30 results on '"Biqing Chen"'
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2. CAR-T cell-induced cytokine release syndrome is rapidly alleviated by tripterygium glycosides
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Zuqiong Xu, Fang Tian, Biqing Chen, Xiangtu Kong, Xingbin Dai, Jiang Cao, Pengjun Jiang, Lu Lu, Qi Lv, Aiping Yang, Leyuan Ma, Lihong Hu, and Xuejun Zhu
- Abstract
Background Cytokine release syndrome (CRS) is a life-threatening complication of chimeric antigen receptor T cell (CAR-T) therapy. Macrophages/ monocytes are mediators of CRS. Tripterygium glycosides is an immunomodulator which could inhibit macrophages/ monocytes in animal models. Methods Two patients with relapsed and refractory hematological malignancies developed CRS after receiving CAR-T therapy. They received short-term tripterygium glycosides orally. Results Both patients showed rapid mitigation of fever with evidently decrease in elevated inflammatory cytokines within 72 hours. The patients' monocytes diminished remarkably, while CAR-T cells were neglectably affected. Treatment of 30 ng/mL triptolide in ex vivo cultured patients' blood for 24 hours selectively deplete over half of monocytes. Single cell RNA sequencing suggested selective depletion of CD14+CD16+ monocytes with decreased pro-inflammatory cytokines. Conclusions The low-cost and orally available tripterygium glycosides could be a promising alternative for CAR-T induced CRS, as well as other diseases complicated with CRS, e.g., coronavirus disease 2019.
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- 2022
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3. Rapidly progressed Natural Killer/ T cell Lymphoma with hyperleukocytosis and NOTCH4 mutation but without Epstein-Barr virus infection:A case report
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Chencheng Li Li, Zuqiong Xu Xu, Xixi Liu Liu, Fang Tian Tian, Pengjun Jiang Jiang, Biqing Chen Chen, Xingbin Dai Dai, and Xuejun Zhu Zhu
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Background: Natural killer/T-cell lymphoma(NKTCL) is a highly aggressive non-Hodgkin's lymphoma that is prevalent in Asia and South America. However, given the high malignancy grade, rapid clinical progress and poor long‐term prognosis of NKTCL, exploring the potential mechanism of NKTCL is of great significance for the development of drugs for NKTCL. Case presentation: We presented a case of a woman who was admitted to hospital with multiple enlarged lymph nodes and high white blood cells ,and flow cytometry examination revealed CD56 bright, CD16 dim, surface CD3-, cytoplasmic CD3+, CD2+, CD7-, HLA-DR+, CD57-, TCRβ and TCRγ genes rearrangement. No further pathological diagnosis was made because the patient's condition did not meet the need for biopsy, deteriorated rapidly and died within three days after admission; NKTCL was diagnosed based on clinical manifestations. Whole exome sequencing revealed that the NOTCH4, KMT2D, and S100A16 mutations were closely related to the occurrence and progression of NKTCL. In addition, this patient was EBV-negative. Conclusions: We mainly diagnosed NKTCL by exclusion, and the pathogenesis is complex or not limited to EBV. The discovery of new mutant genes will provide potential impact on clinical diagnosis and research guidance for its pathogenesis, prognosis, drug resistance and targeted therapy.
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- 2022
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4. Effect of Exercise Training on Serum Transaminases in Patients With Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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Feng Hong, Yubo Liu, Veeranjaneya Reddy Lebaka, Arifullah Mohammed, Weibing Ye, Biqing Chen, and Mallikarjuna Korivi
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Physiology ,Physiology (medical) - Abstract
Background/Purpose: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) constitutes a spectrum of liver diseases associated with various metabolic disorders. Exercise interventions reportedly manage the clinical outcomes of NAFLD, but their efficacy depends on exercise as well as characteristics of patient. We hypothesized that exercise could alleviate the elevated transaminases level, which may be associated with the characteristics of patients (age/bodyweight/sex) or exercise variables (frequency/intensity/duration). Therefore, we examined the effect of exercise on serum transaminases, and identified the variables influencing transaminases in NAFLD patients.Methods: Article search was conducted using electronic databases (PubMed, Web of Science, EMBASE, ScienceDirect, Google Scholar) until December 2021. Studies that involved examination and comparison of the effect of an exercise intervention on alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels in NAFLD/nonalcoholic steatohepatitis patients were included. We calculated pooled effect upon a meta-analysis, determined correlations (between transaminases and characteristics of patients/exercise) by meta-regression, and assessed the influencing variable through subgroup analysis.Results: A total of 18 studies (22 trials) with 1098 NAFLD patients (exercise = 568; control = 530) were included. The pooled outcomes revealed that exercise intervention significantly decreased both ALT (p = 0.004) and AST (p = 0.001) levels in NAFLD patients. Meta-regression analysis showed decreased ALT (coef. = 1.138, p < 0.01) and AST (coef. = 0.459, p = 0.041) after intervention was correlated with the age of patients. Particularly, patients aged 30–39 years (MD: −25.89 U/L, 95% CI: −36.40 to −15.37, p < 0.00001) and 40–49 years (MD: −12.17 U/L, 95% CI: −20.38 to −3.96, p = 0.004) represented a substantial decrease in ALT levels. Additionally, the 50–59 years age group tended to have decreased ALT levels (MD: −3.94 U/L, 95% CI: −8.19 to 0.31, p = 0.07); however, patients above 60 years did not respond (p = 0.92) to exercise intervention. In contrast, exercise-induced AST reduction was found in only the 30–39 years age group (MD: −11.92 U/L, 95% CI: −16.78 to −7.06, p < 0.00001) and not in patients under the 40–49 (p = 0.19), and 50–59 groups (p = 0.12) and above 60 years (p = 0.15).Conclusion: Our findings suggest that the age of NAFLD patients may be an important variable in improving the levels of serum transaminases, and clinically young patients may have greater benefits from exercise than older patients.
