Chinese-American biochemist; professor at Johns Hopkins University
Ru-Chih Chow Huang (Chinese: 黃周汝吉; pinyin: Huáng Zhōu Rǔjí; born 1932) is a Taiwanese-American biology professor at Johns Hopkins University. She is a biochemist who worked with James F. Bonner and Doug Fambrough to characterize and discern functions for nuclear histones in the early 1960s when the field lacked a consensus on types and functions of individual histone proteins.[1][2][3] Later she made discoveries about the molecular biology of cancer[4] and of viral gene regulation.[5]
- ^ RCC Huang and James Bonner. (1964) "Physical and biological properties of soluble nucleohistones."Journal of Molecular Biology 8 (1): 54-64.
- ^ R-C Huang and J Bonner (1962) "Histone, A Suppressor of Chromosomal RNA Synthesis" Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 48:1216-1222.
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- ^ DE Hansel, S Dhara, RCC Huang, R Ashfaq, M Deasel, Y Shimada, HS Bernstein, J Harmon, M Brock, A Forastiere, MK Washington, A Maitra, E Montgomery (2005). "CDC2/CDK1 expression in esophageal adenocarcinoma and precursor lesions serves as a diagnostic and cancer progression marker and potential novel drug target." Am J Surg Pathol. 29:390-399.
- ^ IS Abd-Elazem, HS Chen, RB Bates, RCC Huang (2002). "Isolation of two highly potent and non-toxic inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase from Salvia miltiorrhiza." Antiviral Res. 55:91-106.