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Featured researches published by Shui Ying Tsang.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2011

Imprinting in the schizophrenia candidate gene GABRB2 encoding GABA(A) receptor β(2) subunit.

Frank Wing Pun; Cunyou Zhao; Wing-Sze Lo; Siu Kin Ng; Shui Ying Tsang; Vishwajit L. Nimgaonkar; W.S. Chung; Gabor Sandor Ungvari; Hong Xue

Schizophrenia is a complex genetic disorder, the inheritance pattern of which is likely complicated by epigenetic factors yet to be elucidated. In this study, transmission disequilibrium tests with family trios yielded significant differences between paternal and maternal transmissions of the disease-associated single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs6556547 and its haplotypes. The minor allele (T) of rs6556547 was paternally undertransmitted to male schizophrenic offsprings, and this parent-of-origin effect strongly suggested that GABRB2 is imprinted. ‘Flipping’ of allelic expression in heterozygotes of SNP rs2229944 (C/T) in GABRB2 or rs2290732 (G/A) in the neighboring GABRA1 was compatible with imprinting effects on gene expression. Clustering analysis of GABRB2 mRNA expressions suggested that imprinting brought about the observed two-tiered distribution of expression levels in controls with heterozygous genotype at the disease-associated SNP rs1816071 (A/G). The deficit of upper-tiered expressions accounted for the lowered expression levels in the schizophrenic heterozygotes. The occurrence of a two-tiered distribution furnished support for imprinting, and also pointed to the necessity of differentiating between two kinds of heterozygotes of different parental origins in disease association studies on GABRB2. Bisulfite sequencing revealed hypermethylation in the neighborhood of SNP rs1816071, and methylation differences between controls and schizophrenia patients. Notably, the two schizophrenia-associated SNPs rs6556547 and rs1816071 overlapped with a CpG dinucleotide, thereby opening the possibility that CpG methylation status of these sites could have an impact on the risk of schizophrenia. Thus multiple lines of evidence pointed to the occurrence of imprinting in the GABRB2 gene and its possible role in the development of schizophrenia.


Biological Psychiatry | 2007

GABRB2 Association with Schizophrenia: Commonalities and Differences Between Ethnic Groups and Clinical Subtypes

W.S. Lo; Mutsuo Harano; Micha Gawlik; Zhiliang Yu; Jianhuan Chen; Frank Wing Pun; Ka Lok Tong; Cunyou Zhao; Siu Kin Ng; Shui Ying Tsang; Naohisa Uchimura; Gerald Stöber; Hong Xue

BACKGROUND Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and haplotypes in intron 8 of type A gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA(A)) receptor beta2 subunit gene (GABRB2) were initially found to be associated with schizophrenia in Chinese. This finding was subjected to cross-validation in this study with Japanese (JP) and German Caucasian (GE) subjects. METHODS Single nucleotide polymorphisms discovery and genotyping were carried out through resequencing of a 1839 base pair (bp) region in GABRB2. Tagging SNPs (tSNPs) were selected based on linkage disequilibrium (LD), combinations of which were analyzed with Bonferroni correction and permutation for disease association. Random resampling was applied to generate size- and gender-balanced cases and control subjects. RESULTS Out of the 17 SNPs (9.2/kilobase [kb]) revealed, 6 were population-specific. Population variations in LD were observable, and at least two low LD points were identified in both populations. Although disease association at single SNP level was only shown in GE, strong association was demonstrated in both JP (p = .0002 - .0191) and GE (p = .0033 - .0410) subjects, centering on haplotypes containing rs1816072 and rs1816071. Among different clinical subtypes, the most significant association was exhibited by systematic schizophrenia. CONCLUSIONS Cross-population validation of GABRB2 association with schizophrenia has been obtained with JP and GE subjects, with the genotype-disease correlations being strongest in systematic schizophrenia, the most severe subtype of the disease.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2006

Two isoforms of GABAA receptor |[beta]|2 subunit with different electrophysiological properties: differential expression and genotypical correlations in schizophrenia

Cunyou Zhao; Zhiwen Xu; Jianhuan Chen; Zhiliang Yu; Ka Lok Tong; Wing-Sze Lo; Frank Wing Pun; Siu Kin Ng; Shui Ying Tsang; Hong Xue