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- 2022
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5. Effect of Thiourea on Electrodeposited Co–Mg–Nd Alloy Coating in Deep Eutectic Solvents
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Shimin Zhang, Jing Zhao, Chan Du, Biqing Chen, Miao Li, Tongtong Xiong, and Yunna Zhu
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Tafel equation ,Materials science ,Alloy ,Nucleation ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Corrosion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Thiourea ,chemistry ,Coating ,Plating ,Electrochemistry ,engineering ,0210 nano-technology ,Nuclear chemistry ,Eutectic system - Abstract
Potentiostatic technique was used to investigate the effect of additive thiourea on the deposition mechanism of Co2+ in choline chloride–urea eutectic solvent system. The Co–Mg–Nd ternary alloy coating was prepared by linear scanning technique which was used to study the electrochemical behavior of Co2+, Mg2+ and Nd3+ in the system and the corrosion resistance of alloy coatings. The results show that Co2+ follows the growth mechanism of three-dimensional continuous nucleation in choline chloride–urea eutectic system. When the amount of thiourea added exceeds 300 mg, the nucleation mode of Co2+ approaches the three-dimensional instantaneous nucleation. The cathodic polarization curves of Co2+, Mg2+, and Nd3+ in the choline chloride–urea system shows a trend of weakening first and then increasing with the increase of thiourea content. At the addition of 100 mg, the cathodic polarization of the films was the strongest, which was conducive to deposite. According to the Ecorr and Icorr obtained by tafel curve, it is found that adding thiourea in the plating solution system could change the corrosion resistance of the coating. When the content was less than 100 mg, the corrosion resistance of the coating is the best. With the thiourea content increasing, the corrosion resistance of the coating is gradually weakening. It is found that the plating solution with 100 mg thiourea added can prepare Co–Mg–Nd ternary alloy coating with excellent coating morphology, high rare earth content and stable compound, by SEM, EDX and XRD analysis.
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- 2021
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6. Preparation of the Eu-Co-Ni-B coating from anhydrous ethanol at low temperature and effects of heat treatment on the coating
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Biqing Chen, Tongtong Xiong, Jing Zhao, Shimin Zhang, Chan Du, Lixia Gao, and Yunna Zhu
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Morphology (linguistics) ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Copper ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Corrosion ,020401 chemical engineering ,Coating ,Chemical engineering ,Anhydrous ethanol ,chemistry ,Electroless plating ,engineering ,0204 chemical engineering ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
In this paper, the Eu-Co-Ni-B coating was successfully prepared on the surface of copper from anhydrous ethanol at low temperature (40 °C) by electroless plating. The surface morphology of the coat...
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- 2020
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7. Electrochemical reduction of NaBO2 into NaBH4 with pulse voltage using the Eu-Co-Ni-B coating electrode
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Yunna Zhu, Shimin Zhang, Jing Zhao, Biqing Chen, Chan Du, Lixia Gao, and Tongtong Xiong
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Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Inorganic chemistry ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Electrochemistry ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Pulse voltage ,Reduction (complexity) ,Sodium borohydride ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Sodium metaborate ,020401 chemical engineering ,Coating ,chemistry ,Electroless plating ,Electrode ,engineering ,0204 chemical engineering ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
To further explore the possibility of the electrochemical reduction of NaBO2 into NaBH4, the electrochemical reduction of NaBO2 into NaBH4 was fulfilled with pulse voltage using the Eu-Co-Ni-B coat...
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- 2020
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8. A genome-wide association study reveals a substantial genetic basis underlying the Ebbinghaus illusion
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Wan Fang, Ren Na, Biqing Chen, Jianing Liu, Shanbi Zhou, Ailong Huang, Dongsheng Ni, Yuping Gu, Tingmei Chen, Yi Rao, Qin Zhou, Han Lei, Zijian Zhu, Fang Fang, and Wenxia Zhang
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0301 basic medicine ,Genetics ,Optical illusion ,Ebbinghaus illusion ,Chinese adults ,Genome-wide association study ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Visual modality ,030105 genetics & heredity ,Biology ,Heritability ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetics (clinical) - Abstract
The Ebbinghaus illusion (EI) is an optical illusion of relative size perception that reflects the contextual integration ability in the visual modality. The current study investigated the genetic basis of two subtypes of EI, EI overestimation, and EI underestimation in humans, using quantitative genomic analyses. A total of 2825 Chinese adults were tested on their magnitudes of EI overestimation and underestimation using the method of adjustment, a standard psychophysical protocol. Heritability estimation based on common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) revealed a moderate heritability (34.3%) of EI overestimation but a nonsignificant heritability of EI underestimation. A meta-analysis of two phases (phase 1: n = 1986, phase 2: n = 839) of genome-wide association study (GWAS) discovered 1969 and 58 SNPs reaching genome-wide significance for EI overestimation and EI underestimation, respectively. Among these SNPs, 55 linkage-disequilibrium-independent SNPs were associated with EI overestimation in phase 1 with genome-wide significance and their associations could be confirmed in phase 2 cohort. Gene-based analyses found seven genes to be associated with EI overestimation at the genome-wide level, two from meta-analysis, and five from classical two-stage analysis. Overall, this study provided consistent evidence for a substantial genetic basis of the Ebbinghaus illusion.
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- 2020
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9. Structural Insight Into hnRNP A2/B1 Homodimerization and DNA Recognition
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Yue Liu, Abudureyimu Abula, Haonan Xiao, Hangtian Guo, Tinghan Li, Le Zheng, Biqing Chen, Henry C. Nguyen, and Xiaoyun Ji
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Structural Biology ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
Heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A2/B1 (hnRNP A2/B1) has been identified as a nuclear DNA sensor. Upon viral infection, hnRNP A2/B1 recognizes pathogen-derived DNA as a homodimer, which is a prerequisite for its translocation to the cytoplasm to activate the interferon response. However, the DNA binding mechanism inducing hnRNP A2/B1 homodimerization is unknown. Here, we show the crystal structure of the RNA recognition motif (RRM) of hnRNP A2/B1 in complex with a U-shaped ssDNA, which mediates the formation of a newly observed protein dimer. Our biochemical assays and mutagenesis studies confirm that the hnRNP A2/B1 homodimer forms in solution by binding to pre-generated ssDNA or dsDNA with a U-shaped bulge. These results depict a potential functional state of hnRNP A2/B1 in antiviral immunity and other cellular processes.
