A STAR researcher awarded prestigious Technology Review 35 Award
Released on: August 25, 2008, 6:36 pm
Press Release Author: Institute for Infocomm Research
Industry: Education
Press Release Summary: Dr Victor Tong Joo Chuan earns global recognition for his ground-breaking research to design vaccines more effectively
Press Release Body: Singapore, 25 August 2008 - Dr Victor Tong Joo Chuan, a researcher at A*STAR's Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R), has been conferred the "TR35 Award" for his research work on Personalized Vaccine Design. He is one of the 35 top innovators in science and technology under the age of 35 honoured by MIT's Technology Review magazine this year.
Since 1999, the Technology Review has honoured young innovators in science and technology; and today that collection is the TR35, a list of technologists and scientists who had achieved success and made a difference with their inventions and research into medicine, computing, communications, electronics, and nanotechnology before they turn 35 years old.
Dr Tong leads a cross-disciplinary team focusing on developing algorithms that take genetic variations into account to help select antigens that are most effective for triggering immune response. This is especially relevant in optimizing effectiveness of vaccines because each person's immune system is unique to the individual. He is able to achieve this by creating 3-D models of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-antigen complexes, training machine-learning algorithms to account for variations in immune recognition patterns and identifying important antigens that have the best potential to be effective vaccines. The target of Dr Tong's team is to create computational models for 120-150 HLA molecules, which should cover not only the entire Singapore population but also 95% of the global population. Together with A/P Ren Ee Chee, Principal Investigator at Singapore Immunology Network (SIgN), Dr Tong's group is developing an integrated pipeline from computational modeling to clinical testing for development of next generation vaccines.
By matching possible antigens with the HLA variants most common in a population, vaccines of the future may be tailored to specific groups or, with personal screening, even to individuals. This development holds tremendous value for the medical community as it leads to continuing research to target specific prevention and vaccination for various infectious diseases and even cancer.
Professor Lye Kin Mun, Deputy Executive Director (Research) said, "I congratulate Dr. Tong on this achievement! I2R is proud that Dr. Tong is receiving international recognition for his outstanding research. This substantiates the quality of talent we have working within Fusionopolis and the importance of cross-disciplinary approaches to solving tough problems. We will continue to promote and support such efforts in the future."
Dr. Tong and the other TR35 winners for 2008 will be featured in the September issue of Technology Review magazine and honoured at the Emerging Technologies (EmTech) Conference to be held on September 23-25, 2008 at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. - END -
Web Site: http://www.i2r.a-star.edu.sg
Contact Details: Mr Andrew Yap Acting Manager, Corporate Communications Institute for Infocomm Research (I2R) DID: (65) 6419 1143 Fax: (65) 6466 7716 Email: jtyap@i2r.a-star.edu.sg