Cerium oxide nanoparticles protect gastrointestinal epithelium from radiation-induced damage by reduction of reactive oxygen species and upregulation of superoxide dismutase 2
Jimmie Colón(University of Central Florida), Cheryl H. Baker(University of Central Florida), Patrick Kupelian, Amber Ferguson(Florida Hospital Cancer Institute), D. Wayne Jenkins, Nelson Hsieh(Florida Hospital Cancer Institute), Sudipta Seal(University of Central Florida)
Cited by 381
Related Papers
Graphene based materials: Past, present and future
|Progress in Materials Science|2011|3.5k
Recent development in 2D materials beyond graphene
|Progress in Materials Science|2015|1.5k
Superoxide dismutase mimetic properties exhibited by vacancy engineered ceria nanoparticles
|Chemical Communications|2007|1.3k
Nanoceria exhibit redox state-dependent catalase mimetic activity
|Chemical Communications|2010|1.2k
Size dependency variation in lattice parameter and valency states in nanocrystalline cerium oxide
|Applied Physics Letters|2005|1.1k