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- 2023
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10. Heritability of human visual contour integration—an integrated genomic study
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Ren Na, Shanbi Zhou, Fang Fang, Wenxia Zhang, Wan Fang, Dongsheng Ni, Ailong Huang, Yi Rao, Qin Zhou, Yuping Gu, Biqing Chen, Jianing Liu, Zijian Zhu, Han Lei, and Tingmei Chen
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Male ,Genotype ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Genome-wide association study ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Poly(A)-Binding Proteins ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,Cohort Studies ,Genetics ,Humans ,SNP ,Gene ,Vision, Ocular ,Genetics (clinical) ,Genetic association ,Genomics ,Heritability ,Form Perception ,MicroRNAs ,Cohort ,Schizophrenia ,Female ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Contour integration, a key visual function to deal with occlusion and discontinuity in natural scenes, is essential to human survival. However, individuals are not equally well equipped with this ability. In particular, contour integration deficiencies are commonly detected in patients with mental disorders, especially schizophrenia. To understand the underlying sources of these individual differences, the current study investigated the genetic basis of contour integration in humans. A total of 2619 normal participants were tested on their ability to detect continuous contours embedded in a cluttered background. Quantitative genomic analysis was performed, involving heritability estimation based on single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and association testing at SNP, gene, and pathway levels. Heritability estimation showed that common SNPs contributed 49.5% (standard error of the mean = 15.6%) of overall phenotypic variation, indicating moderate heritability of contour integration. Two-stage genome-wide association analysis (GWAS) detected four SNPs reaching genome-wide significance in the discovery test (N = 1931) but not passing the replication test (N = 688). Gene-level analysis further revealed a significant genome-wide association of a microRNA-encoding gene MIR1178 in both the discovery and replication cohorts. Another gene poly(A)-binding protein nuclear 1 like, cytoplasmic (PABPN1L) showed suggestive significance in the discovery cohort (p
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- 2019
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11. Both Val158Met Polymorphism of Catechol-O-Methyltransferase Gene and Menstrual Cycle Affect Prepulse Inhibition but Not Attentional Modulation of Prepulse Inhibition in Younger-Adult Females
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Biqing Chen, Yu Ding, Zhemeng Wu, Ming Lei, Chao Wu, Yayue Gao, Langchen Fan, Xiaohan Bao, Liang Li, Lingxi Lu, Qian Wang, Pengcheng Yang, Lu Luo, and Changxin Zhang
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0301 basic medicine ,Reflex, Startle ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Catechol O-Methyltransferase ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Methionine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Precedence effect ,Internal medicine ,Attentional modulation ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention ,Menstrual Cycle ,Menstrual cycle ,Prepulse inhibition ,media_common ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Prepulse Inhibition ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Valine ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Catechol-O-Methyltransferase Gene ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Hormone ,rs4680 - Abstract
Prepulse inhibition (PPI) can be modulated by both the Val158Met (rs4680) polymorphism of the Catechol-O-Methyltransferase (COMT) gene and the menstrual-cycle-related hormone fluctuations, each of which affects the subcortical/cortical dopamine metabolism. PPI can also be modulated by attention. The attentional modulation of PPI (AMPPI) is sensitive to psychoses. Whether the Val158Met polymorphism affects the AMPPI in female adults at different menstrual-cycle phases is unknown. This study examined whether AMPPI and/or PPI are affected by the Val158Met polymorphism in 177 younger-adult females whose menstrual cycles were mutually different across the menstruation, proliferative, or secretory phases. The AMPPI was evaluated by comparing PPI under the condition of the auditory precedence-effect-induced perceptual spatial separation between the prepulse stimulus and a masking noise (PPIPSS) against that under the condition of the precedence-effect-induced perceptual spatial co-location (PPIPSC). The results showed that both the menstrual cycle and the COMT Val158Met polymorphism affected both PPIPSC and PPIPSS, but not the AMPPI (difference between PPIPSS and PPIPSC). Moreover, throughout the menstrual cycle, both PPIPSC and PPIPSS decreased monotonously in Val/Val-carrier participants. However, the decreasing pattern was not overserved in either Met/Met-carrier or Met/Val-carrier participants. Thus, in healthy younger-adult females, PPIPSC and PPIPSS, but not the AMPPI, is vulnerable to changes of ovarian hormones, and the COMT Val158Met polymorphism also has a modulating effect on this menstrual-cycle-dependent PPI variation. In contrast, the AMPPI seems to be more steadily trait-based, less vulnerable to ovarian hormone fluctuations, and may be useful in assisting the diagnosis of schizophrenia in female adults.
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- 2019
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12. MiR-10b-5p inhibits tumorigenesis in gastric cancer xenograft mice model through down-regulating Tiam1
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Xinglan An, Biqing Chen, Ziyi Li, Xu Zhao, Nan Zhang, Wei Xu, and Fang Liu
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Mice, Nude ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,law.invention ,Mice ,In vivo ,law ,Stomach Neoplasms ,medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,Humans ,T-Lymphoma Invasion and Metastasis-inducing Protein 1 ,Cell Proliferation ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Tumor size ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Cancer ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Prognosis ,Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays ,digestive system diseases ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,Survival Rate ,MicroRNAs ,Cancer cell ,Cancer research ,Suppressor ,Female ,Cancer development ,Carcinogenesis - Abstract
The miR-10b-5p plays an important role in gastric cancer development but its exact effect on gastric cancer development in vivo has not been fully studied. We showed that miR-10b-5p inhibited the proliferation and migration of gastric cancer cells by down-regulating Tiam1 which was up-regulated in both gastric cancer cells and tissues. Gastric cancer xenograft experiment showed that lenti-miR-10b-5p treatment and agomir-10b-5p injection could significantly retard tumor growth and reduce tumor size and induced apoptosis. Therefore, our results elucidate the tumor suppressor role of miR-10b-5p in gastric cancer in which it acts as a negative regulator of Tiam1 and also provide a molecular mechanism for agomir-10b-5p to treat gastric cancer.
