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Dive into the research topics where Wilfred Hing Sang Wong is active.

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Featured researches published by Wilfred Hing Sang Wong.


PLOS Genetics | 2010

Genome-Wide Association Study in Asian Populations Identifies Variants in ETS1 and WDFY4 Associated with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Wanling Yang; Nan Shen; Dong-Qing Ye; Qiji Liu; Yan Zhang; Xiaoxia Qian; Nattiya Hirankarn; Dingge Ying; Hai-Feng Pan; Chi Chiu Mok; Tak Mao Chan; Raymond Woon Sing Wong; Ka Wing Lee; Mo Yin Mok; Sik-Nin Wong; Alexander Moon Ho Leung; Xiang-Pei Li; Yingyos Avihingsanon; Chun-Ming Wong; Tsz Leung Lee; Marco Hok Kung Ho; Pamela Pui Wah Lee; Yuk Kwan Chang; Philip H. Li; Ruo-Jie Li; Lu Zhang; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Irene Oi-Lin Ng; Chak Sing Lau; Pak Sham

Systemic lupus erythematosus is a complex and potentially fatal autoimmune disease, characterized by autoantibody production and multi-organ damage. By a genome-wide association study (320 patients and 1,500 controls) and subsequent replication altogether involving a total of 3,300 Asian SLE patients from Hong Kong, Mainland China, and Thailand, as well as 4,200 ethnically and geographically matched controls, genetic variants in ETS1 and WDFY4 were found to be associated with SLE (ETS1: rs1128334, P = 2.33×10−11, OR = 1.29; WDFY4: rs7097397, P = 8.15×10−12, OR = 1.30). ETS1 encodes for a transcription factor known to be involved in a wide range of immune functions, including Th17 cell development and terminal differentiation of B lymphocytes. SNP rs1128334 is located in the 3′-UTR of ETS1, and allelic expression analysis from peripheral blood mononuclear cells showed significantly lower expression level from the risk allele. WDFY4 is a conserved protein with unknown function, but is predominantly expressed in primary and secondary immune tissues, and rs7097397 in WDFY4 changes an arginine residue to glutamine (R1816Q) in this protein. Our study also confirmed association of the HLA locus, STAT4, TNFSF4, BLK, BANK1, IRF5, and TNFAIP3 with SLE in Asians. These new genetic findings may help us to gain a better understanding of the disease and the functions of the genes involved.


Pediatric Allergy and Immunology | 2004

Increasing prevalence of allergic rhinitis but not asthma among children in Hong Kong from 1995 to 2001 (Phase 3 International Study of Asthma and Allergies in Childhood).

Sl Lee; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Yu-Lung Lau

There is a worldwide belief that the prevalence of asthma and other allergic diseases is increasing but the measures used in many studies are susceptible to systematic errors. We examined the trend of asthma, allergic rhinitis and eczema prevalence in school children aged 6–7 years in Hong Kong from 1995 to 2001 using standardized ISAAC methodology. There were 4448 and 3618 children participating in 2001 and 1995, respectively. The prevalence of life‐time rhinitis (42.4% vs. 38.9%, p < 0.01), current rhinitis (37.4% vs. 35.1%, p < 0.03), current rhinoconjunctivitis (17.2 vs. 13.6%, p < 0.01) and life‐time eczema (30.7% vs. 28.1%, p = 0.01) increased significantly. There was no significant change in prevalence of life‐time asthma, life‐time wheeze and current wheeze albeit a significant increase in severe asthma symptoms. We investigated a number of potential risk factors including sex, family history of atopy, sibship size, birth weight, respiratory tract infections, pet ownership and exposure to tobacco smoke. However, the increases in prevalence of rhinitis and eczema could not be entirely explained by the change of prevalence of these risk factors. The odds ratio OR for the study period remained significantly associated with current rhinitis (OR 1.31, 95% confidence intervals CI 1.17–1.46), current rhinoconjunctivitis (OR 1.63, 95% CI 1.41–1.87) and life‐time eczema (OR 1.30, 95% CI 1.16–1.45) after adjustment for these confounding variables using logistic regression model. Further study is warranted to elucidate the factors contributing to the observable change in the prevalence of rhinitis in our population.


Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2006

Association between air pollution and asthma admission among children in Hong Kong.

Sl Lee; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Yu-Lung Lau

Objective To examine the association of air pollutants with hospital admission for childhood asthma in Hong Kong.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

Meta-analysis Followed by Replication Identifies Loci in or near CDKN1B, TET3, CD80, DRAM1, and ARID5B as Associated with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus in Asians

Wanling Yang; Huayang Tang; Yan Zhang; Xianfa Tang; Jing Zhang; Liangdan Sun; Jing Yang; Yong Cui; Lu Zhang; Nattiya Hirankarn; Hui Cheng; Hai-Feng Pan; Jinping Gao; Tsz Leung Lee; Yujun Sheng; Chak Sing Lau; Yang Li; Tak Mao Chan; Xianyong Yin; Dingge Ying; Qianjin Lu; Alexander Moon Ho Leung; Xianbo Zuo; Xiang Chen; Kwok Lung Tong; Fusheng Zhou; Qingchun Diao; Niko Kei Chiu Tse; Hongfu Xie; Chi Chiu Mok

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a prototype autoimmune disease with a strong genetic involvement and ethnic differences. Susceptibility genes identified so far only explain a small portion of the genetic heritability of SLE, suggesting that many more loci are yet to be uncovered for this disease. In this study, we performed a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies on SLE in Chinese Han populations and followed up the findings by replication in four additional Asian cohorts with a total of 5,365 cases and 10,054 corresponding controls. We identified genetic variants in or near CDKN1B, TET3, CD80, DRAM1, and ARID5B as associated with the disease. These findings point to potential roles of cell-cycle regulation, autophagy, and DNA demethylation in SLE pathogenesis. For the region involving TET3 and that involving CDKN1B, multiple independent SNPs were identified, highlighting a phenomenon that might partially explain the missing heritability of complex diseases.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

Mannose-Binding Lectin in Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Infection

W. K. Eddie Ip; Kwok Hung Chan; Helen K. W. Law; Gloria Hoi Wan Tso; Eric Kai-Pang Kong; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Yuk Fai To; Raymond W. H. Yung; Eudora Y. D. Chow; Kl Au; Eric Y. T. Chan; Wilina Lim; Jens C. Jensenius; Malcolm W. Turner; J. S. Malik Peiris; Yu-Lung Lau

Abstract Little is known about the innate immune response to severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus (CoV) infection. Mannose-binding lectin (MBL), a key molecule in innate immunity, functions as an ante-antibody before the specific antibody response. Here, we describe a case-control study that included 569 patients with SARS and 1188 control subjects and used in vitro assays to investigate the role that MBL plays in SARS-CoV infection. The distribution of MBL gene polymorphisms was significantly different between patients with SARS and control subjects, with a higher frequency of haplotypes associated with low or deficient serum levels of MBL in patients with SARS than in control subjects. Serum levels of MBL were also significantly lower in patients with SARS than in control subjects. There was, however, no association between MBL genotypes, which are associated with low or deficient serum levels of MBL, and mortality related to SARS. MBL could bind SARS-CoV in a dose- and calcium-dependent and mannan-inhibitable fashion in vitro, suggesting that binding is through the carbohydrate recognition domains of MBL. Furthermore, deposition of complement C4 on SARS-CoV was enhanced by MBL. Inhibition of the infectivity of SARS-CoV by MBL in fetal rhesus kidney cells (FRhK-4) was also observed. These results suggest that MBL contributes to the first-line host defense against SARS-CoV and that MBL deficiency is a susceptibility factor for acquisition of SARS


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2008

Early clinical predictors of remission of peanut allergy in children

Marco Hok Kung Ho; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Ralf G. Heine; Clifford S. Hosking; David J. Hill; Katrina J. Allen

