118 results on '"Bo, Hai"'
Search Results
2. Effect of room temperature multi-pass ECAP deformation on mechanical properties and precipitation phase distribution of 7075 aluminium alloy
- Author
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Lei Luo, Bo-hai Yang, Xi-rong Yang, Xiao-yan Liu, and Jing-zhong Wang
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Metals and Alloys ,General Engineering - Published
- 2023
3. Bimetallic oxide Cu2O@MnO2 with exposed phase interfaces for dual-effect purification of indoor formaldehyde and pathogenic bacteria
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Jia Yu Zheng, Hao Zhang, Jun Da He, Bo Hai Tian, Chang Bao Han, Zhixiang Cui, and Hui Yan
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General Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Bioengineering ,General Chemistry ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics - Abstract
A bimetallic oxide Cu2O@MnO2 shows superior dynamic HCHO removal efficiency and pathogen inactivation ability, which is attributed to the electron-rich region at the phase-interface inducing the capture and activation of O2 on the material surface.
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- 2023
4. Pediatric body mass index trajectories and the risk of hypertension among adolescents in China: a retrospective cohort study
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Wen-Xin Ge, Di Han, Zi-Yao Ding, Li-Ping Yi, Zhuo-Qiao Yang, Xin-Nan Wang, Yue Xiao, Fei Liang, Bo Hai, Hui-Ling Lv, Hui Shen, Hai-Bing Yang, Jie-Yun Yin, and Jia Hu
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Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
The impact of pediatric body mass index (BMI) trajectories on the risk of adolescent hypertension (HTN) determined by three separate visits remains unclear. This longitudinal study aims to identify potential pediatric sex-specific BMI trajectories and to assess their associations with HTN and HTN subtypes.Based on the Health Promotion Program for Children and Adolescents (HPPCA) in Suzhou, China, a total of 24,426 participants who had initial normal blood pressure (BP) and had at least four BMI measurements during 2012-2020 were included. HTN was defined as simultaneously having three separate visits of elevated BP in 2020. Latent class growth models were used to explore sex-specific BMI trajectories, whose associations with HTN and HTN subtypes were further examined by logistic regression.The incidence of HTN determined through three separate visits was 3.34%. Four trajectories were identified for both sexes: low BMI increasing, medium BMI increasing, high BMI increasing, and highest BMI increasing. Compared to the medium BMI increasing group, the odds ratio (95% confidential interval) for developing adolescent HTN of the low, high, and highest BMI increasing groups among boys were 0.54 (0.39, 0.75), 1.90 (1.44, 2.51), and 2.89 (1.90, 4.39), respectively; and the corresponding values for girls were 0.66 (0.48, 0.90), 2.30 (1.72, 3.09), and 4.71 (3.06, 7.26). Similar gradually elevated associations between different trajectories with isolated systolic hypertension, systolic and diastolic hypertension were observed.Current results emphasized the adverse effects of stable high BMI on HTN and the benefits of maintaining normal weight throughout childhood.
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- 2022
5. Construction of Multiobjective Planning Decision-Making Model of Ecological Building Spatial Layout under the Background of Rural Revitalization
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Ying Liu, Yong-Di Long, Bo-Hai Wang, and Xing She
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Article Subject ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Abstract
In order to improve the spatial layout ability of ecological buildings under the background of rural revitalization, a multiobjective planning and decision-making model for the spatial layout of ecological buildings is constructed. Based on the visual impact detection of ecological building space, a three-dimensional rendering model is established. The block matrix matching and boundary contour parameter analysis methods are used to plan and design the layout boundary feature points, and the wavelet scale decomposition method is used to analyze the mixed tone of the layout image. Based on this, a multiobjective planning decision-making model for the spatial layout of ecological buildings is established, based on which the spatial layout design scheme of ecological buildings is output to realize the spatial layout planning of ecological buildings. The simulation results show that the spatial layout of ecological buildings using this method is more reasonable, and the expression ability of ecological aesthetics is stronger, which has a good application value in rural planning and design.
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- 2022
6. Data from Transient Activation of Hedgehog Pathway Rescued Irradiation-Induced Hyposalivation by Preserving Salivary Stem/Progenitor Cells and Parasympathetic Innervation
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Fei Liu, Dharanipathy Rangaraj, Sangroh Kim, Yanqiu Zhao, Xinyu Ti, Lei Shangguan, Qingguo Zhao, Zhenhua Yang, Lizheng Qin, and Bo Hai
- Abstract
Purpose: To examine the effects and mechanisms of transient activation of the Hedgehog pathway on rescuing radiotherapy-induced hyposalivation in survivors of head and neck cancer.Experimental Design: Mouse salivary glands and cultured human salivary epithelial cells were irradiated by a single 15-Gy dose. The Hedgehog pathway was transiently activated in mouse salivary glands, by briefly overexpressing the Sonic hedgehog (Shh) transgene or administrating smoothened agonist, and in human salivary epithelial cells, by infecting with adenovirus encoding Gli1. The activity of Hedgehog signaling was examined by the expression of the Ptch1-lacZ reporter and endogenous Hedgehog target genes. The salivary flow rate was measured following pilocarpine stimulation. Salivary stem/progenitor cells (SSPC), parasympathetic innervation, and expression of related genes were examined by flow cytometry, salisphere assay, immunohistochemistry, quantitative reverse transcription PCR, Western blotting, and ELISA.Results: Irradiation does not activate Hedgehog signaling in mouse salivary glands. Transient Shh overexpression activated the Hedgehog pathway in ductal epithelia and, after irradiation, rescued salivary function in male mice, which is related with preservation of functional SSPCs and parasympathetic innervation. The preservation of SSPCs was likely mediated by the rescue of signaling activities of the Bmi1 and Chrm1–HB-EGF pathways. The preservation of parasympathetic innervation was associated with the rescue of the expression of neurotrophic factors such as Bdnf and Nrtn. The expression of genes related with maintenance of SSPCs and parasympathetic innervation in female salivary glands and cultured human salivary epithelial cells was similarly affected by irradiation and transient Hedgehog activation.Conclusions: These findings suggest that transient activation of the Hedgehog pathway has the potential to restore salivary gland function after irradiation-induced dysfunction. Clin Cancer Res; 20(1); 140–50. ©2013 AACR.
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- 2023
7. Supplementary Methods and Data from Transient Activation of the Hedgehog-Gli Pathway Rescues Radiotherapy-Induced Dry Mouth via Recovering Salivary Gland Resident Macrophages
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Fei Liu, Jian Q. Feng, Geoffrey M. Kapler, Michael A. Deveau, Courtney L. Baetge, Jun Wang, Bo Hai, Linying Zhang, and Qingguo Zhao
- Abstract
Figure S1-9, Table S1
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- 2023
8. Data from Transient Activation of the Hedgehog-Gli Pathway Rescues Radiotherapy-Induced Dry Mouth via Recovering Salivary Gland Resident Macrophages
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Fei Liu, Jian Q. Feng, Geoffrey M. Kapler, Michael A. Deveau, Courtney L. Baetge, Jun Wang, Bo Hai, Linying Zhang, and Qingguo Zhao
- Abstract
Irreversible hypofunction of salivary glands is a common side effect of radiotherapy for head and neck cancer and is difficult to remedy. Recent studies indicate that transient activation of Hedgehog signaling rescues irradiation-impaired salivary function in animal models, but the underlying mechanisms are largely unclear. Here, we show in mice that activation of canonical Gli-dependent Hedgehog signaling by Gli1 gene transfer is sufficient to recover salivary function impaired by irradiation. Salivary gland cells responsive to Hedgehog/Gli signaling comprised small subsets of macrophages, epithelial cells, and endothelial cells, and their progeny remained relatively rare long after irradiation and transient Hedgehog activation. Quantities and activities of salivary gland resident macrophages were substantially and rapidly impaired by irradiation and restored by Hedgehog activation. Conversely, depletion of salivary gland macrophages by clodronate liposomes compromised the restoration of irradiation-impaired salivary function by transient Hedgehog activation. Single-cell RNA sequencing and qRT-PCR of sorted cells indicated that Hedgehog activation greatly enhances paracrine interactions between salivary gland resident macrophages, epithelial progenitors, and endothelial cells through Csf1, Hgf, and C1q signaling pathways. Consistently, expression of these paracrine factors and their receptors in salivary glands decreased following irradiation but were restored by transient Hedgehog activation. These findings reveal that resident macrophages and their prorepair paracrine factors are essential for the rescue of irradiation-impaired salivary function by transient Hedgehog activation and are promising therapeutic targets of radiotherapy-induced irreversible dry mouth.Significance:These findings illuminate a novel direction for developing effective treatment of irreversible dry mouth, which is common after radiotherapy for head and neck cancer and for which no effective treatments are available.
