168 results on '"L. Huo"'
Search Results
2. Correlation between LOX-1 and CX3CR1 and Vascular Endothelial Function, Fibrinolytic Activity, and Recurrence after Thrombolysis in Patients with Cerebral Infarction
- Author
-
X. L. Huo, J. H. Shao, L. S. Wang, C. H. Zhou, X. W. Ying, and X. C. Jin
- Subjects
Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Flexible Job Shop Scheduling Based on Digital Twin and Improved Bacterial Foraging
- Author
-
L. Huo and J. Y. Wang
- Subjects
Modeling and Simulation ,Computer Science Applications - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. High prevalence of vertebral deformity in tumor-induced osteomalacia associated with impaired bone microstructure
- Author
-
X, Ni, W, Guan, Y, Jiang, X, Li, Y, Chi, Q, Pang, W, Liu, R, Jiajue, O, Wang, M, Li, X, Xing, H, Wu, L, Huo, Y, Liu, J, Jin, X, Zhou, W, Lv, L, Zhou, Y, Xia, Y, Gong, W, Yu, and W, Xia
- Subjects
Endocrinology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism - Abstract
Patients with tumor-induced osteomalacia (TIO) often suffer from irreversible height loss due to vertebral deformity. However, the prevalence of vertebral deformity in TIO patients varies among limited studies. In addition, the distribution and type of vertebral deformity, as well as its risk factors, remain unknown. This study aimed to identify the prevalence, distribution, type and risk factors for vertebral deformity in a large cohort of TIO patients.A total of 164 TIO patients were enrolled in this retrospective study. Deformity in vertebrae T4-L4 by lateral thoracolumbar spine radiographs was evaluated according to the semiquantitative method of Genant. Bone microstructure was evaluated by trabecular bone score (TBS) and high-resolution peripheral QCT (HR-pQCT).Ninety-nine (99/164, 60.4%) patients had 517 deformed vertebrae with a bimodal pattern of distribution (T7-9 and T11-L1), and biconcave deformity was the most common type (267/517, 51.6%). Compared with patients without vertebral deformity, those with vertebral deformity had a higher male/female ratio, longer disease duration, more height loss, lower serum phosphate, higher bone turnover markers, lower TBS, lower areal bone mineral density (aBMD), lower peripheral volumetric BMD (vBMD) and worse microstructure. Lower trabecular vBMD and worse trabecular microstructure in the peripheral bone and lower spine TBS were associated with an increased risk of vertebral deformity independently of aBMD. After adjusting for the number of deformed vertebrae, we found little difference in clinical indexes among the patients with different types of vertebral deformity. However, we found significant correlations of clinical indexes with the number of deformed vertebrae and the spinal deformity index.We reported a high prevalence of vertebral deformity in the largest cohort of TIO patients and described the vertebral deformity in detail for the first time. Risk factors for vertebral deformity included male sex, long disease duration, height loss, abnormal biochemical indexes and bone impairment. Clinical manifestation, biochemical indexes and bone impairment were correlated with the number of deformed vertebrae and degree of deformity, but not the type of deformity.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The nonshivering thermogenesis of brown adipose tissue and fat mobilization of striped hamsters exposed to cycles of cold and warm temperatures
- Author
-
D.-L. Huo, M.-H. Bao, J. Cao, and Z.-J. Zhao
- Subjects
Animal Science and Zoology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. [Research progress of metabolic flexibility in metabolic diseases]
- Author
-
W, Huang, W Q, Ruan, C L, Huo, H N, Zhai, J, Zhuang, and J, Lu
- Subjects
Metabolic Diseases ,Humans - Abstract
代谢灵活性是指生物体能够根据供能底物的可获得性,适应性调节底物氧化的能力,是肥胖以及相关代谢疾病的预警指标之一,具有重要的实践价值。对代谢灵活性进行准确评价以及有针对性的干预是预防和治疗代谢疾病的重要方式。本综述对代谢灵活性概念的提出与发展进行介绍,并梳理代谢灵活性的评价方法及与代谢疾病的关系,并就运动对代谢灵活性的改善作用进行论述。.
- Published
- 2022
7. [Determination of acetochlor and its metabolites in urine using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry]
- Author
-
M Y, Chen, H, Zhang, Z L, Huo, H, Chen, J R, Dou, B L, Zhu, and F, Zhang
- Subjects
Acetonitriles ,Toluidines ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Solid Phase Extraction ,Humans ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Chromatography, Liquid - Published
- 2022
8. The DNA repair pathway as a therapeutic target to synergize with trastuzumab deruxtecan, an anti-HER2 antibody-drug conjugate
- Author
-
J. Lee, K. Kida, H. Liu, Y.J. Gi, G. Manyam, J. Wang, A. Multani, L. Huo, D. Tripathy, and N. Ueno
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism array and whole-genome sequencing reveal the inbreeding progression of Banna minipig inbred line
- Author
-
Liqing Zhang, Y. Z. Zeng, X. H. Ye, Xiaowei Wu, W. M. Cheng, W. R. Pan, Yu H. Sun, K. Yang, X. Zhang, and J. L. Huo
- Subjects
Genetics ,Whole genome sequencing ,China ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Swine ,Single-nucleotide polymorphism ,General Medicine ,Biology ,Genome ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Breed ,SNP genotyping ,Loss of heterozygosity ,Animals ,Swine, Miniature ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Inbreeding ,Allele - Abstract
Inbred pigs are promising animal models for biomedical research and xenotransplantation. Established in 1980, the Banna minipig inbred (BMI) line originated from a sow and its own male offspring. It was selected from a small backcountry minority Lahu village, where records show that no other pig breed has ever been introduced. During the inbreeding process, we perfomed extreme inbreeding over 23 consecutive generations using full-sibling or parent-offspring mating. In order to investigate the inbreeding effects in BMI pigs across generations over the past 40 years, in this study we conducted a genome-wide SNP genotyping of the last 10 generations, representing generations 14-23. In total, we genotyped 57,746 SNPs, corresponding to an average decrease in heterozygosity rate of 0.0078 per generation. Furthermore, we were only able to identify 18,216 polymorphic loci with a MAF larger than 0.05, which is substantially lower than the values in previous reports on other pig breeds. In addition, we sequenced the genome of the first pig in the twenty-third generation (inbreeding coefficient 99.28%) to an average coverage of 12.4× to evaluate at the genome level the impact of advanced inbreeding. ROH analysis indicates that BMI pigs have longer ROHs than Wuzhishan and Duroc pigs. Those long ROH regions in BMI pigs are enriched for distinct functions compared with the highly polymorphic regions. Our study reveals a genome-wide allele diversity loss during the progress of inbreeding in BMI pigs and characterizes ROH and polymorphic regions as a result of inbreeding. Overall, our results indicate the successful establishment of the BMI line, which paves the way for further in-depth studies.
