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Dive into the research topics where Foo Cheung is active.

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Featured researches published by Foo Cheung.


Cell | 2014

Global Analyses of Human Immune Variation Reveal Baseline Predictors of Postvaccination Responses

John S. Tsang; Pamela L. Schwartzberg; Yuri Kotliarov; Angélique Biancotto; Zhi Xie; Ronald N. Germain; Ena Wang; Matthew J. Olnes; Manikandan Narayanan; Hana Golding; Susan Moir; Howard B. Dickler; Shira Perl; Foo Cheung

A major goal of systems biology is the development of models that accurately predict responses to perturbation. Constructing such models requires the collection of dense measurements of system states, yet transformation of data into predictive constructs remains a challenge. To begin to model human immunity, we analyzed immune parameters in depth both at baseline and in response to influenza vaccination. Peripheral blood mononuclear cell transcriptomes, serum titers, cell subpopulation frequencies, and B cell responses were assessed in 63 individuals before and after vaccination and were used to develop a systematic framework to dissect inter- and intra-individual variation and build predictive models of postvaccination antibody responses. Strikingly, independent of age and pre-existing antibody titers, accurate models could be constructed using pre-perturbation cell populations alone, which were validated using independent baseline time points. Most of the parameters contributing to prediction delineated temporally stable baseline differences across individuals, raising the prospect of immune monitoring before intervention.


Molecular Therapy | 2014

Ultra-low Dose Interleukin-2 Promotes Immune-modulating Function of Regulatory T Cells and Natural Killer Cells in Healthy Volunteers

Sawa Ito; Catherine M. Bollard; Mattias Carlsten; J. Joseph Melenhorst; Angélique Biancotto; Ena Wang; Jinguo Chen; Yuri Kotliarov; Foo Cheung; Zhi Xie; Francesco M. Marincola; Kazushi Tanimoto; Minoo Battiwalla; Matthew J. Olnes; Shira Perl; Paula Schum; Thomas Hughes; Keyvan Keyvanfar; Nancy Hensel; Pawel Muranski; Neal S. Young; A. John Barrett

Low-dose interleukin-2 (IL-2) expands regulatory T cells (Tregs) and natural killer (NK) cells after stem cell transplantation (SCT) and may reduce graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). We hypothesized that ultra-low dose (ULD) IL-2 could serve as an immune-modulating agent for stem cell donors to prevent GVHD following SCT. However, the safety, dose level, and immune signatures of ULD IL-2 in immune-competent healthy subjects remain unknown. Here, we have characterized the phenotype and function of Tregs and NK cells as well as the gene expression and cytokine profiles of 21 healthy volunteers receiving 50,000 to 200,000 units/m(2)/day IL-2 for 5 days. ULD IL-2 was well tolerated and induced a significant increase in the frequency of Tregs with increased suppressive function. There was a marked expansion of CD56(bright) NK cells with enhanced interferon-γ (IFN-γ) production. Serum cytokine profiling demonstrated increase of IFN-γ induced protein 10 (IP-10). Gene expression analysis revealed significant changes in a highly restricted set of genes, including FOXP3, IL-2RA, and CISH. This is the first study to evaluate global immune-modulating function of ULD IL-2 in healthy subjects and to support the future studies administrating ULD IL-2 to stem cell donors.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Effects of Systemically Administered Hydrocortisone on the Human Immunome

Matthew J. Olnes; Yuri Kotliarov; Angélique Biancotto; Foo Cheung; Jinguo Chen; Rongye Shi; Huizhi Zhou; Ena Wang; John S. Tsang; Robert B. Nussenblatt

