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Huoming Zhang

Researcher at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

Publications -  67
Citations -  2680

Huoming Zhang is an academic researcher from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Proteome & Mutant. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 61 publications receiving 2273 citations. Previous affiliations of Huoming Zhang include Agency for Science, Technology and Research & Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

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Hypoxic Tumor Cell Modulates Its Microenvironment to Enhance Angiogenic and Metastatic Potential by Secretion of Proteins and Exosomes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors observed that tumor cells produce a secretion that modifies their microenvironment to facilitate tumor angiogenesis and metastasis under hypoxia, and the secreted proteins were predominantly cytoplasmic and membrane proteins.
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Myostatin induces degradation of sarcomeric proteins through a Smad3 signaling mechanism during skeletal muscle wasting.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that myostatin signals through Smad3 (mothers against decapentaplegic homolog 3) to activate forkhead box O1 and Atrogin-1 expression, which further promotes the ubiquitination and subsequent proteasome-mediated degradation of critical sarcomeric proteins.
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Simultaneous Characterization of Glyco- and Phosphoproteomes of Mouse Brain Membrane Proteome with Electrostatic Repulsion Hydrophilic Interaction Chromatography

TL;DR: An optimized protocol using electrostatic repulsion hydrophilic interaction chromatography for the simultaneous enrichment of glyco- and phosphopeptides from mouse brain membrane protein digest is reported here to study the complex interaction of two different post-translational modifications in health and disease without being affected by interexperimental variations.
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Identification of novel functional differences in monocyte subsets using proteomic and transcriptomic methods.

TL;DR: Novel functional differences between the monocyte subsets are uncovered from differences in gene expression at the protein and mRNA levels, which would provide new insights into the different roles of the two monocytes subsets in regulating innate and adaptive immune responses.