Single nucleotide polymorphisms in type A γ-aminobutyric acid (GABAA) receptor β2 subunit gene (GABRB2) were found to be associated with schizophrenia in Chinese, German, Japanese and Portuguese. To explore potential functional consequences of these DNA sequence polymorphisms, this study examined the expression and electrophysiological properties of two alternatively spliced products of GABRB2 along with genotypical disease association analysis. Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction, performed with a cohort of 31 schizophrenics and 31 controls of US population, showed 21.7% reduction in the expression of the long isoform β2L, 13.4% in the short isoform β2S and 15.8% in the sum of the two isoforms β2T in postmortem schizophrenic brain. Furthermore, two independent mRNA quantitation methods showed that the relative expression of the long over the short isoforms was significantly decreased, suggesting the occurrence of altered splicing, in schizophrenia. In male schizophrenics, the heterozygous genotypes of rs1876071 (T/C) and rs1876072 (A/G) were correlated with reduced expression of β2L, β2S and β2T, and the heterozygous of rs2546620 (A/G) and homozygous-minor of rs1876071 (C/C) and rs1876072 (G/G) were correlated with reduced expression of β2T. Significant correlations of expression levels with different alleles and haplotypes were also indicated by quantitative trait analysis. Recombinant GABAA receptors expressed in HEK293 human cells containing β2L underwent a steeper current rundown upon repetitive GABA activation than receptors containing β2S. The results thus revealed genotype-dependent expression of the alternatively spliced isoforms of GABAA receptor β2 subunit, giving rise to electrophysiological consequences that could play an important role in the pathogenesis mechanism of schizophrenia.


Neuropharmacology | 2008

GABAA receptor subtype selectivity underlying selective anxiolytic effect of baicalin

Feng Wang; Zhiwen Xu; Lihuan Ren; Shui Ying Tsang; Hong Xue

Baicalin, a naturally occurring flavonoid, was previously reported to induce anxiolytic-like effect devoid of sedation and myorelaxation in mice, acting through type A gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA(A)) receptor benzodiazepine (BZ) site. The present study further expanded the behavioral pharmacology profile of baicalin and subtype selectivity was explored as a possible mechanism underlying its in vivo effects on mice. Baicalin was characterized using convulsion, memory, and motor function related animal tests; and its selectivity towards recombinant GABA(A) receptor subtypes expressed in HEK 293T cells was determined by radioligand binding assay and electrophysiological studies. In the picrotoxin-induced seizure, step-through passive avoidance and rotarod tests, the anticonvulsant, amnesic and motor incoordination effects commonly associated with classical BZs were not observed when baicalin was administered at effective anxiolytic doses, demonstrating a separation of the anticonvulsant, amnesic and motor incoordination effects from the anxiolytic-like effect. Although baicalin exhibited higher binding affinity for the alpha1-containing GABA(A) subtype compared with alpha2-, alpha3-, and alpha5-containing subtypes, this was not statistically significant. In contrast to the classical BZ diazepam, baicalin showed significant preference for alpha2- and alpha3-containing subtypes compared to alpha1- and alpha5-containing subtypes in whole-cell patch clamp studies (P < 0.01). Its subtype selectivity suggested that baicalin exerted its in vivo anxiolytic-like effect mainly through the alpha2- and alpha3-containing subtypes. Therefore, the present study revealed an underlying mechanism for the selective anxiolytic profile of baicalin, suggesting alpha2- and alpha3-containing subtypes were important drug targets for flavonoid-based anxiolytics.


Life Sciences | 2001

Low density lipoprotein as a targeted carrier for doxorubicin in nude mice bearing human hepatoma HepG2 cells

Andrew Chi-Yuen Chu; Shui Ying Tsang; Elka H.K. Lo; Kwok-Pui Fung

Doxorubicin (DOX) was coupled to human low density lipoprotein (LDL) to form a complex (LDL-DOX). When injected into mice, LDL-DOX was more accumulated in liver than free DOX. In contrast, LDL-DOX was less accumulated in heart than free DOX. In in vitro studies on human hepatoma (HepG2) cells, although the cellular uptake of LDL-DOX was higher than that of DOX, the anti-proliferative effect of LDL-DOX on these tumor cells was smaller than that of LDL. However, when LDL-DOX or DOX was administered to nude mice bearing HepG2 cells implanted on the shoulder, the anti-proliferative effects on the tumor cells of both drugs were similar. Histological analyses indicated that organization of myocardial filaments was disrupted and vacuolization was observed in DOX-treated group when compared with control group whereas LDL-DOX-treatment did not exhibit any damage in the hosts heart. Enzymatic analyses also demonstrated that plasma lactate dehydrogenase activity, which is a common indicator of heart damage, was elevated in DOX-treated group when compared with control group whereas the activity of this enzyme was unchanged in LDL-DOX-treated group. The results in present study indicate that LDL can be used as a targeted carrier for DOX because LDL-DOX can exhibit similar anti-proliferative effect as DOX on tumor but reduce the DOX-induced cardiotoxicity in the host.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Positive Selection within the Schizophrenia-Associated GABAA Receptor β2 Gene