Corticosteroids have been used for decades to modulate inflammation therapeutically, yet there is a paucity of data on their effects in humans. We examined the changes in cellular and molecular immune system parameters, or “immunome”, in healthy humans after systemic corticosteroid administration. We used multiplexed techniques to query the immunome in 20 volunteers at baseline, and after intravenous hydrocortisone (HC) administered at moderate (250u2009mg) and low (50 mg) doses, to provide insight into how corticosteroids exert their effects. We performed comprehensive phenotyping of 120 lymphocyte subsets by high dimensional flow cytometry, and observed a decline in circulating specific B and T cell subsets, which reached their nadir 4–8u2009hours after administration of HC. However, B and T cells rebounded above baseline 24u2009hours after HC infusion, while NK cell numbers remained stable. Whole transcriptome profiling revealed down regulation of NF-κB signaling, apoptosis, and cell death signaling transcripts that preceded lymphocyte population changes, with activation of NK cell and glucocorticoid receptor signaling transcripts. Our study is the first to systematically characterize the effects of corticosteroids on the human immunome, and we demonstrate that HC exerts differential effects on B and T lymphocytes and natural killer cells in humans.


Immunity | 2016

Systematic Analysis of Cell-to-Cell Expression Variation of T Lymphocytes in a Human Cohort Identifies Aging and Genetic Associations.

Yong Lu; Angélique Biancotto; Foo Cheung; Elaine F. Remmers; Naisha Shah; J. Philip McCoy; John S. Tsang

Cell-to-cell expression variation (CEV) is a prevalent feature of even well-defined cell populations, but its functions, particularly at the organismal level, are not well understood. Using single-cell data obtained via high-dimensional flow cytometry of Txa0cells as a model, we introduce an analysis framework for quantifying CEV in primary cell populations and studying its functional associations in human cohorts. Analyses of 840 CEV phenotypes spanning multiple baseline measurements of 14 proteins in 28 Txa0cell subpopulations suggest that the quantitative extent of CEV can exhibit substantial subject-to-subject differences and yet remain stable within healthy individuals over months. We linked CEV to age and disease-associated genetic polymorphisms, thus implicating CEV as a biomarker of aging and disease susceptibility and suggesting that it might play an important role in health and disease. Our dataset, interactive figures, and software for computing CEV with flow cytometry data provide a resource for exploring CEV functions.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Assessment of Variability in the SOMAscan Assay

Julián Candia; Foo Cheung; Yuri Kotliarov; Giovanna Fantoni; Brian Sellers; Trevor Griesman; Jinghe Huang; Sarah Stuccio; Adriana Zingone; Bríd M. Ryan; John S. Tsang; Angélique Biancotto

SOMAscan is an aptamer-based proteomics assay capable of measuring 1,305 human protein analytes in serum, plasma, and other biological matrices with high sensitivity and specificity. In this work, we present a comprehensive meta-analysis of performance based on multiple serum and plasma runs using the current 1.3u2009k assay, as well as the previous 1.1u2009k version. We discuss normalization procedures and examine different strategies to minimize intra- and interplate nuisance effects. We implement a meta-analysis based on calibrator samples to characterize the coefficient of variation and signal-over-background intensity of each protein analyte. By incorporating coefficient of variation estimates into a theoretical model of statistical variability, we also provide a framework to enable rigorous statistical tests of significance in intervention studies and clinical trials, as well as quality control within and across laboratories. Furthermore, we investigate the stability of healthy subject baselines and determine the set of analytes that exhibit biologically stable baselines after technical variability is factored in. This work is accompanied by an interactive web-based tool, an initiative with the potential to become the cornerstone of a regularly updated, high quality repository with data sharing, reproducibility, and reusability as ultimate goals.


Journal of open research software | 2017

Web Tool for Navigating and Plotting SomaLogic ADAT Files

Foo Cheung; Giovanna Fantoni; Maria Conner; Brian Sellers; Yuri Kotliarov; Julián Candia; Katherine E. Stagliano; Angélique Biancotto

SOMAscan™ is a complex proteomic platform created by SomaLogic. Experimental data resulting from the assay is provided by SomaLogic in a proprietary text-based format called ADAT. This manuscript describes a user-friendly point and click open source, platform-independent software tool designed to be used for navigating and plotting data from an ADAT file. This tool was used either alone or in conjunction with other tools as a first pass analysis of the data on several different on-going research projects. We have seen a need from our experience for a web interface to the ADAT file so that users can navigate, generate plots, perform QC and conduct statistical analysis on their own data in a point and click manner. After several rounds of interacting with biologists and their requirements with respect to data analysis, we present an online interactive Shiny Web Tool for Navigating and Plotting data contained within the ADAT file. Extensive video tutorials, example data, the tool and the source code are available online.