BACKGROUND Understanding predictors of clinical remission would assist in clinical management of peanut allergy. OBJECTIVE We sought to determine the early clinical predictors of peanut allergy remission using a longitudinal cohort of young children with peanut allergy. METHODS Consecutive patients less than 2 years of age with peanut allergy were identified on the basis of skin prick test (SPT) wheal size of 95% positive predictive value or greater. Baseline SPT responses to peanuts, tree nuts, and sesame and serum peanut-specific IgE antibody levels were documented, and follow-up studies were conducted at 1- to 2-year intervals for up to 8 years. Peanut food challenges were performed when SPT responses decreased to less than the 95% positive predictive value for peanut allergy. RESULTS SPT wheal diameters to peanut extract of 6 mm or greater (hazard ratio, 2.16; 95% CI, 1.23-3.786; P = .008) and peanut-specific IgE antibody of 3 kUA/L or greater (hazard ratio, 2.74; 95% CI, 1.13-6.61; P = .025) before the age of 2 years were independent predictors of persistent peanut allergy. Mean SPT wheal diameters of nonremitters increased (r = 0.31, P < .001), whereas those of remitters decreased (r = -0.26, P = .002) between 1 and 4 years of age. Twenty-one percent of young children with peanut allergy became clinically tolerant by age 5 years. CONCLUSIONS Remission of peanut allergy can be predicted by low levels of IgE antibodies to peanut in the first 2 years of life or decreasing levels of IgE sensitization by the age of 3 years.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2004

Mercury Exposure in Children With Autistic Spectrum Disorder: Case-Control Study

Patrick Ip; Virginia Wong; Marco Hok Kung Ho; Joseph Lee; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong

Although mercury has been proven to be a neurotoxicant, there is a lack of data to evaluate the causal relationship between mercury and autism. We aim to see if there is increased mercury exposure in children with autistic spectrum disorder. We performed a cross-sectional cohort study over a 5-month period in 2000 to compare the hair and blood mercury levels of children with autistic spectrum disorder (n = 82; mean age 7.2 years) and a control group of normal children (n = 55; mean age 7.8 years). There was no difference in the mean mercury levels. The mean blood mercury levels of the autistic and control groups were 19.53 and 17.68 nmol/L, respectively (P = .15), and the mean hair mercury levels of the autistic and control groups were 2.26 and 2.07 ppm, respectively (P = .79). Thus, the results from our cohort study with similar environmental mercury exposure indicate that there is no causal relationship between mercury as an environmental neurotoxin and autism. (J Child Neurol 2004;19:431-434).


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

ITGAM is associated with disease susceptibility and renal nephritis of systemic lupus erythematosus in Hong Kong Chinese and Thai

Wanling Yang; Ming-Hui Zhao; Nattiya Hirankarn; Chak Sing Lau; Chi Chiu Mok; Tak Mao Chan; Raymond Woon Sing Wong; Ka Wing Lee; Mo Yin Mok; Sik-Nin Wong; Yingyos Avihingsanon; N G Irene Oi Lin; Tsz Leung Lee; Marco Hok Kung Ho; Pamela Pui Wah Lee; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Pak Sham; Yu-Lung Lau

ITGAM was recently found to be associated with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) in populations of not only European ancestry, but also in Hispanic- and African-Americans, Mexicans and Colombians. The risk alleles in the gene, however, were found to be monomorphic in two Asian populations examined: Japanese and Korean. In this study, using a collection of 910 SLE patients and 2360 controls from Chinese living in Hong Kong, analyzed by both genome-wide association and direct sequencing, we confirmed the association of the same risk alleles in ITGAM with the disease. These findings were further replicated in the Thai population with 278 patients and 383 ethnicity- and geography-matched controls. Subphenotype stratification analyses showed significantly more involvement of the gene in patients with renal nephritis and neurological disorders. Although our results support a pivotal role by rs1143679 (R77H) in disease association, our data also suggests an additional contribution from rs1143683, another non-synonymous polymorphism in this gene (A858V). Therefore, despite the low-allele frequencies of the risk alleles of the gene in our two Asian populations, ITGAM was confirmed to be a risk factor related to disease susceptibility and probably severe manifestations of SLE.


