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Dive into the research topics where Ching-Seng Ang is active.

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Featured researches published by Ching-Seng Ang.


Proteomics | 2013

Comparative proteomics evaluation of plasma exosome isolation techniques and assessment of the stability of exosomes in normal human blood plasma

Hina Kalra; Christopher G. Adda; Michael Liem; Ching-Seng Ang; Adam Mechler; Richard J. Simpson; Mark D. Hulett; Suresh Mathivanan

Exosomes are nanovesicles released by a variety of cells and are detected in body fluids including blood. Recent studies have highlighted the critical application of exosomes as personalized targeted drug delivery vehicles and as reservoirs of disease biomarkers. While these research applications have created significant interest and can be translated into practice, the stability of exosomes needs to be assessed and exosome isolation protocols from blood plasma need to be optimized. To optimize methods to isolate exosomes from blood plasma, we performed a comparative evaluation of three exosome isolation techniques (differential centrifugation coupled with ultracentrifugation, epithelial cell adhesion molecule immunoaffinity pull‐down, and OptiPrepTM density gradient separation) using normal human plasma. Based on MS, Western blotting and microscopy results, we found that the OptiPrepTM density gradient method was superior in isolating pure exosomal populations, devoid of highly abundant plasma proteins. In addition, we assessed the stability of exosomes in plasma over 90 days under various storage conditions. Western blotting analysis using the exosomal marker, TSG101, revealed that exosomes are stable for 90 days. Interestingly, in the context of cellular uptake, the isolated exosomes were able to fuse with target cells revealing that they were indeed biologically active.


Proteomics | 2015

FunRich: An open access standalone functional enrichment and interaction network analysis tool

Mohashin Pathan; Shivakumar Keerthikumar; Ching-Seng Ang; Lahiru Gangoda; Camelia Quek; Nicholas A. Williamson; Dmitri Mouradov; Oliver M. Sieber; Richard J. Simpson; Agus Salim; Antony Bacic; Andrew F. Hill; David A. Stroud; Michael T. Ryan; Johnson I. Agbinya; John M. Mariadason; Antony W. Burgess; Suresh Mathivanan

As high‐throughput techniques including proteomics become more accessible to individual laboratories, there is an urgent need for a user‐friendly bioinformatics analysis system. Here, we describe FunRich, an open access, standalone functional enrichment and network analysis tool. FunRich is designed to be used by biologists with minimal or no support from computational and database experts. Using FunRich, users can perform functional enrichment analysis on background databases that are integrated from heterogeneous genomic and proteomic resources (>1.5 million annotations). Besides default human specific FunRich database, users can download data from the UniProt database, which currently supports 20 different taxonomies against which enrichment analysis can be performed. Moreover, the users can build their own custom databases and perform the enrichment analysis irrespective of organism. In addition to proteomics datasets, the custom database allows for the tool to be used for genomics, lipidomics and metabolomics datasets. Thus, FunRich allows for complete database customization and thereby permits for the tool to be exploited as a skeleton for enrichment analysis irrespective of the data type or organism used. FunRich (http://www.funrich.org) is user‐friendly and provides graphical representation (Venn, pie charts, bar graphs, column, heatmap and doughnuts) of the data with customizable font, scale and color (publication quality).


ACS Nano | 2013

Differential roles of the protein corona in the cellular uptake of nanoporous polymer particles by monocyte and macrophage cell lines.

Yan Yan; Katelyn T. Gause; Marloes M. J. Kamphuis; Ching-Seng Ang; Neil M. O’Brien-Simpson; Jason C. Lenzo; Eric C. Reynolds; Edouard C. Nice; Frank Caruso

Many biomolecules, mainly proteins, adsorb onto polymer particles to form a dynamic protein corona in biological environments. The protein corona can significantly influence particle-cell interactions, including internalization and pathway activation. In this work, we demonstrate the differential roles of a given protein corona formed in cell culture media in particle uptake by monocytes and macrophages. By exposing disulfide-stabilized poly(methacrylic acid) nanoporous polymer particles (PMASH NPPs) to complete cell growth media containing 10% fetal bovine serum, a protein corona, with the most abundant component being bovine serum albumin, was characterized. Upon adsorption onto the PMASH NPPs, native bovine serum albumin (BSA) was found to undergo conformational changes. The denatured BSA led to a significant decrease in internalization efficiency in human monocytic cells, THP-1, compared with the bare particles, due to reduced cell membrane adhesion. In contrast, the unfolded BSA on the NPPs triggered class A scavenger receptor-mediated phagocytosis in differentiated macrophage-like cells (dTHP-1) without a significant impact on the overall internalization efficiency. Taken together, this work demonstrates the disparate effects of a given protein corona on particle-cell interactions, highlighting the correlation between protein corona conformation in situ and relevant biological characteristics for biological functionalities.