Cytokine | 2018

Circulating S100A8 and S100A9 protein levels in plasma of patients with acquired aplastic anemia and myelodysplastic syndromes

Valentina Giudice; Zhijie Wu; Sachiko Kajigaya; Maria del Pilar Fernandez Ibanez; Olga Rios; Foo Cheung; Sawa Ito; Neal S. Young

&NA; The alarmin family members S100A8 and S100A9 are acute phase inflammation proteins, but they also have been proposed as biomarkers in many malignant and non‐malignant diseases. In this study, circulating S100A8 and S100A9 homodimers and S100A8/A9 heterodimers in plasma were systematically investigated by ELISA in aplastic anemia (AA) and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Plasma was obtained from 58 severe AA (SAA) and 30 MDS patients, and from 47 age‐ and sex‐matched healthy donors. In 40 out of the 58 AA subjects, S100A protein levels were measured before and 6 months after immunosuppressive therapy (IST). No differences were observed in AA patients at diagnosis compared to healthy controls for circulating S100A homodimers and heterodimers. After therapy, SAA‐responders showed significantly increased circulating S100A8. Non‐responding patients had significantly higher levels of circulating S100A8/A9 compared to responders and healthy controls, but without variations of S100A8 and S100A9 homodimers. In MDS patients, circulating S100A8 was significantly elevated compared to those of AA and/or healthy controls. By Pearson correlation analysis of protein levels and blood counts, multiple correlations were found. However, as S100A8 and S100A9 are abundantly present in white blood cells and platelets, correlations with blood counts likely mirror the higher number of cells in the blood of some patients. In conclusion, our findings indicate that circulating S100A8 is increased in MDS but not in AA, and that may be useful to distinguish these diseases in the differential diagnosis of bone marrow failure syndromes. Clinicaltrials.gov identifiers: NCT00260689, NCT00604201, NCT01328587, NCT01623167, NCT00001620, NCT00001397.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2017

Impaired B cell immunity in acute myeloid leukemia patients after chemotherapy

Meghali Goswami; Gabrielle T. Prince; Angélique Biancotto; Susan Moir; Lela Kardava; Brian H. Santich; Foo Cheung; Yuri Kotliarov; Jinguo Chen; Rongye Shi; Huizhi Zhou; Hana Golding; Jody Manischewitz; Lisa King; Lauren M. Kunz; Kimberly Noonan; Ivan Borrello; B. Douglas Smith; Christopher S. Hourigan

BackgroundChanges in adaptive immune cells after chemotherapy in adult acute myeloid leukemia (AML) may have implications for the success of immunotherapy. This study was designed to determine the functional capacity of the immune system in adult patients with AML who have completed chemotherapy and are potential candidates for immunotherapy.MethodsWe used the response to seasonal influenza vaccination as a surrogate for the robustness of the immune system in 10 AML patients in a complete remission post-chemotherapy and performed genetic, phenotypic, and functional characterization of adaptive immune cell subsets.ResultsOnly 2 patients generated protective titers in response to vaccination, and a majority of patients had abnormal frequencies of transitional and memory B-cells. B-cell receptor sequencing showed a B-cell repertoire with little evidence of somatic hypermutation in most patients. Conversely, frequencies of T-cell populations were similar to those seen in healthy controls, and cytotoxic T-cells demonstrated antigen-specific activity after vaccination. Effector T-cells had increased PD-1 expression in AML patients least removed from chemotherapy.ConclusionOur results suggest that while some aspects of cellular immunity recover quickly, humoral immunity is incompletely reconstituted in the year following intensive cytotoxic chemotherapy for AML. The observed B-cell abnormalities may explain the poor response to vaccination often seen in AML patients after chemotherapy. Furthermore, the uncoupled recovery of B-cell and T-cell immunity and increased PD-1 expression shortly after chemotherapy might have implications for the success of several modalities of immunotherapy.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2018