Wing-Sze Lo; Zhiwen Xu; Zhiliang Yu; Frank Wing Pun; Siu-Kin Ng; Jianhuan Chen; Ka-Lok Tong; Cunyou Zhao; Xiaojing Xu; Shui Ying Tsang; Mutsuo Harano; Gerald Stöber; Vishwajit L. Nimgaonkar; Hong Xue

The gamma-aminobutyric acid type-A (GABAA) receptor plays a major role in inhibitory neurotransmissions. Intronic SNPs and haplotypes in GABRB2, the gene for GABAA receptor β2 subunit, are associated with schizophrenia and correlated with the expression of two alternatively spliced β2 isoforms. In the present study, using chimpanzee as an ancestral reference, high frequencies were observed for the derived (D) alleles of the four SNPs rs6556547, rs187269, rs1816071 and rs1816072 in GABRB2, suggesting the occurrence of positive selection for these derived alleles. Coalescence-based simulation showed that the population frequency spectra and the frequencies of H56, the haplotype having all four D alleles, significantly deviated from neutral-evolution expectation in various demographic models. Haplotypes containing the derived allele of rs1816072 displayed significantly less diversity compared to haplotypes containing its ancestral allele, further supporting positive selection. The variations in DD-genotype frequencies in five human populations provided a snapshot of the evolutionary history, which suggested that the positive selections of the D alleles are recent and likely ongoing. The divergence between the DD-genotype profiles of schizophrenic and control samples pointed to the schizophrenia-relevance of positive selections, with the schizophrenic samples showing weakened selections compared to the controls. These DD-genotypes were previously found to increase the expression of β2, especially its long isoform. Electrophysiological analysis showed that this long β2 isoform favored by the positive selections is more sensitive than the short isoform to the inhibition of GABAA receptor function by energy depletion. These findings represent the first demonstration of positive selection in a schizophrenia-associated gene.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2004

Development of Effective Therapeutics Targeting the GABAA Receptor: Naturally Occurring Alternatives

Shui Ying Tsang; Hong Xue

The enhancement of GABA-mediated synaptic transmission underlies the pharmacotherapy of various neurological diseases. GABAA receptors are thus targets for neuroactive drugs, including classical benzodiazepines, mediating their anxiolytic, hypnotic and anticonvulsant effects via the benzodiazepine site (BZS). Based on findings that low intrinsic efficacy and subtype selectivity can greatly improve the specificity of drugs targeting the BZS, recent research has identified possible drug leads with apparently little side effects. In particular, drug leads of natural sources have been identified as promising candidates. This review describes the advances in the design of effective therapeutics targeting the GABAA receptor, focusing on the more recent research on naturally occurring drug leads. This includes discussion on the isolation of neuroactive alkaloids and flavonoids from herbal medicines and their rational development based on structure-activity relationships studies. Interest in the development of effective therapeutics from natural sources is clear and awaits to be seen whether their medicinal potential can be fulfilled.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Alternative-Splicing in the Exon-10 Region of GABAA Receptor β2 Subunit Gene: Relationships between Novel Isoforms and Psychotic Disorders

Cunyou Zhao; Zhiwen Xu; Feng Wang; Jianhuan Chen; Siu Kin Ng; Pak Wing Wong; Zhiliang Yu; Frank Wing Pun; Lihuan Ren; Wing-Sze Lo; Shui Ying Tsang; Hong Xue

Background Non-coding single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in GABRB2, the gene for β2-subunit of gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptor, have been associated with schizophrenia (SCZ) and quantitatively correlated to mRNA expression and alternative splicing. Methods and Findings Expression of the Exon 10 region of GABRB2 from minigene constructs revealed this region to be an “alternative splicing hotspot” that readily gave rise to differently spliced isoforms depending on intron sequences. This led to a search in human brain cDNA libraries, and the discovery of two novel isoforms, β2S1 and β2S2, bearing variations in the neighborhood of Exon-10. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis of postmortem brain samples showed increased β2S1 expression and decreased β2S2 expression in both SCZ and bipolar disorder (BPD) compared to controls. Disease-control differences were significantly correlated with SNP rs187269 in BPD males for both β2S1 and β2S2 expressions, and significantly correlated with SNPs rs2546620 and rs187269 in SCZ males for β2S2 expression. Moreover, site-directed mutagenesis indicated that Thr365, a potential phosphorylation site in Exon-10, played a key role in determining the time profile of the ATP-dependent electrophysiological current run-down. Conclusion This study therefore provided experimental evidence for the importance of non-coding sequences in the Exon-10 region in GABRB2 with respect to β2-subunit splicing diversity and the etiologies of SCZ and BPD.


