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Dive into the research topics where Swee Han Goh is active.

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Featured researches published by Swee Han Goh.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Comparison of Ileum Microflora of Pigs Fed Corn-, Wheat-, or Barley-Based Diets by Chaperonin-60 Sequencing and Quantitative PCR

Janet E. Hill; Sean M. Hemmingsen; Blair G. Goldade; Tim J. Dumonceaux; Jonathan L. Klassen; R. T. Zijlstra; Swee Han Goh; Andrew G. Van Kessel

ABSTRACT We have combined the culture-independent methods of high-throughput sequencing of chaperonin-60 PCR product libraries and quantitative PCR to profile and quantify the small-intestinal microflora of pigs fed diets based on corn, wheat, or barley. A total of 2,751 chaperonin-60 PCR product clones produced from samples of ileum digesta were examined. The majority (81%) of these clones contained sequences independently recovered from all three libraries; 372 different nucleotide sequences were identified, but only 14% of the 372 different sequences were recovered from all three libraries. Taxonomic assignments of the library sequences were made by comparison to a reference database of chaperonin-60 sequences combined with phylogenetic analysis. The taxa identified are consistent with previous reports of pig ileum microflora. Frequencies of each sequence in each library were calculated to identify taxa that varied in frequency between the corn, barley, and wheat libraries. The chaperonin-60 sequence inventory was used as a basis for designing PCR primer sets for taxon-specific quantitative PCR. Results of quantitative PCR analysis of ileum digesta confirmed the relative abundances of targeted taxa identified with the library sequencing approach. The results of this study indicate that chaperonin-60 clone libraries can be valid profiles of complex microbial communities and can be used as the basis for producing quantitative PCR assays to measure the abundance of taxa of interest during experimentally induced or natural changes in a community.


Cell | 1983

The promoter sequence of a yeast tRNAtyr gene

Daniel S. Allison; Swee Han Goh; Benjamin D. Hall

Thirty-one base substitution mutations within the yeast SUP4 tRNAtyr gene were used to probe the effects of different intragenic sequences on promoter activity. The various mutant plasmids were tested quantitatively for their in vitro template activity and for their ability to block competitively the transcription of a reference gene. Five mutations within the coding sequence of SUP4 decreased template activity for pre-tRNAtyr synthesis. The competition assays revealed 11 mutant genes that behaved differently than SUP4-o. Six were weaker competitors and five were stronger. The 12 mutations affecting template activity or competition are clustered in three regions: those encoding the dihydrouracil (D) arm, the extra loop, and the T psi arm of the tRNA. All of the mutations that reduce competition involve base changes that decrease homology to a eucaryotic tRNA consensus sequence in the highly conserved D and T psi regions. Three of the five up mutations increased homology to the tRNA consensus sequence.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2006

Coordinated Response to SARS, Vancouver, Canada

Danuta M. Skowronski; Martin Petric; Patricia Daly; Robert Parker; Elizabeth Bryce; Patrick Doyle; Michael A. Noble; Diane Roscoe; Joan Tomblin; Tung C. Yang; Mel Krajden; David M. Patrick; Babak Pourbohloul; Swee Han Goh; William R. Bowie; Timothy F. Booth; S. Aleina Tweed; Thomas L. Perry; Allison McGeer; Robert C. Brunham

Two Canadian urban areas received travelers with severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) before the World Health Organization issued its alert. By July 2003, Vancouver had identified 5 cases (4 imported); Toronto reported 247 cases (3 imported) and 43 deaths. Baseline preparedness for pandemic threats may account for the absence of sustained transmission and fewer cases of SARS in Vancouver.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006

Longitudinal analysis of genotype distribution of influenza A virus from 2003 to 2005.

Annie Mak; Ronak Rahmanian; Victor Lei; David Lawrence; Mel Krajden; Robert C. Brunham; Danuta M. Skowronski; Yan Li; Timothy F. Booth; Swee Han Goh; Martin Petric

ABSTRACT Influenza A viruses cause yearly epidemics, in part, due to their ability to overcome immunity from previous infections through acquisition of mutations. Amino acid sequences encoded by genes 4 (HA), 6 (NA), 7 (M), and 8 (NS) from 77 H3N2 influenza A isolates, collected between November 2003 and March 2005, were analyzed to determine the extent to which the viruses mutated within epidemic periods and between the epidemics. Nucleotide and amino acid sequences were stable throughout the epidemics but experienced substantial changes between epidemics. Major changes occurred in the HA gene in 5 to 7 amino acids and the NA gene in 11 to 13 amino acids and changes of 5 amino acids occurred in the M and NS genes. In the HA gene, changes occurred in sites known to be epitopes that determine the hemagglutination inhibition reactivity, and these were shown to be associated with a change of strain from A/Fujian/411/2002-like to A/California/7/2004-like viruses. Our findings indicate that genotype determination promises to be a rapid approach for detecting new strains of influenza A viruses in a population.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1996

HSP60 gene sequences as universal targets for microbial species identification: studies with coagulase-negative staphylococci.

Swee Han Goh; Sheila Potter; Julian O. Wood; Sean M. Hemmingsen; Robert P. Reynolds; Andanthony W. Chow


Genome Research | 2004

cpnDB: A Chaperonin Sequence Database

Janet E. Hill; Susanne L. Penny; Kenneth G. Crowell; Swee Han Goh; Sean M. Hemmingsen


Veterinary Microbiology | 2005

Biochemical analysis, cpn60 and 16S rDNA sequence data indicate that Streptococcus suis serotypes 32 and 34, isolated from pigs, are Streptococcus orisratti.

Janet E. Hill; Marcelo Gottschalk; Roland Brousseau; Josée Harel; Sean M. Hemmingsen; Swee Han Goh


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 1997

Identification of Staphylococcus species and subspecies by the chaperonin 60 gene identification method and reverse checkerboard hybridization.

Swee Han Goh; Zefferino Santucci; Wesley E. Kloos; Monica Faltyn; Carol G. George; David Driedger; Sean M. Hemmingsen


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2000

Identification of Enterococcus species and phenotypically similar Lactococcus and Vagococcus species by reverse checkerboard hybridization to chaperonin 60 gene sequences.

Swee Han Goh; Richard R. Facklam; Michelle Chang; Janet E. Hill; Gregory J. Tyrrell; Emma C. M. Burns; David Chan; Cheng He; Tazim Rahim; Carol Shaw; Sean M. Hemmingsen


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2005

Characterization of vaginal microflora of healthy, nonpregnant women by chaperonin-60 sequence-based methods

Janet E. Hill; Swee Han Goh; Deborah M. Money; Melissa Doyle; Andra Li; William L. Crosby; Matthew G. Links; Amy Leung; Debbie Chan; Sean M. Hemmingsen

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Janet E. Hill

University of Saskatchewan

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Anthony W. Chow

University of British Columbia

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Amy Leung

University of British Columbia

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Carol Shaw

University of British Columbia

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Danuta M. Skowronski

BC Centre for Disease Control

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Josée Harel

Université de Montréal

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Martin Petric

University of British Columbia

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Mel Krajden

University of British Columbia

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