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Young Rok Seo

Researcher at Dongguk University

Publications -  92
Citations -  2238

Young Rok Seo is an academic researcher from Dongguk University. The author has contributed to research in topics: DNA damage & Genotoxicity. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 84 publications receiving 1688 citations.

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An Overview of Carcinogenic Heavy Metal: Molecular Toxicity Mechanism and Prevention.

TL;DR: The analyzed data showed that Arsenic, cadmium, chromium, and nickel induce oxidative stress, DNA damage, and cell death processes, resulting in increase the risk of cancer and cancer-related diseases.
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Understanding of ROS-Inducing Strategy in Anticancer Therapy.

TL;DR: This review describes ROS-inducing cancer therapy and the anticancer mechanism employed by prooxidative agents and proposes and visualize the drug-gene, drug-cell process, and drug-disease interactions involved in oxidative stress induction and antioxidant process inhibition as well as specific side effects of these drugs using pathway analysis with big data-based text-mining approach.
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p53 regulation of DNA excision repair pathways

TL;DR: In human cancers carrying inactivating mutations in p53, especially those wherein p53 mutation occurs early, accelerated mutagenesis by exogenous and endogenous DNA damage is predicted, and the excision repair pathways could provide a useful target for DNA-damaging Chemotherapeutics against p53-defective cancers, having decreased ability to repair chemotherapeutic damage.
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Toxicogenomic approaches for understanding molecular mechanisms of heavy metal mutagenicity and carcinogenicity

TL;DR: Advances in high-throughput toxicogenomic-based technologies and studies related to exposure to individual heavy metal and/or mixtures are summarized and the underlying mechanism of action and toxicant signatures are proposed.
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Advances in carcinogenic metal toxicity and potential molecular markers.

TL;DR: Observations provide evidence that emerging oxidative stress-responsive regulatory factors and DNA repair proteins are putative predictive factors for tumor initiation and progression.