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- 2023
9. The specific mitochondrial unfolded protein response in fast- and slow-twitch muscles of high-fat diet-induced insulin-resistant rats
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Li, Can, Li, Nan, Zhang, Ziyi, Song, Yu, Li, Jialin, Wang, Zhe, Bo, Hai, and Zhang, Yong
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Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism - Abstract
IntroductionSkeletal muscle insulin resistance (IR) plays an important role in the pathogenesis of type 2 diabetes mellitus. Skeletal muscle is a heterogeneous tissue composed of different muscle fiber types that contribute distinctly to IR development. Glucose transport shows more protection in slow-twitch muscles than in fast-twitch muscles during IR development, while the mechanisms involved remain unclear. Therefore, we investigated the role of the mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt) in the distinct resistance of two types of muscle in IR.MethodsMale Wistar rats were divided into high-fat diet (HFD) feeding and control groups. We measured glucose transport, mitochondrial respiration, UPRmt and histone methylation modification of UPRmt-related proteins to examine the UPRmt in the slow fiber-enriched soleus (Sol) and fast fiber-enriched tibialis anterior (TA) under HFD conditions.ResultsOur results indicate that 18 weeks of HFD can cause systemic IR, while the disturbance of Glut4-dependent glucose transport only occurred in fast-twitch muscle. The expression levels of UPRmt markers, including ATF5, HSP60 and ClpP, and the UPRmt-related mitokine MOTS-c were significantly higher in slow-twitch muscle than in fast-twitch muscle under HFD conditions. Mitochondrial respiratory function is maintained only in slow-twitch muscle. Additionally, in the Sol, histone methylation at the ATF5 promoter region was significantly higher than that in the TA after HFD feeding.ConclusionThe expression of proteins involved in glucose transport in slow-twitch muscle remains almost unaltered after HFD intervention, whereas a significant decline of these proteins was observed in fast-twitch muscle. Specific activation of the UPRmt in slow-twitch muscle, accompanied by higher mitochondrial respiratory function and MOTS-c expression, may contribute to the higher resistance to HFD in slow-twitch muscle. Notably, the different histone modifications of UPRmt regulators may underlie the specific activation of the UPRmt in different muscle types. However, future work applying genetic or pharmacological approaches should further uncover the relationship between the UPRmt and insulin resistance.
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- 2023
10. The Interrater and Intrarater Reliability of the Humeral Head Ossification System and the Proximal Femur Maturity Index Assessments for Patients with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis
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Wang, Huan, Lu, Qing-da, Liu, Chen-xin, Yang, Shuai, Qi, Bo-hai, Bai, Huan-an, Qu, Ji-ning, Yang, Ye, Jin, Xiao-hui, Yang, Ming, Su, Fei, Yang, Ya-ting, and Jie, Qiang
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Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
BackgroundSkeletal maturity can evaluate the growth and development potential of children and provide a guide for the management of adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS). Recent studies have demonstrated the advantages of the Humeral Head Ossification System (HHOS) and the Proximal Femur Maturity Index (PFMI), based on standard scoliosis films, in the management of AIS patients. We further assessed the HHOS and the PFMI method's reliability in the interrater and intrarater.MethodsThe data from 38 patients, including the humeral head and proximal femur on standard scoliosis films, were distributed to the eight raters in the form of a PowerPoint presentation. On 38 independent standard spine radiographs, raters utilized the HHOS and PFMI to assign grades. The PPT sequence was randomly changed and then reevaluated 2 weeks later. For every system, the 95% confidence interval (95% CI) and intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) were calculated to evaluate the interrater and intrarater reliability.ResultsThe HHOS was extremely reliable, with an intraobserver ICC of 0.802. In the first round, the interobserver ICC reliability for the HHOS was 0.955 (0.929–0.974), while in the second round, it was 0.939 (0.905–0.964). The PFMI was extremely reliable, with an intraobserver ICC of 0.888. In the first round, the interobserver ICC reliability for the PFMI was 0.967 (0.948–0.981), while in the second round, it was 0.973 (0.957–0.984).ConclusionsThe HHOS and PFMI classifications had excellent reliability. These two methods are beneficial to reduce additional exposure to radiation and expense for AIS. There are advantages and disadvantages to each classification. Clinicians should choose a personalized and reasonable method to assess skeletal maturity, which will assist in the management of adolescent scoliosis patients.
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- 2023
11. CeO2 Nanodots@carbon Sphere/NiFe-Layered Double Hydroxides as an Efficient Electrocatalyst for Oxygen Evolution Reactions
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Shanshan Lv, Bo Hai, Xueqiong Zhang, and Lijun Ding
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Materials Chemistry ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2022
12. A systematic review and meta-analysis of efficacy and safety comparing holmium laser enucleation of the prostate with transurethral resection of the prostate for patients with prostate volume less than 100 mL or 100 g
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Jiawei Chen, Wei Dong, Xincheng Gao, Xuexiang Li, Zirui Cheng, Bo Hai, and Zili Pang
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Reproductive Medicine ,Urology ,Original Article - Abstract
BACKGROUND: To assess the efficacy and safety of holmium laser enucleation of the prostate (HoLEP) and transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) for patients with prostate volume less than 100 mL or 100 g. METHODS: We searched PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library and Web of Science from inception to July 2021 to collect randomized controlled trials. Two reviewers independently screened the literature, extracted data, and assessed the risk of bias of the included studies by using the Cochrane risk of bias tool. Review Manager 5.3 software was used for meta-analysis. We synthesised effect estimates using risk ratios (RR), mean difference (MD), and standardized mean differences (SMD). RESULTS: A total of eight studies were included, involving 764 patients, 384 patients in the HoLEP group and 380 patients in the TURP group. The meta-analysis showed that the catheterization time (SMD =−1.44; 95% CI: −2.17 to −0.70; P=0.0001), hospital stay (SMD =−1.01; 95% CI: −1.58 to −0.44; P=0.0005), haemoglobin loss (MD =−0.29; 95% CI: −0.52 to −0.07; P=0.01), and transfusion rate (RR =0.16; 95% CI: 0.05–0.49; P=0.001) in the HoLEP group were lower than those in the TURP group. In addition, the 12-month postvoid residual volume (PVR) of the HoLEP group (MD =−9.93 95% CI: −18.59 to −1.27; P=0.02) were superior to the TURP group. Although the operation time of the HoLEP group was longer (MD =17.89; 95% CI: 9.18–26.60; P
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- 2022
13. LettuceMOT: A dataset of lettuce detection and tracking with re-identification of re-occurred plants for agricultural robots
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Nan, Hu, Shuo, Wang, Xuechang, Wang, Yu, Cai, Daobilige, Su, Purevdorj, Nyamsuren, Yongliang, Qiao, Yu, Jiang, Bo, Hai, and Hang, Wei
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Plant Science - Published
- 2022
14. How Does Sunshine Become Electricity
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Junhao Chu, Bo Hai, Chang Qin, and Zhongying Xue
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- 2022
15. Prevalence of hypertension and related risk factors among children and adolescents at three separate visits: A large school-based study in China
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Jia, Hu, Ziyao, Ding, Di, Han, Bo, Hai, Huiling, Lv, Jieyun, Yin, Hui, Shen, Aihua, Gu, and Haibing, Yang
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Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health - Abstract
ObjectiveWe aimed to demonstrate characteristics of hypertension at three separate visits and its risk factors among children and adolescents based on a large school-based study in China.Materials and methodsBased on a large-scale ongoing monitoring program conducted in Suzhou, China, 59,679 children and adolescents aged 7–17 years from 60 public schools were enrolled during 2020 to 2021. Height, weight, and blood pressure (BP) were measured. Additional BP would be measured for hypertensive students at least 2 weeks later. Confirmed hypertension was defined as simultaneously BP meeting above or equal to 95th percentile for age, sex, and height at three separate visits. Odds ratio (ORs), and 95% CIs were calculated by logistic regression to identify risk factors for hypertension.ResultsPrevalence of hypertension at three separate visits were 20.4, 6.3, and 3.1%, respectively. Prevalence of confirmed isolated systolic hypertension, isolated diastolic hypertension, and systolic and diastolic hypertension were 1.9, 0.3, and 0.9%, respectively. Hypertension prevalence for stages 1 and 2 were 2.6 and 0.6%. Different hypertension prevalence were found among various age and gender groups. Boys [OR, 1.137 (95% CI, 1.033–1.251)], high age [OR, 3.326 (95% CI, 2.950–3.751)], urban residents [OR, 1.579 (95% CI, 1.417–1.760)], high-socioeconomic status [OR, 1.156 (95% CI, 1.039–1.286)] and body mass index category including overweight [1.883 (95% CI, 1.665–2.129)], obesity [4.049 (95% CI, 3.625–4.523)], and thinness [OR, 0.457 (95% CI, 0.306–0.683)] were associated with confirmed hypertension.ConclusionA single BP measurement would overestimate hypertension prevalence, about 3% Chinese children were hypertensive, early, and effective intervention around risk factors for hypertension should be taken.
