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Author
- An, Yawen1
- Chang, Yuqian1
- Cui, Tingting1
- Dinger, Marcel E1
- Gao, Tianwen1
- Govindarajan, Subramaniam1
- Guo, Weinan1
- He, Yuanmin1
- Jian, Zhe1
- Komatsu, Masanobu1
- Lee, Bongyong1
- Li, Chunying1
- Li, Jian-Liang1
- Li, Kai1
- Li, Shuli1
- Liu, Ling1
- Mattick, John S1
- Mazar, Joseph1
- Perera, Ranjan J1
- Sawada, Junko1
- Shelley, John1
- Song, Pu1
- Towler, Dwight1
- Wang, Gang1
- Wang, Lin1
Keyword
- extracellular signal-regulated kinase2
- mitogen-activated protein kinase2
- siRNA2
- c-Jun amino terminal kinase1
- CAT1
- catalase1
- CDK1
- cyclin-dependent kinase1
- dipeptidyl peptidase-IV1
- DPPIV1
- ERK1
- Erk1
- H2O21
- hydrogen peroxide1
- JNK1
- lncRNA1
- long noncoding RNA1
- MCM1
- minichromosome maintenance1
- Nrf21
- nuclear erythroid 2-related factor1
- ROS1
- SOD1
Melanoma
2 Results
- Original Article Melanocytes/MelanomaOpen Archive
Simvastatin Protects Human Melanocytes from H2O2-Induced Oxidative Stress by Activating Nrf2
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 137Issue 6p1286–1296Published online: February 4, 2017- Yuqian Chang
- Shuli Li
- Weinan Guo
- Yuqi Yang
- Weigang Zhang
- Qian Zhang
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 43The prevention of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-induced oxidative stress has proved to be beneficial to vitiligo patients. Simvastatin possesses antioxidative capacity and has shown protective effect in various oxidative stress-related diseases. However, whether simvastatin can protect human melanocytes against oxidative stress has not been investigated. In this study, we initially found that pretreatment with 0.1 μmol/L to 1.0 μmol/L simvastatin led to increased cell viability and decreased cell apoptosis of melanocytes in response to H2O2. - Original Article Melanocytes/MelanomaOpen Archive
The Long Noncoding RNA SPRIGHTLY Regulates Cell Proliferation in Primary Human Melanocytes
Journal of Investigative DermatologyVol. 136Issue 4p819–828Published online: January 29, 2016- Wei Zhao
- Joseph Mazar
- Bongyong Lee
- Junko Sawada
- Jian-Liang Li
- John Shelley
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 31The long noncoding RNA SPRIGHTLY (formerly SPRY4-IT1), which lies within the intronic region of the SPRY4 gene, is up-regulated in human melanoma cells compared to melanocytes. SPRIGHTLY regulates a number of cancer hallmarks, including proliferation, motility, and apoptosis. To better understand its oncogenic role, SPRIGHTLY was stably transfected into human melanocytes, which resulted in increased cellular proliferation, colony formation, invasion, and development of a multinucleated dendritic-like phenotype.