparent infections, which can be fatal if untreated. Despite many years of research, there are no effective vaccine and no antiviral treatment available for dengue. Development of vaccines has been hampered in particular by the lack of a suitable small animal model. Mouse models used to test dengue vaccine are deficient in interferon (IFN) type I signaling and severely immunocompromised and therefore likely not ideal for the testing of vaccines. In this study, we explored alternative models lacking the IFN receptor only on certain cell types. We show that mice lacking the IFN receptor on either CD11c- or LysM-expressing cells (conditional IFNAR mice) are susceptible to dengue virus infection. Importantly, we demonstrate that conditional IFN receptor knockout mice generate a better immune response to live virus and a candidate dengue vaccine compared to IFNAR mice and are resistant to subsequent challenge.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Susceptibility and Response of Human Blood Monocyte Subsets to Primary Dengue Virus Infection

Kok Loon Wong; Weiqiang Chen; Thavamalar Balakrishnan; Ying Xiu Toh; Katjia Fink; Siew Cheng Wong

Human blood monocytes play a central role in dengue infections and form the majority of virus infected cells in the blood. Human blood monocytes are heterogeneous and divided into CD16− and CD16+ subsets. Monocyte subsets play distinct roles during disease, but it is not currently known if monocyte subsets differentially contribute to dengue protection and pathogenesis. Here, we compared the susceptibility and response of the human CD16− and CD16+ blood monocyte subsets to primary dengue virus in vitro. We found that both monocyte subsets were equally susceptible to dengue virus (DENV2 NGC), and capable of supporting the initial production of new infective virus particles. Both monocyte subsets produced anti-viral factors, including IFN-α, CXCL10 and TRAIL. However, CD16+ monocytes were the major producers of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in response to dengue virus, including IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6, CCL2, 3 and 4. The susceptibility of both monocyte subsets to infection was increased after IL-4 treatment, but this increase was more profound for the CD16+ monocyte subset, particularly at early time points after virus exposure. These findings reveal the differential role that monocyte subsets might play during dengue disease.


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.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2014

Dengue serotype cross-reactive, anti-E protein antibodies confound specific immune memory for 1 year after infection

Ying Xiu Toh; Victor C. Gan; Thavamalar Balakrishnan; Roland Zuest; Michael Poidinger; Solomonraj Wilson; Ramapraba Appanna; Tun Linn Thein; Adrian Ong; Lee Ching Ng; Yee Sin Leo; Katja Fink

Dengue virus has four serotypes and is endemic globally in tropical countries. Neither a specific treatment nor an approved vaccine is available, and correlates of protection are not established. The standard neutralization assay cannot differentiate between serotype-specific and serotype cross-reactive antibodies in patients early after infection, leading to an overestimation of the long-term serotype-specific protection of an antibody response. It is known that the cross-reactive response in patients is temporary but few studies have assessed kinetics and potential changes in serum antibody specificity over time. To better define the specificity of polyclonal antibodies during disease and after recovery, longitudinal samples from patients with primary or secondary DENV-2 infection were collected over a period of 1 year. We found that serotype cross-reactive antibodies peaked 3 weeks after infection and subsided within 1 year. Since secondary patients rapidly produced antibodies specific for the virus envelope (E) protein, an E-specific ELISA was superior compared to a virus particle-specific ELISA to identify patients with secondary infections. Dengue infection triggered a massive activation and mobilization of both naïve and memory B cells possibly from lymphoid organs into the blood, providing an explanation for the surge of circulating plasmablasts and the increase in cross-reactive E protein-specific antibodies.


Vaccine | 2015

Tetravalent dengue DIIIC protein together with alum and ODN elicits a Th1 response and neutralizing antibodies in mice.

Roland Zuest; Iris Valdés; David Skibinski; Yufang Lin; Ying Xiu Toh; Katherine Chan; Lisset Hermida; John Connolly; Gerardo Guillén; Katja Fink

Dengue disease is a global challenge for healthcare systems particularly during outbreaks, and millions of dollars are spent every year for vector control. An efficient and safe vaccine that is cost-effective could resolve the burden that dengue virus imposes on affected countries. We describe here the immunogenicity of a tetravalent formulation of a recombinant fusion protein consisting of E domain III and the capsid protein of dengue serotypes 1-4 (Tetra DIIIC). E domain III is an epitope for efficient neutralizing antibodies while the capsid protein contains T cell epitopes. Besides combining B and T cell epitopes, Tetra DIIIC is highly immunogenic due to its aggregate form and a two-component adjuvant. Following previous studies assessing the monovalent DIIIC formulations, we addressed here the quality and breadth of the T cell- and antibody response of Tetra DIIIC in mice. Tetra DIIIC induced a Th1-type response against all four DENV serotypes and dengue-specific antibodies were predominantly IgG1 and IgG2a and neutralizing, while the induction of neutralizing antibodies was dependent on IFN signaling. Importantly, the Th1 and IgG1/IgG2a profile of the DIIIC vaccine approach is similar to an efficient natural anti-dengue response.