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- 2022
16. Designing layered V2O3@C with stable oxygen defects via UV-curing technology for high‑performance Zn-ion hybrid supercapacitors
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Hanqin Liang, Bo Hai, Yuan Wang, Kuangyu Han, Ning Miao, Jinchang Wang, Yulian Pang, Hang Wei, Zhiming Shi, Haibin Chu, and Yingquan Zou
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General Physics and Astronomy ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,General Chemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films - Published
- 2023
17. Optimization of one-step production of biodiesel by Sulfuric acid/Stannic oxide-Hangjin2 clay catalyzed xanthoceras sorbifolia bunge kernel
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Bo Hai, Hao Yinan, Lijun Ding, Ximing Wang, and Jing Chen
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Biodiesel ,biology ,Central composite design ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,Oxide ,Energy Engineering and Power Technology ,Sulfuric acid ,One-Step ,Xanthoceras ,biology.organism_classification ,Catalysis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Fuel Technology ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,chemistry ,Chemical engineering ,Kernel (statistics) - Abstract
In this study, biodiesel has been successfully prepared from Xanthoceras sorbifolia seed kernel by SO42-/SnO2-Hangjin2#clay as catalyst. Based on the Central Composite Design method, the effect of ...
- Published
- 2021
18. Comparisons of tri-ponderal mass index and body mass index in discriminating hypertension at three separate visits in adolescents: A retrospective cohort study
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Jia Hu, Yi Zhong, WenXin Ge, Huiling Lv, Ziyao Ding, Di Han, Bo Hai, Hui Shen, Jieyun Yin, Aihua Gu, and Haibing Yang
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Food Science - Abstract
ObjectiveTo estimate whether the new obesity indicator tri-ponderal mass index (TMI) has a better capacity to predict adolescent hypertension (HTN) and HTN subtypes at three separate blood pressure (BP) visits than the conventionally used body mass index (BMI).MethodsA total of 36,950 adolescents who had initial normal BP from 2012 to 2019 were included in Suzhou, China. HTN was defined as having three separate visits of elevated BP in 2020. The area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC), false-positive rate, false-negative rate, total misclassification rates, net reclassification improvement (NRI), and integrated discrimination improvement were calculated to compare the discriminative ability of HTN between BMI and TMI.ResultsTMI had better predictive abilities than BMI among all of the participants when predicting HTN (difference in AUC = 0.019, 95% CI = 0.007–0.031; NRI = 0.067, 95% CI = 0.008–0.127) and isolated systolic hypertension (difference in AUC = 0.021, 95% CI = 0.005–0.036; NRI = 0.106, 95% CI = 0.029–0.183). The difference in prediction abilities between BMI and TMI was more obvious in the subgroup of age ≥16. Also, TMI outperformed BMI in predicting adolescent HTN in girls but not in boys.ConclusionCompared with BMI, TMI may have a better predictive capacity for HTN, particularly in girls and older adolescents. TMI has the potential to be used as an effective predictor for HTN in clinic practice. Further studies are needed to verify the utility of TMI.
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- 2022
19. An in-situ X-ray computed tomography imaging apparatus with stack pressures for rechargeable batteries
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Ning Miao, Bo Hai, Shanfeng Wang, Jun Ni, Xiang Li, Hang Wei, Kai Zhang, Xiaolong Wang, and Weifeng Huang
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Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metals and Alloys ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics - Published
- 2023
20. The comparison between selling and leasing for new and remanufactured products with quality level in the electric vehicle industry
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Tao Zhou, Bo-hai Liu, and Kai Li
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Control and Optimization ,business.product_category ,Process (engineering) ,Vendor ,Applied Mathematics ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Space (commercial competition) ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Product (business) ,Electric vehicle ,Electric-vehicle battery ,Quality (business) ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Remanufacturing ,Industrial organization ,media_common - Abstract
Process uncertainty makes remanufacturing operations management sophisticated. To reduce the uncertainty of the timing, quality and quantity of product returns in remanufacturing, motivated by the selling and leasing of electric vehicle batteries, we consider a monopolist vendor who markets her products by adopting two models: (1) a single leasing model, and (2) a single selling model. We first investigate the firm's marketing model with remanufacturing and analyze the impact of the quality level of the returned products on the firm's marketing and remarketing models. Then we compare selling and leasing models. We first find that only when the quality level of returned sold products is relatively high will the vendor choose to remanufacture under the single selling model. Conversely, only when the quality level of returned leased products is relatively low will the vendor decide to remanufacture under the single leasing model. Secondly, we show that the space of remanufacturable quality level under the single selling model is bigger than the space under the single leasing model. Thirdly, selling is more profitable than leasing when the quality level of returned sold products is sufficiently high. These results are further demonstrated by a numerical study. Our study provides firms with guidance on how to optimally adopt remanufacturing and marketing strategies that take into account the quality level of the returned products.
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- 2021
21. Author response for 'Effect of rapid cooling on the microstructure and properties of fine-grained 7075 aluminium alloy under friction stir welding'
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null Lei Luo, null Bo-Hai Yang, null Qiang-Qiang Quan, null Xi-Rong Yang, null Xiao-Yan Liu, and null Jing-Zhong Wang
- Published
- 2022
22. Lingual Mucosal Graft Ureteroplasty for Long Proximal Ureteral Stricture: 6 Years of Experience with 41 Cases
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Chaoqi Liang, Jianli Wang, Bo Hai, Yujie Xu, Jinmin Zeng, Shuaishuai Chai, Jiawei Chen, Hao Zhang, Xincheng Gao, Gong Cheng, Xiong Yang, Teng Hou, Wencheng Li, Xingyuan Xiao, and Bing Li
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Treatment Outcome ,Urology ,Mouth Mucosa ,Humans ,Constriction, Pathologic ,Ureter ,Retrospective Studies ,Ureteral Obstruction - Abstract
Management of a long proximal ureteral stricture is challenging. Lingual mucosal graft ureteroplasty (LMGU) is a novel minimally invasive technique for ureteral reconstruction that avoids the morbidity of bowel interposition or autotransplantation.To evaluate the long-term effectiveness of LMGU for managing long, complex proximal ureteral strictures in a multi-institutional cohort of patients.This retrospective study involved data for 41 patients treated with LMGU at three centers between June 2015 and January 2021.LMGU was performed using either an onlay ureteroplasty in which the diseased ureter was incised ventrally and repaired with a lingual mucosal graft (LMG) to widen the ureteral lumen, or an augmented anastomotic technique in which the obliterated segment of the ureter was excised and reanastomosed primarily on dorsal side, and an LMG was placed on the ventral side.Pre-, intra-, and postoperative variables and outcomes were assessed. A descriptive statistical analysis was performed.Of 41patients, 40 were operated with laparoscopic procedures and one with a robot. Twenty-four (59%) patients underwent an onlay ureteroplasty, and 17 (41%) underwent an augmented anastomotic ureteroplasty. The reconstructed ureter was wrapped with omentum in 90% of cases. The median (range) stricture length was 4.8 cm (2.0-8.0), operative time was 166 min (98-306), and estimated blood loss was 65 ml (15-220). No open conversions and intraoperative complications occurred. At a median follow-up of 35 mo (range 13-80), the overall success rate was 97.6% (40/41).LMGU is a safe, feasible, and effective long-term technique for managing long, complex proximal ureteral strictures.We reported a novel technique for long proximal complex ureteral strictures using an onlay lingual mucosal graft (LMG). Our 6-yr outcomes demonstrate that onlay LMG ureteroplasty is a safe, feasible, and effective long-term procedure for ureteral reconstruction.
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- 2022
23. The Role of DLLs in Cancer: A Novel Therapeutic Target
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Yuan-Meng Liu, Meng-xi Xiu, and Bo-Hai Kuang
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0301 basic medicine ,Future studies ,business.industry ,Notch signaling pathway ,Cancer ,Tumor immunity ,medicine.disease ,Tumor vasculature ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,medicine ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Tumor growth ,business - Abstract
Delta-like ligands (DLLs) control Notch signaling. DLL1, DLL3 and DLL4 are frequently deregulated in cancer and influence tumor growth, the tumor vasculature and tumor immunity, which play different roles in cancer progression. DLLs have attracted intense research interest as anti-cancer therapeutics. In this review, we discuss the role of DLLs in cancer and summarize the emerging DLL-relevant targeting methods to aid future studies.
