29 results on '"Lin, Regina"'
Search Results
2. Sustainable development: Uncovering the synergy between natural resources, clean technologies, and economic progress
- Author
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Xie, Hao, Chang, Shuangshuang, Liu, Pengqiang, and Lin, Regina Fang-Ying
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Spatial neural network model with disruptive technology for property appraisal in real estate industry
- Author
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Lin, Regina Fang-Ying, Ou, Chiye, Tseng, Kuo-Kun, Bowen, Deng, Yung, K.L., and Ip, W.H.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Direct control of CAR T cells through small molecule-regulated antibodies
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Park, Spencer, Pascua, Edward, Lindquist, Kevin C., Kimberlin, Christopher, Deng, Xiaodi, Mak, Yvonne S. L., Melton, Zea, Johnson, Theodore O., Lin, Regina, Boldajipour, Bijan, Abraham, Robert T., Pons, Jaume, Sasu, Barbra Johnson, Van Blarcom, Thomas J., and Chaparro-Riggers, Javier
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- 2021
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5. Recent advances in artificial intelligence for video production system.
- Author
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Huang, YuFeng, Lv, ShiJuan, Tseng, Kuo-Kun, Tseng, Pin-Jen, Xie, Xin, and Lin, Regina Fang-Ying
- Subjects
VIDEO production & direction ,DEEP learning ,USER-generated content ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,ARTISTIC creation ,FILMMAKING ,TELEVISION broadcasting - Abstract
The emergence of AI has revolutionized video production, enabling innovative approaches in artistic creation. With self-media's rise and demand for user-generated content, AI drives personalized, efficient video production. However, research lacks comprehensive reviews of AI's impact on film and TV. This study fills the gap by analyzing AI's influence using a five-sub-field framework. Through literature integration, we assess AI video production's potential, proposing a new process paradigm. This research sheds light on AI's transformative role, guiding efficient, personalized film and TV production, and inspiring deep learning-based advancements. This paper acts as a roadmap for maximizing AI's potential in enhancing production quality and efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Price prediction of e-commerce products through Internet sentiment analysis
- Author
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Tseng, Kuo-Kun, Lin, Regina Fang-Ying, Zhou, Hongfu, Kurniajaya, Kevin Jati, and Li, Qianyu
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- 2018
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- View/download PDF
7. Environmental Regulations and Corporate Green Investment: Evidence From Heavy Polluting Companies in China
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Chen Crystal Xiaobei, Lin Regina Fangying, Zheng Xinqian, and Li Yiyuan
- Subjects
Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
With the rapid development of the global economy, environmental pollution has become one of the main problems facing. As the main carriers of social production, companies create value for the whole society and also occupy the main resources. Heavy polluting companies have serious pollution discharge. They should bear more environmental protection responsibilities. Green investment of heavy polluting companies is the focus of social concern. Therefore, this paper selects 243 listed companies in China’s heavy polluting industry as samples to explore the impact of environmental regulations on corporate green investment. This study calculates the green investment amount of companies through the “content analysis method”, and divides the environmental regulation into formal environmental regulation and informal environmental regulation. A fixed panel model is constructed for research. The empirical results show that market-incentive environmental regulation and informal environmental regulation have a significantly positive impact on corporate green investment. There is no significant relationship between command-andcontrol environmental regulation and corporate green investment. According to this conclusion, this paper proposes some suggestions about green finance.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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8. Applied sentiment analysis on a real estate advertisement recommendation model.
- Author
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Lin, Regina Fang-Ying, Wu, Jiesheng, Tseng, Kuo-Kun, Tang, Yuk-Ming, and Liu, Lu
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SENTIMENT analysis ,REAL property ,REAL estate sales ,ECONOMIC statistics - Abstract
Recently, the data generated are exploding in the information age. In the post-COVID-19 era, some real estate contracts have been signed online, and online advertisement recommendation has become a new way to reduce the searching cost. Therefore, the model in which real estate online recommendations can be made suitable without user preferences has become a tricky problem. This study uses sentiment and economic data to predict real estate sales and then made an advertisement recommendation from the forecast results. The 2SA-RERec (Two Sentiment Analysis of Real Estate Recommendation) model is proposed, which shows the highest accuracy among the others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Corrigendum to “The Spatial neural network model with disruptive technology for property appraisal in real estate industry”✰
- Author
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Lin, Regina Fang-Ying, Ou, Chiye, Tseng, Kuo-Kun, Bowen, Deng, Yung, K.L., and Ip, W.H.