- Published
- 2021
10. Analysis of Electromagnetic Wave Propagation in Unmagnetized Hypersonic Vehicle Plasma Sheath Using the Variational Method
- Author
-
L. Huo, Jianyi Chen, Jing Zhang, and G. X. Tang
- Subjects
Electromagnetic field ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Debye sheath ,Wave propagation ,Electron ,Plasma ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Electromagnetic radiation ,Action (physics) ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,Computational physics ,symbols.namesake ,Variational method ,Physics::Plasma Physics ,Physics::Space Physics ,0103 physical sciences ,symbols - Abstract
The propagation of electromagnetic waves in the plasma sheath is investigated theoretically and numerically using the variational method, which handles the inhomogeneity of the plasma sheath. We derive the variation of the action integral, which can be numerically represented by expanding the velocity and electromagnetic fields to the piecewise polynomial function space. We analyze the transmissivity of electromagnetic waves propagating through the plasma sheath with the barrier and the barrier-parabolic electron number density profile. We give the frequency-dependent transmissivity of electromagnetic wave propagation in different inhomogeneous plasma sheaths. The electromagnetic energy density derived from the Lagrangian density is also given, and the result shows that the collision between electrons and neutral particles can be used to enhance the transmission of electromagnetic waves in the plasma sheath.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Discovery of INCB123667, a potent and selective cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) inhibitor for the treatment of cyclin E dysregulated cancers
- Author
-
S. Wee, M. Ye, Y. Lo, M. Hansbury, N. Shin, M. Weber, V. Roman, L. Huo, H. Skaggs, K. Drake, K. Kapilashrami, K. Stump, J. Yang, S. Chand, C. Timmers, J. Hummel, Y. Ye, G. Zhang, Y.O. Yang, M. Covington, L. Wu, H. Koblish, and S. Kim
- Subjects
Cancer Research ,Oncology - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A novel non-stationary clutter compensation algorithm for ariborne radar with a yaw angle
- Author
-
L. Huo, J. Chen, Xingzhao Liu, Guisheng Liao, and P. Huang
- Subjects
Euler angles ,symbols.namesake ,law ,Control theory ,Computer science ,symbols ,Clutter ,Radar ,Compensation algorithm ,law.invention - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Brain-Specific Relative Biological Effectiveness of Protons Based on Long-term Outcome of Patients With Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma
- Author
-
Annie W. Chan, Jay S. Loeffler, Saveli Goldberg, Ying Sun, Jun Ma, Xiaowu Deng, Barbara C. Fullerton, Judith Adams, Wan L. Huo, Harald Paganetti, Hsiao M. Lu, Jason M. Slater, and Ying Y. Zhang
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Temporal lobe ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Relative biological effectiveness ,medicine ,Proton Therapy ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Radiation treatment planning ,Prospective cohort study ,Proton therapy ,Radiation ,Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Radiotherapy Dosage ,medicine.disease ,Radiation therapy ,Treatment Outcome ,Oncology ,Nasopharyngeal carcinoma ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Female ,Radiotherapy, Intensity-Modulated ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Monte Carlo Method ,Relative Biological Effectiveness - Abstract
Uncertainties in relative biological effectiveness (RBE) constitute a major pitfall of the use of protons in clinics. An RBE value of 1.1, which is based on cell culture and animal models, is currently used in clinical proton planning. The purpose of this study was to determine RBE for temporal lobe radiographic changes using long-term follow-up data from patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma.Five hundred sixty-six patients with newly diagnosed nasopharyngeal carcinoma received double-scattering proton therapy or intensity modulated radiation therapy at our institutions. The 2 treatment cohorts were well matched. Proton dose distributions were simulated using Monte Carlo and compared with those obtained from the proton clinical treatment planning system. Late treatment effect was defined as development of enhancement of temporal lobe on T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, with or without accompanying clinical symptoms. The tolerance dose was calculated with receiving operator characteristic analysis and the Youden index. Tolerance curves, expressed as a cumulative dose-volume histogram, were generated using the cutoff points.With a median follow-up period5 years for both cohorts, 10% of proton patients and 4% of patients undergoing intensity modulated radiation therapy developed temporal lobe enhancement in unilateral temporal lobe. There was no significant difference in dose distributions between the Monte Carlo method and treatment planning system. The tolerance dose-volume levels were V10 (26.1%), V20 (21.9%), V30 (14.0%), V40 (7.7%), V50 (4.8%), and V60 (3.3%) for proton therapy (P.03). Comparison of the two tolerance curves revealed that tolerance doses of proton treatments were lower than that of photon treatments at all dose levels. The dose tolerance at D1% was 58.56 Gy for protons and 69.07 Gy for photons. The RBE for temporal lobe enhancement from proton treatments were calculated to be 1.18.Using long-term clinical outcome of patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma, our data suggest that the RBE for temporal lobe enhancement is 1.18 at D1%. A prospective study in a large cohort would be necessary to confirm these findings.