- Published
- 2020
24. Internet-based intelligent and sustainable manufacturing: developments and challenges
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Tao Zhou, Bo-hai Liu, and Kai Li
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Sustainable development ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Big data ,Cloud computing ,02 engineering and technology ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Computer Science Applications ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Engineering management ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Resource (project management) ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Information and Communications Technology ,Paradigm shift ,The Internet ,Business ,Software - Abstract
In recent years, the nations of the world have presented the development strategy of manufacturing. Manufacturing is the foundation of a country. However, with the increasing global resource constraints and market heterogeneity, the variety of individual demands, and the long-term goals of sustainable development, with the support of emerging information and communication technologies such as Internet, cyber-physical system, Internet of Things, cloud computing, and big data, industrial value creation is causing a paradigm shift in manufacturing. This paper studies a range of new manufacturing paradigms and presents a state-of-the-art survey of published works. It explores the corresponding current manufacturing concepts, technologies, framework features, application effects, resource optimization, and future challenges in these new paradigms. The integration of various manufacturing paradigms is also analyzed. Through this survey, the developments of these new manufacturing paradigms are explained and the future prospects are also discussed.
- Published
- 2020
25. RNA-Seq Study of Hepatic Response of Yellow-Feather Chickens to Acute Heat Stress
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Yi Kang Luo, Jia Ming Liang, Xi Quan Zhang, Lin Lin Huang, Yan Zi Chan, Yin Wang, Bo Hai Zhang, and Quan Zhang
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0301 basic medicine ,ACACA ,Fatty acid metabolism ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Broiler ,Lipid metabolism ,Context (language use) ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Biology ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Andrology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,ACSS2 ,ACOX1 ,HADHB - Abstract
The yellow-feather broiler is a popular poultry breed in Asia, particularly in China. In this study, we performed RNA-seq analysis to identify differentially expressed genes (deGs) in the liver of yellow-feather broilers that had been subjected to acute heat stress treatment (38±1°C for 4 h, recovery 2 h) and determine the response of the liver to high temperature and its effects on yellow-feather broiler physiology. We found that the cloacal temperature and respiratory rate of yellow-feather chickens were significantly increased immediately after the initiation of acute heat stress (38°c) treatment. And after recovery for 2 h, there was no difference in the cloacal temperature and respiratory rate between the acute heat stress and control groups. A total of 834 DEGs were observed in response to heat stress by RNA-seq. Almost half of the DEGs were involved in the lipid and energy metabolism, including fatty acid metabolism (ACOX1, ACACA, ACSL1, ACSL6, ACAA1, ACAA2, HADHB, and FASN) and propanoate metabolism (ACSS2, ALDH2, ACACA, DLAT, ALDH7A1, MDH1, ME1, ABAT, SUCLG2, and ACSS3). Our findings provide the context for RNA-seq studies in the liver of yellow-feather chickens and suggest that the liver of yellow-feather broilers has the lipid and energy metabolism physiological mechanisms activated in response to heat stress.
- Published
- 2020
26. SLC17A9-PTHLH-EMT axis promotes proliferation and invasion of clear renal cell carcinoma
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Weiquan, Li, Ning, Xu, Xiangui, Meng, Hongwei, Yuan, Tiexi, Yu, Qi, Miao, Hongmei, Yang, Bo, Hai, Wen, Xiao, and Xiaoping, Zhang
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Multidisciplinary - Abstract
SLC17A9 is a vesicular ATP transport protein that plays an important role in determining cell functions and the onset and progression of different diseases. In this study, SLC17A9 was initially identified as a potential diagnostic and prognostic risk biomarker for clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC). Then, the aberrant expression levels of SLC17A9 were confirmed in both the cell lines and clinical tissues. Mechanistically, SLC17A9 could upregulate the expression of PTHLH, thus promoting epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) in ccRCC. Functionally, SLC17A9 knockdown inhibited the proliferation, migration, and invasion activity of renal cancer cells, whereas its overexpression led to stronger cell viability and more malignant phenotype
- Published
- 2023
27. Study on Formulation with Lower Initial Viscosity Gel/Alkali/Surfactant/Polymer After Polymer Flooding and Scenario Design of Field Test
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Qian Gao, Lin Wen Chen, Chao Guo Liu, Wei Yan, Cheng Jie Cheng, Hui Pei Han, Quan Zhou, and Bo Hai Liu
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_classification ,Viscosity ,Materials science ,Pulmonary surfactant ,chemistry ,Field (physics) ,Polymer flooding ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Polymer ,Composite material ,Alkali metal ,Scenario design - Abstract
The blocks of polymer flooding have gradually entered into the stage of chase water flooding after polymer flooding in Daqing Oilfield and the comprehensive water cut is close to the exploitation limit of 98%. So it is urgent to develop some new technologies to further enhance oil recovery after polymer flooding. On the basis of laboratory research, a field test of alkali/surfactant/polymer flooding was carried out after polymer flooding in Daqing Oilfield in 2015, which achieved good development effect, but the polymer concentration was relatively large. Based on the field test of alkali/surfactant/polymer flooding, a new technology of the lower initial viscosity gel/alkali/surfactant/polymer flooding has further been studied according to the technical route combining plugging, adjusting and displacing, which can reduce the polymer dosage greatly under the premise of ensuring good oil displacing effect. In this paper, some laboratory studies are carried out, which realize significant technology breakthrough. Firstly, the adjusting and plugging agent of lower initial viscosity gel is screened out, which can be injected into the high permeability layers of low flow resistance like the water and migrate to the deep location of the high permeability layers and then gelatinize on spot. Therefore it can plug high permeability layers effectively and does not pollute the middle and low permeability layers at the same time. Secondly, the injection parameters of lower initial viscosity gel/alkali/surfactant/polymer system are optimized. The results of laboratory experiments show that the lower initial viscosity gel/alkali/surfactant/polymer system can enhance oil recovery by 13.5% OOIP under the optimal injection parameters, which is 1.2% OOIP more than that of the alkali/surfactant/polymer flooding and can save polymer dosage by 17.8%. In view of the good results obtained in laboratory experiments, the scenario design of field test is carried out and the incremental oil recovery is 10.1% OOIP predicted by numerical simulation. The field test is expected to start chemical flooding in 2021.
- Published
- 2021
28. P‐6.12: The View Angle Simulation And Evaluation Platform For Memory Skin Colors
- Author
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Yu-jun Hasio, Yan-xue Wang, Bo Hai, Yue-cu Lin, Wei-Wei Zheng, and Chun-Chi Chen
- Subjects
business.industry ,Computer science ,Skin color ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,View angle ,business - Published
- 2019
29. A programmable pseudo negative stiffness control device and its role in stay cable vibration control
- Author
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Yan-Wei Xu, Zhao-Dong Xu, Ying-Qing Guo, Min Zhou, Yu-Liang Zhao, Yang Yang, Jun Dai, Jie Zhang, Chen Zhu, Bo-Hai Ji, Yan-Liang Du, and Zheng-Qing Chen
- Subjects
Control and Systems Engineering ,Mechanical Engineering ,Signal Processing ,Aerospace Engineering ,Computer Science Applications ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Published
- 2022
30. What Makes You Unique?
- Author
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Lin He, Bo Hai, and Chang Qin
- Published
- 2021
31. Effect of rapid cooling on the microstructure and properties of fine-grained 7075 aluminium alloy under friction stir welding
- Author
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Lei Luo, Bo-Hai Yang, Qiang-Qiang Quan, Xi-Rong Yang, Xiao-Yan Liu, and Jing-Zhong Wang
- Subjects
Biomaterials ,Polymers and Plastics ,Metals and Alloys ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Abstract
In this study, 7075 aluminium alloy plates with a fine-grained structure were produced by four-pass equal-channel angular pressing and subsequently joined at room temperature (297 K) using carbon dioxide (CO2)-assisted cooling friction stir welding. Electron backscatter diffraction, x-ray diffraction, Thermocouple measuring instrument,optical microscopy and microhardness testing were used to investigate the microstructural and mechanical characteristics of friction stir welded joints. The results indicated that the maximum temperatures of welded joints at room temperature and CO2-assisted were 673 K and 568 K, macroscopic surfaces of the welded joints under CO2-assisted cooling were smoother than those created under room temperature; this was because the rapid cooling of liquid CO2 inhibited the growth of grains and, following dynamic recrystallisation, the grain size was finer (∼2.9 μm). Compared with the fine-grained base material (BM), the proportion of large-angle grain boundaries in the stir zone region of the welded joints increased under both conditions, and the anisotropy was weakened. The precipitation hardening of the joints was obvious; the welded joints appeared to soften at room temperature, while the hardness of the joints was the same as that of the fine-grained BM under the CO2-assisted cooling condition.