- Published
- 2022
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10. Targeting miR-23a in [CD8.sup.+] cytotoxic T lymphocytes prevents tumor-dependent immunosuppression
- Author
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Lin, Regina, Chen, Ling, Chen, Gang, Hu, Chunyan, Jiang, Shan, Sevilla, Jose, Wan, Ying, Sampson, John H., Zhu, Bo, and Li, Qi- Jing
- Subjects
T cells -- Physiological aspects -- Research ,MicroRNA -- Physiological aspects -- Research ,Immunosuppression -- Research ,Health care industry - Abstract
[CD8.sup.+] cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) have potent antitumor activity and therefore are leading candidates for use in tumor immunotherapy. The application of CTLs for clinical use has been limited by the susceptibility of ex vivo-expanded CTLs to become dysfunctional in response to immunosuppressive microenvironments. Here, we developed a microRNA-targeting (miRNA-targeting) approach that augments CTL cytotoxicity and preserves immunocompetence. Specifically, we screened for miRNAs that modulate cytotoxicity and identified miR-23a as a strong functional repressor of the transcription factor BLIMP-1, which promotes CTL cytotoxicity and effector cell differentiation. In a cohort of advanced lung cancer patients, miR-23a was upregulated in tumor-infiltrating CTLs, and expression correlated with impaired antitumor potential of patient CTLs. We determined that tumor-derived TGF-β directly suppresses CTL immune function by elevating miR-23a and downregulating BLIMP-1. Functional blocking of miR-23a in human CTLs enhanced granzyme B expression, and in mice with established tumors, immunotherapy with just a small number of tumor-specific CTLs in which miR-23a was inhibited robustly hindered tumor progression. Together, our findings provide a miRNA-based strategy that subverts the immunosuppression of CTLs that is often observed during adoptive cell transfer tumor immunotherapy and identify a TGF-β-mediated tumor immune-evasion pathway., Introduction Owing to their unique abilities for specific tumor antigen recognition and efficient cytolysis, CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) represent the primary leukocyte population used for adoptive cell transfer (ACT) [...]
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- 2014
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11. Environmental Regulations and Corporate Green Investment: Evidence From Heavy Polluting Companies in China.
- Author
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Wen, F., Ziaei, S.M., Chen, Crystal Xiaobei, Lin, Regina Fangying, Zheng, Xinqian, and Li, Yiyuan
- Published
- 2021
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12. Preclinical Evaluation of ALLO-605, an Allogeneic BCMA Turbocar TTM Cell Therapy for the Treatment of Multiple Myeloma
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Sommer, Cesar, Lin, Regina, Sutton, Janette, Bentley, Trevor, Nguyen, Duy, Yoon, Hayung, Au, Melinda, Vargas-Inchaustegui, Diego, Cheng, Hsin-Yuan, Van Blarcom, Tom, Panowski, Siler, and Sasu, Barbra
- Published
- 2020
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13. How bad is the flat earth assumption? Effect of topography on wireless systems.
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Fund, Fraida, Lin, Regina, Korakis, Thanasis, and Panwar, Shivendra S.
- Published
- 2016
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14. Intensive seated robotic training of the ankle in patients with chronic stroke differentially improves gait.
- Author
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Chang, Johanna L., Lin, Regina Y., Saul, Maira, Koch, Philip J., Igo Krebs, Hermano, and Volpe, Bruce T.
