S
Sangho Yu
Researcher at Pennington Biomedical Research Center
Publications - 31
Citations - 2696
Sangho Yu is an academic researcher from Pennington Biomedical Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Energy homeostasis & Gastric bypass surgery. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 29 publications receiving 2261 citations. Previous affiliations of Sangho Yu include Louisiana State University System & Yonsei University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
miR-126 regulates angiogenic signaling and vascular integrity
Jason E. Fish,Massimo M. Santoro,Sarah U. Morton,Sangho Yu,Ru Fang Yeh,Joshua D. Wythe,Kathryn N. Ivey,Benoit G. Bruneau,Didier Y.R. Stainier,Deepak Srivastava +9 more
TL;DR: It is found that miR-126 regulated the response of endothelial cells to VEGF, providing a new target for modulating vascular formation and function and illustrating that a single miRNA can regulate vascular integrity and angiogenesis.
Journal ArticleDOI
Stromal Cell–Derived Factor-1α Is Cardioprotective After Myocardial Infarction
Ankur Saxena,Jason E. Fish,Michael D. White,Sangho Yu,James W. Smyth,Robin M. Shaw,J. Michael DiMaio,Deepak Srivastava +7 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that SDF-1α may serve a tissue-protective and regenerative role for solid organs suffering a hypoxic insult.
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Glutamatergic Preoptic Area Neurons That Express Leptin Receptors Drive Temperature-Dependent Body Weight Homeostasis
Sangho Yu,Emily Qualls-Creekmore,Kavon Rezai-Zadeh,Yanyan Jiang,Hans-Rudolf Berthoud,Christopher D. Morrison,Andrei V. Derbenev,Andrea Zsombok,Heike Münzberg +8 more
TL;DR: LepRbPOA neurons are BAT-related neurons and it is shown that they are sufficient to inhibit energy expenditure, and LepRb POA neurons modulate food intake and body weight, which is mediated by temperature-dependent homeostatic responses.
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Appetite and body weight regulation after bariatric surgery
TL;DR: Surgery‐induced reduction of energy intake and subsequent weight loss appear to be the main drivers for rapid improvements of glycaemic control and none of the major candidate mechanisms postulated in mediating surgery‐induced changes from the gut and other organs to the brain have been confirmed yet.
Journal ArticleDOI
Galanin-Expressing GABA Neurons in the Lateral Hypothalamus Modulate Food Reward and Noncompulsive Locomotion.
Emily Qualls-Creekmore,Sangho Yu,Marie François,John Hoang,Clara Huesing,Annadora J. Bruce-Keller,David H. Burk,Hans-Rudolf Berthoud,Christopher D. Morrison,Heike Münzberg +9 more
TL;DR: LHAGal neurons are sufficient to drive motivated feeding and locomotor activity similar to LHAGABA neurons, but without inducing compulsive-like behaviors, which are proposed to require direct VTA innervation.