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- 2021
13. Depression and anxiety in patients with active ulcerative colitis: crosstalk of gut microbiota, metabolomics and proteomics
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Xiaomin Yuan, Huize Liu, Xiaoyong Wang, Tuo Chen, Guoping Shi, Yang Ding, Yajun Liu, Hong-tao Shang, Jun Xiao, Qiong Wang, Baosheng Wang, Shijia Liu, Weiwei Liu, Ziqian Xia, Jin-Yong Zhou, Zhenglan Duan, Yugen Chen, Zhaofeng Shen, Biqing Chen, Bo-Lin Yang, and Lei Zhu
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Adult ,Proteomics ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,multi-omics analyses ,RC799-869 ,Anxiety ,Gut flora ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Gastroenterology ,Feces ,Mice ,Young Adult ,Internal medicine ,Brain-Gut Axis ,medicine ,Metabolome ,Prevotella ,Animals ,Humans ,Metabolomics ,Prospective Studies ,Colitis ,microbiota-gut-brain axis ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,Aged ,ulcerative colitis ,Bacteria ,biology ,Depression ,Streptococcus ,Middle Aged ,Diseases of the digestive system. Gastroenterology ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Ulcerative colitis ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Infectious Diseases ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,medicine.symptom ,Research Article ,Research Paper - Abstract
Patients with ulcerative colitis (UC) have a high prevalence of mental disorders, such as depression and anxiety. Gut microbiota imbalance and disturbed metabolism have been suggested to play an important role in either UC or mental disorders. However, little is known about their detailed multi-omics characteristics in patients with UC and depression/anxiety. In this prospective observational study, 240 Chinese patients were enrolled, including 129 patients with active UC (69 in Phase 1 and 60 in Phase 2; divided into depression/non-depression or anxiety/non-anxiety groups), 49 patients with depression and anxiety (non-UC), and 62 healthy people. The gut microbiota of all subjects was analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing. The serum metabolome and proteome of patients with UC in Phase 2 were analyzed using liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. Associations between multi-omics were evaluated by correlation analysis. The prophylactic effect of candidate metabolites on the depressive-like behavior of mice with colitis was investigated. In total, 58% of patients with active UC had depression, while 50% had anxiety. Compared to patients with UC without depression/anxiety, patients with UC and depression/anxiety had lower fecal microbial community richness and diversity, with more Lactobacillales, Sellimonas, Streptococcus, and Enterococcus but less Prevotella_9 and Lachnospira. Most metabolites (e.g., glycochenodeoxycholate) were increased in the serum, while few metabolites, including 2ʹ-deoxy-D-ribose and L-pipecolic acid, were decreased, accompanied by a general reduction in immunoglobulin proteins. These related bacteria, metabolites, and proteins were highly connected. A prophylactic administration of 2ʹ-deoxy-D-ribose and L-pipecolic acid significantly reduced the depressive-like behaviors in mice with colitis and alleviated the inflammatory cytokine levels in their colon, blood and brain. This study has identified a comprehensive multi-omics network related to depression and anxiety in active UC. It is composed of a certain set of gut microbiota, metabolites, and proteins, which are potential targets for clinical intervention for patients with UC and depression/anxiety.
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- 2021
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14. Crosstalk of multi-omics reveals specific characteristics in active ulcerative colitis patients with depression and anxiety
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Hong-tao Shang, Zhaofeng Shen, Yang Ding, Yajun Liu, Bolin Yang, Lei Zhu, Weiwei Liu, Ziqian Xia, Shijia Liu, Yugen Chen, Tuo Chen, Huize Liu, Jun Xiao, Baosheng Wang, Xiaomin Yuan, Zhenglan Duan, Zhou Jinyong, Biqing Chen, Xiaoyong Wang, and Guoping Shi
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Crosstalk (biology) ,Text mining ,business.industry ,medicine ,Multi omics ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,Bioinformatics ,business ,medicine.disease ,Ulcerative colitis - Abstract
Background:Ulcerative colitis (UC) patients have a high incidence of mental disorders. The microbiota-gut-brain axis dysfunction is considered as one important pathogenesis of mental diseases. At present, little is known about how gut microbiota interact with the host in UC patients with depression and anxiety.Results: This prospective observational study enrolled 240 Chinese patients in two cohorts: the discovery cohort, including 69 active UC patients, 49 non-inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) depression and anxiety patients, and 62 healthy people, and the replication cohort of 60 active UC patients. About half of active UC patients showed symptoms of depression or anxiety. Through 16s rRNA sequencing, it was found that these UC patients accompanied with depression and anxiety had lower fecal microbial abundance with more Sellimonas , Eubacterium ventriosum group , Enterococcus , and Peptoclostridium , but less Prevotella_9 , Erysipelotrichaceae UCG_003 , Collinsella , and Dorea , compared with non-depressed/ anxious UC patients. Serum metabolome and proteome analysed using liquid chromatography/ mass spectrometry showed significantly increased glycochenodeoxycholate, stearoyllysophosphatidylcholine, and glyceryl stearates, while decreased 2'-deoxy-D-ribose and a set of immunoglobulin protein in the serum of UC patients with depression and anxiety. Through integration of multiple statistical analyses and multi-omics correlation analyses, we revealed a highly connected and comprehensive network, centring on Prevotella_9 and 1-stearoyl-sn-glycerol, composed of these bacteria, metabolites and proteins associated with UC-specific depression and anxiety.Conclusion: This study has identified a highly connected multi-omics network, composed of a set of gut microbiota, serum metabolites and proteins, specifically related to depression and anxiety in active UC. This network might influence host's mental state through mediating the effect of gut inflammation on synapse pruning in the central nervous system.
