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Dive into the research topics where Yung Shwen Ho is active.

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Featured researches published by Yung Shwen Ho.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2010

Both CD31+ and CD31- Naive CD4+ T Cells Are Persistent HIV Type 1-Infected Reservoirs in Individuals Receiving Antiretroviral Therapy

Fiona Wightman; Ajantha Solomon; Gabriela Khoury; Justin A. Green; Lachlan Robert Gray; Paul R. Gorry; Yung Shwen Ho; Nitin K. Saksena; Jennifer Hoy; Suzanne M. Crowe; Paul U. Cameron; Sharon R. Lewin

BACKGROUND Naive T cell recovery is critical for successful immune reconstitution after antiretroviral therapy (ART), but the relative contribution of CD31(+) and CD31⁻ naive T cells to immune reconstitution and viral persistence is unknown. METHODS In a cross-sectional (n = 94) and longitudinal (n = 10) study of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients before and after ART, we examined the ratio of CD31(+) to CD31⁻ naive CD4(+) T cells. In the longitudinal cohort we then quantified the concentration of HIV-1 DNA in each cell subset and performed single-genome amplification of virus from memory and naive T cells. RESULTS Patients receiving ART had a higher proportion of CD31(+) CD4(+) T cells than HIV-1-infected individuals naive to ART and uninfected control subjects (P < .001 and .007, respectively). After 24 months of ART, the proportion of CD31(+) naive CD4(+) T cells did not change, the concentration of HIV-1 DNA in memory CD4(+) T cells significantly decreased over time (P < .001), and there was no change in the concentration of HIV-1 DNA in CD31(+) or CD31⁻ naive CD4(+) T cells (P = .751 and .251, respectively). Single-genome amplification showed no evidence of virus compartmentalization in memory and naive T cell subsets before or after ART. CONCLUSIONS After ART, both CD31(+) and CD31⁻ naive CD4(+) T cells expand, and both subsets represent a stable, persistent reservoir of HIV-1.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Adaptation of the genetically tractable malaria pathogen Plasmodium knowlesi to continuous culture in human erythrocytes

Robert W. Moon; Joanna Hall; Farania Rangkuti; Yung Shwen Ho; Neil Almond; G. H. Mitchell; Arnab Pain; Anthony A. Holder; Michael J. Blackman

Research into the aetiological agent of the most widespread form of severe malaria, Plasmodium falciparum, has benefitted enormously from the ability to culture and genetically manipulate blood-stage forms of the parasite in vitro. However, most malaria outside Africa is caused by a distinct Plasmodium species, Plasmodium vivax, and it has become increasingly apparent that zoonotic infection by the closely related simian parasite Plasmodium knowlesi is a frequent cause of life-threatening malaria in regions of southeast Asia. Neither of these important malarial species can be cultured in human cells in vitro, requiring access to primates with the associated ethical and practical constraints. We report the successful adaptation of P. knowlesi to continuous culture in human erythrocytes. Human-adapted P. knowlesi clones maintain their capacity to replicate in monkey erythrocytes and can be genetically modified with unprecedented efficiency, providing an important and unique model for studying conserved aspects of malarial biology as well as species-specific features of an emerging pathogen.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2014

Assembly of the Genome of the Disease Vector Aedes aegypti onto a Genetic Linkage Map Allows Mapping of Genes Affecting Disease Transmission

Punita Juneja; Jewelna Osei-Poku; Yung Shwen Ho; Cristina V. Ariani; William J. Palmer; Arnab Pain; Francis M. Jiggins

The mosquito Aedes aegypti transmits some of the most important human arboviruses, including dengue, yellow fever and chikungunya viruses. It has a large genome containing many repetitive sequences, which has resulted in the genome being poorly assembled — there are 4,758 scaffolds, few of which have been assigned to a chromosome. To allow the mapping of genes affecting disease transmission, we have improved the genome assembly by scoring a large number of SNPs in recombinant progeny from a cross between two strains of Ae. aegypti, and used these to generate a genetic map. This revealed a high rate of misassemblies in the current genome, where, for example, sequences from different chromosomes were found on the same scaffold. Once these were corrected, we were able to assign 60% of the genome sequence to chromosomes and approximately order the scaffolds along the chromosome. We found that there are very large regions of suppressed recombination around the centromeres, which can extend to as much as 47% of the chromosome. To illustrate the utility of this new genome assembly, we mapped a gene that makes Ae. aegypti resistant to the human parasite Brugia malayi, and generated a list of candidate genes that could be affecting the trait.


