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Dive into the research topics where Yung-Chang Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Yung-Chang Chen.


Hepatology | 2004

Increased vascular heme oxygenase-1 expression contributes to arterial vasodilation in experimental cirrhosis in rats

Yung-Chang Chen; Pere Ginès; Jianhui Yang; Sandra N. Summer; Sandor Falk; Nash S. Russell; Robert W. Schrier

Vascular heme oxygenase (HO) regulates vascular tone in normal conditions and in some pathologic circumstances (e.g., sepsis). However, its possible role in the pathogenesis of arterial vasodilation in cirrhosis is unknown. To address this question, the expression and activity of HO in arterial vessels was studied in rats at 1, 2, and 4 weeks after bile duct ligation (BDL) or sham operation. A progressively increased expression of HO‐1 was found in aorta and mesenteric arteries of BDL rats in a close chronologic relationship with the progression from acute cholestatic liver injury (1 week) to the fully developed cirrhosis with intense systemic arterial vasodilation (4 weeks). No changes were found in the expression of the constitutive isoform HO‐2. HO‐1 was mainly located in vascular smooth muscle cells of the arterial wall. Aortic HO activity increased in parallel with the expression of HO‐1 (up to 600% in rats with cirrhosis compared with sham rats) and correlated with hemodynamic parameters. Increased expression of HO‐1 and HO activity were also found in other organs, such as liver and spleen, though to a lesser extent compared with vascular tissue. The acute administration of an inhibitor of HO to cirrhotic rats, at a dose that normalized aortic HO activity, was associated with significantly greater effects on arterial pressure, total peripheral vascular resistance, and cardiac index, compared with effects in sham rats. In conclusion, these findings are consistent with a role for HO in the pathogenesis of arterial vasodilation in cirrhosis. (HEPATOLOGY 2004;39:1075–1087.)


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2005

Molecular Mechanisms of Impaired Urinary Concentrating Ability in Glucocorticoid-Deficient Rats

Yung-Chang Chen; Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai; Sandra N. Summer; Sandor Falk; Chunling Li; Weidong Wang; Robert W. Schrier

The purpose of this study was to examine urinary concentrating ability and protein expression of renal aquaporins and ion transporters in glucocorticoid-deficient (GD) rats in response to water deprivation as compared with control rats. Rats underwent bilateral adrenalectomies, followed only by aldosterone replacement (GD) or both aldosterone and dexamethasone replacement (control). As compared with control rats, the GD rats demonstrated a decrease in cardiac output and mean arterial pressure. In response to 36-h water deprivation, GD rats demonstrated significantly greater urine flow rate and decreased urine osmolality as compared with control rats at comparable serum osmolality and plasma vasopressin concentrations. The initiator of the countercurrent concentrating mechanism, the sodium-potassium-2 chloride co-transporter, was significantly decreased, as was the medullary osmolality in the GD rats versus control rats. There was also a decrease in inner medulla aquaporin-2 (AQP2) and urea transporter A1 (UT-A1) in GD rats as compared with control rats. There was a decrease in outer medulla Gsalpha protein, an important factor in vasopressin-mediated regulation of AQP2. Immunohistochemistry studies confirmed the decreased expression of AQP2 and UT-A1 in kidneys of GD rats as compared with control. In summary, impairment in the urinary concentrating mechanism was documented in GD rats in association with impaired countercurrent multiplication, diminished osmotic equilibration via AQP2, and diminished urea equilibration via UT-A1. These events occurred primarily in the relatively oxygen-deficient medulla and may have been initiated, at least in part, by the decrease in mean arterial pressure and thus renal perfusion pressure in this area of the kidney.


Biology of the Cell | 2005

Clinical update on renal aquaporins

Yung-Chang Chen; Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai; Robert W. Schrier

Following the discovery of the aquaporin‐1 water channel over a decade ago, molecular techniques have been developed to examine the role of renal aquaporin water channels under numerous physiological and pathological conditions. The present article reviews current knowledge regarding the function and dysfunction of renal aquaporins in disorders of water metabolism.


Neuroscience | 2004

From finch to fish to man: Role of aquaporins in body fluid and brain water regulation

Robert W. Schrier; Yung-Chang Chen; Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai

Charles Darwin, in his Origin of the Species, noted that different species of finches on the Galapagos Islands had adapted their beak size based on where they sought their food. Homer Smith, in his book From Fish to Philosopher, discussed the evolution of the nephron from a single conduit in salt water vertebrates, to nephrons with large glomerular capillaries and proximal and distal tubules in fresh water vertebrates, to smaller glomerular capillaries in amphibians, to nephrons with loops of Henle to allow for urinary concentration and dilution in mammals. The kidney with its million nephrons has emerged as the vital organ for regulating body fluid composition and volume. With the recent discovery of aquaporin water channels, our understanding of volume regulation has been greatly enhanced. This article reviews current knowledge regarding: 1) the unifying hypothesis of body fluid volume regulation; 2) brain aquaporins and their role in pathophysiologic states; and 3) function and regulation of renal aquaporins in the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH).


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2005

Nonosmotic release of vasopressin and renal aquaporins in impaired urinary dilution in hypothyroidism

Yung-Chang Chen; Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai; Jianhui Yang; Sandra N. Summer; Sandor Falk; Chunling Li; Weidong Wang; Robert W. Schrier


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2005

Role of heme oxygenase-1 in endotoxemic acute renal failure

Brian Poole; Wei Wang; Yung-Chang Chen; Einath Zolty; Sandor Falk; Amitabha Mitra; Robert W. Schrier


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2006

Molecular analysis of impaired urinary diluting capacity in glucocorticoid deficiency.

Weidong Wang; Chunling Li; Sandra N. Summer; Sandor Falk; Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai; Yung-Chang Chen; Robert W. Schrier


American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2004

Evidence for bradykinin as a stimulator of thirst

Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai; Boris Rogachev; Sandra N. Summer; Yung-Chang Chen; Lajos Gera; John M. Stewart; Robert W. Schrier


Archive | 2016

in impaired urinary dilution in hypothyroidism Nonosmotic release of vasopressin and renal aquaporins

Sandor Falk; Chunling Li; Weidong Wang; Robert W. Schrier; Yung-Chang Chen; Melissa A. Cadnapaphornchai; Jianhui Yang; Sandra N. Summer


Archive | 2016

failureof heme oxygenase-1 in endotoxemic acute renal

Robert W. Schrier; Brian Poole; Wei Wang; Yung-Chang Chen; Einath Zolty; Sandor Falk; Amitabha Mitra

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Robert W. Schrier

University of Colorado Boulder

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Sandor Falk

Anschutz Medical Campus

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Sandra N. Summer

University of Colorado Denver

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Jianhui Yang

University of Colorado Denver

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Brian Poole

Anschutz Medical Campus

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Einath Zolty

University of Colorado Denver

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Wei Wang

Anschutz Medical Campus

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