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Dive into the research topics where Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed is active.

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Featured researches published by Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed.


Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 2013

Organotypic culture of normal, dysplastic and squamous cell carcinoma‐derived oral cell lines reveals loss of spatial regulation of CD44 and p75NTR in malignancy

Andrew J. Dalley; Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Zee Upton; Camile S. Farah

Oral squamous cell carcinomas (OSCC) often arise from dysplastic lesions. The role of cancer stem cells in tumour initiation is widely accepted, yet the potential existence of pre-cancerous stem cells in dysplastic tissue has received little attention. Cell lines from oral diseases ranging in severity from dysplasia to malignancy provide opportunity to investigate the involvement of stem cells in malignant progression from dysplasia. Stem cells are functionally defined by their ability to generate hierarchical tissue structures in consortium with spatial regulation. Organotypic cultures readily display tissue hierarchy in vitro; hence, in this study, we compared hierarchical expression of stem cell-associated markers in dermis-based organotypic cultures of oral epithelial cells from normal tissue (OKF6-TERT2), mild dysplasia (DOK), severe dysplasia (POE-9n) and OSCC (PE/CA P J15). Expression of CD44, p75(NTR), CD24 and ALDH was studied in monolayers by flow cytometry and in organotypic cultures by immunohistochemistry. Spatial regulation of CD44 and p75(NTR) was evident for organotypic cultures of normal (OKF6-TERT2) and dysplasia (DOK and POE-9n) but was lacking for OSCC (PE/CA PJ15)-derived cells. Spatial regulation of CD24 was not evident. All monolayer cultures exhibited CD44, p75(NTR), CD24 antigens and ALDH activity (ALDEFLUOR(®) assay), with a trend towards loss of population heterogeneity that mirrored disease severity. In monolayer, increased FOXA1 and decreased FOXA2 expression correlated with disease severity, but OCT3/4, Sox2 and NANOG did not. We conclude that dermis-based organotypic cultures give opportunity to investigate the mechanisms that underlie loss of spatial regulation of stem cell markers seen with OSCC-derived cells.


Cancer Medicine | 2014

Expression of ABCG2 and Bmi-1 in oral potentially malignant lesions and oral squamous cell carcinoma

Andrew J. Dalley; Luke P. Pitty; Aidan G. Major; Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Camile S. Farah

Early diagnosis is vital for effective treatment of oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). The optimal time for clinical intervention is prior to malignancy when patients present with oral potentially malignant lesions such as leukoplakia or erythroplakia. Transformation rates for oral dysplasia vary greatly and more rigorous methods are needed to predict the malignant potential of oral lesions. We hypothesized that the expression of two putative stem cell markers, ABCG2 and Bmi‐1, would correlate with disease severity for non diseased, potentially malignant and OSCC specimens and cell lines derived from an equivalent range of tissues. We compared immunoreactive protein and relative gene expression of ABCG2 and Bmi‐1 in eight cell lines derived from source tissues ranging in disease severity from normal (OKF6‐TERT2) through mild and moderate/severe dysplasia (DOK, POE‐9n) to OSCC (PE/CA‐PJ15, SCC04, SCC25, SCC09, SCC15). We also analyzed immunoreactive protein expression of ABCG2 and Bmi‐1 in 189 tissue samples with the same range of disease severity. A trend between oral lesion severity to ABCG2 and Bmi‐1 immunostain intensity was observed. Flow cytometry of oral cell lines confirmed this trend and gave good correlation with RT‐PCR results for ABCG2 (r = 0.919, P = 0.001; Pearson) but not Bmi‐1 (r = −0.311). The results provide evidence of increased density of ABCG2 and Bmi‐1‐positive populations in malignant and oral potentially malignant lesions and derived cell lines, but that intragroup variability within IHC, flow cytometry, and RT‐PCR results compromise the diagnostic potential of these techniques for discriminating oral dysplasia from normal tissue or OSCC.


Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 2013

Putative cancer stem cell marker expression in oral epithelial dysplasia and squamous cell carcinoma

Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Andrew J. Dalley; Camile S. Farah

Multifactorial conditions underlie progression of potentially malignant oral lesions (PMOL) to oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) and there is currently need for better prediction of malignant transformation. The hypothesised existence of cancer stem cells in dysplastic oral tissues provides the potential for more informed assessment of PMOL progression. Semi-quantitative immunohistochemical assessment of four putative cancer stem cell markers (CD24, CD44, CD271 and ALDH1) was conducted with a training cohort of 107 patient biopsies to establish clinically applicable score threshold values that were subsequently applied to a blind diagnosis in an independent validation cohort of 278 biopsies. Stain intensity scores for ALDH1, CD24 and CD44, but not CD271 were greater for OSCC than normal tissues. The intensity of ALDH1 and CD24 immunostaining correlated with increased oral epithelial disease severity, and CD24 was effective in distinguishing OSCC from non-malignant tissues, correctly diagnosing 71% of OSCC cases in the validation cohort. Importantly, CD24 immunostaining was effective in diagnosing the presence of dysplasia, correctly discriminating 69% of dysplasia tissues from normal tissues, although no distinction between mild and severe grades of dysplasia was achieved. The results highlight CD24 immunostain intensity as an effective marker of oral dysplasia and OSCC. In conclusion, CD24 immunostain intensity scoring may serve as a helpful technique to assist with the histological recognition of dysplasia in oral biopsies, but not for distinguishing between grades of dysplasia.


Biomarkers in Cancer | 2013

Can Immunohistochemistry Serve as an Alternative to Subjective Histopathological Diagnosis of Oral Epithelial Dysplasia

Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Camile S. Farah

Many attempts have been made to identify objective molecular biomarkers to diagnose and prognosticate oral epithelial dysplasia (OED) because histopathological interpretation is subjective and lacks sensitivity. The majority of these efforts describe changes in gene expression at protein level in OED as determined by immunohistochemistry (IHC). However, the literature on these putative markers of oral cancer progression is vast and varied. The main purpose of this article is to review current knowledge on biomarkers of protein expression for OED by IHC approaches. We further discuss these findings in terms of the proposed essential hallmarks of cancer cells to better understand their role in oral oncogenesis.


Clinical Medicine Insights: Oncology | 2013

Gene Expression Profiling for the Purposes of Biomarker Discovery in Oral Potentially Malignant Lesions: A Systematic Review

Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Camile S. Farah

Early and accurate diagnosis of oral potentially malignant lesions (OPML) is of critical importance in preventing malignant transformation. Although histopathological interpretation of the degree of epithelial dysplasia is considered the gold standard for diagnosis, this method is subjective and lacks sensitivity. Therefore, many attempts have been made to identify objective molecular biomarkers to improve diagnosis. Microarray technology has the advantage of screening the expression of the whole genome making it one of the best tools for searching for novel biomarkers. However, microarray studies of OPMLs are limited, and no review has been published to highlight and compare their findings. In this paper, we systematically review all studies that have incorporated microarray analyses in the investigation of gene profile alterations in OPMLs and suggest a set of commonly dysregulated genes across multiple gene expression profile studies. This list of common genes may help focus selection of markers for further analysis regarding their importance in the diagnosis and prognosis of OPMLs.


Journal of Cranio-maxillofacial Surgery | 2010

Intra-oral calibre persistent artery

Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Camile S. Farah

Calibre persistent arteries (CPA) penetrate into submucosal tissue without division or reduction in calibre. Intraorally, these abnormalities have been predominantly reported in the lip. Here we report a case of CPA in the buccal vestibule. Misdiagnosis of this entity may result in profuse bleeding during surgical intervention.


Annals of Diagnostic Pathology | 2013

Loss of ELF3 immunoexpression is useful for detecting oral squamous cell carcinoma but not for distinguishing between grades of epithelial dysplasia

Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Andrew J. Dalley; Camile S. Farah


Oral Oncology | 2013

OP230: Multi-marker discrimination of dysplasia grades in potentially malignant oral disorders

Camile S. Farah; Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Maryam Jessri; Luke P. Pitty; Aidan G. Major; Andrew J. Dalley


Oral Oncology | 2011

O52. Immunoexpression of putative cancer stem cell markers in oral epithelial dysplasia and squamous cell carcinoma

Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; S. Stein; A. Chan; Camile S. Farah


Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2013

Organotypic culture of normal, dysplastic and squamous cell carcinoma-derived oral cell lines reveals loss of spatial regulation of CD44 and p75(NTR) in malignancy

Andrew J. Dalley; Ahmad A. AbdulMajeed; Zee Upton; Camile S. Farah

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Camile S. Farah

University of Western Australia

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A. Chan

University of Queensland

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Aidan G. Major

University of Queensland

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Luke P. Pitty

University of Queensland

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S. Stein

University of Queensland

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Zee Upton

Queensland University of Technology

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Maryam Jessri

University of Queensland

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