- Published
- 2020
14. [MicroRNA-26a-5p targets Wnt5a to regulate osteogenic differentiation of human periodontal ligament stem cell from inflammatory microenvironment]
- Author
-
K K, Zhang, Y D, Geng, S B, Wang, and L, Huo
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Mice ,MicroRNAs ,Osteogenesis ,Periodontal Ligament ,Stem Cells ,Animals ,Humans ,Mice, Nude ,Cell Differentiation ,Wnt-5a Protein - Published
- 2019
15. [β-catenin nuclear translocation represses thyroid cancer stem cells differentiating into cells with sodium-iodine symporter functional expression]
- Author
-
L, Lan, W, Deng, D, Cui, H L, Chen, L L, Huo, Q Y, Zuo, W, Li, G Y, Zhang, and Y, Luo
- Subjects
Iodine Radioisotopes ,Mice ,Symporters ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Sodium ,Neoplastic Stem Cells ,Animals ,Humans ,Mice, SCID ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,beta Catenin - Published
- 2019
16. Knockdown of long noncoding RNA SNHG7 inhibits the proliferation and promotes apoptosis of thyroid cancer cells by downregulating BDNF
- Author
-
Y-H, Wang, B-L, Huo, C, Li, G, Ma, and W, Cao
- Subjects
Male ,Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Down-Regulation ,Humans ,Apoptosis ,Female ,RNA, Long Noncoding ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Middle Aged ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Proliferation - Abstract
Recently, long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have got much attention for their role in tumor progression. LncRNA small nucleolar RNA host gene 7 (SNHG7) was studied in this research to identify how it affects the development of thyroid cancer (TC).SNHG7 expression was detected by quantitative Real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) in both TC cells and tissue samples. Pearson's Chi-square test was used to determine the association of SNHG7 expression with several clinicopathological factors. Moreover, colony formation assay, cell proliferation and cell apoptosis assay were conducted. In addition, by performing qRT-PCR and Western blot assay, the underlying mechanism was explored.SNHG7 expression level was higher in TC samples than that in corresponding ones. The SNHG7 expression was associated with tumor size and TNM stage. Moreover, TC cell proliferation was inhibited, and TC cell apoptosis was induced after SNHG7 was knocked down in vitro. Moreover, the mRNA and protein expressions of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) were downregulated after knockdown of SNHG7. Furthermore, the expression level of BDNF was positively related to the expression of SNHG7 in TC tissues.These results suggested that knockdown of SNHG7 could inhibit TC cell proliferation and induce cell apoptosis via downregulating BDNF, which might be a potential therapeutic target in TC.
- Published
- 2019
17. Measurements of dihadron correlations relative to the event plane in Au+Au collisions at GeV *
- Author
-
H. Agakishiev, M. M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, A. V. Alakhverdyants, I. Alekseev, J. Alford, B. D. Anderson, C. D. Anson, D. Arkhipkin, G. S. Averichev, J. Balewski, D. R. Beavis, N. K. Behera, R. Bellwied, M. J. Betancourt, R. R. Betts, A. Bhasin, A. K. Bhati, H. Bichsel, J. Bielcik, J. Bielcikova, B. Biritz, L. C. Bland, W. Borowski, J. Bouchet, E. Braidot, A. V. Brandin, A. Bridgeman, S. G. Brovko, E. Bruna, S. Bueltmann, I. Bunzarov, T. P. Burton, X. Z. Cai, H. Caines, M. Calderón de la Barca Sánchez, D. Cebra, R. Cendejas, M. C. Cervantes, Z. Chajecki, P. Chaloupka, S. Chattopadhyay, H. F. Chen, J. H. Chen, J. Y. Chen, L. Chen, J. Cheng, M. Cherney, A. Chikanian, K. E. Choi, W. Christie, P. Chung, M. J. M. Codrington, R. Corliss, J. G. Cramer, H. J. Crawford, S. Dash, A. Davila Leyva, L. C. De Silva, R. R. Debbe, T. G. Dedovich, A. A. Derevschikov, R. Derradi de Souza, L. Didenko, P. Djawotho, S. M. Dogra, X. Dong, J. L. Drachenberg, J. E. Draper, J. C. Dunlop, L. G. Efimov, M. Elnimr, J. Engelage, G. Eppley, M. Estienne, L. Eun, O. Evdokimov, R. Fatemi, J. Fedorisin, A. Feng, R. G. Fersch, P. Filip, E. Finch, V. Fine, Y. Fisyak, C. A. Gagliardi, D. R. Gangadharan, A. Geromitsos, F. Geurts, P. Ghosh, Y. N. Gorbunov, A. Gordon, O. Grebenyuk, D. Grosnick, S. M. Guertin, A. Gupta, W. Guryn, B. Haag, O. Hajkova, A. Hamed, L-X. Han, J. W. Harris, J. P. Hays-Wehle, M. Heinz, S. Heppelmann, A. Hirsch, E. Hjort, G. W. Hoffmann, D. J. Hofman, B. Huang, H. Z. Huang, T. J. Humanic, L. Huo, G. Igo, P. Jacobs, W. W. Jacobs, C. Jena, F. Jin, J. Joseph, E. G. Judd, S. Kabana, K. Kang, J. Kapitan, K. Kauder, H. Ke, D. Keane, A. Kechechyan, D. Kettler, D. P. Kikola, J. Kiryluk, A. Kisiel, V. Kizka, A. G. Knospe, D. D. Koetke, T. Kollegger, J. Konzer, I. Koralt, L. Koroleva, W. Korsch, L. Kotchenda, V. Kouchpil, P. Kravtsov, K. Krueger, M. Krus, L. Kumar, P. Kurnadi, M. A. C. Lamont, J. M. Landgraf, S. LaPointe, J. Lauret, A. Lebedev, R. Lednicky, J. H. Lee, W. Leight, M. J. LeVine, C. Li, L. Li, N. Li, W. Li, X. Li, Y. Li, Z. M. Li, M. A. Lisa, F. Liu, H. Liu, J. Liu, T. Ljubicic, W. J. Llope, R. S. Longacre, W. A. Love, Y. Lu, E. V. Lukashov, X. Luo, G. L. Ma, Y. G. Ma, D. P. Mahapatra, R. Majka, O. I. Mall, L. K. Mangotra, R. Manweiler, S. Margetis, C. Markert, H. Masui, H. S. Matis, Yu. A. Matulenko, D. McDonald, T. S. McShane, A. Meschanin, R. Milner, N. G. Minaev, S. Mioduszewski, A. Mischke, M. K. Mitrovski, B. Mohanty, M. M. Mondal, B. Morozov, D. A. Morozov, M. G. Munhoz, M. Naglis, B. K. Nandi, T. K. Nayak, P. K. Netrakanti, L. V. Nogach, S. B. Nurushev, G. Odyniec, A. Ogawa, null Oh, null Ohlson, V. Okorokov, E. W. Oldag, D. Olson, M. Pachr, B. S. Page, S. K. Pal, Y. Pandit, Y. Panebratsev, T. Pawlak, H. Pei, T. Peitzmann, C. Perkins, W. Peryt, S. C. Phatak, P. Pile, M. Planinic, M. A. Ploskon, J. Pluta, D. Plyku, N. Poljak, A. M. Poskanzer, B. V. K. S. Potukuchi, C. B. Powell, D. Prindle, N. K. Pruthi, P. R. Pujahari, J. Putschke, H. Qiu, R. Raniwala, S. Raniwala, R. L. Ray, R. Redwine, R. Reed, H. G. Ritter, J. B. Roberts, O. V. Rogachevskiy, J. L. Romero, A. Rose, L. Ruan, J. Rusnak, N. R. Sahoo, S. Sakai, I. Sakrejda, T. Sakuma, S. Salur, J. Sandweiss, E. Sangaline, A. Sarkar, J. Schambach, R. P. Scharenberg, A. M. Schmah, N. Schmitz, T. R. Schuster, J. Seele, J. Seger, I. Selyuzhenkov, P. Seyboth, E. Shahaliev, M. Shao, M. Sharma, S. S. Shi, Q. Y. Shou, E. P. Sichtermann, F. Simon, R. N. Singaraju, M. J. Skoby, N. Smirnov, H. M. Spinka, B. Srivastava, T. D. S. Stanislaus, D. Staszak, S. G. Steadman, J. R. Stevens, R. Stock, M. Strikhanov, B. Stringfellow, A. A. P. Suaide, M. C. Suarez, N. L. Subba, M. Sumbera, X. M. Sun, Y. Sun, Z. Sun, B. Surrow, D. N. Svirida, T. J. M. Symons, A. Szanto