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Featured researches published by Bee Keat Neoh.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Differential Metabolite Profiles during Fruit Development in High-Yielding Oil Palm Mesocarp

Huey Fang Teh; Bee Keat Neoh; May Ping Li Hong; Jaime Yoke Sum Low; Theresa Lee Mei Ng; Nalisha Ithnin; Yin Mee Thang; Mohaimi Mohamed; Fook Tim Chew; Hirzun Mohd Yusof; Harikrishna Kulaveerasingam; David Ross Appleton

To better understand lipid biosynthesis in oil palm mesocarp, in particular the differences in gene regulation leading to and including de novo fatty acid biosynthesis, a multi-platform metabolomics technology was used to profile mesocarp metabolites during six critical stages of fruit development in comparatively high- and low-yielding oil palm populations. Significantly higher amino acid levels preceding lipid biosynthesis and nucleosides during lipid biosynthesis were observed in a higher yielding commercial palm population. Levels of metabolites involved in glycolysis revealed interesting divergence of flux towards glycerol-3-phosphate, while carbon utilization differences in the TCA cycle were proven by an increase in malic acid/citric acid ratio. Apart from insights into the regulation of enhanced lipid production in oil palm, these results provide potentially useful metabolite yield markers and genes of interest for use in breeding programmes.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2013

Profiling of metabolites in oil palm mesocarp at different stages of oil biosynthesis.

Bee Keat Neoh; Huey Fang Teh; Theresa Lee Mei Ng; Soon Huat Tiong; Yin Mee Thang; Mohd Amiron Bin Ersad; Mohaimi Mohamed; Fook Tim Chew; Harikrishna Kulaveerasingam; David Ross Appleton

Oil palm is one of the most productive oil producing crops and can store up to 90% oil in its fruit mesocarp. However, the biosynthetic regulation and drivers of palm mesocarp development are still not well understood. Multiplatform metabolomics technology was used to profile palm metabolites during six critical stages of fruit development in order to better understand lipid biosynthesis. Significantly higher amino acid levels were observed in palm mesocarp preceding lipid biosynthesis. Nucleosides were found to be in high concentration during lipid biosynthesis, whereas levels of metabolites involved in the tricarboxylic acid cycle were more concentrated during early fruit development. Apart from insights into the regulation of metabolites during fruit development in oil palm, these results provide potentially useful metabolite yield markers and genes of interest for use in breeding programs.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2014

Hormones, polyamines, and cell wall metabolism during oil palm fruit mesocarp development and ripening.

Huey Fang Teh; Bee Keat Neoh; Yick Ching Wong; Qi Bin Kwong; Tony Eng Keong Ooi; Theresa Lee Mei Ng; Soon Huat Tiong; Jaime Yoke Sum Low; Asma Dazni Danial; Mohd Amiron Bin Ersad; Harikrishna Kulaveerasingam; David Ross Appleton

Oil palm is one of the most productive oil-producing crops and can store up to 90% oil in its fruit mesocarp. Oil palm fruit is a sessile drupe consisting of a fleshy mesocarp from which palm oil is extracted. Biochemical changes in the mesocarp cell walls, polyamines, and hormones at different ripening stages of oil palm fruits were studied, and the relationship between the structural and the biochemical metabolism of oil palm fruits during ripening is discussed. Time-course analysis of the changes in expression of polyamines, hormones, and cell-wall-related genes and metabolites provided insights into the complex processes and interactions involved in fruit development. Overall, a strong reduction in auxin-responsive gene expression was observed from 18 to 22 weeks after pollination. High polyamine concentrations coincided with fruit enlargement during lipid accumulation and latter stages of maturation. The trend of abscisic acid (ABA) concentration was concordant with GA₄ but opposite to the GA₃ profile such that as ABA levels increase the resulting elevated ABA/GA₃ ratio clearly coincides with maturation. Polygalacturonase, expansin, and actin gene expressions were also observed to increase during fruit maturation. The identification of the master regulators of these coordinated processes may allow screening for oil palm variants with altered ripening profiles.


BioMed Research International | 2014

Phytochemicals from Kaempferia angustifolia Rosc. and their cytotoxic and antimicrobial activities.

Sook Wah Tang; Mohd Aspollah Sukari; Bee Keat Neoh; Yunie Soon Yu Yeap; Ahmad Bustamam Abdul; Nurolaini Kifli; Gwendoline Cheng Lian Ee

Phytochemical investigation on rhizomes of Kaempferia angustifolia has afforded a new abietene diterpene, kaempfolienol (1) along with crotepoxide (2), boesenboxide (3), 2′-hydroxy-4,4′,6′-trimethoxychalcone (4), zeylenol (5), 6-methylzeylenol (6), (24S)-24-methyl-5α-lanosta-9(11), 25-dien-3β-ol (7), sucrose, β-sitosterol, and its glycoside (8). The structures of the compounds were elucidated on the basis of spectroscopic methods (IR, MS, and NMR). Isolation of 6-methylzeylenol (6), (24S)-24-methyl-5α-lanosta-9(11), 25-dien-3β-ol (7), and β-sitosterol-3-O-β-D-glucopyranoside (8) from this plant species has never been reported previously. The spectroscopic data of (7) is firstly described in this paper. Cytotoxic screening indicated that most of the pure compounds tested showed significant activity with (4) showing the most potent activity against HL-60 (human promyelocytic leukemia) and MCF-7 (human breast cancer) cell lines. However, all extracts and most of the pure compounds tested were found to be inactive against HT-29 (human colon cancer) and HeLa (human cervical cancer) cell lines. Similarly, none of the extracts or compounds showed activity in the antimicrobial testing.