PBMC fixation and processing for Chromium single-cell RNA sequencing

Jinguo Chen; Foo Cheung; Rongye Shi; Huizhi Zhou; Wenrui Lu

BackgroundInterest in single-cell transcriptomic analysis is growing rapidly, especially for profiling rare or heterogeneous populations of cells. In almost all reported works investigators have used live cells, which introduces cell stress during preparation and hinders complex study designs. Recent studies have indicated that cells fixed by denaturing fixative can be used in single-cell sequencing, however they did not usually work with most types of primary cells including immune cells.MethodsThe methanol-fixation and new processing method was introduced to preserve human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) for single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq) analysis on 10× Chromium platform.ResultsWhen methanol fixation protocol was broken up into three steps: fixation, storage and rehydration, we found that PBMC RNA was degraded during rehydration with PBS, not at cell fixation and up to 3-month storage steps. Resuspension but not rehydration in 3× saline sodium citrate (SSC) buffer instead of PBS preserved PBMC RNA integrity and prevented RNA leakage. Diluted SSC buffer did not interfere with full-length cDNA synthesis. The methanol-fixed PBMCs resuspended in 3× SSC were successfully implemented into 10× Chromium standard scRNA-seq workflows with no elevated low quality cells and cell doublets. The fixation process did not alter the single-cell transcriptional profiles and gene expression levels. Major subpopulations classified by marker genes could be identified in fixed PBMCs at a similar proportion as in live PBMCs. This new fixation processing protocol also worked in several other fixed primary cell types and cell lines as in live ones.ConclusionsWe expect that the methanol-based cell fixation procedure presented here will allow better and more effective batching schemes for a complex single cell experimental design with primary cells or tissues.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2018

The Immunome in Two Inherited Forms of Pulmonary Fibrosis

Souheil El-Chemaly; Foo Cheung; Yuri Kotliarov; Kevin J. O’Brien; William A. Gahl; Jinguo Chen; Shira Perl; Angélique Biancotto; Bernadette R. Gochuico

The immunome (immune cell phenotype, gene expression, and serum cytokines profiling) in pulmonary fibrosis is incompletely defined. Studies focusing on inherited forms of pulmonary fibrosis provide insights into mechanisms of fibrotic lung disease in general. To define the cellular and molecular immunologic phenotype in peripheral blood, high-dimensional flow cytometry and large-scale gene expression of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and serum proteomic multiplex analyses were performed and compared in a cohort with familial pulmonary fibrosis (FPF), an autosomal dominant disorder with incomplete penetrance; Hermansky–Pudlak syndrome pulmonary fibrosis (HPSPF), a rare autosomal recessive disorder; and their unaffected relatives. Our results showed high peripheral blood concentrations of activated central memory helper cells in patients with FPF. Proportions of CD38+ memory CD27− B-cells, IgA+ memory CD27+ B-cells, IgM+ and IgD+ B-cells, and CD39+ T helper cells were increased whereas those of CD39− T helper cells were reduced in patients affected with either familial or HPSPF. Gene expression and serum proteomic analyses revealed enrichment of upregulated genes associated with mitosis and cell cycle control in circulating mononuclear cells as well as altered levels of several analytes, including leptin, cytokines, and growth factors. In conclusion, dysregulation of the extra-pulmonary immunome is a phenotypic feature of FPF or HPSPF. Further studies investigating the blood immunome are indicated to determine the role of immune system dysregulation in the pathogenesis of pulmonary fibrosis. Clinical Trial Registration www.ClinicalTrials.gov, identifiers NCT00968084, NCT01200823, NCT00001456, and NCT00084305.

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Angélique Biancotto

National Institutes of Health

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Yuri Kotliarov

National Institutes of Health

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Jinguo Chen

National Institutes of Health

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John S. Tsang

National Institutes of Health

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Rongye Shi

National Institutes of Health

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Huizhi Zhou

National Institutes of Health

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Ena Wang

National Institutes of Health

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Giovanna Fantoni

National Institutes of Health

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Julián Candia

National Institutes of Health

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Matthew J. Olnes

National Institutes of Health

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