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Bochu Wang

Researcher at Chongqing University

Publications -  227
Citations -  5726

Bochu Wang is an academic researcher from Chongqing University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 196 publications receiving 4648 citations. Previous affiliations of Bochu Wang include Oklahoma State University–Stillwater & Chongqing University of Posts and Telecommunications.

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Biodegradation of Silk Biomaterials

TL;DR: This article will focus on silk-based biomaterials and review the degradation behaviors of silk materials and discuss their applications in medical applications.
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Measurement of Creep Compliance of Solid Polymers by Nanoindentation

TL;DR: In this article, a method to measure the local surface creep compliance of time-dependent materials is proposed and validated in the regime of linear viscoelasticity using nanoindentation.
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DNA binding, cytotoxicity, apoptotic inducing activity, and molecular modeling study of quercetin zinc(II) complex

TL;DR: The results obtained indicate that quercetin zinc(II) complex can intercalate into the stacked base pairs of DNA, and compete with the strong intercalator ethidium bromide for the intercalative binding sites with Stern-Volmer quenching constant.
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Microencapsulation peptide and protein drugs delivery system.

TL;DR: This review article presents the outstanding contributions in field of microencapsulation as protein delivery systems and different approaches of protein delivery are described and discusses how these advances may be applied to resolve the challenges face the development of microcapsule for the controllable delivery of protein drugs.
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Feather keratin hydrogel for wound repair: Preparation, healing effect and biocompatibility evaluation.

TL;DR: Feather keratins displayed wound-healing and biodegradation properties similar to those of human hair keratin and were also highly compatible with those of the tissue and devoid of immunogenicity and systematic toxicity, suggesting that feather keratin hydrogel could be used for biomedical applications, particularly effective wound healing.