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Angang Yang

Researcher at Fourth Military Medical University

Publications -  191
Citations -  6693

Angang Yang is an academic researcher from Fourth Military Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cancer & Apoptosis. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 180 publications receiving 5595 citations. Previous affiliations of Angang Yang include Xinxiang Medical University & Wake Forest University.

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Overexpression of YAP and TAZ Is an Independent Predictor of Prognosis in Colorectal Cancer and Related to the Proliferation and Metastasis of Colon Cancer Cells

TL;DR: Co-overexpression of YAP and TAZ is an independent predictor of prognosis for patients with CRC, and may account for the higher proliferation, metastasis, and poor survival outcome of these patients.
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MicroRNA Let-7a Inhibits Proliferation of Human Prostate Cancer Cells In Vitro and In Vivo by Targeting E2F2 and CCND2

TL;DR: In vitro and in vivo approaches used to investigate whether E2F2 and CCND2 are direct targets of let-7a, and if let- 7a acts as a tumor suppressor in prostate cancer by down-regulating E2f2 andCCND2 confirmed the capability of let's7a to inhibit prostate tumor development in vivo.
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Circular RNAs in immune responses and immune diseases.

TL;DR: Because of their circular configurations, expression in blood and peripheral tissues and coexistence with exosomes, circRNAs show inherent conservation along with environmental resistance stability and may be regarded as potential biomarkers or therapeutic targets for some immune diseases.
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B7-H1 expression is associated with poor prognosis in colorectal carcinoma and regulates the proliferation and invasion of HCT116 colorectal cancer cells.

TL;DR: Positive B7-H1 expression is an independent predictor for colorectal carcinoma prognosis and knockdown of B8H1 can inhibit cell proliferation, migration and invasion.
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Notch activation promotes cell proliferation and the formation of neural stem cell-like colonies in human glioma cells

TL;DR: Notch signaling promote the formation of cancer stem cell-like cells in human glioma, suggesting that Notch signaling play roles in cancer stem cells and cancer cells with a stem cell phenotype.