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- 2020
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15. A genome-wide association study reveals a substantial genetic basis underlying the Ebbinghaus illusion
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Zijian, Zhu, Biqing, Chen, Ren, Na, Wan, Fang, Wenxia, Zhang, Qin, Zhou, Shanbi, Zhou, Han, Lei, Ailong, Huang, Tingmei, Chen, Dongsheng, Ni, Yuping, Gu, Jianing, Liu, Yi, Rao, and Fang, Fang
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Genotype ,Optical Illusions ,Individuality ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Linkage Disequilibrium ,Young Adult ,Asian People ,Ethnicity ,Humans ,Female ,Size Perception ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Visual Cortex - Abstract
The Ebbinghaus illusion (EI) is an optical illusion of relative size perception that reflects the contextual integration ability in the visual modality. The current study investigated the genetic basis of two subtypes of EI, EI overestimation, and EI underestimation in humans, using quantitative genomic analyses. A total of 2825 Chinese adults were tested on their magnitudes of EI overestimation and underestimation using the method of adjustment, a standard psychophysical protocol. Heritability estimation based on common single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) revealed a moderate heritability (34.3%) of EI overestimation but a nonsignificant heritability of EI underestimation. A meta-analysis of two phases (phase 1: n = 1986, phase 2: n = 839) of genome-wide association study (GWAS) discovered 1969 and 58 SNPs reaching genome-wide significance for EI overestimation and EI underestimation, respectively. Among these SNPs, 55 linkage-disequilibrium-independent SNPs were associated with EI overestimation in phase 1 with genome-wide significance and their associations could be confirmed in phase 2 cohort. Gene-based analyses found seven genes to be associated with EI overestimation at the genome-wide level, two from meta-analysis, and five from classical two-stage analysis. Overall, this study provided consistent evidence for a substantial genetic basis of the Ebbinghaus illusion.
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- 2020
16. Perceptual learning and recognition confusion reveal the underlying relationships among the six basic emotions
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Fang Fang, Zijian Zhu, Biqing Chen, and Yingying Wang
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Adult ,Male ,China ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotion classification ,Emotions ,Happiness ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Anger ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Perceptual learning ,Sadness ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,Learning ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Confusion ,media_common ,Facial expression ,05 social sciences ,Recognition, Psychology ,Fear ,Disgust ,Facial Expression ,Surprise ,Female ,Perception ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
The six basic emotions (disgust, anger, fear, happiness, sadness, and surprise) have long been considered discrete categories that serve as the primary units of the emotion system. Yet recent evidence indicated underlying connections among them. Here we tested the underlying relationships among the six basic emotions using a perceptual learning procedure. This technique has the potential of causally changing participants' emotion detection ability. We found that training on detecting a facial expression improved the performance not only on the trained expression but also on other expressions. Such a transfer effect was consistently demonstrated between disgust and anger detection as well as between fear and surprise detection in two experiments (Experiment 1A, n = 70; Experiment 1B, n = 42). Notably, training on any of the six emotions could improve happiness detection, while sadness detection could only be improved by training on sadness itself, suggesting the uniqueness of happiness and sadness. In an emotion recognition test using a large sample of Chinese participants (n = 1748), the confusion between disgust and anger as well as between fear and surprise was further confirmed. Taken together, our study demonstrates that the "basic" emotions share some common psychological components, which might be the more basic units of the emotion system.
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- 2018
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17. Nature vs. nurture in human sociality: multi-level genomic analyses of social conformity
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Ailong Huang, Yi Rao, Biqing Chen, Wan Fang, Xiaohu Ding, Dongsheng Ni, Tingmei Chen, Mingguang He, Shanbi Zhou, Yingying Wang, Yuping Gu, Jianing Liu, Qin Zhou, Han Lei, Xiaobo Guo, and Zijian Zhu
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Adult ,Genetic Markers ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Inheritance Patterns ,Twins ,Genome-wide association study ,Genomics ,Locus (genetics) ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Biology ,Quantitative trait locus ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Conformity ,Memory conformity ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Quantitative Trait, Heritable ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Memory ,Social Conformity ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Genetics ,Humans ,Child ,Social Behavior ,Genetics (clinical) ,media_common ,Brain Mapping ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Gene expression profiling ,030104 developmental biology ,Female ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Social conformity is fundamental to human societies and has been studied for more than six decades, but our understanding of its mechanisms remains limited. Individual differences in conformity have been attributed to social and cultural environmental influences, but not to genes. Here we demonstrate a genetic contribution to conformity after analyzing 1,140 twins and single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based studies of 2,130 young adults. A two-step genome-wide association study (GWAS) revealed replicable associations in 9 genomic loci, and a meta-analysis of three GWAS with a sample size of ~2,600 further confirmed one locus, corresponding to the NAV3 (Neuron Navigator 3) gene which encodes a protein important for axon outgrowth and guidance. Further multi-level (haplotype, gene, pathway) GWAS strongly associated genes including NAV3, PTPRD (protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type D), ARL10 (ADP ribosylation factor-like GTPase 10), and CTNND2 (catenin delta 2), with conformity. Magnetic resonance imaging of 64 subjects shows correlation of activation or structural features of brain regions with the SNPs of these genes, supporting their functional significance. Our results suggest potential moderate genetic influence on conformity, implicate several specific genetic elements in conformity and will facilitate further research on cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying human conformity.
