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Chunghee Cho

Researcher at Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

Publications -  81
Citations -  3822

Chunghee Cho is an academic researcher from Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Sperm. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 79 publications receiving 3491 citations. Previous affiliations of Chunghee Cho include National Institutes of Health & University of California, Davis.

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Fertilization Defects in Sperm from Mice Lacking Fertilin β

TL;DR: Fertilin, a member of the ADAM family, is found on the plasma membrane of mammalian sperm and could have a direct role in sperm-zona binding or oviduct migration; alternatively, the effects on these functions could result from the absence of fertilin activity during spermatogenesis.
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Haploinsufficiency of protamine-1 or -2 causes infertility in mice.

TL;DR: It is found that a decrease in the amount of either protamine disrupts nuclear formation, processing of protamine-2 and normal sperm function, and that haploinsufficiency caused by a mutation in one allele of Prm1 or Prm2 prevents genetic transmission of both mutant and wild-type alleles.
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Protamine 2 Deficiency Leads to Sperm DNA Damage and Embryo Death in Mice

TL;DR: It is suggested that development fails because of damage to paternal DNA and that PRM2 is crucial for maintaining the integrity of sperm chromatin.
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Analysis of loss of adhesive function in sperm lacking cyritestin or fertilin beta.

TL;DR: Because the altered sperm protein expression must be responsible for the fertilization defects, the data suggest new models for the molecular basis of the affected steps in fertilization are suggested.
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Synthesis and structure-activity relationships of novel indirubin derivatives as potent anti-proliferative agents with CDK2 inhibitory activities

TL;DR: Among the indirubin derivatives tested in the growth inhibitions against several human cancer cell lines, 5-nitro, halide, and bulky group containing acylamino substituted analogs showed high anti-proliferative effects.