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Jing Fan

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  10
Citations -  588

Jing Fan is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Nanomedicine & Drug delivery. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 10 publications receiving 438 citations. Previous affiliations of Jing Fan include Southeast University & Shenzhen University.

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NIR‐Responsive On‐Demand Release of CO from Metal Carbonyl‐Caged Graphene Oxide Nanomedicine

TL;DR: On-demand release of carbon monoxide (CO) is realized through a novel near-infrared-responsive nanomedicine in favor of the enhancement of therapy efficacy and biosafety of CO therapy.
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Transformative Nanomedicine of an Amphiphilic Camptothecin Prodrug for Long Circulation and High Tumor Uptake in Cancer Therapy.

TL;DR: A camptothecin prodrug that was well formulated in solution and rapidly transformed into long-circulating nanocomplexes in vivo for highly efficient drug delivery and effective cancer therapy is reported.
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A novel self-assembled sandwich nanomedicine for NIR-responsive release of NO

TL;DR: The intracellular NIR-responsive release of NO from the GO-BNN6 nanomedicine causes a remarkable anti-cancer effect and is easily triggered and effectively controlled by adjusting the switching, irradiation time and power density of NIR laser.
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Light-Responsive Biodegradable Nanomedicine Overcomes Multidrug Resistance via NO-Enhanced Chemosensitization.

TL;DR: A nitric oxide (NO) gas-enhanced chemosensitization strategy is proposed to overcome MDR by construction of a biodegradable nanomedicine formula based on BNN6/DOX coloaded monomethoxy(polyethylene glycol)-poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (mPEG-PLGA).
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Hierarchical Assembly of Bioactive Amphiphilic Molecule Pairs into Supramolecular Nanofibril Self-Supportive Scaffolds for Stem Cell Differentiation.

TL;DR: This study is a successful attempt to entirely use bioactive molecules for bottom-up self-assembly of new biomaterials mimicking the ECM to directly impact cell behaviors and provides a new avenue in biomaterial design to advance tissue engineering and cell delivery.