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- 2018
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18. Rapid adsorption of cobalt (II) by 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane modified halloysite nanotubes
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Wei Zhang, Yuantao Chen, Wenfang He, Jian Wang, Biqing Chen, and Xin Wang
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Chemistry ,Contact time ,General Chemical Engineering ,Inorganic chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Langmuir adsorption model ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,engineering.material ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Halloysite ,0104 chemical sciences ,Catalysis ,Thermogravimetry ,symbols.namesake ,Adsorption ,Chemical engineering ,engineering ,symbols ,Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy ,0210 nano-technology ,Cobalt - Abstract
The adsorption of cobalt (II) by 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane (APTS) modified halloysite nanotubes (HNTs) was studied. The modified halloysite was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), X-Ray diffraction (XRD) and thermogravimetry (TG). In addition, a batch method was used to study the adsorption behavior and the mechanism of removal Co (II) by modified HNTs; the effective factors influencing the adsorption process including adsorbent concentration, contact time, initial pH, temperature and the initial concentration of Co (II) have been investigated. The results showed that the APTS was successfully grafted on the HNTs surface. The modified HNTs exhibited rapid adsorption speed, which reached the adsorption equilibrium within 30 min. The adsorption capacity of the adsorbent increased significantly with the increase of pH. The adsorption data of Co (II) on the modified HNTs are well consistent with the Langmuir model and the pseudo-second-order kinetic model.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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19. Amorphous Nd-Ni-B/NF Rare Earth Composites: Preparation and HER Electrocatalytic Performance
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Shimin Zhang, Jing Zhao, Chan Du, Tianshu Cheng, Yunna Zhu, and Biqing Chen
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Materials science ,Chemical engineering ,Rare earth ,General Materials Science ,Amorphous solid - Published
- 2021
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20. Deposit amorphous Ni-Co-B-RE (RE = Ce, Gd and Nd) on nickel foam as a high performance and durable electrode for hydrogen evolution reaction
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Biqing Chen, Tianshu Cheng, Shimin Zhang, Chan Du, and Yunna Zhu
- Subjects
Tafel equation ,Chemistry ,General Chemical Engineering ,Doping ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,Overpotential ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Electrochemistry ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Analytical Chemistry ,Amorphous solid ,Catalysis ,Nickel ,Chemical engineering ,Electrode ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
The rare earths (RE) are widely used in composites modification. In this study, the morphology, the electronic structure and the catalytic performance have been investigated by doping RE. The amorphous structure of Ni-Co-B-RE/NF (RE = Ce, Gd and Nd, NF = Ni foam) electrodes, which can be used as a catalyst for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER), was prepared on Ni foam by a handy chemical deposition method. Interestingly, the synergistic effect of rare earth Gd and electronic materials (e.g. Ni, Co and B) can accelerate deposition rate and refine coated particles. The results suggest that the Ni-Co-B-Gd/NF electrode exhibits excellent catalytic performance in alkaline solutions, which shows a high electrochemical stability even with overpotential of 92 mV at a current density of 10 mA cm−2 and Tafel slope of 105 mV dec−1.
- Published
- 2020
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21. S0201 Crosstalk of Multi-Omics Reveals Specific Characteristics in Active Ulcerative Colitis Patients With Depression and Anxiety
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Xiaomin Yuan, Biqing Chen, Jin-Yong Zhou, Shijia Liu, Guoping Shi, Lei Zhu, and Yugen Chen
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Hepatology ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Wu Mei Wan attenuates CAC by regulating gut microbiota and the NF-kB/IL6-STAT3 signaling pathway
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Xiaomin Yuan, Haidan Wang, Tuo Chen, Ping Zhu, Jinyong Zhou, Yugen Chen, Minghao Liu, Biqing Chen, Feng Jiang, Guoping Shi, and Qiong Wang
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Male ,STAT3 Transcription Factor ,Colitis-associated colorectal cancer ,0301 basic medicine ,NF-kB/IL-6/STAT3 pathway ,Colorectal cancer ,Gut microbiota ,RM1-950 ,medicine.disease_cause ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animals ,Medicine ,Colitis ,Preventive drug ,Survival rate ,Cell Proliferation ,Pharmacology ,biology ,Interleukin-6 ,business.industry ,Dextran Sulfate ,Lachnospiraceae ,NF-kappa B ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Proliferating cell nuclear antigen ,Disease Models, Animal ,Cell Transformation, Neoplastic ,030104 developmental biology ,Herb formula ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Sample collection ,Neoplasm Grading ,Colorectal Neoplasms ,business ,Carcinogenesis ,Drugs, Chinese Herbal ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Background Colorectal cancer (CRC) has a high incidence and mortality rate worldwide. Colitis-associated CRC (CAC) is used for describing the relationship between inflammation and CRC. No chemopreventive agents have been found to be both effective and safe in CRC. Therefore, the prevention and treatment of CAC are extremely urgent. Wu Mei Wan (WMW) has been used for the clinical treatment of enteritis with a remarkable efficacy. Here, we aim to investigate the underlying mechanism of WMW in the prevention of CAC. Methods The AOM/DSS-induced CAC mouse model was used, and the mice were divided into normal control (NC), AOM/DSS model control (MC), and AOM/DSS plus WMW (WMW). The weight of mice, the score of DAI, survival rate, number of tumors and sample collection were performed at the end of the 14th week. Histopathological examination was performed using Hematoxylin–Eosin (HE) staining. Tumor cell proliferation was indicated by the expression of PCNA, and p65 and p-STAT3 were detected by immunohistochemistry. Serum IL-6 levels were detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The expression of p65, IL-6 and p-STAT3 in the colon was detected by Western Blot. Intestinal flora was analyzed by 16S rDNA sequencing. Results WMW improved the survival rate of mice in the MC group and also attenuated CAC symptoms such as abnormal clinical colitis and pathological changes to intestinal tissue by reducing DAI score, tumor formation, tumor volume, and grade of tumorigenesis. WMW also reduced the proliferation of tumor cells in colon tissues. WMW decreased the expression of p65, IL-6, and p-STAT3 in colon tumors of CAC mice. WMW decreased Bacteroidetes and increased Firmicutes at the phylum level, while decreasing bacteroidales_s24-7_group and increasing the number of Lachnospiraceae at the family level. Conclusion WMW attenuates CAC by regulating the balance between “tumor-promoting bacteria” and “tumor-suppressing bacteria” and the NF-kB/IL-6/STAT3 pathway. WMW has the potential to be a safe and effective chemopreventive drug but further clinical evidence is necessary.