Nature | 2013

A type III effector antagonizes death receptor signalling during bacterial gut infection

Jaclyn S. Pearson; Sze Ong; Catherine L. Kennedy; Michelle Kelly; Keith S. Robinson; Tania Lung; Ashley Mansell; Patrice Riedmaier; Claire Oates; Ali Zaid; Sabrina Mühlen; Valerie F. Crepin; Oliver Marchès; Ching-Seng Ang; Nicholas A. Williamson; Lorraine A. O'Reilly; Aleksandra Bankovacki; Ueli Nachbur; Giuseppe Infusini; Andrew I. Webb; John Silke; Andreas Strasser; Gad Frankel; Elizabeth L. Hartland

Successful infection by enteric bacterial pathogens depends on the ability of the bacteria to colonize the gut, replicate in host tissues and disseminate to other hosts. Pathogens such as Salmonella, Shigella and enteropathogenic and enterohaemorrhagic (EPEC and EHEC, respectively) Escherichia coli use a type III secretion system (T3SS) to deliver virulence effector proteins into host cells during infection that promote colonization and interfere with antimicrobial host responses. Here we report that the T3SS effector NleB1 from EPEC binds to host cell death-domain-containing proteins and thereby inhibits death receptor signalling. Protein interaction studies identified FADD, TRADD and RIPK1 as binding partners of NleB1. NleB1 expressed ectopically or injected by the bacterial T3SS prevented Fas ligand or TNF-induced formation of the canonical death-inducing signalling complex (DISC) and proteolytic activation of caspase-8, an essential step in death-receptor-induced apoptosis. This inhibition depended on the N-acetylglucosamine transferase activity of NleB1, which specifically modified Arg 117 in the death domain of FADD. The importance of the death receptor apoptotic pathway to host defence was demonstrated using mice deficient in the FAS signalling pathway, which showed delayed clearance of the EPEC-like mouse pathogen Citrobacter rodentium and reversion to virulence of an nleB mutant. The activity of NleB suggests that EPEC and other attaching and effacing pathogens antagonize death-receptor-induced apoptosis of infected cells, thereby blocking a major antimicrobial host response.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

Response of Porphyromonas gingivalis to Heme Limitation in Continuous Culture

Stuart G. Dashper; Ching-Seng Ang; Paul D. Veith; Helen L. Mitchell; Alvin W. Lo; Christine A. Seers; Katrina A. Walsh; Nada Slakeski; Dina Chen; J. Patricia Lissel; Catherine A. Butler; Neil M. O'Brien-Simpson; Ian G. Barr; Eric C. Reynolds

Porphyromonas gingivalis is an anaerobic, asaccharolytic, gram-negative bacterium that has essential requirements for both iron and protoporphyrin IX, which it preferentially obtains as heme. A combination of large-scale quantitative proteomic analysis using stable isotope labeling strategies and mass spectrometry, together with transcriptomic analysis using custom-made DNA microarrays, was used to identify changes in P. gingivalis W50 protein and transcript abundances on changing from heme-excess to heme-limited continuous culture. This approach identified 160 genes and 70 proteins that were differentially regulated by heme availability, with broad agreement between the transcriptomic and proteomic data. A change in abundance of the enzymes of the aspartate and glutamate catabolic pathways was observed with heme limitation, which was reflected in organic acid end product levels of the culture fluid. These results demonstrate a shift from an energy-efficient anaerobic respiration to a less efficient process upon heme limitation. Heme limitation also resulted in an increase in abundance of a protein, PG1374, which we have demonstrated, by insertional inactivation, to have a role in epithelial cell invasion. The greater abundance of a number of transcripts/proteins linked to invasion of host cells, the oxidative stress response, iron/heme transport, and virulence of the bacterium indicates that there is a broad response of P. gingivalis to heme availability.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

Targeted In-Gel MRM: A Hypothesis Driven Approach for Colorectal Cancer Biomarker Discovery in Human Feces

Ching-Seng Ang; Edouard C. Nice

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most common cause of cancer-related deaths in both men and women. The fecal occult blood test is currently the first line method for CRC screening but has an unacceptably low sensitivity and specificity. Improved screening tests are therefore urgently required for early stage CRC screening. We have described a hypothesis-driven approach for a rapid biomarker discovery process whereby selected proteins previously implicated as colorectal cancer-associated proteins (CCAP), which can potentially be shed into the feces from a colorectal tumor, are targeted for excision from 1D-SDS-PAGE based on their predicted molecular weight followed by directed identification and relative quantification using multiple reaction monitoring (MRM). This approach can significantly reduce the time for clinical assay development with the added advantage that many proteins will have been validated by previous in vitro and/or in vivo studies. Sixty potential CCAPs were selected from the literature and appropriate MRM conditions were established for measurement of proteotypic peptides. Nineteen of these proteins were detected in the feces from a patient with colorectal cancer. Relative quantitation of these 19 CCAP across 5 CRC patients and 5 healthy volunteers were carried out, revealing hemoglobin, myeloperoxidase, S100A9, filamin A and l-plastin to be present only in the feces of CRC patients.


