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Dive into the research topics where Shengnan Jin is active.

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Featured researches published by Shengnan Jin.


Clinical Chemistry | 2008

Systematic search for placental DNA-methylation markers on chromosome 21: Toward a maternal plasma-based epigenetic test for fetal trisomy 21

Stephen Siu Chung Chim; Shengnan Jin; Tracy Yuen Han Lee; Fiona M.F. Lun; Wing Shan Lee; Lisa Y.S. Chan; Yongjie Jin; Ningning Yang; Yu K. Tong; Tak Yeung Leung; Tze K. Lau; Chunming Ding; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Y.M. Dennis Lo

BACKGROUND The presence of fetal DNA in maternal plasma represents a source of fetal genetic material for noninvasive prenatal diagnosis; however, the coexisting background maternal DNA complicates the analysis of aneuploidy in such fetal DNA. Recently, the SERPINB5 gene on chromosome 18 was shown to exhibit different DNA-methylation patterns in the placenta and maternal blood cells, and the allelic ratio for placenta-derived hypomethylated SERPINB5 in maternal plasma was further shown to be useful for noninvasive detection of fetal trisomy 18. METHODS To develop a similar method for the noninvasive detection of trisomy 21, we used methylation-sensitive single nucleotide primer extension and/or bisulfite sequencing to systematically search 114 CpG islands (CGIs)-76% of the 149 CGIs on chromosome 21 identified by bioinformatic criteria-for differentially methylated DNA patterns. The methylation index (MI) of a CpG site was estimated as the proportion of molecules methylated at that site. RESULTS We identified 22 CGIs which were shown to contain CpG sites that were either completely unmethylated (MI = 0.00) in maternal blood cells and methylated in the placenta (MI range, 0.22-0.65), or completely methylated (MI = 1.00) in maternal blood cells and hypomethylated in the placenta (MI range, 0.00-0.75). We detected, for the first time, placental DNA-methylation patterns on chromosome 21 in maternal plasma during pregnancy and observed their postpartum clearance. CONCLUSION Twenty-two (19%) of the 114 studied CGIs on chromosome 21 showed epigenetic differences between samples of placenta and maternal blood cells; these CGIs may provide a rich source of markers for noninvasive prenatal diagnosis.


Clinical Chemistry | 2010

Noninvasive Prenatal Detection of Trisomy 21 by an Epigenetic–Genetic Chromosome-Dosage Approach

Yu K. Tong; Shengnan Jin; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Chunming Ding; K.C. Allen Chan; Tak Yeung Leung; Ling Yu; Tze K. Lau; Y.M. Dennis Lo

BACKGROUND The use of fetal DNA in maternal plasma for noninvasive prenatal diagnosis of trisomy 21 (T21) is an actively researched area. We propose a novel method of T21 detection that combines fetal-specific epigenetic and genetic markers. METHODS We used combined bisulfite restriction analysis to search for fetal DNA markers on chromosome 21 that were differentially methylated in the placenta and maternal blood cells and confirmed any target locus with bisulfite sequencing. We then used methylation-sensitive restriction endonuclease digestion followed by microfluidics digital PCR analysis to investigate the identified marker. Chromosome-dosage analysis was performed by comparing the dosage of this epigenetic marker with that of the ZFY (zinc finger protein, Y-linked) gene on chromosome Y. RESULTS The putative promoter of the HLCS (holocarboxylase synthetase) gene was hypermethylated in the placenta and hypomethylated in maternal blood cells. A chromosome-dosage comparison of the hypermethylated HLCS and ZFY loci could distinguish samples of T21 and euploid placental DNA. Twenty-four maternal plasma samples from euploid pregnancies and 5 maternal plasma samples from T21 pregnancies were analyzed. All but 1 of the euploid samples were correctly classified. CONCLUSIONS The epigenetic-genetic chromosome-dosage approach is a new method for noninvasive prenatal detection of T21. The epigenetic part of the analysis can be applied to all pregnancies. Because the genetic part of the analysis uses paternally inherited, fetal-specific genetic markers that are abundant in the genome, broad population coverage should be readily achievable. This approach has the potential to become a generally usable technique for noninvasive prenatal diagnosis.


