Man-Gi Cho
Dongseo University
5 Papers
Man-Gi Cho is an academic researcher from Dongseo University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Nutraceutical. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
The Influence of Abiotic Factors on the Induction of Seaweed Callus
Gabriel Tirtawijaya,Bertoka Fajar Surya Perwira Negara,Jin-Hwa Lee,Man-Gi Cho,Hye Kyung Kim,Yun-Sik Choi,Sang-Hoon Lee,Jae-Suk Choi +7 more
TL;DR: The influence of abiotic factors on callus induction in seaweeds, a prerequisite for the application and development of seaweed callus culture, is discussed.
Narrow-Gap Rheometry: A Novel Method for Measuring Cell Mechanics
Khawaja Muhammad Imran Bashir,Suhyang Lee,Dong Hee Jung,Santanu Kumar Basu,Man-Gi Cho,Andreas Wierschem +5 more
TL;DR: Insight is provided for whether and how narrow-gap rheometer could be used as an efficient drug screening tool, which could further improve the current understanding of the mechanical issues present in the treatment of human diseases.
Measuring the linear viscoelastic regime of MCF-7 cells with a monolayer rheometer in the presence of microtubule-active anti-cancer drugs at high concentrations
Suhyang Lee,Khawaja Muhammad Imran Bashir,Dong Hee Jung,Santanu Kumar Basu,Gayeon Seo,Man-Gi Cho,Andreas Wierschem +6 more
TL;DR: To enable studying the impact of microtubule-active drugs on vital cells at concentrations several orders of magnitude beyond the half maximal effective concentration for cytotoxicity, the authors arrested the cell cycle with hydroxyurea and found a strong impact of the gap width and of normal forces on the moduli and obtained high vitality levels during the rheological study.
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Cytoprotective effect of fucoxanthin isolated from brown algae Sargassum siliquastrum against H2O2-induced cell damage
Soo-Jin Heo,Seok-Chun Ko,Sung-Myung Kang,Hahk-Soo Kang,Jong-Pyung Kim,Soo-Hyun Kim,Ki-Wan Lee,Man-Gi Cho,You-Jin Jeon +8 more
TL;DR: Results clearly indicate that fucoxanthin isolated from S. siliquastrum possesses prominent antioxidant activity against H2O2-mediated cell damage and which might be a potential therapeutic agent for treating or preventing several diseases implicated with oxidative stress.
Physiological and Clinical Aspects of Bioactive Peptides from Marine Animals
TL;DR: The physiological and clinical significance of antioxidant and anticancer peptides derived from marine animals are discussed, and their biological activities through existing in vitro and in vivo studies are compared.