Wei-wei Wang
7 Papers
16 Citations
Wei-wei Wang is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Kidney & Stem cell. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Enhanced renoprotective effect of HIF-1α modified human adipose-derived stem cells on cisplatin-induced acute kidney injury in vivo
TL;DR: HIF-1α-modified ASCs implantation could provide advanced benefits in the protection again AKI, which will contribute to developing a new therapeutic strategy for the treatment of AKI.
Effect and mechanism of erythropoietin on mesenchymal stem cell proliferation in vitro under the acute kidney injury microenvironment
TL;DR: The results show that EPO can promote proliferation of mMSCs in vitro under the AKI microenvironment, which is mediated by EPOR and related with the proliferation/apoptosis signal pathway.
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Network-based pharmacology and in vitro validation reveal that galangin induces apoptosis in bladder cancer cells by promoting the p53 signaling pathway.
Xiaoming Long,Li Chen,Jing Yang,Taotao Dong,Qisen Cheng,Wei-wei Wang,Yujian Zou,Yao Su,Wenbin Dai,Bo Chen,Xin Zhou +10 more
TL;DR: In vitro experiments showed that galangin could inhibit bladder cancer cell proliferation, induce apoptosis, and up- Regulate the expression of apoptosis-related proteins bax and Cleaved-PARP and down-regulate theexpression of Bcl-2; meanwhile, galangIn could promote the up-regulation of the expressionof p53 and cytc proteins through activating the p53 signaling pathway.
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Reprogramming of mouse renal tubular epithelial cells to induced pluripotent stem cells.
TL;DR: The iPS cells were indistinguishable from mouse embryonic stem cells with respect to colony morphology, the expression of pluripotency-associated transcription factors and surface markers, embryoid body-mediated differentiation potential and teratoma assays, and quantitative polymerase chain reaction demonstrated that the lentiviral transgenes were largely silenced.
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Assessment of the characteristics and quality of life of patients with uremic peripheral neuropathy .
TL;DR: Sensory nerves were damaged more severely than motor nerves, and lower extremity lesions were more frequent than upper limb lesions in patients with uremic peripheral neuropathy.
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