Schizophrenia Research | 2012

Epigenetic regulation on GABRB2 isoforms expression: Developmental variations and disruptions in psychotic disorders

Cunyou Zhao; Feng Wang; Frank Wing Pun; Lingling Mei; Lihuan Ren; Zhiliang Yu; Sin Kin Ng; Jianhuan Chen; Shui Ying Tsang; Hong Xue

INTRODUCTION To improve the understanding of psychotic abnormalities and their non-Mendelian inheritance patterns, the epigenetic regulation of the psychotic disorder-associated GABRB2, gene for the type A γ-aminobutyric acid receptor β(2)-subunit, was investigated. METHODS Expression of GABRB2, and the epigenetic regulatory enzymes histone deacetylases (HDACs) and DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) in mouse and postmortem human brains was analyzed using real-time PCR. RESULTS Results showed that expression of GABRB2 isoforms significantly increased over time in both mouse and human, especially for the long splicing isoform. In the brains of non-psychiatric controls (CON), a significant positive correlation of GABRB2 expression with age was observed in individuals with MM genotypes of the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) rs187269 and rs1816072. This was reversed to a significant negative correlation in schizophrenics (SCZ). A similar reversal was also displayed by bipolar disorder (BPD) patients. In parallel, a significant co-variation of HDAC1 with GABRB2 expression observed in CON remained significant in BPD but not in SCZ; comparably, a significant co-variation of HDAC2 with GABRB2 expression observed in CON became non-significant in both SCZ and BPD. Moreover, co-variations of DNMT1 and DNMT3B with GABRB2, not observable in CON, became significant in BPD. CONCLUSION These findings demonstrated that GABRB2 expression was under epigenetic regulation that varied with development, genotype and disease status, and these regulatory mechanisms were observably disrupted in SCZ and BPD. This study provided insight into the complex inheritance patterns of psychiatric disorders, and pointed to the involvement of epigenetic dysregulation in the disease process of major psychotic disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2010

A recombination hotspot in a schizophrenia-associated region of GABRB2.

Siu Kin Ng; Wing-Sze Lo; Frank Wing Pun; Cunyou Zhao; Zhiliang Yu; Jianhuan Chen; Ka Lok Tong; Zhiwen Xu; Shui Ying Tsang; Qiang Yang; Weichuan Yu; Vishwajit L. Nimgaonkar; Gerald Stöber; Mutsuo Harano; Hong Xue

Background Schizophrenia is a major disorder with complex genetic mechanisms. Earlier, population genetic studies revealed the occurrence of strong positive selection in the GABRB2 gene encoding the β2 subunit of GABAA receptors, within a segment of 3,551 bp harboring twenty-nine single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and containing schizophrenia-associated SNPs and haplotypes. Methodology/Principal Findings In the present study, the possible occurrence of recombination in this ‘S1–S29’ segment was assessed. The occurrence of hotspot recombination was indicated by high resolution recombination rate estimation, haplotype diversity, abundance of rare haplotypes, recurrent mutations and torsos in haplotype networks, and experimental haplotyping of somatic and sperm DNA. The sub-segment distribution of relative recombination strength, measured by the ratio of haplotype diversity (Hd) over mutation rate (θ), was indicative of a human specific Alu-Yi6 insertion serving as a central recombining sequence facilitating homologous recombination. Local anomalous DNA conformation attributable to the Alu-Yi6 element, as suggested by enhanced DNase I sensitivity and obstruction to DNA sequencing, could be a contributing factor of the increased sequence diversity. Linkage disequilibrium (LD) analysis yielded prominent low LD points that supported ongoing recombination. LD contrast revealed significant dissimilarity between control and schizophrenic cohorts. Among the large array of inferred haplotypes, H26 and H73 were identified to be protective, and H19 and H81 risk-conferring, toward the development of schizophrenia. Conclusions/Significance The co-occurrence of hotspot recombination and positive selection in the S1–S29 segment of GABRB2 has provided a plausible contribution to the molecular genetics mechanisms for schizophrenia. The present findings therefore suggest that genome regions characterized by the co-occurrence of positive selection and hotspot recombination, two interacting factors both affecting genetic diversity, merit close scrutiny with respect to the etiology of common complex disorders.

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Hong Xue

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Cunyou Zhao

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Frank Wing Pun

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Zhiwen Xu

Sichuan Agricultural University

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Zhiliang Yu

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Jianhuan Chen

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Siu-Kin Ng

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Wing-Sze Lo

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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Siu Kin Ng

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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