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Liang Zhang

Researcher at City University of Hong Kong

Publications -  78
Citations -  3471

Liang Zhang is an academic researcher from City University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Wnt signaling pathway & Transduction (genetics). The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 70 publications receiving 2901 citations. Previous affiliations of Liang Zhang include University of Iowa & Mount Sinai Hospital.

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Exosomes Mediate Stromal Mobilization of Autocrine Wnt-PCP Signaling in Breast Cancer Cell Migration

TL;DR: It is reported that fibroblast-secreted exosomes promote breast cancer cell (BCC) protrusive activity and motility via Wnt-planar cell polarity (PCP) signaling and it is demonstrated that exosome-stimulated BCC protrusions display mutually exclusive localization of the core PCP complexes.
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Regulation of Planar Cell Polarity by Smurf Ubiquitin Ligases

TL;DR: It is shown that Smurfs engage in a noncanonical Wnt signaling pathway that targets the core PCP protein Prickle1 for ubiquitin-mediated degradation.
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Intracellular trafficking of adeno-associated viral vectors

TL;DR: The current understanding of events that control rAAV transduction following receptor binding and leading to nuclear uptake is summarized, finding these stages are broadly classified as intracellular trafficking and have been found to be a major rate-limiting step in AAV transduction for many cell types.
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Nox2 and Rac1 Regulate H2O2-Dependent Recruitment of TRAF6 to Endosomal Interleukin-1 Receptor Complexes

TL;DR: It is found that Nox2-derived ROS influence the formation of an active interleukin-1 (IL-1) receptor complex in the endosomal compartment by directing the H2O2-dependent binding of TRAF6 to the IL-1R1/MyD88 complex.
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Human epithelial cancers secrete immunoglobulin g with unidentified specificity to promote growth and survival of tumor cells.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that human cancers of epithelial origin, including carcinomas of breast, colon, liver, lung, established epithelial cancer lines, as well as some normal lung tissues, also produce IgG in both cytoplasmic and secreted forms, and a role of tumor-derived IgG as growth factor for epithelial cancers is supported.