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Joonsung Hwang

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  8
Citations -  987

Joonsung Hwang is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multiple drug resistance & Hair follicle. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications receiving 942 citations.

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Multiple drug-resistant human KB carcinoma cells independently selected for high-level resistance to colchicine, adriamycin, or vinblastine show changes in expression of specific proteins.

TL;DR: It is suggested that only a limited number of protein changes occur in multidrug-resistant cell lines, which are associated with a loss of translatable mRNA for these proteins.
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Characterization of adriamycin-resistant human breast cancer cells which display overexpression of a novel resistance-related membrane protein.

TL;DR: The demonstration of high levels of the P-95 protein in clinical samples obtained from patients refractory to Adr suggests that this protein may play a role in clinical drug resistance.
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Dlx3 is a crucial regulator of hair follicle differentiation and cycling.

TL;DR: The central role of Dlx3 is demonstrated as a crucial transcriptional regulator of hair formation and regeneration and the results establish that DlX3 is essential for hair morphogenesis, differentiation and cycling programs.
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Neural Crest Deletion of Dlx3 Leads to Major Dentin Defects through Down-regulation of Dspp

TL;DR: It is found that dentin sialophosphoprotein (Dspp), a major component of the dentin matrix, is strongly down-regulated in odontoblasts lacking Dlx3, establishing a regulatory pathway where the transcription factor DlX3 is essential in dentin formation by directly regulating a crucial matrix protein.
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Epidermal ablation of Dlx3 is linked to IL-17–associated skin inflammation

TL;DR: Dlx3 ablation in epidermis is linked to altered epidermal differentiation, barrier development, and IL-17–associated skin inflammation and this model provides a platform that will allow the systematic exploration of the contributions of keratinocytes to cutaneous inflammation.