- Published
- 2022
32. Identification of hub genes, miRNAs and regulatory factors relevant for Duchenne muscular dystrophy by bioinformatics analysis
- Author
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Bo-Hai Kuang, Meng-Xi Xiu, and Bin Zeng
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,0301 basic medicine ,Duchenne muscular dystrophy ,Computational biology ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,ABCF2 ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene expression ,microRNA ,medicine ,Humans ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,RNA, Messenger ,Muscular dystrophy ,KEGG ,Transcription factor ,SPI1 ,General Neuroscience ,Computational Biology ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne ,MicroRNAs ,030104 developmental biology ,Gene Ontology ,biology.protein ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Purpose Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is currently the most commonly diagnosed form of muscular dystrophy due to mutations in the dystrophin gene. However, its pathological process remains unknown and there is a lack of specific molecular biomarkers. The aim of our study is to explore key regulatory connections underlying the progression of DMD. Materials and methods The gene expression profile dataset GSE38417 of DMD was obtained from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database. The differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between DMD patients and healthy controls were screened using geo2R, followed by Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) and Gene Ontology (GO) pathway enrichment analyses. Then a protein-protein interaction (PPI) network and sub-network of modules were constructed. To investigate the regulatory network underlying DMD, a global triple network including miRNAs, mRNAs and transcription factors (TFs) was constructed. Results A total of 1811 DEGs were found between the DMD and control groups, among which HERC5, SKP2 and FBXW5 were defined as hub genes with a degree of connectivity >35 in the PPI network. Furthermore, the five TFs ZNF362, ATAT1, SPI1, TCF12 and ABCF2, as well as the eight miRNAs miR-124a, miR-200b/200c/429, miR-19a/b, miR-23a/b, miR-182, miR-144, miR-498 and miR-18a/b were identified as playing crucial roles in the molecular pathogenesis of DMD. Conclusions This paper provides a comprehensive perspective on the miRNA-TF-mRNA co-regulatory network underlying DMD, although the bioinformatic findings need further validation in future studies.
- Published
- 2020
33. Systematic analysis of purified astrocytes after SCI unveils Zeb2os function during astrogliosis
- Author
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K. Lakshmi Narayanan, Benjamin Deneen, Xizi Wu, Xu Li, Bo Hai, Tanuj J. Prajapati, Neha Tallapragada, Yanan You, Dong H. Kim, Haichao Wei, Qilin Cao, Yiyan Zheng, Jia Qian Wu, and Raquel Cuevas-Diaz Duran
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Gliosis ,STAT3 ,Gene ,Spinal cord injury ,Spinal Cord Injuries ,biology ,medicine.disease ,Long non-coding RNA ,Astrogliosis ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Astrocytes ,biology.protein ,RNA, Long Noncoding ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Function (biology) ,Astrocyte - Abstract
SUMMARY Spinal cord injury (SCI) is one of the most devastating neural injuries without effective therapeutic solutions. Astrocytes are the predominant component of the scar. Understanding the complex contributions of reactive astrocytes to SCI pathophysiologies is fundamentally important for developing therapeutic strategies. We have studied the molecular changes in the injury environment and the astrocyte-specific responses by astrocyte purification from injured spinal cords from acute to chronic stages. In addition to protein-coding genes, we have systematically analyzed the expression profiles of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) (>200 bp), which are regulatory RNAs that play important roles in the CNS. We have identified a highly conserved lncRNA, Zeb2os, and demonstrated using functional assays that it plays an important role in reactive astrogliosis through the Zeb2os/Zeb2/Stat3 axis. These studies provide valuable insights into the molecular basis of reactive astrogliosis and fill the knowledge gap regarding the function(s) of lncRNAs in astrogliosis and SCI., Graphical Abstract, In Brief Wei et al. comprehensively investigate the coding and long non-coding gene expression changes and astrocyte-specific responses in injured spinal cord tissue and purified astrocytes from acute to chronic stages. Bioinformatic and functional analysis identify a conserved lncRNA Zeb2os that plays an essential role in reactive astrogliosis through the Zeb2os/Zeb2/Stat3 axis.
- Published
- 2020
34. The oncogenic role of Jagged1/Notch signaling in cancer
- Author
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Meng-xi Xiu, Bo-Hai Kuang, and Yuan-Meng Liu
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Male ,Cell type ,JAG1 ,Notch ,Angiogenesis ,Notch signaling pathway ,RM1-950 ,Biology ,Metastasis ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Oncogenic ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Severe toxicity ,Cancer ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Pharmacology ,Oncogene Proteins ,Receptors, Notch ,Calcium-Binding Proteins ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,030104 developmental biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Female ,Cancer development ,Therapy ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,Jagged-1 Protein ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Aberrant activation of Notch signaling plays an oncogenic role in cancer development. Jagged1 (JAG1) is an important Notch ligand that triggers Notch signaling through cell-cell interactions. JAG1 overexpression has been reported in many different types of cancer and correlates with a poor clinical prognosis. JAG1/Notch signaling controls oncogenic processes in different cell types and cellular contexts. Furthermore, JAG1/Notch signaling cascades activate a number of oncogenic factors that regulate cellular functions such as proliferation, metastasis, drug-resistance, and angiogenesis. To suppress the severe toxicity of pan-Notch inhibitors, JAG1 is attracting increasing attention as a source of therapeutic targets for cancers. In this review, the oncogenic role of JAG1/Notch signaling in cancer is discussed, as well as implications of strategies to inhibit JAG1/Notch signaling activity.
- Published
- 2020
35. Specific Adsorption Reinforced Interface Enabling Stable Lithium Metal Electrode
- Author
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Yu‐Yang Wang, Jian‐Kang Gu, Bo‐Hai Zhang, Guo‐Ran Li, Sheng Liu, and Xue‐Ping Gao
- Subjects
Biomaterials ,Electrochemistry ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2022
36. Pricing new and remanufactured products based on customer purchasing behavior
- Author
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Tao Zhou, Bo-hai Liu, and Kai Li
- Subjects
Control and Optimization ,Applied Mathematics ,Strategy and Management ,Price discrimination ,Competitive advantage ,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics ,Purchasing ,Extended producer responsibility ,Competition (economics) ,Pricing strategies ,Business ,Business and International Management ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Remanufacturing ,Duopoly ,Industrial organization - Abstract
Firms' pricing strategies are largely influenced by customer purchasing behavior. By considering whether to invest in customer purchasing behavior analysis, firms can choose a discriminatory or a non-discriminatory pricing model. This paper presents a two-period duopoly that the original material supplier (OS) supplying new products faces a competition of an independent material supplier (IS) providing remanufactured products to analyze each party's competitive strategy under each pricing model. We also identify situations under which the firms would obtain more profits and cause less environmental impact under the model with price discrimination compared with the model without price discrimination. A numerical study is provided to illustrate the performance of the model. A sensitivity analysis with respect to primary parameters is used to assess the stability of the model. The proposed model could be applied in many industrial fields where the managers have the full awareness of extended producer responsibility, and they are willing to engage in the project related to remanufacturing.