npj Vaccines | 2017

A potent neutralizing antibody with therapeutic potential against all four serotypes of dengue virus

Meihui Xu; Roland Zuest; Sumathy Velumani; Farhana Tukijan; Ying Xiu Toh; Ramapraba Appanna; Ern Yu Tan; Daniela Cerny; Paul A. MacAry; Cheng-I Wang; Katja Fink

A therapy for dengue is still elusive. We describe the neutralizing and protective capacity of a dengue serotype-cross-reactive antibody isolated from the plasmablasts of a patient. Antibody SIgN-3C neutralized all four dengue virus serotypes at nano to picomolar concentrations and significantly decreased viremia of all serotypes in adult mice when given 2 days after infection. Moreover, mice were protected from pathology and death from a lethal dengue virus-2 infection. To avoid potential Fc-mediated uptake of immune complexes and ensuing enhanced infection, we introduced a LALA mutation in the Fc part. SIgN-3C-LALA was as efficient as the non-modified antibody in neutralizing dengue virus and in protecting mice while antibody-dependent enhancement was completely abrogated. The epitope of the antibody includes conserved amino acids in all three domains of the glycoprotein, which can explain its cross-reactivity. SIgN-3C-LALA neutralizes dengue virus both pre and post-attachment to host cells. These attributes likely contribute to the remarkable protective capacity of SIgN-3C.Dengue: A single vaccine candidate for all strainsAn antibody-vaccine candidate has been discovered that neutralizes and confers protection against all four strains of dengue virus. Katja Fink, of the Singapore Immunology Network and Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, describes this as the first time a highly neutralizing antibody has shown efficacy against all four strains. Fink’s team, consisting of scientists from institutions across the country, tested the candidate (SIgN-3C-LALA) in both pre-exposure and post-exposure mouse models. The findings showed it reduced blood-virus levels, protected from lethal infection, and also offered improved safety—without compromising efficacy—the latter by way of intentional mutations to the antibody’s structure. As the global cost of dengue treatment is as high as 9 billion US


Scientific Reports | 2017

Skin dendritic cell and T cell activation associated with dengue shock syndrome

Huynh Thi Le Duyen; Daniela Cerny; Jassia Pang; Sumathy Velumani; Ying Xiu Toh; Phan Tu Qui; Nguyen Van Hao; Cameron P. Simmons; Muzlifah Haniffa; Bridget Wills; Katja Fink

per year, further study is needed to evaluate the suitability of the antibody candidate for the treatment of dengue in humans.


Journal of Virology | 2016

Protective Capacity of the Human Anamnestic Antibody Response during Acute Dengue Virus Infection

Meihui Xu; Roland Züst; Ying Xiu Toh; Jennifer M. Pfaff; Kristen M. Kahle; Edgar Davidson; Benjamin J. Doranz; Sumathy Velumani; Farhana Tukijan; Cheng-I Wang; Katja Fink

The pathogenesis of severe dengue remains unclear, particularly the mechanisms underlying the plasma leakage that results in hypovolaemic shock in a small proportion of individuals. Maximal leakage occurs several days after peak viraemia implicating immunological pathways. Skin is a highly vascular organ and also an important site of immune reactions with a high density of dendritic cells (DCs), macrophages and T cells. We obtained skin biopsies and contemporaneous blood samples from patients within 24 hours of onset of dengue shock syndrome (DSS), and from healthy controls. We analyzed cell subsets by flow cytometry, and soluble mediators and antibodies by ELISA; the percentage of migratory CD1a+ dermal DCs was significantly decreased in the DSS patients, and skin CD8+ T cells were activated, but there was no accumulation of dengue-specific antibodies. Inflammatory monocytic cells were not observed infiltrating the skin of DSS cases on whole-mount histology, although CD14dim cells disappeared from blood.

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Daniela Cerny

Nanyang Technological University

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Yee Sin Leo

National University of Singapore

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Roland Züst

University of St. Gallen

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