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HEMIPLEGIA , *STROKE treatment , *ROBOTICS , *ANALYSIS of variance , *ANKLE , *ARM , *COMPUTED tomography , *CONVALESCENCE , *DIAGNOSIS , *GAIT in humans , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL protocols , *MEDICAL technology , *PATIENTS , *PHYSICAL therapy , *REHABILITATION , *SITTING position , *WALKING , *CONTROL groups , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *THERAPEUTICS ,GAIT disorder treatment - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Robotic driven treatment plans targeting isolated joints of the upper limb have improved the sensorimotor condition of patients with stroke. Similar intensive efforts to allay lower limb gait impairment have not been so successful. In patients with stroke, targeted robot assisted training of the ankle joint, in a seated position, has demonstrated significant alterations in ankle stiffness and foot-ankle orientation at foot strike which may provide a new treatment option for gait impairment. OBJECTIVE: To determine if isolated robot-assisted training of the ankle joint improves chronic hemiparetic gait in patients with stroke who are categorized according to baseline gait impairment. METHODS: Patients with chronic stroke (>6mo) and hemiparetic gait (N = 29) received 18 sessions of isolated robotassisted motor training of the ankle (3×/week for 6 weeks). All participants had stable clinical baseline scores across three admission measures, and no participant was receiving simultaneous outpatient rehabilitation. Baseline gait speed determined three impairment groups: high, >0.8 m/s; medium, 0.4-0.8 m/s; low, <0.4 m/s. Outcome measures included the Berg Balance Scale, the 6 Minute Walk Test, and the 10 Meter Walk Test, and were recorded upon admission, discharge, and 3 months following intervention. RESULTS: Three distinct and significant between-group patterns of recovery emerged for gait speed. The within-group analysis showed that the medium and high group exhibited significant improvements in gait speed and endurance upon discharge, that were maintained at 3-months. Gait speed improvements were clinically significant (>0.16 m/s) for the high function group across all gait speed and endurance measures at discharge and at 3 months. The moderate group also exhibited clinically significant improvements at follow-up on the 10 Meter Walk Test, fast pace (0.16 m/sec), and approached clinical significance for the 10 MeterWalk comfortable pace (0.12 m/sec). The low group had small but significant improvements, at discharge on two of the three gait measures, and these improvements were maintained at 3 months. For balance measures, the low and moderate impairment groups had significant improvements at discharge that were robust on follow-up measure. The high function group demonstrated no significant change in balance. CONCLUSIONS: Joint-specific robotic training of the paretic ankle provided the most benefit to individuals with moderate or mild gait speed impairments after stroke. Baseline gait speed function (low, moderate, high) was associated with three distinct recovery profiles. This suggests that severity-specific intervention may be critical to improving efficiency of stroke recovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
15. Economic Complexity of the City Cluster in Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area, China.
- Author
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Lee, Ivan and Lin, Regina Fang-Ying
- Abstract
With the rapid economic growth in China over the last two decades, exploring the changes in the Chinese economy has attracted great attention from the research community. Among different economic clusters in China, the southern region represents the wealthiest region. Hence, it is essential to conduct an in-depth analysis to explore the region's sustainability in its economy. This paper applies the economic complexity model to 22 major cities within the Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area cluster. The study is based on seven industrial sectors. Revealed comparative advantage of different product sectors, similarities of product sector specialisation, diversity of the economic composition, and the association to the geographical location are investigated in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The tumor microenvironment disarms CD8 T lymphocyte function via a miR-26a-EZH2 axis.
- Author
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Long, Haixia, Xiang, Tong, Luo, Jing, Li, Fei, Lin, Regina, Liu, Siqi, Jiang, Shan, Hu, Chunyan, Chen, Gang, Wong, Elizabeth, Wan, Ying, Li, Qi-Jing, and Zhu, Bo
- Subjects
TUMOR microenvironment ,T cells - Abstract
One of the most important factors that limit the potency of CD8+cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses is the tumor microenvironment (TME). Here, we provide evidence that miR-26a is a negative regulator of CTL function in the TME. Specifically, we identified miR-26a as a crucial suppressor gene in CTLs from the TME, as we found that, miR-26a expression was elevated in CTLs to respond to TME secretome stimulation. CTLs from miR-26a-transgenic mice showed impaired IFNγ and granzyme B production in response to their cognate antigen. Conversely, we found that miR-26a inhibition in CTLs could effectively increase the cytotoxicity and suppress tumor growth. Mechanically, we identified EZH2 as a direct target of miR-26a. miR-26a and EZH2 expression were found to be inversely correlated in CTLs, and the inhibition of EZH2 in CTLs impairs CTL function. These functional correlations were validated in a cohort of non-small cell lung cancer patients, indicating that the miR-26a-EZH2 axis is clinically relevant. Our findings suggested that miR-26a silencing as a novel strategy to improve the efficacy of CTL-based cancer immunotherapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Association of CD8+ T lymphocyte repertoire spreading with the severity of DRESS syndrome.