de Toledo, J. Takahashi, A. H. Tang, Z. Tang, L. H. Tarini, T. Tarnowsky, D. Thein, J. H. Thomas, J. Tian, A. R. Timmins, D. Tlusty, M. Tokarev, V. N. Tram, S. Trentalange, R. E. Tribble, null Tribedy, O. D. Tsai, T. Ullrich, D. G. Underwood, G. Van Buren, G. van Nieuwenhuizen, J. A. Vanfossen, Jr., R. Varma, G. M. S. Vasconcelos, A. N. Vasiliev, F. Videbæk, Y. P. Viyogi, S. Vokal, M. Wada, M. Walker, F. Wang, G. Wang, H. Wang, J. S. Wang, Q. Wang, X. L. Wang, Y. Wang, G. Webb, J. C. Webb, G. D. Westfall, C. Whitten Jr., H. Wieman, S. W. Wissink, R. Witt, W. Witzke, Y. F. Wu, null Xiao, W. Xie, H. Xu, N. Xu, Q. H. Xu, W. Xu, Y. Xu, Z. Xu, L. Xue, Y. Yang, P. Yepes, K. Yip, I-K. Yoo, M. Zawisza, H. Zbroszczyk, W. Zhan, J. B. Zhang, S. Zhang, W. M. Zhang, X. P. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Z. P. Zhang, J. Zhao, C. Zhong, W. Zhou, X. Zhu, Y. H. Zhu, R. Zoulkarneev, and Y. Zoulkarneeva
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Star (game theory) ,Elliptic flow ,Zero (complex analysis) ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Parton ,Correlation function (quantum field theory) ,Nuclear matter ,01 natural sciences ,0103 physical sciences ,010306 general physics ,Jet quenching ,Centrality ,Instrumentation - Abstract
Dihadron azimuthal correlations containing a high transverse momentum ( ) trigger particle are sensitive to the properties of the nuclear medium created at RHIC through the strong interactions occurring between the traversing parton and the medium, i.e. jet-quenching. Previous measurements revealed a strong modification to dihadron azimuthal correlations in Au+Au collisions with respect to p+p and d+Au collisions. The modification increases with the collision centrality, suggesting a path-length or energy density dependence to the jet-quenching effect. This paper reports STAR measurements of dihadron azimuthal correlations in mid-central (20%-60%) Au+Au collisions at GeV as a function of the trigger particle's azimuthal angle relative to the event plane, . The azimuthal correlation is studied as a function of both the trigger and associated particle . The subtractions of the combinatorial background and anisotropic flow, assuming Zero Yield At Minimum (ZYAM), are described. The correlation results are first discussed with subtraction of the even harmonic (elliptic and quadrangular) flow backgrounds. The away-side correlation is strongly modified, and the modification varies with , with a double-peak structure for out-of-plane trigger particles. The near-side ridge (long range pseudo-rapidity correlation) appears to drop with increasing while the jet-like component remains approximately constant. The correlation functions are further studied with the subtraction of odd harmonic triangular flow background arising from fluctuations. It is found that the triangular flow, while responsible for the majority of the amplitudes, is not sufficient to explain the -dependence of the ridge or the away-side double-peak structure. The dropping ridge with could be attributed to a -dependent elliptic anisotropy; however, the physics mechanism of the ridge remains an open question. Even with a -dependent elliptic flow, the away-side correlation structure is robust. These results, with extensive systematic studies of the dihadron correlations as a function of , trigger and associated particle , and the pseudo-rapidity range , should provide stringent inputs to help understand the underlying physics mechanisms of jet-medium interactions in high energy nuclear collisions.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The significance of Akt/NF-κb signaling pathway in the posterior cataract animal model
- Author
-
D. W. Shao, B. Liu, H. Wang, P. Pan, X. Q. Zhu, L. Huo, W. Sun, and W. Chen
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Economics and Econometrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lens Capsule, Crystalline ,Cataract ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Random Allocation ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Animal model ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,Materials Chemistry ,Media Technology ,medicine ,Animals ,Protein phosphorylation ,Protein kinase B ,business.industry ,NF-kappa B ,Forestry ,NF-κB ,Rats ,Blot ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Signal transduction ,business ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Signal Transduction ,Transforming growth factor - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To establish SD rat posterior capsular opacification (posterior capsular opacification- PCO) animal model, and to detect the expression of Akt/NF-kb signaling pathway in the PCO model. METHODS 30 healthy SD rats were randomly divided into control group (0d) and the experimental groups (7d and 14 d), there were 10 rats at all time points. All rats (right eye) were treated with the lens capsule, and the inflammatory reaction of the anterior segment of the eye and the occurrence of PCO at different time points were observed under the microscope. The TGF-β concentration of humor aquosus was measured at the different time points by ELISA method. Eyeballs were removed after the rats were killed. RT-PCR method was used to detect the gene expression levels of Akt and NF-κb and Westen Blot method to detect the protein expression of Akt, p-Akt, NF-κb and p-NF-κb. RESULTS TGF-β concentration, Akt and NF-κb gene expression, and Akt, p-Akt, NF-κb and p-NF-κb protein expression in humor aquosus, increased with the time and the time-dependence was significant. CONCLUSION Akt/NF-κb signaling pathway may be closely related to the occurrence and development of PCO, which may be related to the role of protein phosphorylation (Fig. 5, Ref. 20).
