Yanhui Fan
University of Hong Kong
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yanhui Fan.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2012
Lu Hua Chen; Patrick Y. P. Kao; Yanhui Fan; Deborah Tip Yin Ho; Cherry Sze Yan Chan; Ping Yiu Yik; Joyce Cheuk Tung Ha; L.W. Chu; You-Qiang Song
In this case-controlled study, we tested susceptible genetic variants for Alzheimers disease (AD) in CR1, CLU and PICALM from genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in a southern Chinese population. Eight hundred twelve participants consisting of 462 late-onset Alzheimers disease (LOAD) patients and 350 nondemented control subjects were recruited. We found by multivariate logistic regression analysis, that single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in CR1 (rs6656401 adjusted allelic p = 0.035; adjusted genotypic p = 0.043) and CLU (rs2279590 adjusted allelic p = 0.035; adjusted genotypic p = 0.006; rs11136000 adjusted allelic p = 0.038; adjusted genotypic p = 0.009) were significantly different between LOAD patients and nondemented controls. For PICALM, LOAD association was found only in the APOE ε4 (-) subgroup (rs3851179 adjusted allelic p = 0.028; adjusted genotypic p = 0.013). Our findings showed evidence of CR1, CLU, and PICALM and LOAD susceptibility in an independent southern Chinese population, which provides additional evidence for LOAD association apart from prior genome-wide association studies in Caucasian populations.
Journal of Human Genetics | 2012
Yanhui Fan; You-Qiang Song; Danny Chan; Yohei Takahashi; Shiro Ikegawa; Morio Matsumoto; Ikuyo Kou; Kathryn S. E. Cheah; Pak Sham; Kenneth M.C. Cheung; Keith D. K. Luk
A study was conducted to validate the most significant single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) from a genome-wide association study of Japanese adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) patients in an independent southern Chinese population. In total, 300 AIS patients fulfilled the clinical criteria and 788 controls with MRI scans of the spine were included in the replication study. We employed case–control analysis to study the association of SNP rs11190870 near LBX1 (ladybird homeobox 1) with AIS in a southern Chinese population. The results suggest that SNP rs11190870 is significantly associated with AIS (P=9.1 × 10−10; odds ratio=1.85; 95% confidence interval=1.52–2.25). The results of this study confirm that SNP rs11190870 is associated with AIS.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2012
Jie Zhou; Kelvin K. W. To; Hui Dong; Zhong-Shan Cheng; Candy Choi-Yi Lau; Vincent K. M. Poon; Yanhui Fan; You-Qiang Song; Herman Tse; Kwok-Hung Chan; Bo-Jian Zheng; Guoping Zhao; Kwok-Yung Yuen
Infection due to 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza A virus (A[H1N1]pdm09) is commonly manifested as mild infection but occasionally as severe pneumonia. We hypothesized that host genetic variations may contribute to disease severity. An initially small-scale genome-wide association study guided the selection of CD55 single-nucleotide polymorphisms in 425 Chinese patients with severe (n = 177) or mild (n = 248) disease. Carriers of rs2564978 genotype T/T were significantly associated with severe infection (odds ratio, 1.75; P = .011) under a recessive model, after adjustment for clinical confounders. An allele-specific effect on CD55 expression was revealed and ascribed to a promoter indel variation, which was in complete linkage disequilibrium with rs2564978. The promoter variant with deletion exhibited significantly lower transcriptional activity. We further demonstrated that CD55 can protect respiratory epithelial cells from complement attack. Additionally, A(H1N1)pdm09 infection promoted CD55 expression. In conclusion, CD55 polymorphisms are associated with severe A(H1N1)pdm09 infection. CD55 may exert a substantial impact on the disease severity of A(H1N1)pdm09 infection.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2014
Douglas Londono; Ikuyo Kou; Toby Johnson; Swarkar Sharma; Yoji Ogura; Tatsuhiko Tsunoda; Atsushi Takahashi; Morio Matsumoto; John A. Herring; Tp Lam; Wang X; Elisa M S Tam; You-Qiang Song; Yanhui Fan; Danny Chan; Kathryn S. E. Cheah; Xusheng Qiu; Hua Jiang; Dongsheng Huang; Peiqiang Su; Pak Sham; Kenneth M.C. Cheung; Keith D. K. Luk; Derek Gordon; Yong Qiu; Jack C. Y. Cheng; Nelson L.S. Tang; Shiro Ikegawa; Carol A. Wise