- Author
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Niu, Jun, Yang, Xichuan, Zhai, Zhifang, Song, Zhiqiang, Hao, Fei, Zhong, Hua, Jia, Qingzhu, Ni, Qingshan, Yang, Yi, Chen, Gang, Yu, Haili, Guan, Peng, Wan, Ying, Lin, Regina, and Li, Qi-Jing
- Subjects
T cell receptors ,DRESS syndrome ,T cells ,IMMUNOGLOBULINS ,AUTOIMMUNE diseases - Abstract
T-cell receptor (TCR)-mediated cross-recognition is a major mechanism in the pathogenesis of drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) syndrome. However, the characteristics of the TCR repertoire and the clinical significance of repertoire reformation throughout the course of DRESS are unknown. Here, we isolated CD4
+ and CD8+ T-cells from peripheral blood of 8 DRESS patients at 10-day intervals and, sequenced CDR3-regions of the TCRB chain by high-throughput sequencing to analyze the dynamic reformation in the T-cell repertoire hierarchy. Compared with healthy donors, T-cell expanded in peripheral repertoires from DRESS patient. The extent of fluctuation of dominant CD8+ T-cell clones, but not of CD4+ counterparts, correlated positively with the clinical severity and helped classify the enrolled subjects into 'fluctuant' and 'flat' repertoire groups. The anti-herpesvirus response, which was measured using anti-EBV/HHV antibodies, and the proportion of the homologous CD8+ EBV-specific clonotypes, in the 'fluctuant' group was substantial higher than that in the 'flat' group. Furthermore, autoimmune sequelae were observed in a cured 'fluctuant' patient. Collectively, the clinical relevance of the fluctuant CD8+ T-cell repertoires supports the notion that herpes virus-mediated continuously de novo priming of newly pathogenic CD8+ T-cell clones is an alternate mechanism responsible for the pathogenicity of DRESS. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Diversity index of mucosal resident T lymphocyte repertoire predicts clinical prognosis in gastric cancer.
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Zhou, Junfeng, Shi, Yan, Yu, Peiwu, Jia, Qingzhu, Chen, Gang, Yu, Haili, Guan, Peng, Wan, Ying, Li, Qi-Jing, Lin, Regina, and Jiang, Ning
- Subjects
STOMACH cancer ,PROGNOSIS ,T cell receptors ,T cells ,MUCOUS membranes - Abstract
A characteristic immunopathology of human cancers is the induction of tumor antigen-specific T lymphocyte responses within solid tumor tissues. Current strategies for immune monitoring focus on the quantification of the density and differentiation status of tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes; however, properties of the TCR repertoire ‒ including antigen specificity, clonality, as well as its prognostic significance ‒ remain elusive. In this study, we enrolled 28 gastric cancer patients and collected tumor tissues, adjacent normal mucosal tissues, and peripheral blood samples to study the landscape and compartmentalization of these patients’ TCR β repertoire by deep sequencing analyses. Our results illustrated antigen-driven expansion within the tumor compartment and the contracted size of shared clonotypes in mucosa and peripheral blood. Most importantly, the diversity of mucosal T lymphocytes could independently predict prognosis, which strongly underscores critical roles of resident mucosal T-cells in executing post-surgery immunosurveillance against tumor relapse. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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19. miR-23a blockade enhances adoptive T cell transfer therapy by preserving immune-competence in the tumor microenvironment.