Clinical Chemistry | 2009

Multiplex Detection of 60 Hepatitis B Virus Variants by MALDI-TOF Mass Spectrometry

Ju Luan; Jing Yuan; Xiaohe Li; Shengnan Jin; Ling Yu; Mingfeng Liao; Hongmei Zhang; Cheng Xu; Qing He; Bin Wen; Xunhua Zhong; Xinchun Chen; Henry Lik-Yuen Chan; Joseph J.Y. Sung; Boping Zhou; Chunming Ding

BACKGROUND Variations in the hepatitis B virus (HBV) genome may develop spontaneously or under selective pressure from antiviral therapy. Such variations may confer drug resistance or affect virus replication capacity, resulting in failure of antiviral therapy. METHODS A duplex PCR was used to amplify the region of the reverse transcriptase gene, the precore promoter, and the basal core promoter of the HBV genome. Four multiplex primer-extension reactions were used to interrogate 60 frequently observed HBV variants during antiviral therapy. Automated MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (MS) was used for mutation detection. Capillary sequencing was used to confirm the MS results. RESULTS The limit of quantification was 1000 HBV copies/mL for multiplex detection of HBV variants. Fifty-three variants (88.3%) were analyzed successfully in at least 90% of the sera from 88 treatment-naive patients and 80 patients with virologic breakthrough. MS was able to detect twice as many minor variants as direct sequencing while achieving close to full automation. MS and direct sequencing showed only 0.1% discordance in variant calls. CONCLUSIONS This platform based on multiplex primer extension and MALDI-TOF MS was able to detect 60 HBV variants in 4 multiplex reactions with accuracy and low detection limits.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Placenta-derived fetal specific mRNA is more readily detectable in maternal plasma than in whole blood

Macy M. S. Heung; Shengnan Jin; Nancy B.Y. Tsui; Chunming Ding; Tak Yeung Leung; Tze K. Lau; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Y.M. Dennis Lo

Background Placental mRNA was detected in maternal whole blood, raising the possibility of using maternal blood for noninvasive prenatal diagnosis. We investigated fetal mRNA detection in maternal whole blood and determined if it offered advantages over maternal plasma analysis. Methodology The concentrations of placental expressed genes, CSH1, KISS1, PLAC4 and PLAC1 in plasma and whole blood from healthy pregnant and non-pregnant individuals were compared by real-time quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction analysis. Their fetal specificity was investigated by comparing the transcript concentrations in pre- and post-delivery samples and through SNP genotyping by matrix-assisted laser-desorption and ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The gene expression profiles of pregnant and non-pregnant whole blood were investigated by microarray analysis. Upregulated genes in pregnant whole blood were selected for further quantitative analysis. Principal Findings The concentrations of the four transcripts were significantly higher in third trimester maternal whole blood than corresponding plasma without significant correlations. KISS1, PLAC4 and PLAC1 were detected in non-pregnant whole blood but not plasma. The transcripts remained detectable in some postpartum whole blood samples. The PLAC4 mRNA in maternal plasma showed fetal genotype while that in corresponding whole blood indicated both fetal and maternal contributions. Microarray analysis revealed upregulation of genes involved in neutrophil functions in pregnant whole blood including DEFA4, CEACAM8, OLFM4, ORM1, MMP8 and MPO. Though possibly pregnancy-related, they were not pregnancy-specific as suggested by the lack of post-delivery reduction in concentrations. Conclusions Maternal plasma is preferred over maternal whole blood for placenta-derived fetal RNA detection. Most studied ‘placental’ mRNA molecules in maternal whole blood were of maternal origin and might be derived from processes such as ‘illegitimate transcription’.


Archive | 2007

Novel markers for prenatal diagnosis and monitoring

Yuk Ming Dennis Lo; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Stephen Siu Chung Chim; Chunming Ding; Shengnan Jin; Tracy Yuen Han Lee; Fiona M.F. Lun


Archive | 2010

Method for detecting chromosomal aneuploidy

Yuk Ming Dennis Lo; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Yu Kwan Tong; Shengnan Jin; Wai Yi Tsui


Archive | 2007

Novel fetal markers for prenatal diagnosis and monitoring

Yuk Ming Dennis Lo; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Stephen Siu Chung Chim; Chunming Ding; Shengnan Jin; Tracy Yuen Han Lee; Fiona M.F. Lun


Archive | 2007

Gene d'holocarboxylase synthetase (hlcs) servant au diagnostic prenatal de la trisomie 21

Yuk Ming Dennis Lo; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Stephen Siu Chung Chim; Chunming Ding; Shengnan Jin; Tracy Yuen Han Lee; Fiona M.F. Lun


Archive | 2007

Neuartiger Marker zur pränatalen Diagnose und Überwachung

Yuk Ming Dennis Lo; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Stephen Siu Chung Chim; Chunming Ding; Shengnan Jin; Tracy Yuen Han Lee; Fiona M.F. Lun


Archive | 2007

Nouveaux marqueurs pour diagnostic et surveillance prénataux

Yuk Ming Dennis Lo; Rossa W.K. Chiu; Stephen Siu Chung Chim; Chunming Ding; Shengnan Jin; Tracy Yuen Han Lee; Fiona M.F. Lun

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Chunming Ding

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Rossa W.K. Chiu

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Fiona M.F. Lun

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Stephen Siu Chung Chim

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Tracy Yuen Han Lee

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Yuk Ming Dennis Lo

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Tak Yeung Leung

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Tze K. Lau

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Y.M. Dennis Lo

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Ling Yu

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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