Publications by authors named "Wanchen Zou"

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is marked by a progressive loss of central vision and is the third leading cause of irreversible blindness worldwide. The exact mechanisms driving the progression of this macular degenerative condition remain elusive, and as of now, there are no available preventative measures for dry AMD. According to ancient records, ginseng affects the eyes by brightening them and enhancing wisdom.

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Article Synopsis
  • Peptides with antimicrobial and protease inhibitory properties could serve as alternatives to traditional antibiotics and cancer treatments, but issues like cytotoxicity and hydrolysis limit their use.
  • Researchers synthesized the Kunitz-type peptide OSTI-1949 and created four modified analogues that exhibited enhanced antimicrobial, anticancer, and protease inhibitory activities without increasing toxicity to normal cells.
  • The study highlights that structural modifications, like enhancing helicity to form α-helix and ß-sheet structures, can improve the biological activity of peptides while keeping them safe for clinical applications.
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In recent decades, antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have held great promise as novel antibiotic agents. However, they have generally been excluded from clinical use due to certain limitations, such as poor biocompatibility and sensitivity to environmental conditions. In this study, we report a novel brevinin-1 type antimicrobial peptide B1LTe, derived from the skin secretion of .

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Antimicrobial peptides have gradually attracted interest as promising alternatives to conventional agents to control the worldwide health threats posed by antibiotic resistance and cancer. Crabrolin is a tridecapeptide extracted from the venom of the European hornet (). Its antibacterial and anticancer potentials have been underrated compared to other peptides discovered from natural resources.

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Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs), one of the most promising next-generation antibiotics to address the problem of antibiotic-resistance, have gained increasing attention in recent decades. However, some bottlenecks, such as high manufacturing costs and high toxicity, have greatly hindered their development. To overcome these problems, we developed an efficient modification approach to find the valid active-core fragments of AMPs by mimicking the cleavage process of trypsin-like specificity proteases , and truncating the peptide.

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Mammalian bombesin-like neuropeptides (BLPs) play an important role in regulation of physiological and pathophysiological processes. Frog skin-derived BLPs, of smaller size and diverse lengths and sequences at their N-terminus, have attracted the attention of many researchers. However, these N-terminal variants and the receptors modulating their pharmacological actions are poorly studied and less understood.

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Due to the abuse of traditional antibiotics and the continuous mutation of microbial resistance genes, microbial infections have become serious problems for human health. Therefore, novel antibacterial agents are urgently required, and amphibian antimicrobial peptides (AMP) are among the most interesting potential antibacterial leads. In this research, a novel peptide, named kassporin-KS1 (generically QUB-1641), with moderate antibacterial activity against Gram-positive bacteria, was discovered in the skin secretion of the Senegal running frog, .

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