- Published
- 2022
37. OLIG2 regulates lncRNAs and its own expression during oligodendrocyte lineage formation
- Author
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Yanan You, Jia Qian Wu, Xiaomin Dong, Natasha Kharas, Bo Hai, Raquel Cuevas-Diaz Duran, Xizi Wu, and Haichao Wei
- Subjects
QH301-705.5 ,Physiology ,OLIG2 ,Nerve Tissue Proteins ,Plant Science ,Cell fate determination ,Biology ,Axon ensheathment ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Regulation after transcription ,0302 clinical medicine ,Transcriptional regulation ,Structural Biology ,medicine ,Basic Helix-Loop-Helix Transcription Factors ,Cell Lineage ,Biology (General) ,LncRNAs ,Transcription factor ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Oligodendrocyte differentiation ,Cell Differentiation ,Cell Biology ,Embryonic stem cell ,Neural stem cell ,Oligodendrocyte ,Cell biology ,Oligodendrocyte development ,Oligodendroglia ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,RNA, Long Noncoding ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Histone modification ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Developmental Biology ,Biotechnology ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Oligodendrocytes, responsible for axon ensheathment, are critical for central nervous system (CNS) development, function, and diseases. OLIG2 is an important transcription factor (TF) that acts during oligodendrocyte development and performs distinct functions at different stages. Previous studies have shown that lncRNAs (long non-coding RNAs; > 200 bp) have important functions during oligodendrocyte development, but their roles have not been systematically characterized and their regulation is not yet clear. Results We performed an integrated study of genome-wide OLIG2 binding and the epigenetic modification status of both coding and non-coding genes during three stages of oligodendrocyte differentiation in vivo: neural stem cells (NSCs), oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs), and newly formed oligodendrocytes (NFOs). We found that 613 lncRNAs have OLIG2 binding sites and are expressed in at least one cell type, which can potentially be activated or repressed by OLIG2. Forty-eight of them have increased expression in oligodendrocyte lineage cells. Predicting lncRNA functions by using a “guilt-by-association” approach revealed that the functions of these 48 lncRNAs were enriched in “oligodendrocyte development and differentiation.” Additionally, bivalent genes are known to play essential roles during embryonic stem cell differentiation. We identified bivalent genes in NSCs, OPCs, and NFOs and found that some bivalent genes bound by OLIG2 are dynamically regulated during oligodendrocyte development. Importantly, we unveiled a previously unknown mechanism that, in addition to transcriptional regulation via DNA binding, OLIG2 could self-regulate through the 3′ UTR of its own mRNA. Conclusions Our studies have revealed the missing links in the mechanisms regulating oligodendrocyte development at the transcriptional level and after transcription. The results of our research have improved the understanding of fundamental cell fate decisions during oligodendrocyte lineage formation, which can enable insights into demyelination diseases and regenerative medicine.
- Published
- 2019
38. Identifying Hub Genes, Key Pathways and Immune Cell Infiltration Characteristics in Pediatric and Adult Ulcerative Colitis by Integrated Bioinformatic Analysis
- Author
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Cong Hu, Mengxi Xiu, Bo-Hai Kuang, Yuan-Meng Liu, and Guangyuan Chen
- Subjects
Adult ,Microarray ,Physiology ,Naive B cell ,RAC1 ,CDC42 ,Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Paracrine Communication ,Humans ,Cell adhesion ,Child ,Gene ,Immunity, Cellular ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Gastroenterology ,Computational Biology ,Actin cytoskeleton ,Cell biology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Colitis, Ulcerative ,Biomarkers ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
In the present study, we investigated the differentially expressed genes (DEGs), pathways and immune cell infiltration characteristics of pediatric and adult ulcerative colitis (UC). We conducted DEG analysis using the microarray dataset GSE87473 containing 19 pediatric and 87 adult UC samples downloaded from the Gene Expression Omnibus. Gene ontology and pathway enrichment analyses were conducted using Metascape. We constructed the protein–protein interaction (PPI) network and the drug–target interaction network of DEGs and identified hub modules and genes using Cytoscape and analyzed immune cell infiltration in pediatric and adult UC using CIBERSORT. In total, 1700 DEGs were screened from the dataset. These genes were enriched mainly in inter-cellular items relating to cell junctions, cell adhesion, actin cytoskeleton and transmembrane receptor signaling pathways and intra-cellular items relating to the splicing, metabolism and localization of RNA. CDC42, POLR2A, RAC1, PIK3R1, MAPK1 and SRC were identified as hub DEGs. Immune cell infiltration analysis revealed higher proportions of naive B cells, resting memory T helper cells, regulatory T cells, monocytes, M0 macrophages and activated mast cells in pediatric UC, along with lower proportions of memory B cells, follicular helper T cells, γδ T cells, M2 macrophages, and activated dendritic cells. Our study suggested that hub genes CDC42, POLR2A, RAC1, PIK3R1, MAPK1 and SRC and immune cells including B cells, T cells, monocytes, macrophages and mast cells play vital roles in the pathological differences between pediatric and adult UC and may serve as potential biomarkers in the diagnosis and treatment of UC.
- Published
- 2019
39. A multi-agent system for sharing distributed manufacturing resources
- Author
-
Bo-hai Liu, Tao Zhou, Kai Li, and Hui Li
- Subjects
0209 industrial biotechnology ,Computer science ,Heuristic ,Multi-agent system ,Distributed computing ,General Engineering ,Scheduling (production processes) ,02 engineering and technology ,ComputingMethodologies_ARTIFICIALINTELLIGENCE ,Computer Science Applications ,Shared resource ,Scheduling (computing) ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Contract Net Protocol ,Artificial Intelligence ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Distributed manufacturing - Abstract
This paper considers a shared scheduling environment for distributed manufacturing resources. In this paper, we proposed a multi-agent system based approach to promote competition and cooperation among multi-agents and to achieve global optimal scheduling. We first build two multi-agent system (MAS) architectures. One is enterprise multi-agent subsystem (Sub-EMAS) architecture comprises job agents, resource agents and manager agents; the other one is enterprise alliance multi-agent system (EA-MAS) architecture involves the addition of a mediator agent and a scheduling agent. Then we design a Shared Contract Net Protocol (SCNP) to support both the Sub-EMAS and EA-MAS. We propose two heuristic algorithms to solve the scheduling model. The computational experiments show that the EA-MAS, with the integration of shared resource information, is able to provide shared scheduling scheme for distributed manufacturing with a good performance.
- Published
- 2018
40. Inhibitory Effects of iPSC-MSCs and Their Extracellular Vesicles on the Onset of Sialadenitis in a Mouse Model of Sjögren’s Syndrome
- Author
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Fei Liu, Qingguo Zhao, Taeko Shigemoto-Kuroda, Ryang Hwa Lee, and Bo Hai
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,lcsh:Internal medicine ,Article Subject ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,medicine ,lcsh:RC31-1245 ,Induced pluripotent stem cell ,Molecular Biology ,Autoimmune disease ,business.industry ,Mesenchymal stem cell ,Autoantibody ,Cell Biology ,medicine.disease ,Sialadenitis ,In vitro ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,Bone marrow ,business ,Research Article - Abstract
No effective treatment for Sjögren’s syndrome (SS), a chronic autoimmune disease affecting mainly salivary and lacrimal glands, is available now. Systemic infusion of allogeneic mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) isolated from tissues such as bone marrow (BM) alleviated SS in mouse models and a small clinical trial, but further research and application of this MSC therapy were hindered by limited expandability, significant donor variations, and safety concerns of tissue-derived MSCs. To circumvent these issues, we derived MSCs from human iPSCs using an optimized protocol that can be easily scaled up to produce a huge amount of standardized MSCs. Our iPSC-MSCs inhibited the onset of lymphocyte infiltration into salivary glands in the NOD mouse model of SS in the same way as BM-MSCs. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) carry bioactive molecules in the same way as their originating cells and are more stable and considered much safer than cells for therapies. We found that EVs derived from BM-MSCs and iPSC-MSCs suppressed activation of immune cells and expression of proinflammation factors essential for SS progression in vitro and that infusion of iPSC-MSC EVs at the predisease stage decreased the lymphocyte infiltration in salivary glands and serum autoantibody levels in the same way as infusion of BM-MSCs and iPSC-MSCs. These data suggested that iPSC-MSC EVs have the potential to prevent the progression of SS before the onset of sialadenitis.
- Published
- 2018
41. Intragland Shh gene delivery mitigated irradiation-induced hyposalivation in a miniature pig model
- Author
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Qingguo Zhao, Linsha Ma, Xiaoshan Wu, Fei Liu, Xiangchun Li, Lizheng Qin, Yipu Xu, Liang Hu, Bo Hai, Chunmei Zhang, Zhao Zhu, Xiaoyu Feng, Jingsong Wang, Shimin Chang, and Songlin Wang
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Miniature pig ,Swine ,Genetic enhancement ,Blotting, Western ,Saliva secretion ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Hedgehog signaling ,Gene delivery ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Xerostomia ,Adenoviridae ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,stomatognathic system ,Western blot ,Transduction, Genetic ,medicine ,Animals ,Parotid Gland ,Hedgehog Proteins ,Progenitor cell ,hyposalivation ,Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous) ,pig model ,Drug Carriers ,Radiotherapy ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Head and neck cancer ,Genetic Therapy ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,gene therapy ,Hedgehog signaling pathway ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,Swine, Miniature ,business ,Research Paper - Abstract
Irreversible hypofunction of salivary glands is common in head and neck cancer survivors treated with radiotherapy and can only be temporarily relieved with current treatments. We found recently in mouse models that transient activation of Hedgehog pathway following irradiation rescued salivary gland function by preserving salivary stem/progenitor cells, parasympathetic innervation and microvessels. Due to huge differences between salivary glands of rodents and humans, to examine the translational potential of this approach, we evaluated effects of Shh gene transfer in a miniature pig model of irradiation-induced hyposalivation. Methods: The right parotid of each pig was irradiated with a single dose of 20 Gray. Shh and control GFP genes were delivered into irradiated parotid glands by noninvasive retrograde ductal instillation of corresponding adenoviral vectors 4 or 16 weeks after irradiation. Parotid saliva was collected every two weeks. Parotid glands were collected 5 or 20 weeks after irradiation for histology, Western blot and qRT-PCR assays. Results: Shh gene delivery 4 weeks after irradiation significantly improved stimulated saliva secretion and local blood supply up to 20 weeks, preserved saliva-producing acinar cells, parasympathetic innervation and microvessels as found in mouse models, and also activated autophagy and inhibited fibrogenesis in irradiated glands. Conclusion: These data indicate the translational potential of transient activation of Hedgehog pathway to preserve salivary function following irradiation.