Genes and Immunity | 2009

Population differences in SLE susceptibility genes: STAT4 and BLK, but not PXK, are associated with systemic lupus erythematosus in Hong Kong Chinese.

Wanling Yang; Ping Wing Ng; Ming-Hui Zhao; Nattiya Hirankarn; Chak Sing Lau; Cc Mok; Tm Chan; Rws Wong; Kw Lee; Mo Yin Mok; Sik-Nin Wong; Yingyos Avihingsanon; Tl Lee; Mhk Ho; Pui-Yin Lee; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Yu-Lung Lau

In this study, we compared the association of several newly discovered susceptibility genes for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) between populations of European origin and two Asian populations. Using 910 SLE patients and 1440 healthy controls from Chinese living in Hong Kong, and 278 SLE patients and 383 controls in Thailand, we studied association of STAT4, BLK and PXK with the disease. Our data confirmed association of STAT4 (rs7574865, odds ratio (OR) =1.71, P=3.55 × 10−23) and BLK (rs13277113, OR=0.77, P=1.34 × 10−5) with SLE. It was showed that rs7574865 of STAT4 is also linked to hematologic disorders and potentially some other subphenotypes of the disease. More than one genetic variant in STAT4 were found to be associated with the disease independently in our populations (rs7601754, OR=0.59, P=1.39 × 10−9, and P=0.00034 when controlling the effect of rs7574865). With the same set of samples, however, our study did not detect any significant disease association for PXK, a risk factor for populations of European origin (rs6445975, joint P=0.36, OR=1.06, 95% confidence interval: 0.93–1.21). Our study indicates that some of the susceptibility genes for this disease may be population specific.


Hepatology | 2005

Mannose‐binding lectin in chronic hepatitis B virus infection

Wai Po Chong; Yuk Fai To; Wai Kee Ip; Man-Fung Yuen; Tung Ping Poon; Wilfred Hing Sang Wong; Ching-Lung Lai; Yu-Lung Lau

Mannose binding lectin (MBL) is a pattern‐recognition molecule of the innate immune system. The roles of MBL and its gene (mbl2) polymorphisms, −221X/Y and codon 54A/B, in hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection were investigated in this study. We recruited 320 nonprogressed hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) carriers; 199 progressed HBsAg carriers with hepatocellular carcinoma or cirrhosis; 87 spontaneously recovered individuals who were HBsAg negative and anti‐HBs and anti HBc positive; and 484 controls who were naïve to HBV. There was no significant difference between nonprogressed carriers, spontaneously recovered individuals, and controls in terms of serum MBL levels and mbl2 polymorphisms distributions. However, the low MBL genotypes had a dose‐dependent correlation with the cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in progressed carriers with odds ratios of 1.36 and 3.21 for the low and extremely low MBL genotypes, respectively (P = .01). The low‐expression promoter haplotype XA (OR = 1.97) and the mutant haplotype YB (OR = 1.90) were also associated with the cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (P = .002). As expected, the lower serum MBL levels in progressed carriers as compared with nonprogressed carriers were due to an overrepresentation of low and extremely low MBL genotypes. Moreover, MBL could bind HBsAg in a dose‐ and calcium‐dependent and mannan‐inhibitable manner in vitro, suggesting that binding occurs via the carbohydrate recognition domains. This binding also enhanced C4 deposition. In conclusion, these results suggest that low MBL genotypes associate with the occurrence of cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in progressed HBsAg carriers, and MBL can bind HBsAg. (HEPATOLOGY 2005.)

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Yu-Lung Lau

University of Hong Kong

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Patrick Ip

University of Hong Kong

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Marco Hok Kung Ho

Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine

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Mo Yin Mok

University of Hong Kong

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