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Min Kyung Yi

Researcher at University of Texas Medical Branch

Publications -  57
Citations -  7802

Min Kyung Yi is an academic researcher from University of Texas Medical Branch. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hepatitis C virus & RNA. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 56 publications receiving 7459 citations. Previous affiliations of Min Kyung Yi include Kanazawa University.

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Modulation of hepatitis C virus RNA abundance by a liver-specific MicroRNA

TL;DR: It is shown that the sequestration of miR-122 in liver cells results in marked loss of autonomously replicating hepatitis C viral RNAs, suggesting that miR -122 may present a target for antiviral intervention.
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Selectable Subgenomic and Genome-Length Dicistronic RNAs Derived from an Infectious Molecular Clone of the HCV-N Strain of Hepatitis C Virus Replicate Efficiently in Cultured Huh7 Cells

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that RNA derived from this documented infectious molecular clone has a unique capacity for replication in Huh7 cells in the absence of additional cell culture-adaptive mutations.
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Production of infectious genotype 1a hepatitis C virus (Hutchinson strain) in cultured human hepatoma cells.

TL;DR: Production of infectious genotype 1a HCV in cells transfected with synthetic RNA derived from a prototype virus (H77-S) is described, which will substantially benefit antiviral and vaccine discovery programs.
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Regulation of Hepatitis C Virus Translation and Infectious Virus Production by the MicroRNA miR-122

TL;DR: It is concluded that miR-122 promotes replication by binding directly to both sites in the genomic RNA and, at least in part, by stimulating internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-mediated translation.
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Disruption of innate immunity due to mitochondrial targeting of a picornaviral protease precursor

TL;DR: It is shown that hepatitis A virus ablates type 1 IFN responses by targeting the 3ABC precursor of its 3Cpro cysteine protease to mitochondria where it colocalizes with and cleaves MAVS, thereby disrupting activation of IRF3 through the MDA5 pathway.