- Published
- 2018
42. Analysis of tower foundation of long span single tower cable stayed bridge
- Author
-
Bo-Hai Liu
- Subjects
Long span ,Engineering ,business.industry ,Foundation (engineering) ,Structural engineering ,Cable stayed ,business ,Tower ,Bridge (interpersonal) - Abstract
The pylon is an important stressed structure in the single pylon cable-stayed bridge. The rationality of bearing platform and pile foundation of pylon foundation is one of the key research contents in the design of single pylon cable-stayed bridge. The main bridge of Tarim bridge in Xinjiang is a single tower double span cable-stayed bridge with span arrangement of (41 + 168 + 168 + 41) m and total height of cable tower of 125m. Arc shaped concrete tower columns are adopted. The stress of cable tower foundation is complex. The stress analysis of foundation scheme is one of the key problems of this project. In this paper, the geological conditions, structural stress, economic rationality, construction convenience and other factors are comprehensively considered, the different foundation types are compared and analyzed, the reasonable foundation type and layout type are determined, and the stress of the pile and cap structure of the main tower foundation is calculated and analyzed. Through the solid finite element model, this paper analyzes the influence of the stiffness deformation of pile cap on the stress of pile group foundation. The calculation results show that the stress of dumbbell shaped pile cap is more reasonable than that of rectangular foundation pile cap, and the number of pile foundation and the calculated pile length are reduced in varying degrees. By adjusting the pile foundation arrangement under dumbbell shaped foundation, the stress of pile foundation can be more uniform, which can be used as the foundation for similar projects. The foundation design provides reference and reference.
- Published
- 2021
43. Crack stop holes in steel bridge decks: Drilling method and effects
- Author
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Bo-hai Ji, Xie Shuhui, Liu Tianjia, and Zhong-qiu Fu
- Subjects
Flank ,Materials science ,Tension (physics) ,Metals and Alloys ,General Engineering ,Drilling ,020101 civil engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Edge (geometry) ,0201 civil engineering ,law.invention ,Stress (mechanics) ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,0203 mechanical engineering ,law ,Horizontal position representation ,Bridge (instrument) ,Composite material ,Stress concentration - Abstract
Force analysis using a compact tension model, as recommended by ASTM, was carried out on a crack stop hole. The stress before, and after, drilling the hole was compared in terms of stress concentration and stress gradient. The optimum drilling location and diameter were studied through analysis of different locations and diameters. By analyzing the effects of flank holes and an additional hole, drilling advice was proposed and fatigue testing of the cracks in a steel bridge deck with a crack stop hole was conducted. The results show that the stress at the crack tip with a crack stop hole decreased, and the major principal stress around the hole was distributed accordingly. The optimum position of the crack stop hole centre was where the centre of the crack stop hole was situated behind the crack and the hole edge coincided with the crack tip. Therefore, hole diameters larger than 8 mm, or those weakening the section by 10%, were suggested as the best diameters. In terms of multi-hole crack stopping, a flank hole was not recommended. The optimum horizontal position of flank holes was at a distance of 1/4 of a single hole diameter from, and in front of, the single hole. Besides, the experiment showed that crack stop hole could only prevent cracks from growing and had no influence on crack growth rate.
- Published
- 2017
44. Association of increased urine brain derived neurotrophic factor with lower urinary tract symptoms in men with benign prostatic hyperplasia
- Author
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Longwang Wang, Hongwei Huang, Ruihai Xiao, Jianlong Li, Bo Hai, Yi Yu, and Renrui Kuang
- Subjects
Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Urinary system ,Prostatic Hyperplasia ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Biomedical Engineering ,Urology ,Urine ,urologic and male genital diseases ,Biochemistry ,Biomaterials ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms ,Lower urinary tract symptoms ,Genetics ,Humans ,Medicine ,Aged ,Brain-derived neurotrophic factor ,Creatinine ,Urinary Bladder, Overactive ,urogenital system ,business.industry ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,Middle Aged ,Hyperplasia ,medicine.disease ,nervous system ,chemistry ,Case-Control Studies ,Biomarker (medicine) ,International Prostate Symptom Score ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Urinary brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), an ubiquitous neurotrophin, was found to rise in patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). We hypothesized that the urinary level of BDNF could be a potential biomarker for lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in patients with BPH. Totally, 76 patients with BPH-caused LUTS and 32 male control subjects without BPH were enrolled. International Prostate Symptom Score (IPSS) was applied to assess the symptom severity of LUTS. Urodynamic tests were performed for the diagnosis of underlying detrusor overactivity (DO) in the patients with BPH. Urine samples were collected from all subjects. Urinary BDNF levels were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and normalized by urinary creatinine (Cr) levels. Seventy-six BPH patients were divided into moderate LUTS group (n=51, 7IPSS≤20) and severe LUTS group (n=25, IPSS20) according to the IPSS. Of the 76 BPH patients, DO was present in 34 (44.7%) according to the urodynamic test. The urinary BDNF/Cr levels were significantly higher in BPH patients with moderate LUTS (8.29±3.635, P0.0001) and severe LUTS (11.8±6.44, P0.0001) than normal controls (1.71±0.555). Patients with severe LUTS tended to have higher urinary BDNF/Cr levels than patients with moderate LUTS (11.8±6.44 vs. 8.29±3.635, P=0.000). The conditions of BPH with LUTS correlated with elevated urinary BDNF levels, and urinary BDNF levels were even higher in BPH-DO patients. The results of this study have provided evidence to suggest that urinary BDNF level test could evaluate the severity of LUTS in BPH patients, and BDNF level can be used as a biomarker for the diagnosis of DO in BPH patients.
- Published
- 2017
45. Retrospective Examination of Q Fever Endocarditis
- Author
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Quan Fang, Jeffrey Hsu, Bo-Hai Wen, Baotong Zhou, Lian Wu, Xiao-Lu Xiong, Qi Miao, Xiaowei Yan, Hongwei Fan, Wei Chen, and Xiao Han
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,0301 basic medicine ,China ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030106 microbiology ,lcsh:Medicine ,Q fever ,Disease ,Serology ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Endocarditis ,Serologic Tests ,Blood culture ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Retrospective Studies ,Blood Culture ,Q Fever ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Retrospective cohort study ,Endocarditis, Bacterial ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Coxiella burnetii ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Infective endocarditis ,Female ,Original Article ,business - Abstract
Background: Q fever endocarditis, a chronic illness caused by Coxiella burnetii, can be fatal if misdiagnosed or left untreated. Despite a relatively high positive rate of Q fever serology in healthy individuals in the mainland of China, very few cases of Q fever endocarditis have been reported. This study summarized cases of Q fever endocarditis among blood culture negative endocarditis (BCNE) patients and discussed factors attributing to the low diagnostic rate. Methods: We identified confirmed cases of Q fever endocarditis among 637 consecutive patients with infective endocarditis (IE) in the Peking Union Medical College Hospital between 2006 and 2016. The clinical findings for each confirmed case were recorded. BCNE patients were also examined and each BCNE patient’s Q fever risk factors were identified. The risk factors and presence of Q fever serologic testing between BCNE patients suspected and unsuspected of Q fever were compared using the Chi-squared or Chi-squared with Yates’ correction for continuity. Results: Among the IE patients examined, there were 147 BCNE patients, of whom only 11 patients (7.5%) were suspected of Q fever and undergone serological testing for C. burnetii. Six out of 11 suspected cases were diagnosed as Q fever endocarditis. For the remaining 136 BCNE patients, none of them was suspected of Q fever nor underwent relevant testing. Risk factors for Q fever endocarditis were comparable between suspected and unsuspected patients, with the most common risk factors being valvulopathy in both groups. However, significantly more patients had consulted the Infectious Diseases Division and undergone comprehensive diagnostic tests in the suspected group than the unsuspected group (100% vs. 63%, P = 0.03). Conclusions: Q fever endocarditis is a serious yet treatable condition. Lacking awareness of the disease may prevent BCNE patients from being identified, despite having Q fever risk factors. Increasing awareness and guideline adherence are crucial in avoiding misdiagnosing and missed diagnosing of the disease. Key words: Blood Culture; Endocarditis; Q Fever
- Published
- 2017
46. A novel strategy to prepare LDH networks loaded carbon structure by C-MEMS techniques for glucose detection
- Author
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Yunying Liu, Wang Zhengde, Hui Yan, Ma Litong, Guo Guibao, Bai Yuchen, Wang Xiaoxia, Ying-Quan Zou, and Bo Hai
- Subjects
Microelectromechanical systems ,Nanocomposite ,Fabrication ,Materials science ,Nanostructure ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Photoresist ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,chemistry ,0210 nano-technology ,Carbon ,Pyrolysis ,Lithography - Abstract
NiAl-layered double hydroxide (NiAl-LDH) networks loaded carbon microcylinder (CMC) hybrid was synthesized for the first time using typical carbon based microelectromechanical systems (C-MEMS) techniques combined with in situ growth progress. The incorporation of NiAl-LDH on C-MEMS structures via a simple pyrolysis of modified photoresist was investigated. With proper control of parameters in lithography and hydrothermal processes, the NiAl-LDH/CMC composites with suitable morphology were fabricated. When the composites applied as new catalytic material for glucose detection, this simple sensor showed satisfying electrocatalytic properties towards glucose oxidation owing to its unique structure and excellent electric conductivity. It is also worth pointing out that this novel fabrication process can equip carbon microfeatures with various nanostructures, and have wide potential applications in scaling up carbon based nanocomposites.