- Author
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Lin, Regina, Sampson, John H, Li, Qi-Jing, and Zhu, Bo
- Subjects
- *
T cells , *ANTINEOPLASTIC agents , *LYMPHOCYTES , *TUMORS , *IMMUNOSUPPRESSION - Abstract
In adoptive T cell transfer therapy (ACT), the antitumor efficacy of cytotoxic CD8+T lymphocytes (CTLs) has been limited by tumor-induced immunosuppression. We have demonstrated that miR-23a blockade in tumor-specific CTLs conferred resilience to TGFβ-mediated immunosuppression, resulting in superior tumor control. Our studies highlight miR-23a in tumor-specific CTLs as a clinically relevant target to enhance ACT. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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20. Analysis of the Rab GTPase Interactome in Dendritic Cells Reveals Anti-microbial Functions of the Rab32 Complex in Bacterial Containment.
- Author
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Li, Yuanyuan, Wang, Yu, Zou, Liyun, Tang, Xiangyu, Yang, Yi, Ma, Li, Jia, Qingzhu, Ni, Qingshan, Liu, Siqi, Tang, Lizhang, Lin, Regina, Wong, Elizabeth, Sun, Wei, Wang, Liting, Wei, Quanfang, Ran, Haiying, Zhang, Liqun, Lian, Hengning, Huang, Wei, and Wu, Yuzhang
- Subjects
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GUANOSINE triphosphatase , *DENDRITIC cells , *ANTI-infective agents , *MASS spectrometry , *BIOLOGICAL transport - Abstract
Summary Dendritic cells (DCs) orchestrate complex membrane trafficking through an interconnected transportation network linked together by Rab GTPases. Through a tandem affinity purification strategy and mass spectrometry, we depicted an interactomic landscape of major members of the mammalian Rab GTPase family. When complemented with imaging tools, this proteomic analysis provided a global view of intracellular membrane organization. Driven by this analysis, we investigated dynamic changes to the Rab32 subnetwork in DCs induced by L. monocytogenes infection and uncovered an essential role of this subnetwork in controlling the intracellular proliferation of L. monocytogenes. Mechanistically, Rab32 formed a persistent complex with two interacting proteins, PHB and PHB2, to encompass bacteria both during early phagosome formation and after L. monocytogenes escaped the original containment vacuole. Collectively, we have provided a functional compartmentalization overview and an organizational framework of intracellular Rab-mediated vesicle trafficking that can serve as a resource for future investigations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
21. The Parkinson Disease-linked LRRK2 Protein Mutation I2020T Stabilizes an Active State Conformation Leading to Increased Kinase Activity.
- Author
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Ray, Soumya, Bender, Samantha, Kang, Stephanie, Lin, Regina, Glicksman, Marcie A., and Min Liu
- Subjects
- *
DARDARIN , *GENETIC mutation , *PHOSPHORYLATION , *MOLECULAR conformation , *ADENOSINE triphosphate - Abstract
The effect of leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) mutation I2020T on its kinase activity has been controversial, with both increased and decreased effects being reported. We conducted steady-state and pre-steady-state kinetic studies on LRRKtide and its analog LRRKtideS. Their phosphorylation differs by the rate-limiting steps: product release is rate-limiting for LRRKtide and phosphoryl transfer is rate-limiting for LRRKtideS. As a result, we observed that the I2020T mutant is more active than wild type (WT) LRRK2 for LRRKtideS phosphorylation, whereas it is less active than WT for LRRKtide phosphorylation. Our pre-steady-state kinetic data suggest that (i) the I2020T mutant accelerates the rates of phosphoryl transfer of both reactions by 3-7-fold; (ii) this increase is masked by a rate-limiting product release step for LRRKtide phosphorylation; and (iii) the observed lower activity of the mutant for LRRKtide phosphorylation is a consequence of its instability: the concentration of the active form of the mutant is 3-fold lower than WT. The I2020T mutant has a dramatically low KATP and therefore leads to resistance to ATP competitive inhibitors. Two well known DFG-out or type II inhibitors are also weaker toward the mutant because they inhibit the mutant in an unexpected ATP competitive mechanism. The I2020 residue lies next to the DYG motif of the activation loop of the LRRK2 kinase domain. Our modeling and metadynamic simulations suggest that the I2020T mutant stabilizes the DYG-in active conformation and creates an unusual allosteric pocket that can bind type II inhibitors but in an ATP competitive fashion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
22. Economic complexity of the city cluster in Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area, China
- Author
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Ivan Lee, Regina Fang-Ying Lin, Lee, Ivan, and Lin, Regina Fang Ying
- Subjects
