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Inchan Kwon

Researcher at Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

Publications -  81
Citations -  1811

Inchan Kwon is an academic researcher from Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amino acid & Human serum albumin. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 75 publications receiving 1511 citations. Previous affiliations of Inchan Kwon include LG Chem & University of California, Berkeley.

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Xanthene Food Dye, as a Modulator of Alzheimer's Disease Amyloid-beta Peptide Aggregation and the Associated Impaired Neuronal Cell Function

TL;DR: The findings show that erythrosine B (ER) is a novel modulator of Aβ aggregation and reduces Aβ-associated impaired cell function and suggest that xanthene dye can be a new type of small molecule modulators of A β aggregation.
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Co-delivery of therapeutic protein and catalase-mimic nanoparticle using a biocompatible nanocarrier for enhanced therapeutic effect.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that biocompatible pluronic-based nanocarriers can be used to deliver a target therapeutic protein along with its toxicity-eliminating agent in order to reduce side effects and enhance efficacy and co-delivery of UOX and AuNPs using NCs significantly improves in vivo UA degradation.
Patent

Methods of incorporating amino acid analogs into proteins

TL;DR: In this paper, a modified aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase was used to charge nonstandard amino acids to a modified tRNA, which formed strict Watson-Crick base-pairing with a codon that normally forms wobble base pairing with natural tRNAs.
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Bioconjugation of therapeutic proteins and enzymes using the expanded set of genetically encoded amino acids

TL;DR: This review describes bioorthogonal reactions useful for protein conjugation, and biosynthetic methods that produce proteins amenable to those reactions through an expanded genetic code, and provides key examples in which novelprotein conjugates, generated by the genetic incorporation of a non-natural amino acid and the chemoselective reactions, address unmet needs in protein therapeutics and enzyme engineering.
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Expansion of bioorthogonal chemistries towards site-specific polymer–protein conjugation

TL;DR: This review summarizes the recent advances in bioorthogonal chemistries and suggests that the site-specific polymer conjugation technique would be a valuable platform technique to design novel protein–polymer conjugates.