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Molecular cloning, sequence characterization, and tissue expression analysis of three water buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) genes – ST6GAL1, ST8SIA4, and SLC35C1
- Author
-
Changlin Yu, Shen Song, Yongwang Miao, Zhang Yongyun, Teng Xiaohong, J L Huo, Minhui Liu, and Yina Ou-Yang
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Cultural Studies ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cloning ,biology ,Religious studies ,Molecular cloning ,Golgi apparatus ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,Solute carrier family ,03 medical and health sciences ,symbols.namesake ,030104 developmental biology ,chemistry ,Membrane protein ,Biochemistry ,parasitic diseases ,Glycosyltransferase ,biology.protein ,symbols ,Gene - Abstract
Recent studies have shown that ST6 beta-galactosamide alpha-2,6-sialyltransferase 1 (ST6GAL1), ST8 alpha-N-acetyl-neuraminide alpha-2,8-sialyltransferase 4 (ST8SIA4), and solute carrier family 35, member C1 (SLC35C1) play essential roles in the metabolism of milk glycoconjugates in mammals. However, studies on their coding genes in water buffalo have not been reported. In the present study, cloning and sequencing showed that the coding sequences (CDSs) of buffalo ST6GAL1, ST8SIA4, and SLC35C1 were 1218, 1080, and 1095 bp in length, which encoded a precursor protein composed of 405, 359, and 364 amino acids, respectively. The deduced sequences of these three proteins in turn showed 97.6–98.5, 98.6–99.7, and 97.8–99.2 % similarities with other bovine species. Both buffalo ST6GAL1 and ST8SIA4 were predicted to be a member of glycosyltransferase family 29 and were all hydrophilicity proteins functioning in the Golgi apparatus. Buffalo SLC35C1 was a hydrophobic membrane protein located in the Golgi membrane, containing a TPT domain that is found in a number of sugar phosphate transporters. In addition, semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis in 13 lactating buffalo tissues revealed that the ST6GAL1 and ST8SIA4 were expressed in 9 tissues, while SLC35C1 was expressed in 11 tissues. The expression levels of these three genes in the mammary gland were significantly higher in lactating than in non-lactating stage. Collectively, our data indicate that ST6GAL1, ST8SIA4, and SLC35C1 are potentially involved in the process of buffalo lactation.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. [Safety and efficacy of chimeric antigen receptor T cell in the treatment of elderly patients with hematological malignancies]
- Author
-
D, Liu, P, Ke, L, Huo, X H, Hu, C C, Fu, C X, Li, H W, Huang, S L, Xue, H Y, Qiu, D P, Wu, and X, Ma
- Subjects
短篇论著 - Published
- 2018
21. [Endoscopic selective lateral neck dissection via a chest-breast approach for papillary thyroid carcinoma: preliminary experience in 20 cases]
- Author
-
J L, Huo, R, Qu, Y M, Guo, and C, Chen
- Subjects
Thyroid Cancer, Papillary ,Lymphatic Metastasis ,Thyroidectomy ,Humans ,Neck Dissection ,Lymph Nodes ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Retrospective Studies - Published
- 2018
22. MULTIPLE METHODS OF ASSESSING DAILY MEDIA USE IN LATE LIFE
- Author
-
Shiyang L Zhang, Karen L. Fingerman, Crystal L Ng, and Meng L Huo
- Subjects
Abstracts ,Health (social science) ,Computer science ,Media use ,Multiple methods ,Session 2160 (Symposium) ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) ,Data science - Abstract
Television viewing is a risk factor for obesity and poor physical health. By contrast, close ties to family and friends in late life are often beneficial. This study examined associations between social engagement and television viewing. Participants (N = 313) from the Daily Experiences and Well-being Study completed an initial interview about their social partners and participated in a 5 to 6 day intensive data collection including Ecological Momentary Assessments about their social contact and activities every 3 hours. Participants also wore Electronically Activated Recorders (EAR) which captured snippets of sound in the environment. Multilevel models using self report and EAR data revealed that participants were more likely to watch TV when they were with close family members (e.g., spouse, grown children) than with friends or acquaintances. Findings from these multiple methods suggest that close family may encourage risks (e.g., sedentary behaviors) as well as benefits in late life.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Physiological and biochemical changes during organogenesis and somatic embryogenesis of HBsAg-transgenic cherry tomato mutant
- Author
-
Z. J. Guan, Z. P. Guan, S. B. Lu, Y. L. Huo, B. Guo, and Y. H. Wei
- Subjects
Chlorophyll b ,Somatic embryogenesis ,Physiology ,Mutant ,food and beverages ,Organogenesis ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tissue culture ,chemistry ,Chlorophyll ,Callus ,Explant culture - Abstract
Leaf explants of the HBsAg-transgenic cherry tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) mutant were cultured on Murashige and Skoog (MS) basal medium, supplemented with 1.0 mg/L 6-BA and 0.05 mg/L IAA for callus induction, to clarify the physiological and biochemical characteristics of morphogenesis development. Therefore, the physiological and biochemical changes during the development of organogenic shoots and somatic embryos in the mutant were studied. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities of the mutant had only one peak value on the 21st day. Peroxidase (POD) activities of the mutant declined less sharply since the explants were cultured. IAA oxidase activity of the mutant increased steadily until 42 days from culturing and then decreased sharply. Malondialdehyde (MDA) of the mutant showed a significant decreasing trend after 21 days from culturing. Growth rate of the mutant was at times lower than that of the control during its callus differentiation, and the soluble protein content of the mutant callus decreased from explant cultivation until the 28th day of culture. The mutant had greater values of chlorophyll a, carotenoid and Chlorophyll contents than the control after 14 days of culturing, and Chlorophyll b content of the mutant showed a declining trend. The electrical conductivity trend of the mutant was consistent with that in the control. It indicated that in terms of the organogenesis or somatic embryogenesis pattern, protein synthesis and catabolism were very active, and a number of antioxidant enzyme activities were consistent in the early development stages of the two regeneration systems. These findings were useful for the regeneration of the mutant.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A model using easily evaluated clinical features to identify triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) patients (pts) with high probability of achieving pathologic complete response (pCR) to neoadjuvant systemic therapy (NAST)