Geography, Planning and Development ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,0507 social and economic geography ,TJ807-830 ,02 engineering and technology ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,TD194-195 ,Renewable energy sources ,economic complexity ,Cluster (physics) ,GE1-350 ,Product (category theory) ,Economic geography ,Location ,China ,Environmental effects of industries and plants ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,05 social sciences ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Revealed comparative advantage ,revealed comparative advantage ,Environmental sciences ,Geography ,Sustainability ,city clusters ,Guangdong–Hong Kong–Macao Greater Bay Area ,050703 geography ,Bay ,Chinese economy ,Diversity (business) - Abstract
With the rapid economic growth in China over the last two decades, exploring the changes in the Chinese economy has attracted great attention from the research community. Among different economic clusters in China, the southern region represents the wealthiest region. Hence, it is essential to conduct an in-depth analysis to explore the region&rsquo, s sustainability in its economy. This paper applies the economic complexity model to 22 major cities within the Guangdong&ndash, Hong Kong&ndash, Macao Greater Bay Area cluster. The study is based on seven industrial sectors. Revealed comparative advantage of different product sectors, similarities of product sector specialisation, diversity of the economic composition, and the association to the geographical location are investigated in this paper.
- Published
- 2020
23. Constitutive Turbodomains enhance expansion and antitumor activity of allogeneic BCMA CAR T cells in preclinical models.
- Author
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Lin RJ, Sutton J, Bentley T, Vargas-Inchaustegui DA, Nguyen D, Cheng HY, Yoon H, Van Blarcom TJ, Sasu BJ, Panowski SH, and Sommer C
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, B-Cell Maturation Antigen, Neoplasm Recurrence, Local, T-Lymphocytes, Cytokines, Receptors, Chimeric Antigen genetics, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation
- Abstract
The magnitude of CAR T cell expansion has been associated with clinical efficacy. Although cytokines can augment CAR T cell proliferation, systemically administered cytokines can result in toxicities. To gain the benefits of cytokine signaling while mitigating toxicities, we designed constitutively active synthetic cytokine receptor chimeras (constitutive Turbodomains) that signal in a CAR T cell-specific manner. The modular design of Turbodomains enables diverse cytokine signaling outputs from a single homodimeric receptor chimera and allows multiplexing of different cytokine signals. Turbodomains containing an IL-2/15Rβ-derived signaling domain closely mimicked IL-15 signaling and enhanced CAR T cell potency. Allogeneic TurboCAR T cells targeting BCMA showed no evidence of aberrant proliferation yet displayed enhanced expansion and antitumor activity, prolonging survival and preventing extramedullary relapses in mouse models. These results illustrate the potential of constitutive Turbodomains to achieve selective potentiation of CAR T cells and demonstrate the safety and efficacy of allogeneic BCMA TurboCAR T cells, supporting clinical evaluation in multiple myeloma.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Design and Validation of Inducible TurboCARs with Tunable Induction and Combinatorial Cytokine Signaling.
- Author
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Lin RJ, Nager AR, Park S, Sutton J, Lay C, Melton Z, Zhang Y, Boldajipour B, Blarcom TJV, Panowski SH, Sasu BJ, and Chaparro-Riggers J
- Subjects
- Cytokines, Signal Transduction, T-Lymphocytes, Immunotherapy, Adoptive methods, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell genetics
- Abstract
Although cytokine support can enhance CAR T-cell function, coadministering cytokines or engineering CAR T cells to secrete cytokines can result in toxicities. To mitigate these safety risks, we engineered iTurboCAR T cells that coexpress a novel inducible Turbo (iTurbo) cytokine signaling domain. iTurbo domains consist of modular components that are customizable to a variety of activating inputs, as well as cytokine signaling outputs multiplexable for combinatorial signaling outcomes. Unlike most canonical cytokine receptors that are heterodimeric, iTurbo domains leverage a compact, homodimeric design that minimizes viral vector cargo. Using an iTurbo domain activated by the clinically validated dimerizer, AP1903, homodimeric iTurbo domains instigated signaling that mimicked the endogenous heterodimeric cytokine receptor. Different iTurbo domains programmed iTurboCAR T cells toward divergent phenotypes and resulted in improved antitumor efficacy. iTurbo domains, therefore, offer the flexibility for user-programmable signaling outputs, permitting control over cellular phenotype and function while minimizing viral cargo footprint., (©2022 American Association for Cancer Research.)
