Sok Ching Cheong
University of Malaya
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sok Ching Cheong.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Emilios Gemenetzidis; Amrita Bose; Adeel M. Riaz; Tracy Chaplin; Bryan D. Young; Muhammad Ali; David Sugden; Johanna K. Thurlow; Sok Ching Cheong; Soo-Hwang Teo; Hong Wan; Ahmad Waseem; Eric Kenneth Parkinson; Farida Fortune; Muy-Teck Teh
Background Cancer associated with smoking and drinking remains a serious health problem worldwide. The survival of patients is very poor due to the lack of effective early biomarkers. FOXM1 overexpression is linked to the majority of human cancers but its mechanism remains unclear in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). Methodology/Principal Findings FOXM1 mRNA and protein expressions were investigated in four independent cohorts (total 75 patients) consisting of normal, premalignant and HNSCC tissues and cells using quantitative PCR (qPCR), expression microarray, immunohistochemistry and immunocytochemistry. Effect of putative oral carcinogens on FOXM1 transcriptional activity was dose-dependently assayed and confirmed using a FOXM1-specific luciferase reporter system, qPCR, immunoblotting and short-hairpin RNA interference. Genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array was used to ‘trace’ the genomic instability signature pattern in 8 clonal lines of FOXM1-induced malignant human oral keratinocytes. Furthermore, acute FOXM1 upregulation in primary oral keratinocytes directly induced genomic instability. We have shown for the first time that overexpression of FOXM1 precedes HNSCC malignancy. Screening putative carcinogens in human oral keratinocytes surprisingly showed that nicotine, which is not perceived to be a human carcinogen, directly induced FOXM1 mRNA, protein stabilisation and transcriptional activity at concentrations relevant to tobacco chewers. Importantly, nicotine also augmented FOXM1-induced transformation of human oral keratinocytes. A centrosomal protein CEP55 and a DNA helicase/putative stem cell marker HELLS, both located within a consensus loci (10q23), were found to be novel targets of FOXM1 and their expression correlated tightly with HNSCC progression. Conclusions/Significance This study cautions the potential co-carcinogenic effect of nicotine in tobacco replacement therapies. We hypothesise that aberrant upregulation of FOXM1 may be inducing genomic instability through a program of malignant transformation involving the activation of CEP55 and HELLS which may facilitate aberrant mitosis and epigenetic modifications. Our finding that FOXM1 is upregulated early during oral cancer progression renders FOXM1 an attractive diagnostic biomarker for early cancer detection and its candidate mechanistic targets, CEP55 and HELLS, as indicators of malignant conversion and progression.
Analytical Chemistry | 2012
Vyomesh Patel; Bhaskara V. Chikkaveeraiah; Bernard Munge; Sok Ching Cheong; Rosnah Binti Zain; Mannil Thomas Abraham; Dipak K. Dey; J. Silvio Gutkind; James F. Rusling
Multiplexed biomarker protein detection holds unrealized promise for clinical cancer diagnostics due to lack of suitable measurement devices and lack of rigorously validated protein panels. Here we report an ultrasensitive electrochemical microfluidic array optimized to measure a four-protein panel of biomarker proteins, and we validate the protein panel for accurate oral cancer diagnostics. Unprecedented ultralow detection into the 5-50 fg·mL(-1) range was achieved for simultaneous measurement of proteins interleukin 6 (IL-6), IL-8, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), and VEGF-C in diluted serum. The immunoarray achieves high sensitivity in 50 min assays by using off-line protein capture by magnetic beads carrying 400,000 enzyme labels and ~100,000 antibodies. After capture of the proteins and washing to inhibit nonspecific binding, the beads are magnetically separated and injected into the array for selective capture by antibodies on eight nanostructured sensors. Good correlations with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) for protein determinations in conditioned cancer cell media confirmed the accuracy of this approach. Normalized means of the four protein levels in 78 oral cancer patient serum samples and 49 controls gave clinical sensitivity of 89% and specificity of 98% for oral cancer detection, demonstrating high diagnostic utility. The low-cost, easily fabricated immunoarray provides a rapid serum test for diagnosis and personalized therapy of oral cancer. The device is readily adaptable to clinical diagnostics of other cancers.
