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Dive into the research topics where Dennis H. Oh is active.

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Featured researches published by Dennis H. Oh.


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 1997

A young boy with a large hemifacial plaque with histopathologic features of trichoepithelioma

Dennis H. Oh; Alfred T. Lane; Andrew E. Turk; Sabine Kohler

Trichoepitheliomas commonly appear as sporadic solitary lesions or, more rarely, as multiple lesions that are often dominantly inherited. We describe an 8-year-old boy with multiple facial papules that coalesced into a large plaque. This presentation of multiple trichoepitheliomas may represent an unusual type of nevus.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2000

Binding and Photoreactivity of Psoralen Linked to Triple Helix–Forming Oligonucleotides¶

Dennis H. Oh; Philip C. Hanawalt

Triple helix–forming oligonucleotides conjugated to a psoralen (psoTFO) have been designed to bind to three distinct purine‐rich sequences within the human interstitial collagenase (MMP1) gene. Gel mobility shift assays indicate that these psoTFO bind to and photoreact with model target DNA sequences following ultraviolet A (UVA) irradiation. The dissociation constants for binding of the psoTFO to their targets range from 0.3 to 4 μM. Psoralen monoadducts with the purine‐rich target strand and interstrand crosslinks are efficiently formed on targets containing either 5′‐ApT‐3′ or 5′‐TpA‐3′ sequences adjacent to the TFO binding sequence. The dependence of adduct formation on UVA dose has provided quantitative estimates of the overall rate constants for psoralen monoadduct and crosslink formation in the presence of a TFO. When psoralen is tethered to a TFO, the rate of monoadduct formation exceeds that of crosslinking for all sequences studied. This contrasts with the relatively low rate of monoadduct formation that has been reported for free psoralens, suggesting that the bound TFO facilitates the initial photochemistry that generates monoadducts, but does not significantly affect interstrand crosslink formation. psoTFO and UVA treatment inhibit DNA cleavage by a restriction endonuclease when the psoralen covalently reacts directly at the endonuclease site. The particular TFO studied do not completely inhibit endonuclease activity when they are noncovalently bound or when the covalent psoralen adduct does not coincide with the endonuclease site. Our findings confirm that TFO are capable of directing psoralen photoadducts to specific DNA targets and suggest that TFO can significantly modulate psoralen photoreactivity and DNA–protein interactions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1991

Electroabsorption (Stark effect) spectroscopy of mono- and biruthenium charge-transfer complexes: measurements of changes in dipole moments and other electrooptic properties

Dennis H. Oh; Mitsuru Sano; Steven G. Boxer


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1989

Stark effect spectra of Ru(diimine)32+ complexes

Dennis H. Oh; Steven G. Boxer


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1990

Electrochromism in the near-infrared absorption spectra of bridged ruthenium mixed-valence complexes

Dennis H. Oh; Steven G. Boxer


Nucleic Acids Research | 1999

Triple helix-forming oligonucleotides target psoralen adducts to specific chromosomal sequences in human cells

Dennis H. Oh; Philip C. Hanawalt


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 1997

Two-Photon Excitation of 4'-Hydroxymethyl-4,5',8-Trimethylpsoralen

Dennis H. Oh; Robert J. Stanley; Michelle Lin; Warren K. Hoeffler; Steven G. Boxer; Michael W. Berns; Eugene A. Bauer


The FASEB Journal | 1995

Inhibition of collagenase type I expression by psoralen antisense oligonucleotides in dermal fibroblasts.

Michelle Lin; Kevin Hultquist; Dennis H. Oh; Eugene A. Bauer; Warren K. Hoeffler


/data/revues/01909622/v40i6/S0190962299700873/ | 2011

Five cases of calciphylaxis and a review of the literature

Dennis H. Oh; Dana Eulau; Diane A. Tokugawa; Joseph McGuire; Sabine Kohler


Journal of Dermatological Science | 1998

Triple helix-forming oligonucleotides target psoralen adducts to specific sequences of the human interstitial collagenase (MMP-1) gene

Dennis H. Oh; Philip C. Hanawalt

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