Taehong Yang
Stanford University
19 Papers
11 Citations
Taehong Yang is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plexin & Semaphorin. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 15 publications. Previous affiliations of Taehong Yang include University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center & KAIST.
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Papers
Mical links semaphorins to F-actin disassembly
Ruei-Jiun Hung,Umar Yazdani,Jimok Yoon,Heng Wu,Taehong Yang,Nidhi Gupta,Zhiyu Huang,Willem J. H. van Berkel,Jonathan R. Terman +8 more
TL;DR: Mical is a novel F-actin-disassembly factor that provides a molecular conduit through which actin reorganization—a hallmark of cell morphological changes including axon navigation—can be precisely achieved spatiotemporally in response to semaphorins.
A crucial role of WW45 in developing epithelial tissues in the mouse
Joo-Hyeon Lee,Tae Shin Kim,Taehong Yang,Bon-Kyoung Koo,Sangphil Oh,Kwang-Pyo Lee,Hyun Jung Oh,Sang-Hee Lee,Young-Yun Kong,Jin Man Kim,Dae-Sik Lim +10 more
TL;DR: This article showed that WW45 is a key mediator of MST1 signalling in the coordinate coupling of proliferation arrest with terminal differentiation for proper epithelial tissue development in mammals, and showed that W45 is required for MST 1 activation and translocation to the nucleus for subsequent LATS 1/2 activation upon differentiation signal.
Social Control of Hypothalamus-Mediated Male Aggression.
Taehong Yang,Cindy F. Yang,M. Delara Chizari,Niru Maheswaranathan,Kenneth J. Burke,Maxim Borius,Sayaka Inoue,Michael C. Chiang,Kevin J. Bender,Surya Ganguli,Nirao M. Shah +10 more
TL;DR: These studies suggest that fundamentally non-linear computations enable social context to exert a dominant influence on developmentally hard-wired hypothalamus-mediated male territorial aggression.
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Limbic Neurons Shape Sex Recognition and Social Behavior in Sexually Naive Males.
Daniel W. Bayless,Taehong Yang,Matthew M. Mason,Albert A.T. Susanto,Alexandra Lobdell,Nirao M. Shah +5 more
TL;DR: It is found that activity of aromatase-expressing BNSTpr neurons appears to encode sex of other animals and subsequent displays of mating in sexually naive males, and surprisingly, female AB neurons do not appear to control sex recognition, mating, or maternal aggression.
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Periodic Remodeling in a Neural Circuit Governs Timing of Female Sexual Behavior
Sayaka Inoue,Renzhi Yang,Adarsh Tantry,Chung-ha Davis,Taehong Yang,Joseph R. Knoedler,Yichao Wei,Eliza L. Adams,Shivani Thombare,Samantha R. Golf,Rachael L. Neve,Marc Tessier-Lavigne,Jun B. Ding,Nirao M. Shah +13 more
TL;DR: Estrogen-regulated structural plasticity of behaviorally salient connections in the adult female brain links sexual behavior to the estrus phase of the estrous cycle and is essential for sexual behavior in receptive females.
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