International Journal of Cancer | 2014
Kalen R. Dionne; Saman Warnakulasuriya; Rosnah Binti Zain; Sok Ching Cheong
Despite commendable progress in the prevention, detection, and treatment of a wide variety of solid tumor types, oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) remains a significant health burden across the globe. OSCC carcinogenesis involves accumulation of genetic alterations that coincide with the multistep malignant transformation of normal oral epithelium. OSCC is often first diagnosed at late stages of the disease (advanced regional disease and/or metastasis). Delayed diagnosis precludes successful treatment and favorable outcomes. In clinical practice, opportunities exist to identify patients with oral potentially malignant disorders (OPMDs), which precede the development of cancer. This review addresses the current status of laboratory and clinical research on OPMDs, with emphasis on leukoplakia and erythroplakia. OSF is also presented, though there is a paucity of published studies on this disorder. We focus on findings that could translate into earlier diagnosis and more efficacious treatment of those lesions with significant malignant potential. We explore how markers of OPMD malignant transformation might be implemented into current diagnostic practice to help clinicians objectively stratify patients into treatment/follow‐up groups according to relative risk. We provide an overview of recently concluded and ongoing OPMD chemoprevention trials. We describe laboratory OPMD models that can be used to not only to reveal the genetic and molecular intricacies of oral cancer but also to develop novel screening methods and therapeutic approaches. Finally, we call for targeted screening programs of at‐risk populations in order to facilitate diagnosis and treatment of OPMD and early OSCC.
The Journal of Pathology | 2011
Kue Peng Lim; Nicola Cirillo; Yazan Hassona; Wenbin Wei; Johanna K. Thurlow; Sok Ching Cheong; G. Pitiyage; E. Ken Parkinson; Stephen S. Prime
Oral cancer is a highly aggressive malignancy with poor prognosis. This study examined the behaviour of fibroblast strains from normal oral mucosa, dysplastic epithelial tissue, and genetically stable (minimal copy number alterations—CNA; minimal loss of heterozygosity—LOH; wild‐type p53; wild‐type p16
PLOS ONE | 2014
Kue Peng Lim; Nicole Ai Leng Chun; Siti Mazlipah Ismail; Mannil Thomas Abraham; Mohd Nury Yusoff; Rosnah Binti Zain; Wei Cheong Ngeow; Sathibalan Ponniah; Sok Ching Cheong
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Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2012
Chai Phei Gan; Sharifah Hamid; Seen Yii Hor; Rosnah Binti Zain; Siti Mazlipah Ismail; Wan Mahadzir Wan Mustafa; Soo-Hwang Teo; Nicholas A. Saunders; Sok Ching Cheong
) and unstable (extensive CNA and LOH; inactivation of p53 and p16
Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2012
Amyza Saleh; Yi-Hsin Yang; Wan Maria; Nabillah Wan; Abd Ghani; Norlida; Jennifer Geraldine Doss; Roy Navonil; Zainal Ariff Abdul; Siti Mazlipah Ismail; Norain Abu Talib; Rosnah Binti Zain; Sok Ching Cheong
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Cell and Tissue Banking | 2013
Rosnah Binti Zain; Vimmitra Athirajan; Wan Maria Nabillah Ghani; Ishak Abdul Razak; Raja Jalaludin Raja Latifah; Siti Mazlipah Ismail; Atiya A. Sallam; Anita Zarina Bustam; Zainal Ariff Abdul Rahman; Adam Hussien; Norain Abu Talib; Sok Ching Cheong; Amin Jallaludin
) oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Fibroblasts from genetically unstable OSCC relative to the other fibroblast subtypes grew more slowly and stimulated the invasion of a non‐tumourigenic keratinocyte cell line into fibroblast‐rich collagen gels. To understand these findings, genome‐wide transcriptional profiles were generated using the GeneChip® cDNA whole transcript microarray platform. Principal component analysis showed that the fibroblasts could be distinguished according to the stage of tumour development. Tumour progression was associated with down‐regulation of cell cycle‐ and cytokinesis‐related genes and up‐regulation of genes encoding transmembrane proteins including cell adhesion molecules. Gene expression was validated in independent fibroblast strains using qRT‐PCR. Gene connectivity and interactome‐transcriptome associations were determined using a systems biology approach to interrogate the gene expression data. Clusters of gene signatures were identified that characterized genetically unstable and stable OSCCs relative to each other and to fibroblasts from normal oral mucosa. The expression of highly connected genes associated with unstable OSCCs, including those that encode α‐SMA and the integrin α6, correlated with poor patient prognosis in an independent dataset of head and neck cancer. The results of this study demonstrate that fibroblasts from unstable OSCCs represent a phenotypically distinguishable subset that plays a major role in oral cancer biology. Copyright
Oncotarget | 2016
Muhammad Zaki Hidayatullah Fadlullah; Ivy Kim Ni Chiang; Kalen R. Dionne; Pei San Yee; Chai Phei Gan; Kin Kit Sam; Kai Hung Tiong; Adrian Kwok Wen Ng; Daniel Martin; Kue Peng Lim; Thomas George Kallarakkal; Wan Mahadzir Wan Mustafa; Shin Hin Lau; Mannil Thomas Abraham; Rosnah Binti Zain; Zainal Ariff Abdul Rahman; Alfredo A. Molinolo; Vyomesh Patel; J. Silvio Gutkind; Aik Choon Tan; Sok Ching Cheong
Regulatory T cells (Tregs), a subset of CD4+ T cells plays a pivotal role in regulating the immune system. An increase in Treg numbers enables cancer progression by dampening the immune system and allowing tumor cells to evade immune detection and destruction. An increase in Treg numbers and expression of inhibitory cytokines including TGF-β and IL-10 are mechanisms by which Tregs exert their immune suppressive function. However, the presence of Tregs and inhibitory cytokines in oral cancer patients is still unclear. In this study, the presence of circulating Tregs in 39 oral cancer patients and 24 healthy donors was examined by studying the presence of the CD4+CD25hiCD127low cell population in their peripheral blood mononuclear cells using flow cytometry. Serum levels of TGF-β and IL-10 were measured by ELISA. T cell subsets of OSCC patients were found to differ significantly from healthy donors where a decrease in CD8+ cytotoxic T cells and an increase in Tregs (CD4+CD25hiCD127low) were observed. Further, the ratio of CD8+ T cells/Tregs was also decreased in patients compared to healthy donors. The presence of Tregs was accompanied by a decrease in IL-10 but not TGF-β secretion in OSCC patients when compared to donors; in addition, the analysis also revealed that an increased presence of Tregs was accompanied by better patient survival. Amongst OSCC patients, smokers had significantly higher levels of TGF-β. It is apparent that the immune system is compromised in OSCC patients and the characterization of the Treg subpopulation could form a basis for improving our understanding of the perturbations in the immune system that occur during OSCC tumorigenesis.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Vui King Vincent-Chong; Arif Anwar; Lee Peng Karen-Ng; Sok Ching Cheong; Yi-Hsin Yang; Padmaja Jayaprasad Pradeep; Zainal Ariff Abdul Rahman; Siti Mazlipah Ismail; Zuraiza Mohamad Zaini; Narayanan Prepageran; Thomas George Kallarakkal; Anand Ramanathan; Nur Aaina Binti Mohd Mohayadi; Nurul Shielawati Binti Mohamed Rosli; Wan Mahadzir Wan Mustafa; Mannil Thomas Abraham; Keng Kiong Tay; Rosnah Binti Zain
There are limited studies on the effects of drugs that modulate epigenetic regulation for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). This study determined the effect of valproic acid (VPA) on HNSCC.