- Author
-
S. Moulder, B. Adrada, Gaiane M. Rauch, Jennifer K. Litton, L. Huo, Naoto T. Ueno, Rosalind P. Candelaria, B. Lim, KR Hess, and Alastair M. Thompson
- Subjects
Oncology ,High probability ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,business ,Systemic therapy ,Triple-negative breast cancer ,Complete response - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Study on fabrication of ceramic coatings on Ti–6Al–4V alloy by combined ultrasonic impact treatment and electrospark
- Author
-
R. Fang, Dongpo Wang, Li Wang, L. Huo, You-Nian Liu, and Caiyan Deng
- Subjects
Materials science ,Metallurgy ,Alloy ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Ultrasonic impact treatment ,Titanium alloy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,engineering.material ,equipment and supplies ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,chemistry ,Coating ,Residual stress ,visual_art ,Materials Chemistry ,Surface roughness ,engineering ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Ceramic ,Titanium - Abstract
A method combining ultrasonic impact treatment with electrospark was developed to fabricate ceramic coatings on Ti–6Al–4V alloy. In this paper, the mechanism of the combined process is described in detail. The microstructure, chemical states, phase composition and surface residual stress of the ceramic coated titanium alloy were presented. The coatings mainly consist of carbides of titanium. The hardness of the coating increased significantly owing to the existence of the ceramic phase. Further, the impact process and the narrow space that the shock ball traverses decrease the surface roughness of the sample after the combined process. Finally, the surface residual stress of the sample treated by the combined process is compressive stress.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Phase transformation and microstructure of wollastonite glass–ceramics in Na2O–CaO–SiO2 system under different heat treatment conditions
- Author
-
S. Y. Yao, H. X. Cao, W. W. Zhang, W. Xu, Peng Wang, and W. L. Huo
- Subjects
Glass-ceramic ,Materials science ,Scanning electron microscope ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,Sintering ,engineering.material ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Microstructure ,Wollastonite ,law.invention ,Mechanics of Materials ,law ,Phase (matter) ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Crystallization ,Composite material ,Pseudowollastonite - Abstract
Wollastonite glass–ceramic was prepared by using a sintering method. The chemical compositions were in the wollastonite crystallisation primary field of the Na2O–CaO–SiO2 system. Effects of heat treatment conditions on phase transformation and microstructure evolution of wollastonite glass–ceramic in Na2O–CaO–SiO2 system were investigated using X-ray diffraction and scanning electron microscopy. The results showed that the plate-like devitrite (Na2Ca3Si6O16) crystals were firstly precipitated from the parent glass after heat treatment at 950°C and long strip shape wollastonite (α-CaSiO3) crystals appeared in the clearance of Na2Ca3Si6O16 at 1000°C. When the heat treatment temperature increased to 1050°C, the Na2Ca3Si6O16 peak disappeared and α-CaSiO3 became the single phase. Furthermore, the complete phase transformation from α-CaSiO3 to pseudowollastonite (β-CaSiO3) occurred at 1200°C. As the heat treatment temperature increased, the sample surface changed from ‘convex’ into ‘concave’.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. P1.13-27 A Randomized Study of Concurrent vs Sequential Alternating EGFR-TKIs and Chemotherapy for Advanced NSCLC with EGFR Mutations
- Author
-
K. Cui, X. Qiang, H. Yong, H. Hua, W. Wu, C. Yu, X. Ling, L. Dong, L. Hui, X. Peng, L. Huo, L. Fang, W. Qiang, G. Ping, Y. Yang, C. Jin, and S. Xi
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Oncology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Chemotherapy ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,law.invention ,Egfr tki ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Egfr mutation ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Abnormal expression of ANXA2 predicts cholangiocarcinoma's poor prognosis and exacerbates malignancy via activating β-catenin signaling
- Author
-
Ding Ding, X. Li, Y. Zhang, R. Yang, R. Peng, S. Han, D. Wang, Y. Yu, L. Huo, and G. Ji
- Subjects
Poor prognosis ,Hepatology ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,medicine ,Cancer research ,β catenin signaling ,Abnormal expression ,Malignancy ,medicine.disease ,business - Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. TELEVISION VIEWING AND HEALTH IN LATE LIFE
- Author
-
Yee To L Ng, Karen L. Fingerman, and Meng L Huo
- Subjects
Abstracts ,Television viewing ,Health (social science) ,Session 3425 (Symposium) ,Advertising ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Health Professions (miscellaneous) - Abstract
Television viewing is a risk factor for poor physical and cognitive health. Yet, we know little about associations between current health and frequency of television viewing throughout the day. This study examined associations between multiple assessments of physical and cognitive well-being and television viewing. Participants (N = 313) from the Daily Experiences and Well-being Study completed an initial interview assessing their health and well-being. They also wore an Electronically Activated Recorders (EAR) to capture sound in the environment and an Actical to measure physical activity for 5 days. Coders rated the audiofiles for television viewing. Multilevel models revealed that participants who spent a greater proportion of time tuned into television had: higher BMI, poorer health, expended less energy, were more sedentary, and reported drinking more alcohol and eating more junk food. We discuss findings with regard to potential reciprocal influences between television viewing and poor health.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Real-time water quality system in internet of things
- Author
-
G Lenin, M Cho Zin, L Huo Chong, and MV Prassana
- Subjects