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
25. Non-invasive treatment of patients with upper extremity spasticity following stroke using paired trans-spinal and peripheral direct current stimulation.
- Author
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Paget-Blanc A, Chang JL, Saul M, Lin R, Ahmed Z, and Volpe BT
- Abstract
Background: Muscle spasticity is a common impediment to motor recovery in patients with chronic stroke. Standard-of-care treatments such as botulinum toxin injections can temporarily relieve muscle stiffness and pain associated with spasticity, but often at the expense of increased muscle weakness. Recent preclinical investigations of a non-invasive treatment that pairs trans-spinal direct current stimulation and peripheral nerve direct current stimulation (tsDCS+pDCS) provided promising data for a novel approach based on bioelectronic medicine for the treatment of patients with post-stroke spasticity., Methods: Twenty-six patients with upper limb hemiparesis and wrist spasticity at least 6 months after their initial stroke participated in this single-blind crossover design study to test whether tsDCS+pDCS reduces chronic upper-extremity spasticity. Subjects received five consecutive daily sessions (20 min of stimulation or sham) of anodal tsDCS+pDCS, separated by a one-week washout period. The sham condition always preceded the active condition. Clinical and objective measures of spasticity and motor function were collected before and after each condition, and for five weeks after the completion of the active intervention., Results: Subjects treated with active tsDCS+pDCS demonstrated significant reductions in both Modified Tardieu Scale scores (summed across the upper limb, P < 0.05 ), and in objective torque measures (Nm) of the spastic catch response at the wrist flexor ( P < 0.05), compared to the sham condition . Motor function also improved significantly (measured by the Fugl-Meyer and Wolf Motor Function Test; P < 0. 05 for both tests) after active treatment., Conclusions: tsDCS+pDCS intervention alone significantly reduced upper limb spasticity in participants with stroke. Decreased spasticity was persistent for five weeks after treatment, and was accompanied by improved motor function even though patients were unsupervised and there was no prescribed activity or training during that interval., Trial Registration: NCT03080454, March 15, 2017., Competing Interests: Competing interestsDr. Zaghloul Ahmed is the scientific founder of Pathmaker, LLC., which manufacturers the device that delivers the double stimulation. All other authors declare that they have no competing interests., (© The Author(s) 2019.)
- Published
- 2019
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26. The tumor microenvironment disarms CD8 + T lymphocyte function via a miR-26a-EZH2 axis.
- Author
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Long H, Xiang T, Luo J, Li F, Lin R, Liu S, Jiang S, Hu C, Chen G, Wong E, Wan Y, Li QJ, and Zhu B
- Abstract
One of the most important factors that limit the potency of CD8
+ cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses is the tumor microenvironment (TME). Here, we provide evidence that miR-26a is a negative regulator of CTL function in the TME. Specifically, we identified miR-26a as a crucial suppressor gene in CTLs from the TME, as we found that, miR-26a expression was elevated in CTLs to respond to TME secretome stimulation. CTLs from miR-26a-transgenic mice showed impaired IFNγ and granzyme B production in response to their cognate antigen. Conversely, we found that miR-26a inhibition in CTLs could effectively increase the cytotoxicity and suppress tumor growth. Mechanically, we identified EZH2 as a direct target of miR-26a. miR-26a and EZH2 expression were found to be inversely correlated in CTLs, and the inhibition of EZH2 in CTLs impairs CTL function. These functional correlations were validated in a cohort of non-small cell lung cancer patients, indicating that the miR-26a-EZH2 axis is clinically relevant. Our findings suggested that miR-26a silencing as a novel strategy to improve the efficacy of CTL-based cancer immunotherapy.- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Association of CD8(+) T lymphocyte repertoire spreading with the severity of DRESS syndrome.