Proteomics | 2008

Application of 16O/18O reverse proteolytic labeling to determine the effect of biofilm culture on the cell envelope proteome of Porphyromonas gingivalis W50

Ching-Seng Ang; Paul D. Veith; Stuart G. Dashper; Eric C. Reynolds

Porphyromonas gingivalis is an oral pathogen linked to chronic periodontitis. The bacterium exists as part of a polymicrobial biofilm accreted onto the tooth surface. An understanding of the changes to the proteome especially of the cell envelope of biofilm cells compared with planktonic cells could provide valuable insight into the molecular processes of biofilm formation. To establish which proteins changed in abundance between the planktonic and biofilm growth states, the cell envelope fractions of two biological replicates of P. gingivalis cultivated in a chemostat were analysed. Proteins were separated by 1‐D SDS‐PAGE, in‐gel digested with trypsin in the presence of H216O or H218O and identified and quantified by LC‐MALDI TOF/TOF‐MS. Using a reverse labeling strategy we identified and quantified the changes in abundance of 81 P. gingivalis cell envelope proteins. No form of bias between the labels was observed. Twenty four proteins increased in abundance and 18 decreased in abundance in the biofilm state. A group of cell‐surface located C‐Terminal Domain family proteins including RgpA, HagA, CPG70 and PG99 increased in abundance in the biofilm cells. Other proteins that exhibited significant changes in abundance included transport related proteins (HmuY and IhtB), metabolic enzymes (FrdAB) and immunogenic proteins.


Electrophoresis | 2011

Use of multiple reaction monitoring for multiplex analysis of colorectal cancer-associated proteins in human feces.

Ching-Seng Ang; Julie Rothacker; Heather Patsiouras; Peter Gibbs; Antony W. Burgess; Edouard C. Nice

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the second most common cause of cancer‐related deaths worldwide with an annual incidence of almost a million cases and an annual mortality around 500 000. The fecal occult blood test is currently the first line method for CRC screening, but has unacceptably low sensitivity and specificity. Improved screening tests are therefore urgently required for early‐stage CRC screening when therapy is most likely to be effective. We describe a discovery‐based proteomics hypothesis using orthogonal multi‐dimensional fractionation (1‐D SDS‐PAGE, RP‐HPLC, size exclusion chromatography) to mine deep into the fecal proteome for the initial discovery process, which generated a library containing 108 human fecal proteins with the associated peptide and MS/MS data. These data were then used to develop and optimize a multiplex multiple reaction monitoring assay for 40 non‐redundant human proteins present in the feces. To show proof of principal for clinical analysis, multiplex screening of these 40 proteins was carried out on fecal samples from eight CRC patient and seven normal volunteers. We identified 24 proteins consistently found in all samples and nine proteins found only in the CRC patients, showing the potential of this approach for the analysis of potential CRC biomarkers. Absolute quantitation using C‐terminal isotopically labeled synthetic peptides corresponding to hemoglobin and carcinoembryonic antigen 5 was also performed.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2010

Murine fecal proteomics: a model system for the detection of potential biomarkers for colorectal cancer.

Ching-Seng Ang; Julie Rothacker; Heather Patsiouras; Antony W. Burgess; Edouard C. Nice

Tumor related products shed into the feces offer a potential source of biomarkers for the detection of colorectal cancer (CRC). Using SDS-PAGE followed by nanoflow reversed-phased LC-MS/MS to analyse fecal samples from Apc(Min/+) mice (that develop spontaneous multiple intestinal neoplasia with age) we have identified 336 proteins (115 proteins of murine origin, 201 from fecal bacteria, 18 associated with food intake and 2 of apparent parasitic origin). 75% of the murine proteins identified in this study are predicted to be extracellular or associated with the cell plasma membrane. Of these proteins, a number of the murine homologues of colorectal cancer associated proteins (CCAP) such as hemoglobin, haptoglobin, hemopexin, alpha-2-macroglobulin and cadherin-17 have been identified, demonstrating the potential of fecal proteomics for detecting potential biomarkers and paving the way for subsequent MS/MS based biomarker studies on similar human samples.


eLife | 2016

Tim29 is a novel subunit of the human TIM22 translocase and is involved in complex assembly and stability

Yilin Kang; Michael J. Baker; Michael Liem; Jade Louber; Matthew McKenzie; Ishara Atukorala; Ching-Seng Ang; Shivakumar Keerthikumar; Suresh Mathivanan; Diana Stojanovski

The TIM22 complex mediates the import of hydrophobic carrier proteins into the mitochondrial inner membrane. While the TIM22 machinery has been well characterised in yeast, the human complex remains poorly characterised. Here, we identify Tim29 (C19orf52) as a novel, metazoan-specific subunit of the human TIM22 complex. The protein is integrated into the mitochondrial inner membrane with it’s C-terminus exposed to the intermembrane space. Tim29 is required for the stability of the TIM22 complex and functions in the assembly of hTim22. Furthermore, Tim29 contacts the Translocase of the Outer Mitochondrial Membrane, TOM complex, enabling a mechanism for transport of hydrophobic carrier substrates across the aqueous intermembrane space. Identification of Tim29 highlights the significance of analysing mitochondrial import systems across phylogenetic boundaries, which can reveal novel components and mechanisms in higher organisms. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.17463.001

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Antony Bacic

University of Melbourne

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