Background Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) is a common rotational deformity of the spine that presents in children worldwide, yet its etiology is poorly understood. Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified a few candidate risk loci. One locus near the chromosome 10q24.31 LBX1 gene (OMIM #604255) was originally identified by a GWAS of Japanese subjects and replicated in additional Asian populations. To extend this result, and to create larger AIS cohorts for the purpose of large-scale meta-analyses in multiple ethnicities, we formed a collaborative group called the International Consortium for Scoliosis Genetics (ICSG). Methods Here, we report the first ICSG study, a meta-analysis of the LBX1 locus in six Asian and three non-Asian cohorts. Results We find significant evidence for association of this locus with AIS susceptibility in all nine cohorts. Results for seven cohorts containing both genders yielded P=1.22×10–43 for rs11190870, and P=2.94×10–48 for females in all nine cohorts. Comparing the regional haplotype structures for three populations, we refined the boundaries of association to a ∼25 kb block encompassing the LBX1 gene. The LBX1 protein, a homeobox transcription factor that is orthologous to the Drosophila ladybird late gene, is involved in proper migration of muscle precursor cells, specification of cardiac neural crest cells, and neuronal determination in developing neural tubes. Conclusions Our results firmly establish the LBX1 region as the first major susceptibility locus for AIS in Asian and non-Hispanic white groups, and provide a platform for larger studies in additional ancestral groups.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Yan Li; Li Fu; Alissa Michelle Go Wong; Yanhui Fan; Miaoxin Li; Jin Xin Bei; Wei Hua Jia; Yi Xin Zeng; Danny Chan; Kenneth M.C. Cheung; Pak Sham; Daniel Chua; Xin Yuan Guan; You-Qiang Song
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is a malignancy of epithelial origin. The etiology of NPC is complex and includes multiple genetic and environmental factors. We employed case-control analysis to study the association of chromosome 6p regions with NPC. In total, 360 subjects and 360 healthy controls were included, and 233 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) on 6p were examined. Significant single-marker associations were found for SNPs rs2267633 (p = 4.49×10−5), rs2076483 (most significant, p = 3.36×10−5), and rs29230 (p = 1.43×10−4). The highly associated genes were the gamma-amino butyric acid B receptor 1 (GABBR1), human leukocyte antigen (HLA-A), and HLA complex group 9 (HCG9). Haplotypic associations were found for haplotypes AAA (located within GABBR1, p-value = 6.46×10−5) and TT (located within HLA-A, p = 0.0014). Further investigation of the homozygous genotype frequencies between cases and controls suggested that micro-deletion regions occur in GABBR1 and neural precursor cell expressed developmentally down-regulated 9 (NEDD9). Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) using 11 pairs of NPC biopsy samples confirmed the significant decline in GABBR1 and NEDD9 mRNA expression in the cancer tissues compared to the adjacent non-tumor tissue (p<0.05). Our study demonstrates that multiple chromosome 6p susceptibility loci contribute to the risk of NPC, possibly though GABBR1 and NEDD9 loss of function.
Current Genomics | 2007
Yanhui Fan; WenJuan Wang; Guoji Ma; Lijing Liang; Qi Shi; Shiheng Tao
Nucleotide insertions and deletions (indels) are responsible for gaps in the sequence alignments. Indel is one of the major sources of evolutionary change at the molecular level. We have examined the patterns of insertions and deletions in the 19 mammalian genomes, and found that deletion events are more common than insertions in the mammalian genomes. Both the number of insertions and deletions decrease rapidly when the gap length increases and single nucleotide indel is the most frequent in all indel events. The frequencies of both insertions and deletions can be described well by power law.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Yu Chen; Jie Zhou; Zhong-Shan Cheng; Shigui Yang; Hin Chu; Yanhui Fan; Cun Li; Bosco Ho-Yin Wong; Shufa Zheng; Yixin Zhu; Fei Yu; Yiyin Wang; Xiaoli Liu; Hainv Gao; Liang Yu; Linglin Tang; Dawei Cui; Ke Hao; Yohan Bossé; Ma'en Obeidat; Corry-Anke Brandsma; You Qiang Song; Kelvin K. W. To; Pak Sham; Kwok-Yung Yuen; Lanjuan Li
The fatality of avian influenza A(H7N9) infection in humans was over 30%. To identify human genetic susceptibility to A(H7N9) infection, we performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) involving 102 A(H7N9) patients and 106 heavily-exposed healthy poultry workers, a sample size critically restricted by the small number of human A(H7N9) cases. To tackle the stringent significance cutoff of GWAS, we utilized an artificial imputation program SnipSnip to improve the association signals. In single-SNP analysis, one of the top SNPs was rs13057866 of LGALS1. The artificial imputation (AI) identified three non-genotyped causal variants, which can be represented by three anchor/partner SNP pairs rs13057866/rs9622682 (AI P = 1.81 × 10−7), rs4820294/rs2899292 (2.13 × 10−7) and rs62236673/rs2899292 (4.25 × 10−7) respectively. Haplotype analysis of rs4820294 and rs2899292 could simulate the signal of a causal variant. The rs4820294/rs2899292 haplotype GG, in association with protection from A(H7N9) infection (OR = 0.26, P = 5.92 × 10−7) correlated to significantly higher levels of LGALS1 mRNA (P = 0.050) and protein expression (P = 0.025) in lymphoblast cell lines. Additionally, rs4820294 was mapped as an eQTL in human primary monocytes and lung tissues. In conclusion, functional variants of LGALS1 causing the expression variations are contributable to the differential susceptibility to influenza A(H7N9).
