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Gan Wang

Researcher at Wayne State University

Publications -  38
Citations -  1949

Gan Wang is an academic researcher from Wayne State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: DNA repair & Gene. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1885 citations. Previous affiliations of Gan Wang include Yale University & University of South Alabama.

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Mutagenesis in Mammalian Cells Induced by Triple Helix Formation and Transcription-Coupled Repair

TL;DR: When mammalian cells were treated with triplex-forming oligonucleotides of sufficient binding affinity, mutations were specifically induced in a simian virus 40 vector contained within the cells, raising the possibility that naturally occurring triple helices are a source of genetic instability.
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RAPD (arbitrary primer) PCR is more sensitive than multilocus enzyme electrophoresis for distinguishing related bacterial strains

TL;DR: RAPD typing is far more sensitive than MLEE typing for discriminating among related strains of a species, and should be used for studies of bacterial population genetic structure and evolution, as well as for epidemiology.
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Targeted Mutagenesis in Mammalian Cells Mediated by Intracellular Triple Helix Formation

TL;DR: The ability to target mutations to selected sites within mammalian cells by using modified triplex-forming oligonucleotides may provide a new research tool and may eventually lead to therapeutic applications.
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Nuclear Import of Plasmid DNA in Digitonin-permeabilized Cells Requires Both Cytoplasmic Factors and Specific DNA Sequences

TL;DR: The results confirm and extend the findings in microinjected cells and support a protein-mediated mechanism for plasmid nuclear import, requiring a region of the SV40 early promoter and enhancer.
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Chromosomal mutations induced by triplex-forming oligonucleotides in mammalian cells

TL;DR: The ability of triplex-forming oligonucleotides to influence mutation frequencies at a specific site in a mammalian chromosome is demonstrated, indicating a TFO-specific induction of mutagenesis.