- Author
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Niu J, Jia Q, Ni Q, Yang Y, Chen G, Yang X, Zhai Z, Yu H, Guan P, Lin R, Song Z, Li QJ, Hao F, Zhong H, and Wan Y
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Viral immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes immunology, Cluster Analysis, Drug Hypersensitivity Syndrome immunology, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Humans, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell chemistry, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell genetics, Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell metabolism, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Severity of Illness Index, T-Lymphocyte Subsets immunology, T-Lymphocyte Subsets metabolism, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Drug Hypersensitivity Syndrome pathology
- Abstract
T-cell receptor (TCR)-mediated cross-recognition is a major mechanism in the pathogenesis of drug reaction with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms (DRESS) syndrome. However, the characteristics of the TCR repertoire and the clinical significance of repertoire reformation throughout the course of DRESS are unknown. Here, we isolated CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cells from peripheral blood of 8 DRESS patients at 10-day intervals and, sequenced CDR3-regions of the TCRB chain by high-throughput sequencing to analyze the dynamic reformation in the T-cell repertoire hierarchy. Compared with healthy donors, T-cell expanded in peripheral repertoires from DRESS patient. The extent of fluctuation of dominant CD8(+) T-cell clones, but not of CD4(+) counterparts, correlated positively with the clinical severity and helped classify the enrolled subjects into "fluctuant" and "flat" repertoire groups. The anti-herpesvirus response, which was measured using anti-EBV/HHV antibodies, and the proportion of the homologous CD8(+) EBV-specific clonotypes, in the "fluctuant" group was substantial higher than that in the "flat" group. Furthermore, autoimmune sequelae were observed in a cured "fluctuant" patient. Collectively, the clinical relevance of the fluctuant CD8(+) T-cell repertoires supports the notion that herpes virus-mediated continuously de novo priming of newly pathogenic CD8(+) T-cell clones is an alternate mechanism responsible for the pathogenicity of DRESS.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Diversity index of mucosal resident T lymphocyte repertoire predicts clinical prognosis in gastric cancer.
- Author
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Jia Q, Zhou J, Chen G, Shi Y, Yu H, Guan P, Lin R, Jiang N, Yu P, Li QJ, and Wan Y
- Abstract
A characteristic immunopathology of human cancers is the induction of tumor antigen-specific T lymphocyte responses within solid tumor tissues. Current strategies for immune monitoring focus on the quantification of the density and differentiation status of tumor-infiltrating T lymphocytes; however, properties of the TCR repertoire ‒ including antigen specificity, clonality, as well as its prognostic significance ‒ remain elusive. In this study, we enrolled 28 gastric cancer patients and collected tumor tissues, adjacent normal mucosal tissues, and peripheral blood samples to study the landscape and compartmentalization of these patients' TCR β repertoire by deep sequencing analyses. Our results illustrated antigen-driven expansion within the tumor compartment and the contracted size of shared clonotypes in mucosa and peripheral blood. Most importantly, the diversity of mucosal T lymphocytes could independently predict prognosis, which strongly underscores critical roles of resident mucosal T-cells in executing post-surgery immunosurveillance against tumor relapse.
- Published
- 2015
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29. Biological evaluation of subglutinol a as a novel immunosuppressive agent for inflammation intervention.
- Author
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Lin R, Kim H, Hong J, and Li QJ
- Abstract
Subglutinol A (1) is an immunosuppressive natural product isolated from Fusarium subglutinans, an endophytic fungus from the vine Tripterygium wilfordii. We show that 1 exerts multimodal immune-suppressive effects on activated T cells in vitro: subglutinol A (1) effectively blocks T cell proliferation and survival while profoundly inhibiting pro-inflammatory IFNγ and IL-17 production by fully differentiated effector Th1 and Th17 cells. Our data further reveal that 1 may exert its anti-inflammatory effects by exacerbating mitochondrial damage in T cells. Additionally, we demonstrate that 1 significantly reduces lymphocytic infiltration into the footpad and ameliorates footpad swelling in the mouse model of Th1-driven delayed-type hypersensitivity. These results suggest the potential of 1 as a novel therapeutic for inflammatory diseases.
- Published
- 2014
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