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- 2020
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23. Nitrogen-removal ability and niche of Coix lacryma-jobi and Reineckia carnea in response to NO3−/NH4+ ratio
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Yu Liu, Biqing Chen, Wenjuan Han, Qinsu Jiang, Dong Liu, Xing Fan, Jie Chang, Ying Ge, and Haiqin Cao
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biology ,Coefficient of variation ,Biomass ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Plant Science ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Nitrogen ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Horticulture ,Wastewater ,Agronomy ,Nitrate ,chemistry ,Constructed wetland ,Ammonium ,Coix - Abstract
Wastewater comes from various sources with remarkably different nitrate (NO 3 − )/ammonium (NH 4 + ) ratios. In order to choose coexisting plant species for treating wastewater with various compositions in constructed wetlands, it is important to know the performances of plant species under different NO 3 − /NH 4 + ratios. In this study, we investigated the growth traits and nitrogen accumulation of Coix lacryma-jobi and Reineckia carnea under five NO 3 − /NH 4 + ratios (100/0, 75/25, 50/50, 25/75 and 0/100) in a hydroponic system. Results showed that, the total biomass, aboveground biomass and aboveground nitrogen accumulation were the greatest under a NO 3 − /NH 4 + ratio of 50/50 for C. lacryma-jobi , but those were the highest under a ratio of 75/25 for R. carnea . Under the NH 4 + -only (0/100) treatment, C. lacryma-jobi exhibited ammonium toxicity with leaf nitrogen concentration (43 mg g −1 ) exceeding the maximum limit for plants. In contrast, R. carnea showed less sensitivity to NO 3 − /NH 4 + ratios as the coefficient of variance for biomass of R. carnea (17%) was less than half of that of C. lacryma-jobi (40%). The two plant species differed in nitrogen niche (niche overlap = 0.42).
- Published
- 2015
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24. Genomic Analyses of Visual Cognition: Perceptual Rivalry and Top-Down Control
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Yuping Gu, Ren Na, Jianing Liu, Yi Rao, Han Lei, Dongsheng Ni, Shanbi Zhou, Zijian Zhu, Fang Fang, Wenxia Zhang, Ailong Huang, Qin Zhou, Wan Fang, Tingmei Chen, and Biqing Chen
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Binocular rivalry ,Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cognition ,Neuroimaging ,Perception ,Humans ,Rivalry ,Necker cube ,Research Articles ,media_common ,General Neuroscience ,Genomics ,030104 developmental biology ,Endophenotype ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Photic Stimulation ,Cognitive psychology ,Genome-Wide Association Study - Abstract
Visual cognition in humans has traditionally been studied with cognitive behavioral methods and brain imaging, but much less with genetic methods. Perceptual rivalry, an important phenomenon in visual cognition, is the spontaneous perceptual alternation that occurs between two distinct interpretations of a physically constant visual stimulus (e.g., binocular rivalry stimuli) or a perceptually ambiguous stimulus (e.g., the Necker cube). The switching rate varies dramatically across individuals and can be voluntarily modulated by observers. Here, we adopted a genomic approach to systematically investigate the genetics underlying binocular rivalry, Necker cube rivalry and voluntary modulation of Necker cube rivalry in young Chinese adults (Homo sapiens, 81% female, 20 ± 1 years old) at multiple levels, including common single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based heritability estimation, SNP-based genome-wide association study (GWAS), gene-based analysis, and pathway analysis. We performed a pilot GWAS in 2441 individuals and replicated it in an independent cohort of 943 individuals. Common SNP-based heritability was estimated to be 25% for spontaneous perceptual rivalry. SNPs rs184765639 and rs75595941 were associated with voluntary modulation, and imaging data suggested genotypic difference of rs184765639 in the surface area of the left caudal-middle frontal cortex. Additionally, converging evidence from multilevel analyses associated genes such asPRMT1with perceptual switching rate, andMIR1178with voluntary modulation strength. In summary, this study discovered specific genetic contributions to perceptual rivalry and its voluntary modulation in human beings. These findings may promote our understanding of psychiatric disorders, as perceptual rivalry is a potential psychiatric biomarker.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTPerceptual rivalry is an important visual phenomenon in which our perception of a physically constant visual input spontaneously switches between two different states. There are individual variations in perceptual switching rate and voluntary modulation strength. Our genomic analyses reveal several loci associated with these two kinds of variation. Because perceptual rivalry is thought to be relevant to and potentially an endophenotype for psychiatric disorders, these results may help understand not only visual cognition, but also psychiatric disorders.
- Published
- 2017
25. Multi-level genomic analyses suggest new genetic variants involved in human memory
- Author
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Qin Zhou, Shanbi Zhou, Jieyu Chen, Ailong Huang, Zijian Zhu, Dongsheng Ni, Han Lei, Liang Chen, Wenxia Zhang, Wan Fang, Jianing Liu, Yi Rao, Hongming Yan, Biqing Chen, Tianming Gao, Yuping Gu, and Tingmei Chen
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Adolescent ,Population ,Gene regulatory network ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,Genome-wide association study ,Biology ,Pregnancy Proteins ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Article ,Minor Histocompatibility Antigens ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,Polymorphism (computer science) ,Memory ,Genetics ,Humans ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,education ,Genotyping ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) ,Transaminases ,education.field_of_study ,TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Heritability ,030104 developmental biology ,Female ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Transcription Factors - Abstract
Development of high-throughput genotyping platforms provides an opportunity to identify new genetic elements related to complex cognitive functions. Taking advantage of multi-level genomic analysis, here we studied the genetic basis of human short-term (STM, n = 1623) and long-term (LTM, n = 1522) memory functions. Heritability estimation based on single nucleotide polymorphism showed moderate (61%, standard error 35%) heritability of short-term memory but almost zero heritability of long-term memory. We further performed a two-step genome-wide association study, but failed to find any SNPs that could pass genome-wide significance and survive replication at the same time. However, suggestive significance for rs7011450 was found in the shared component of the two STM tasks. Further inspections on its nearby gene zinc finger and at-hook domain containing and SNPs around this gene showed suggestive association with STM. In LTM, a polymorphism within branched chain amino acid transaminase 2 showed suggestive significance in the discovery cohort and has been replicated in another independent population of 1862. Furthermore, we performed a pathway analysis based on the current genomic data and found pathways including mTOR signaling and axon guidance significantly associated with STM capacity. These findings warrant further replication in other larger populations.