Chemistry Central Journal | 2011

Cyclic Tetrapyrrolic Photosensitisers from the leaves of Phaeanthus ophthalmicus

Pei Jean Tan; Cheng Yi Ong; Asma Dazni Danial; Hirzun Mohd Yusof; Bee Keat Neoh; Hong Boon Lee

BackgroundTwenty-seven extracts from 26 plants were identified as photo-cytotoxic in the course of our bioassay guided screening program for photosensitisers from 128 extracts prepared from 64 terrestrial plants in two different collection sites in Malaysia - Royal Belum Forest Reserve in the State of Perak and Gunung Nuang in the State of Selangor. One of the photo-cytotoxic extracts from the leaves of Phaeanthus ophtalmicus was further investigated.ResultsThe ethanolic extract of the leaves from Phaeanthus ophtalmicus was able to reduce the in vitro viability of leukaemic HL60 cells to < 50% when exposed to 9.6 J/cm2 of a broad spectrum light at a concentration of 20 μg/mL. Dereplication of the photo-cytotoxic fractions from P. ophthalmicus extracts based on TLC Rf values and HPLC co-injection of reference tetrapyrrolic compounds enabled quick identification of known photosensitisers, pheophorbide-a, pheophorbide-a methyl ester, 132-hydroxypheophorbide-a methyl ester, pheophytin-a and 151-hydroxypurpurin 7-lactone dimethyl ester. In addition, compound 1 which was not previously isolated as a natural product was also identified as 7-formyl-151-hydroxypurpurin-7-lactone methyl ester using standard spectroscopic techniques.ConclusionsOur results suggest that the main photosensitisers in plants are based on the cyclic tetrapyrrole structure and photosensitisers with other structures, if present, are present in very minor amounts or are not as active as those with the cyclic tetrapyrrole structure.


Archive | 2017

Study of Oil Palm Photosynthesis Using Omics Technologies

Bee Keat Neoh; Huey Fang Teh; Yick Ching Wong; Tony Eng Keong Ooi; See Siang Cheah; David Ross Appleton

Improving photosynthetic efficiency for greater crop yield has been a topic critically discussed as a strategy to meet the demands of an increasing human population when the availability of arable land decreases. Climate changes together with disease can highly affect photosynthetic efficiency in oil palm and thus impact yield. In this chapter, we discuss the deployment and contribution of Omics platforms in photosynthesis research (genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics and phenomics) for yield enhancement through breeding selection and planting strategies.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2017

Natural Organochlorines as Precursors of 3-Monochloropropanediol Esters in Vegetable Oils

Soon Huat Tiong; Norliza Saparin; Huey Fang Teh; Theresa Lee Mei Ng; Mohd Zairey bin Md. Zain; Bee Keat Neoh; Ahmadilfitri Md Noor; Chin Ping Tan; Oi Ming Lai; David Ross Appleton

During high-temperature refining of vegetable oils, 3-monochloropropanediol (3-MCPD) esters, possible carcinogens, are formed from acylglycerol in the presence of a chlorine source. To investigate organochlorine compounds in vegetable oils as possible precursors for 3-MCPD esters, we tested crude palm, soybean, rapeseed, sunflower, corn, coconut, and olive oils for the presence of organochlorine compounds. Having found them in all vegetable oils tested, we focused subsequent study on oil palm products. Analysis of the chlorine isotope mass pattern exhibited in high-resolution mass spectrometry enabled organochlorine compound identification in crude palm oils as constituents of wax esters, fatty acid, diacylglycerols, and sphingolipids, which are produced endogenously in oil palm mesocarp throughout ripening. Analysis of thermal decomposition and changes during refining suggested that these naturally present organochlorine compounds in palm oils and perhaps in other vegetable oils are precursors of 3-MCPD esters. Enrichment and dose-response showed a linear relationship to 3-MCPD ester formation and indicated that the sphingolipid-based organochlorine compounds are the most active precursors of 3-MCPD esters.


Journal of Plant Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2015

Elaeis guineensis: adenosine phosphates and nicotinamides involvement in fatty acid biosynthesis.

Bee Keat Neoh; Huey Fang Teh; Theresa Lee Mei Ng; Soon Huat Tiong; Harikrishna Kulaveerasingam; David Ross Appleton

Adenosine phosphates (ATP, ADP, AMP) and nicotinamides (NAD, NADH, NADP and NADPH) are nucleotides that are involved in various plant biosynthetic pathways such as photosynthesis, nitrogen uptake, purine metabolism and lipid biosynthesis. In oil palm fruit formation, kernel and mesocarp are separated by a shell and differ mainly by lipid composition. Oil palm mesocarp and kernel tissues were extracted using a modified perchloric acid extraction and separated via HPLC to quantify the accumulation of these seven nucleotides in relation to lipid composition. Principal component analysis on palm mesocarp and kernel samples displayed clustering and indicated that palm mesocarp contained higher ATP and NAD+ than palm kernel. The higher levels of ATP and NADH may be attributable to the higher content of unsaturated and long chain fatty acids in found palm mesocarp.


Asian Journal of Chemistry | 2010

Antileukemic activity and chemical constituents of some Zingiberaceae species.

Mohd Aspollah Sukari; Sook Wah Tang; Bee Keat Neoh; Gwendoline Cheng Lian Ee; Mawardi Rahmani


Archive | 2010

Chemical constituents from two weed species of Spermacoce (Rubiaceae)

Bee Keat Neoh; Rahayu Utami Umar; Nordin Hj. Lajis; Tai Yuen Chen; Tu Yen Li; Mawardi Rahmani; Mohd Aspollah Sukari

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Huey Fang Teh

Universiti Putra Malaysia

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Yin Mee Thang

Universiti Putra Malaysia

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Mawardi Rahmani

Universiti Putra Malaysia

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Sook Wah Tang

Universiti Putra Malaysia

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