Publications by authors named "Pauline Poh Kim Aw"

Background & Aims: Hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) loss or functional cure (FC) is considered the optimal therapeutic outcome for patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB). However, the immune-pathological biomarkers and underlying mechanisms of FC remain unclear. In this study we comprehensively interrogate disease-associated cell states identified within intrahepatic tissue and matched PBMCs (peripheral blood mononuclear cells) from patients with CHB or after FC, at the resolution of single cells, to provide novel insights into putative mechanisms underlying FC.

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Zika and Ebola viruses can persist in semen and pose a risk for sexual transmission. To determine if dengue virus, another flavivirus, is similarly detectable in semen, we performed dengue PCR on semen in five patients with acute dengue virus infection. All five tested negative, suggesting that dengue does not pose a risk for sexual transmission.

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Article Synopsis
  • Reports indicate rising cases of hepatitis E virus (HEV) genotype 3 transmission through food, especially in immunosuppressed individuals.
  • A study identified a Middle Eastern liver transplant patient infected with camelid HEV (genotype 7) after regular consumption of camel meat and milk.
  • This discovery connects camel-derived food products to hepatitis E in post-transplant patients, emphasizing the potential for early detection and successful treatment through antiviral therapy and adjusted immunosuppressive medication.
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RNA viruses are notorious for their ability to quickly adapt to selective pressure from the host immune system and/or antivirals. This adaptability is likely due to the error-prone characteristics of their RNA-dependent, RNA polymerase [1, 2]. Dengue virus, a member of the Flaviviridae family of positive-strand RNA viruses, is also known to share these error-prone characteristics [3].

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The study of cell-population heterogeneity in a range of biological systems, from viruses to bacterial isolates to tumor samples, has been transformed by recent advances in sequencing throughput. While the high-coverage afforded can be used, in principle, to identify very rare variants in a population, existing ad hoc approaches frequently fail to distinguish true variants from sequencing errors. We report a method (LoFreq) that models sequencing run-specific error rates to accurately call variants occurring in <0.

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In April 2009, a new influenza A (H1N1 2009) virus emerged that rapidly spread around the world. While current variants of this virus have caused widespread disease, particularly in vulnerable groups, there remains the possibility that future variants may cause increased virulence, drug resistance or vaccine escape. Early detection of these virus variants may offer the chance for increased containment and potentially prevention of the virus spread.

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