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Hui-Chun Ku

Researcher at National Taiwan University

Publications -  14
Citations -  266

Hui-Chun Ku is an academic researcher from National Taiwan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oxidative stress & Cardiac function curve. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 11 publications receiving 228 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

DPP4 deficiency preserves cardiac function via GLP-1 signaling in rats subjected to myocardial ischemia/reperfusion.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the benefit of cardiac protective action against I/R injury was demonstrated in DPP4-deficient rats, which is mediated through both GLP-1 receptor-dependent and receptor-independent mechanisms.
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DPP4 Deficiency Exerts Protective Effect against H2O2 Induced Oxidative Stress in Isolated Cardiomyocytes

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that GLP-1 receptor-dependent pathway is important and exert protective effect in wild-type cardiomyocytes after H2O2 exposure and long term loss of DPP4 activity increased the capability against ROS stress, which was more than GLp-1 dependent pathway.
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GLP-1 signaling preserves cardiac function in endotoxemic Fischer 344 and DPP4-deficient rats

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the resistance to LPS in DPP4-deficient rats seems to be derived from the higher GLP-1 production, and exendin-4 prevents cardiac dysfunction in wild-type rats with endotoxemia.
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A Model of Cardiac Remodeling Through Constriction of the Abdominal Aorta in Rats

TL;DR: The method described here provides a simple and effective approach to produce a hypertensive heart disease animal model that is suitable for studying disease mechanisms and for testing novel therapeutics.
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Pyrrolidinyl caffeamide against ischemia/reperfusion injury in cardiomyocytes through AMPK/AKT pathways

TL;DR: PLCA promoted p-AMPK, p-AKT, and GLUT4 upregulation to induce a cardioprotective effect in both cell and animal model, andAMPK and AKT are synergistically activated by PLCA, which lead to attenuating glucose utilization, thereby attenuating lactate accumulation and cell death.