Oncology Reports | 2014
Josephine My Ko; Peng Zhang; Simon Law; Yanhui Fan; You-Qiang Song; Xue Ke Zhao; Elibe Hiu Wun Wong; Sa Tang; Xin Song; Maria Li Lung; Li Dong Wang
Worldwide, the highest prevalence of esophageal cancer (EC) occurs in Northern China. High-density SNP arrays allow identification of identity-by-descent (IBD) segments in genomic DNAs representative of shared common ancestral regions. We utilized IBD approaches to map susceptibility loci associated with low-penetrance SNPs in high-risk Henan hereditary esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) patients. Affymetrix GeneChip Human mapping SNP array IBD analysis was performed in 32 Henan family history-positive (FH+) ESCC patients, 18 Henan healthy unrelated individuals, and 45 Chinese individuals from a CHB HapMap dataset using PLink (scoring IBD segments individually) and Beagle (scoring of shared IBD segments among case/case vs. control/control pairs) software. Both analyses identified longer IBD segment lengths associated with FH+ ESCC compared to controls. However, there was no strong evidence for a genetic founder effect. Pairing IBD analysis with BEAGLE identified 8 critical IBD segments residing at 2q32.1-q32.2, 3p22.3-p22.2, 4q21.1-q21.21, 7p22.2, 8q23.2-q23.3, 10q23.33-q24.1, 14q24.3 and 16q11.2-q12.1, which were more significantly shared among case/case compared to control/control. The shared IBD segments in FH+ ESCC samples with no overlap with control/CHB Hapmap may encompass potential cancer susceptibility loci. Selected targeted genes, PLCE1, GPT2, SIAH1 and CYP2C-18, residing within the IBD segments at 10q23.33-q24.1 and 16q11.2-q12.1, had statistically significant differential expression in primary ESCC tissues and are likely involved in ESCC carcinogenesis. The importance of these IBD segments to the etiology and development of ESCC in high-risk areas requires further study with expanded sample sizes. This is the first report employing the pairing IBD approach for elucidation of the genetic basis of hereditary ESCC in Henan by applying high throughput SNP array analysis.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012
Yanhui Fan; You-Qiang Song
Large numbers of samples and marker loci were tested for association in genome-wide association studies (GWAS). Hence, quality control (QC) by removing individuals or markers with low genotyping quality is of utmost importance to minimize potential false positive associations. IPGWAS was developed to facilitate the identification of the rational thresholds in QC of GWAS datasets, association analysis, Manhattan plot, quantile-quantile (QQ) plot, and format conversion for genetic analyses, such as meta-analysis, genotype phasing, and imputation. IPGWAS is a multiplatform application written in Perl with a graphical user interface (GUI) and available for free at http://sourceforge.net/projects/ipgwas/.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Yoji Ogura; Kazuki Takeda; Ikuyo Kou; Anas Khanshour; Anna Grauers; Hang Zhou; Gang Liu; Yanhui Fan; Taifeng Zhou; Zhihong Wu; Yohei Takahashi; Morio Matsumoto; Noriaki Kawakami; Taichi Tsuji; Koki Uno; Teppei Suzuki; Manabu Ito; Shohei Minami; Toshiaki Kotani; Tsuyoshi Sakuma; Haruhisa Yanagida; Hiroshi Taneichi; Ikuho Yonezawa; Hideki Sudo; Kazuhiro Chiba; Naobumi Hosogane; Kotaro Nishida; Kenichiro Kakutani; Tsutomu Akazawa; Takashi Kaito
Adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) is a common spinal deformity with the prevalence of approximately 3%. We previously conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) using a Japanese cohort and identified a novel locus on chromosome 9p22.2. However, a replication study using multi-population cohorts has not been conducted. To confirm the association of 9p22.2 locus with AIS in multi-ethnic populations, we conducted international meta-analysis using eight cohorts. In total, we analyzed 8,756 cases and 27,822 controls. The analysis showed a convincing evidence of association between rs3904778 and AIS. Seven out of eight cohorts had significant P value, and remaining one cohort also had the same trend as the seven. The combined P was 3.28 × 10−18 (odds ratio = 1.19, 95% confidence interval = 1.14–1.24). In silico analyses suggested that BNC2 is the AIS susceptibility gene in this locus.