HIV/AIDS : Research and Palliative Care | 2010

HIV reservoirs in vivo and new strategies for possible eradication of HIV from the reservoir sites

Nitin K. Saksena; Bin Wang; Li Zhou; Maly Soedjono; Yung Shwen Ho; Viviane Conceicao

Even though the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) provides a complete control of plasma viremia to below detectable levels (<40 copies/mL plasma), there is an unequal distribution of all antiretroviral drugs across diverse cellular and anatomic compartments in vivo. The main consequence of this is the acquisition of resistance by HIV to all known classes of currently prescribed antiretroviral drugs and the establishment of HIV reservoirs in vivo. HIV has a distinct advantage of surviving in the host via both pre-and postintegration latency. The postintegration latency is caused by inert and metabolically inactive provirus, which cannot be accessed either by the immune system or the therapeutics. This integrated provirus provides HIV with a safe haven in the host where it is incessantly challenged by its immune selection pressure and also by HAART. Thus, the provirus is one of the strategies for viral concealment in the host and the provirus can be rekindled, through unknown stimuli, to create progeny for productive infection of the host. Thus, the reservoir establishment remains the biggest impediment to HIV eradication from the host. This review provides an overview of HIV reservoir sites and discusses both the virtues and problems associated with therapies/strategies targeting these reservoir sites in vivo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Normocyte-binding protein required for human erythrocyte invasion by the zoonotic malaria parasite Plasmodium knowlesi.

Robert W. Moon; Hazem Sharaf; Claire H. Hastings; Yung Shwen Ho; Mridul Nair; Zineb Rchiad; Ellen Knuepfer; Abhinay Ramaprasad; Franziska Mohring; Amirah Amir; Noor A. Yusuf; Joanna Hall; Neil Almond; Yee Ling Lau; Arnab Pain; Michael J. Blackman; Anthony A. Holder

Significance Plasmodium knowlesi is a parasite that naturally infects cynomolgus monkeys but is also a major cause of severe zoonotic malaria in humans in South East Asia. Comparing the genomes of parasites restricted to growth in culture with cynomolgus RBCs and those adapted to growth in human RBCs identified a gene specifically required for invasion of human RBCs, a process that is critical for parasite replication. This gene encodes normocyte-binding protein Xa, a protein previously shown to bind human RBCs and implicated in invasion. Disruption of this gene blocks invasion of human but not cynomolgus RBCs, thus confirming a key mediator of human infection and a potential target for inclusion in vaccines to prevent human infection. The dominant cause of malaria in Malaysia is now Plasmodium knowlesi, a zoonotic parasite of cynomolgus macaque monkeys found throughout South East Asia. Comparative genomic analysis of parasites adapted to in vitro growth in either cynomolgus or human RBCs identified a genomic deletion that includes the gene encoding normocyte-binding protein Xa (NBPXa) in parasites growing in cynomolgus RBCs but not in human RBCs. Experimental deletion of the NBPXa gene in parasites adapted to growth in human RBCs (which retain the ability to grow in cynomolgus RBCs) restricted them to cynomolgus RBCs, demonstrating that this gene is selectively required for parasite multiplication and growth in human RBCs. NBPXa-null parasites could bind to human RBCs, but invasion of these cells was severely impaired. Therefore, NBPXa is identified as a key mediator of P. knowlesi human infection and may be a target for vaccine development against this emerging pathogen.


BMC Genomics | 2010

Hierarchical kernel mixture models for the prediction of AIDS disease progression using HIV structural gp120 profiles

Paul D. Yoo; Yung Shwen Ho; Jason W. P. Ng; Michael A. Charleston; Nitin K. Saksena; Pengyi Yang; Albert Y. Zomaya

