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Tanya Das

Researcher at Bose Institute

Publications -  113
Citations -  5320

Tanya Das is an academic researcher from Bose Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Apoptosis & Cancer cell. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 113 publications receiving 4863 citations. Previous affiliations of Tanya Das include University of Calcutta & Cleveland Clinic.

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Gh: A GTP-binding protein with transglutaminase activity and receptor signaling function

TL;DR: G alpha h represents a new class of GTP-binding proteins that participate in receptor signaling and may be a component of a complex regulatory network in which receptor-stimulated GTP binding switches the function of G alpha h from transglutamination to receptor signaling.
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Curcumin induces apoptosis in human breast cancer cells through p53-dependent Bax induction

TL;DR: Curcumin induced apoptosis in tumor cells via a p53‐dependent pathway in which Bax is the downstream effector of p53, which suggests that this molecule could have a possible therapeutic potential in breast cancer patients.
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Anti cancer effects of curcumin: cycle of life and death

TL;DR: An appraisal of the current level of knowledge regarding the potential of curcumin as an agent for the chemoprevention of cancer via an understanding of its mechanism of action at the level of cell cycle regulation is presented.
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Curcumin selectively induces apoptosis in deregulated cyclin D1-expressed cells at G2 phase of cell cycle in a p53-dependent manner.

TL;DR: Curcumin selectively increases p53 expression at G2 phase of carcinoma cells and releases cytochrome c from mitochondria, which is an essential requirement for apoptosis, suggesting that curcumin may have a possible therapeutic potential in breast cancer patients.
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Curcumin reverses T cell-mediated adaptive immune dysfunctions in tumor-bearing hosts.

TL;DR: Overall, the observations suggest that the unique properties of curcumin may be exploited for successful attenuation of tumor-induced suppression of cell-mediated immune responses.