Computer science ,Interface (computing) ,020208 electrical & electronic engineering ,Hardware description language ,Real-time computing ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,02 engineering and technology ,Integrated circuit ,law.invention ,law ,Personal computer ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Water quality ,Software system ,Field-programmable gate array ,computer ,Wireless sensor network ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Wireless Sensor Network (WSN) in Internet of Thing (IoT) is used in different areas of research for monitoring, collecting and analysing data from remote sites. This paper presents a WSN based reconfigurable interface device for water quality monitoring (WQM) in an IoT environment. The proposed WQM system consists of sensors, Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA), Zigbee wireless communication protocol and personal computer. The system is designed for monitoring water quality such as water temperature, water level, water pH, turbidity of water and Carbon dioxide on the surface of water. The FPGA board is the heart of the system and a Very High Speed Integrated Circuit Hardware Description Language and C++ are used for software system of the proposed designed device. The proposed system collected the data in parallel and in real time basis with high speed from multiple different sensor nodes. The results of the proposed system were validated with the laboratory experiments. Based on the results, it can be concluded that there was no significant difference of water data measurement between the proposed system and the laboratory measurement. The proposed WQM system was able to minimise the operating time, cost and power consumption.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. PMS23 BUDGET IMPACT ANALYSIS OF TERIPARATIDE IN THE TREATMENT FOR POSTMENOPAUSAL OSTEOPOROSIS IN QINGDAO, CHINA
- Author
-
X. Ma, Y.L. Zhang, A.X. Ma, L. Wang, L. Huo, and L. Tian
- Subjects
business.industry ,Health Policy ,Environmental health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Teriparatide ,Medicine ,Budget impact ,Postmenopausal osteoporosis ,business ,China ,medicine.drug - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. PSU43 A REAL-WORLD SURGERY STATUS, RESOURCE USE AND COSTS OF PATIENTS RECEIVING PERCUTANEOUS VERTEBROPLASTY (PVP) OR PERCUTANEOUS KYPHOPLASTY (PKP) DUE TO OSTEOPOROTIC VERTEBRAL COMPRESSION FRACTURES (OVCF) IN CHINA
- Author
-
J.W. Xuan, Lu-Yuan Li, L. Huo, Yanhui Gao, X. Ma, D.H. Yang, and Y.L. Zhang
- Subjects
Percutaneous vertebroplasty ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine ,Resource use ,Compression (physics) ,business ,Surgery - Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Cloning, sequence characterization, and expression patterns of members of the porcine TSSK family
- Author
-
J L Huo, Wang Shuyan, H L Huo, F Q Li, W Z Li, Y Z Zeng, Yongwang Miao, Qiaoling Zhang, H Xiao, P Wang, Zhang Yongyun, and Lei Liu
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Swine ,Biology ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Homology (biology) ,Serine ,Exon ,Mice ,Phylogenetics ,Testis ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Spermatogenesis ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Gene ,Phylogeny ,Cloning ,Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Seminal Vesicles ,General Medicine ,Organ Specificity ,Multigene Family ,Swine, Miniature - Abstract
Testis-specific serine kinases (TSSKs) are a family of serine/threonine kinases highly expressed in the testes that are responsible for regulating many spermatogenesis-related protein activities. Mutations in this family have a positive relationship with oligospermia and azoospermia in human and mouse. Here, five members of the TSSK family from a Banna mini-pig inbred line (BMI) were cloned, sequenced, and characterized. The full-length coding sequences of BMI TSSKs varied from 807 (TSSK3) to 1095 bp (TSSK1) and encoded 268 to 364 amino acids with molecular weights in the range 30.11 to 41.34 kDa. Following comparison with TSSK4 genes in other species, BMI TSSK4 was found to contain three alternatively spliced variants, inform1, inform 3, and inform 4. BMI TSSK1 and TSSK2 are co-localized on the Sus scrofa chromosome (SSC) 14, and consist of a single exon; TSSK3, TSSK4, and TSSK6 are on SSC6, SSC7, and SSC2, and consist of two, four, and one exon, respectively. Multiple protein sequence alignment and phylogenetic analysis showed that the regions spanning the S_TKc domains were more conserved between pig and other animals: with TSSK1 and TSSK2 and TSSK3 and TSSK6 displaying the greatest degree of homology across species, and the TSSK4 protein clearly distinct from other members. Multi-tissue RT-PCR showed BMI TSSK1, TSSK3, and TSSK4 were only expressed in the testes and seminal vesicle, TSSK2 was confined to testes only, while TSSK6 was expressed widely in adult tissues but was highest in the testes.
- Published
- 2015
34. High temperature wear characteristics of TiC composite coatings formed by laser cladding with CNT additives
- Author
-
Q.H. Li, Q.M. Zhang, L. Huo, and M. M. Savalani
- Subjects
Titanium carbide ,Materials science ,Abrasive ,Composite number ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Surfaces and Interfaces ,General Chemistry ,Substrate (electronics) ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Microstructure ,Indentation hardness ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Titanium powder ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Materials Chemistry ,Composite material ,human activities ,Titanium - Abstract
High temperature wear properties of titanium carbide (TiC) composite coatings fabricated by laser cladding with titanium powder and varied percentages of carbon nano-tube (CNT) powders on titanium substrates have been tested by pin-on-disk wear under dry sliding conditions. The results reveal that TiC composite coatings fabricated with proper addition of CNT give promising high temperature wear resistance which is ten times higher than that of the titanium substrate. The high temperature wear behavior and friction coefficient of the titanium substrate and the composite coatings were investigated. It was found that the wear behavior of the dominant wear mechanism of the TiC composite coatings is adhesive wear and oxidation, whereas the Ti substrate exhibits abrasive wear, adhesive wear, serious plastic deformation, and oxidation at high temperature. The improvement of the wear resistance is believed to be attributed to the reinforcement phase of TiC which can also provide high hardness according to the microstructure observation of the composite coatings by SEM, EDX and microhardness measurements.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Molecular characteristics and cloning of two pepper genes AN2 and UPA20
- Author
-
C.H. Ma, J H Lv, Jin-Fen Wen, J L Huo, H Zhou, H.X. Chen, H. Jiang, M H Deng, and H S Zhu
- Subjects
China ,Sequence analysis ,Flowers ,Biology ,Petunia ,Conserved sequence ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Pepper ,Botany ,Genetics ,Tissue Distribution ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Plant Proteins ,Expressed sequence tag ,fungi ,Nucleic acid sequence ,food and beverages ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Plant Leaves ,Capsicum ,Solanaceae - Abstract