Changes to the glycosylation profile on HIV gp120 can influence viral pathogenesis and alter AIDS disease progression. The characterization of glycosylation differences at the sequence level is inadequate as the placement of carbohydrates is structurally complex. However, no structural framework is available to date for the study of HIV disease progression. In this study, we propose a novel machine-learning based framework for the prediction of AIDS disease progression in three stages (RP, SP, and LTNP) using the HIV structural gp120 profile. This new intelligent framework proves to be accurate and provides an important benchmark for predicting AIDS disease progression computationally. The model is trained using a novel HIV gp120 glycosylation structural profile to detect possible stages of AIDS disease progression for the target sequences of HIV+ individuals. The performance of the proposed model was compared to seven existing different machine-learning models on newly proposed gp120-Benchmark_1 dataset in terms of error-rate (MSE), accuracy (CCI), stability (STD), and complexity (TBM). The novel framework showed better predictive performance with 67.82% CCI, 30.21 MSE, 0.8 STD, and 2.62 TBM on the three stages of AIDS disease progression of 50 HIV+ individuals. This framework is an invaluable bioinformatics tool that will be useful to the clinical assessment of viral pathogenesis.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Exome and transcriptome sequencing of Aedes aegypti identifies a locus that confers resistance to Brugia malayi and alters the immune response.

Punita Juneja; Cristina V. Ariani; Yung Shwen Ho; Jewelna Akorli; William J. Palmer; Arnab Pain; Francis M. Jiggins

Many mosquito species are naturally polymorphic for their abilities to transmit parasites, a feature which is of great interest for controlling vector-borne disease. Aedes aegypti, the primary vector of dengue and yellow fever and a laboratory model for studying lymphatic filariasis, is genetically variable for its capacity to harbor the filarial nematode Brugia malayi. The genome of Ae. aegypti is large and repetitive, making genome resequencing difficult and expensive. We designed exome captures to target protein-coding regions of the genome, and used association mapping in a wild Kenyan population to identify a single, dominant, sex-linked locus underlying resistance. This falls in a region of the genome where a resistance locus was previously mapped in a line established in 1936, suggesting that this polymorphism has been maintained in the wild for the at least 80 years. We then crossed resistant and susceptible mosquitoes to place both alleles of the gene into a common genetic background, and used RNA-seq to measure the effect of this locus on gene expression. We found evidence for Toll, IMD, and JAK-STAT pathway activity in response to early stages of B. malayi infection when the parasites are beginning to die in the resistant genotype. We also found that resistant mosquitoes express anti-microbial peptides at the time of parasite-killing, and that this expression is suppressed in susceptible mosquitoes. Together, we have found that a single resistance locus leads to a higher immune response in resistant mosquitoes, and we identify genes in this region that may be responsible for this trait.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Complete Genome Sequence of Mycobacterium vaccae Type Strain ATCC 25954

Yung Shwen Ho; Sabir A. Adroub; M. Abadi; B. Al Alwan; R. Alkhateeb; Ge Gao; A. Ragab; Shahjahan Ali; D. van Soolingen; Wilbert Bitter; Arnab Pain; Abdallah M. Abdallah

Mycobacterium vaccae is a rapidly growing, nontuberculous Mycobacterium species that is generally not considered a human pathogen and is of major pharmaceutical interest as an immunotherapeutic agent. We report here the annotated genome sequence of the M. vaccae type strain, ATCC 25954.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2012

Complete Genome Sequence of Mycobacterium fortuitum subsp. fortuitum Type Strain DSM46621

Yung Shwen Ho; Sabir A. Adroub; Fajr Aleisa; Hanan Mahmood; Ghofran Othoum; Fahad Rashid; Manal S. Zaher; Shahjahan Ali; Wilbert Bitter; Arnab Pain; Abdallah M. Abdallah

Mycobacterium fortuitum is a member of the rapidly growing nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM). It is ubiquitous in water and soil habitats, including hospital environments. M. fortuitum is increasingly recognized as an opportunistic nosocomial pathogen causing disseminated infection. Here we report the genome sequence of M. fortuitum subsp. fortuitum type strain DSM46621.


Archive | 2013

Mycobacterium fortuitum subsp. fortuitum Complete Genome Sequence of

Wilbert Bitter; Abdallah M. Abdallah; Fahad Rashid; Manal S. Zaher; Yung Shwen Ho; Sabir A. Adroub; Fajr Aleisa; Hanan Mahmood

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Arnab Pain

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Sabir A. Adroub

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Abdallah M. Abdallah

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Shahjahan Ali

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Joanna Hall

National Institute for Biological Standards and Control

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