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Xuan Peng

Researcher at Sun Yat-sen University

Publications -  9
Citations -  342

Xuan Peng is an academic researcher from Sun Yat-sen University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Peritoneal dialysis & Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 9 publications receiving 182 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Atg5-mediated autophagy deficiency in proximal tubules promotes cell cycle G2/M arrest and renal fibrosis.

TL;DR: Atg5-mediated autophagy in proximal epithelial cells is a critical host-defense mechanism that prevents renal fibrosis by blocking G2/M arrest, suggesting the regulation of cell cycle progression by ATG5 is Autophagy dependent.
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ATG5-mediated autophagy suppresses NF-κB signaling to limit epithelial inflammatory response to kidney injury

TL;DR: ABlation of epithelial ATG5 genes markedly impaired autophagy, resulting in enhanced nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) activation, macrophage and lymphocyte infiltration, and proinflammatory cytokines production in obstructed kidneys, as compared with wild-type mice.
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Drp1-mediated mitochondrial fission promotes renal fibroblast activation and fibrogenesis.

TL;DR: The results imply that inhibiting p-Drp1S616-mediated mitochondrial fission attenuates fibroblast activation and proliferation in renal fibrosis through epigenetic regulation of fibrosis-related genes transcription and may serve as a therapeutic target for retarding progression of chronic kidney disease.
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Association of Pulmonary Hypertension with Mortality in Incident Peritoneal Dialysis Patients.

TL;DR: The prevalence of pulmonary hypertension at the start of peritoneal dialysis was common and associated with increased risk of both all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in incident PD patients.
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Association of baseline, longitudinal serum high-sensitive C-reactive protein and its change with mortality in peritoneal dialysis patients

TL;DR: Higher longitudinal serum hs-CRP levels and its elevated trend over time, but not baseline levels were predictive of worse prognosis among CAPD patients.