- Published
- 2017
47. Cryptanalysis and Improvement of a Remote Anonymous Authentication Protocol for Mobile Multi-server Environments
- Author
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Shiqiang Zhu, Xingbing Fu, Caifen Wang, Bo Hai, Congcong Meng, and Hailong Yao
- Subjects
0209 industrial biotechnology ,Computer science ,Data_MISCELLANEOUS ,Password cracking ,02 engineering and technology ,Computer security ,computer.software_genre ,01 natural sciences ,Random oracle ,Authenticated Key Exchange ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,Forward secrecy ,0103 physical sciences ,Cryptographic hash function ,Session key ,010301 acoustics ,Replay attack ,computer ,Key exchange - Abstract
Recently, Feng et al. proposed an anonymous remote biometric authentication protocol for mobile multi-server environments. The protocol is vulnerable to session key attack, anonymity attack, replay attack, offline password guessing attack, and impersonation attack. To withstand these flaws, we propose a new secure and efficient anonymous remote biometric authentication protocol for mobile multi-server environments based on cryptographic hash function and elliptic curve cryptography(ECC). Security analysis shows that our protocol can achieve the authenticated key exchange in the random oracle model, with strong anonymity and perfect forward security guarantees, and can resist all known Internet attacks. Performance evaluation shows that our protocol is more secure than the previous protocols, and the computational efficiency and communication efficiency are more suitable for the application requirements of the mobile multi-server environments.
- Published
- 2019
48. In situ encapsulated Co/MnOx nanoparticles inside quasi-MOF-74 for the higher alcohols synthesis from syngas
- Author
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Wen-Gang Cui, Jing-Jing Dai, Hongbo Zhang, Bo-Hai Gao, Tong-Liang Hu, Zheng-Chang Wei, and Yan-Ting Li
- Subjects
Materials science ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,Nanoparticle ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Catalysis ,Dissociation (chemistry) ,0104 chemical sciences ,Chemical engineering ,0210 nano-technology ,Selectivity ,Pyrolysis ,Bimetallic strip ,General Environmental Science ,Syngas ,Space velocity - Abstract
Selective conversion of syngas (CO/H2) to higher alcohols (C2+OH) is of great interest but presents a significant challenge in keeping an appropriate balance between the carbon chain growth and CO insertion to achieve a high C2+OH selectivity. Herein we found that a core-shell Co/MnOx@quasi-MOF-74 catalyst can be easily constructed through controlled deligandation of a bimetallic CoMn-MOF-74 by partial pyrolysis strategy. The as-obtained Co/MnOx@quasi-MOF-74 catalyst produces three types of synergistic active sites (Co°, coordinatively unsaturated sites (CUSs) of Co2+ and Co2C) that collaborate with each other to enhance C2+OH formation during the reaction. The Co° nanoparticles within the framework of quasi-MOF-74 enable CO dissociation and significant CHx-CHy coupling to occur while the uniformly distributed CUSs of Co2+ working with Co2C strengthen CO insertion process, leading an outstanding catalytic performance in the process of CO hydrogenation. The total selectivity of alcohols (ROH) reached 48.7 wt%, where of 93.2 wt% can be C2+OH, and very low CH4 and indetectable CO2 were produced at 200 °C, 3.0 MPa (CO/H2 = 1/2) and a gaseous hourly space velocity (GHSV) of 4500 mL g−1 h−1, reaching the catalytic performance comparable to that of the optimal level of multifunctional catalyst operated at much higher pressure (6.0 MPa). This work highlights the potential of using MOF-derived quasi-MOF materials as a tunable platform to explore highly efficient catalysts for syngas conversion.
- Published
- 2020
49. Bending behaviour of lightweight aggregate concrete-filled steel tube spatial truss beam
- Author
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Bo-hai Ji, Zhong-qiu Fu, Zhu Wei, and Han-bing Ge
- Subjects
Materials science ,business.industry ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Metals and Alloys ,General Engineering ,Truss ,020101 civil engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Structural engineering ,Force balance ,Finite element method ,0201 civil engineering ,Flexural strength ,Deflection (engineering) ,021105 building & construction ,Chord (music) ,Steel tube ,Bearing capacity ,business - Abstract
A lightweight aggregate concrete-filled steel tube (LACFST) spatial truss beam was tested under bending load. The performance was studied by the analysis of the beam deflection and strains in its chords and webs. According to the test results, several assumptions were made to deduce the bearing capacity calculation method based on the force balance of the whole section. An optimal dimension relationship for the truss beam chords was proposed and verified by finite element analysis. Results show that the LACFST spatial truss beam failed after excessive deflection. The strain distribution agreed with Bernoulli-Euler theoretical prediction. The truss beam flexural bearing capacity calculation results matched test evidence with only a 3% difference between the two. Finite element analyses with different chord dimensions show that the ultimate bearing capacity increases as the chord dimensions increase when the chords have a diameter smaller than optimal one; otherwise, it remains almost unchanged as the chord dimensions increase.
- Published
- 2016
50. Rescue Effects and Underlying Mechanisms of IntraglandShhGene Delivery on Irradiation-Induced Hyposalivation
- Author
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Dharanipathy Rangaraj, Lizheng Qin, Bo Hai, Veera R. Gutti, Fei Liu, and Qingguo Zhao
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Genetically modified mouse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Genetic Vectors ,Submandibular Gland ,Saliva secretion ,Mice, Transgenic ,Gene delivery ,Xerostomia ,Adenoviridae ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Transduction, Genetic ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Regeneration ,Hedgehog Proteins ,Progenitor cell ,Sonic hedgehog ,Molecular Biology ,Hedgehog ,Research Articles ,Radiation ,biology ,Gene Transfer Techniques ,Genetic Therapy ,Submandibular gland ,Hedgehog signaling pathway ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Microvessels ,embryonic structures ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Irreversible hypofunction of salivary glands is common in head and neck cancer survivors treated with radiotherapy and can only be temporarily relieved with current treatments. We found in an inducible sonic hedgehog (Shh) transgenic mouse model that transient activation of the Hedgehog pathway after irradiation rescued salivary gland function in males by preserving salivary stem/progenitor cells and parasympathetic innervation. To translate these findings into feasible clinical application, we evaluated the effects of Shh gene transfer to salivary glands of wild-type mice on irradiation-induced hyposalivation. Shh or control GFP gene was delivered by noninvasive retrograde ductal instillation of corresponding adenoviral vectors. In both male and female mice, Shh gene delivery efficiently activated Hedgehog/Gli signaling, and significantly improved stimulated saliva secretion and preserved saliva-producing acinar cells after irradiation. In addition to preserving parasympathetic innervation through induction of neurotrophic factors, Shh gene delivery also alleviated the irradiation damage of the microvasculature, likely via inducing angiogenic factors, but did not expand the progeny of cells responsive to Hedgehog/Gli signaling. These data indicate that transient activation of the Hedgehog pathway by gene delivery is promising to rescue salivary function after irradiation in both sexes, and the Hedgehog/Gli pathway may function mainly in cell nonautonomous manners to achieve the rescue effect.
- Published
- 2016
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