- Published
- 2017
26. Increased NRG1-ErbB4 signaling in human symptomatic epilepsy
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Biqing Chen, Jun-Ming Zhu, Hong-Yan Geng, Xiao-Juan Chen, Xiao-Ming Li, Jianmin Zhang, Chen-Jie Shen, Shu-Xia Cao, Ke-Xin Li, Ying Zhang, and Hong Lian
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0301 basic medicine ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Receptor, ErbB-4 ,Science ,Neuregulin-1 ,Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epilepsy ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Humans ,Epilepsy surgery ,Neuregulin 1 ,Phosphorylation ,ERBB4 ,Temporal cortex ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,business.industry ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Temporal Lobe ,Up-Regulation ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,HEK293 Cells ,src-Family Kinases ,biology.protein ,Medicine ,Female ,Signal transduction ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase Src ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Previous studies have shown that the neuregulin 1 (NRG1)-ErbB4 signaling pathway may regulate the excitability of fast-spiking neurons in the frontal cortex and participate in primary epilepsy pathogenesis. However, the exact roles and mechanism for NRG1/ErbB4 in human symptomatic epilepsy are still unclear. Using fresh human symptomatic epilepsy tissues, we found that the protein levels of NRG1 and ErbB4 were significantly increased in the temporal cortex. In addition, NRG1-ErbB4 signaling suppressed phosphorylation of GluN2B at position 1472 by Src kinase, and decreased levels of phosphorylation level of GluN2B and Src were detected in human symptomatic epilepsy tissues. Our study revealed a critical role of the NRG1-ErbB4 signaling pathway in symptomatic epilepsy, which is different from that in primary epilepsy, and we propose that the NRG1-ErbB4 signaling may act as a homeostasis modulator that protects the brain from aggravation of epileptiform activity.
- Published
- 2016
27. Investigating the Genetics Underlying Human Biological Motion Perception: a Genome-wide Association Study
- Author
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Ren Na, Yi Rao, Zijian Zhu, Biqing Chen, and Fang Fang
- Subjects
Ophthalmology ,Biological motion perception ,Genome-wide association study ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Sensory Systems - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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28. Cue-independent memory impairment by reactivation-coupled interference in human declarative memory
- Author
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Huaqian Cai, Zijian Zhu, Biqing Chen, Yi Rao, Yingying Wang, Zhijun Cao, and Yanhong Wu
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Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Memory, Long-Term ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Interference (genetic) ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,03 medical and health sciences ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Memory formation ,Memory impairment ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Association (psychology) ,Declarative memory ,Memory Consolidation ,Long-term memory ,05 social sciences ,Memory consolidation ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Memory is a dynamic process. While memory becomes increasingly resistant to interference after consolidation, a brief reactivation renders it unstable again. Previous studies have shown that interference, when applied upon reactivation, impairs the consolidated memory, presumably by disrupting the reconsolidation of the memory. However, attempts have failed in disrupting human declarative memory, raising a question about whether declarative memory becomes unstable upon reactivation. Here, we used a double-cue/one-target paradigm, which associated the same target with two different cues in initial memory formation. Only one cue/target association was later reactivated and treated with behavioral interference. Our results showed, for the first time, that reactivation-coupled interference caused cue-independent memory impairment that generalized to other cues associated with the memory. Critically, such memory impairment appeared immediately after interference, before the reconsolidation process was completed, suggesting that common manipulations of reactivation-coupled interference procedures might disrupt other processes in addition to the reconsolidation process in human declarative memory.
- Published
- 2015
29. Synthesis, Crystal Structure of a Novel Mn Complex with Nicotinoyl-Glycine
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Min He, Xin Wang, and Biqing Chen
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crystal structure ,synthesis ,General Chemical Engineering ,Supramolecular chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Infrared spectroscopy ,Manganese ,Crystal structure ,Triclinic crystal system ,010402 general chemistry ,01 natural sciences ,Inorganic Chemistry ,Crystal ,lcsh:QD901-999 ,nicotinoyl-glycine ,manganese complex ,General Materials Science ,010405 organic chemistry ,Chemistry ,Ligand ,Bridging ligand ,Condensed Matter Physics ,0104 chemical sciences ,Crystallography ,lcsh:Crystallography - Abstract
A novel manganese complex, C16H26MnN4O12, was synthesized by the reaction of nicotinoyl-glycine and NaOH in an ethanol/water solution and structurally characterized by elemental analysis, UV-vis spectrum, IR spectrum and single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. The crystal of the complex belongs to the triclinic space group P1 with a = 7.8192(16) Å, b = 8.8800(18) Å, c = 9.0142(18) Å, α = 83.14(3)°, β = 65.27(3)°, γ = 81.67(3)°, V = 516.3(2) Å3, Z = 1, Dx = 1.542 mg·m−3, μ = 0.66 mm−1, F(000) = 271, and final R1 = 0.0381, ωR2 = 0.0964. The nicotinoyl-glycine ligand acts as a bridging ligand to connect the manganese ions by the hydrogen interactions; thus, the complex expands into a 3D supramolecular net structure.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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30. Reconstruction of Local Biochemical Reaction Network Based on Human Chromosome 9 Sequence Data
- Author
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Biqing Chen
- Subjects
Human systems engineering ,Process (engineering) ,Metabolic network ,Chromosome 9 ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,computer.software_genre ,Biochemistry ,Genome ,DNA sequencing ,Computer Science Applications ,Data sequences ,Chromosome (genetic algorithm) ,Data mining ,Molecular Biology ,computer - Abstract
Metabolic networks are complex and highly interconnected, thus systems-level computational approaches are required to elucidate and to understand metabolic genotype-phenotype relationships. This paper has manually reconstructed the local human metabolic network based on DNA sequence data of human chromosome nine. Herein the paper describes the reconstruction process and discusses how the resulting chromosome-scale (or local) network differs from genome-scale ones. The underestimated results have revealed many gaps in the current understanding of human metabolism that require future experimental investigation. They also suggest possible problems arising from local reconstruction based on partial genome data. The study suggests further applications enabled by reconstruction of human metabolic network. The establishment of this network represents a step toward genome-scale human systems biology.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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