The complete coding sequences (CDSs) of "Yunnan Purple Pepper No.1" (Capsicum annuum L.) AN2 and UPA20 genes were amplified using the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction on the basis of the conserved sequence information of some Solanaceae plants and known highly homologous pepper expressed sequence tags. The nucleotide sequence analysis of these 2 genes revealed that pepper AN2 gene encoded a protein of 263 amino acids that has high homology with the AN2-like protein of 4 species: tobacco, tomato, potato, and petunia. The UPA20 gene encoded a protein of 341 amino acids that has high homology with the proteins of 3 species: tobacco, petunia, and tomato. The tissue expression analysis indicated that the pepper AN2 gene was overexpressed in the pericarp and placenta; moderately in stems, flowers, and seeds; and weakly in the roots, leaves, and pericarp. The pepper UPA20 gene was overexpressed in the flowers and seeds; moderately expressed in the roots and stems; and weakly expressed in the leaves and placenta. Our findings might form the basis for further research on these 2 pepper genes.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Genetic diversity of local Yunnan chicken breeds and their relationships with Red Junglefowl
- Author
-
G.S. Wu, Yongwang Miao, T. Chen, L.X. Liu, H.L. Huo, J L Huo, Ge Changrong, and Feng Yuan
- Subjects
China ,Meat ,animal structures ,Biodiversity ,Zoology ,Breeding ,Red junglefowl ,parasitic diseases ,Genotype ,Genetics ,biology.domesticated_animal ,Animals ,Allele ,Molecular Biology ,Alleles ,Phylogeny ,Genetic diversity ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,biology ,Genetic Variation ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,Breed ,Habitat ,Microsatellite ,Chickens ,geographic locations ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
Yunnan is situated in the Southwest China and encompasses regions having high biodiversity, including habitats for several ancestral species of domestic animals such as chicken. Domestic chickens in Yunnan were kept by peoples of varied ethnic and economic backgrounds living in highly varied geographic environments. To identify the genetic background of Yunnan domestic chickens and their relationships with Red Junglefowl, we applied 28 widely used microsatellite DNA markers to genotype 340 birds from 7 chicken breeds and Red Junglefowl indigenous to Yunnan. Among a total of 342 alleles identified, 121 (35.4%) were breed specific, with Red Junglefowl harboring most microsatellite alleles (23). High levels of heterozygosity were observed within populations indicated by a mean unbiased HE value of 0.663, which was higher than the reported for most populations elsewhere. The FIS value of domestic populations ranged from -0.098-0.005, indicating a lack of inbreeding among these populations. A high proportion of significant departures (89) from the 224 HWE tests for each locus in each population reflected an excess of heterozygosity and population substructure. Individual assignment tests, high FST values (0.1757-0.3015), and Nei's DA genetic distances (0.4232-0.6950) indicated clear differentiation among these populations. These observations, along with the close genetic distance between indigenous domestic populations and Red Junglefowl, were consistent with the primitive and ancestral state of Yunnan indigenous chickens. Protecting the unique variants of these indigenous poultry varieties from contamination with commercial breeds might provide values for improving modern agricultural livestock and breeding programs. Thus, the current study may benefit breeding management and conservation efforts.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Molecular characterization of the encoding regions and tissue expression analyses for 3 novel buffalo AKT genes, AKT1, AKT2, and AKT3
- Author
-
Dalin Li, Feng Yuan, Yueyun Yuan, Lixian Liu, Yongwang Miao, Chunfeng Wu, and J L Huo
- Subjects
Physiology ,animal diseases ,AKT1 ,Biology ,Microbiology ,law.invention ,law ,parasitic diseases ,Genetics ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Protein kinase B ,Polymerase chain reaction ,Phylogenetic tree ,Key words: Buffalo,AKT genes,polymorphism,characterization,tissue expression profile ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,Molecular biology ,Pleckstrin homology domain ,Real-time polymerase chain reaction ,Protein kinase domain ,embryonic structures ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Biyoloji ,geographic locations - Abstract
The objective of this study was to obtain the complete coding sequences (CDSs) of 3 buffalo genes (AKT1, AKT2, and AKT3) using reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and to depict their molecular characterizations and tissue expression patterns in buffalo. The buffalo AKT1, AKT2, and AKT3 CDSs were 1443 bp, 1446 bp, and 1440 bp in length and encoded 480, 481, and 479 amino acids, respectively. Nine, 13, and 3 nucleotide differences were found in the CDSs between buffalo and other bovine species. Phylogenetic analyses showed that buffalo AKT1 and AKT2 have close genetic relationships with other species in the family Bovidae, while AKT3 is highly conserved in mammals. Buffalo AKT1, AKT2, and AKT3 all have a pleckstrin homology domain, a Ser/Thr-specific kinase domain, and a C-terminal hydrophobic regulatory domain. The tissue expression profiles were tested by real-time quantitative PCR and revealed that the buffalo AKTs were expressed in 10 tissues. Among these tissues, mammary glands showed high expression levels, which indicated that AKT genes might be important in the regulation of mammary gland functions in buffalo.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. The STAR Collaboration
- Author
-
L. Adamczyk, G. Agakishiev, M.M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, A.V. Alakhverdyants, I. Alekseev, J. Alford, B.D. Anderson, C.D. Anson, D. Arkhipkin, E. Aschenauer, G.S. Averichev, J. Balewski, A. Banerjee, Z. Barnovska, D.R. Beavis, R. Bellwied, M.J. Betancourt, R.R. Betts, A. Bhasin, A.K. Bhati, H. Bichsel, J. Bielcik, J. Bielcikova, L.C. Bland, I.G. Bordyuzhin, W. Borowski, J. Bouchet, A.V. Brandin, S.G. Brovko, E. Bruna, S. Bültmann, I. Bunzarov, T.P. Burton, J. Butterworth, X.Z. Cai, H. Caines, M. Calderón de la Barca Sánchez, D. Cebra, R. Cendejas, M.C. Cervantes, P. Chaloupka, Z. Chang, S. Chattopadhyay, H.F. Chen, J.H. Chen, J.Y. Chen, L. Chen, J. Cheng, M. Cherney, A. Chikanian, W. Christie, P. Chung, J. Chwastowski, M.J.M. Codrington, R. Corliss, J.G. Cramer, H.J. Crawford, X. Cui, S. Das, A. Davila Leyva, L.C. De Silva, R.R. Debbe, T.G. Dedovich, J. Deng, R. Derradi de Souza, S. Dhamija, L. Didenko, F. Ding, A. Dion, P. Djawotho, X. Dong, J.L. Drachenberg, J.E. Draper, C.M. Du, L.E. Dunkelberger, J.C. Dunlop, L.G. Efimov, M. Elnimr, J. Engelage, G. Eppley, L. Eun, O. Evdokimov, R. Fatemi, S. Fazio, J. Fedorisin, R.G. Fersch, P. Filip, E. Finch, Y. Fisyak, C.A. Gagliardi, D.R. Gangadharan, F. Geurts, A. Gibson, S. Gliske, Y.N. Gorbunov, O.G. Grebenyuk, D. Grosnick, S. Gupta, W. Guryn, B. Haag, O. Hajkova, A. Hamed, L-X. Han, J.W. Harris, J.P. Hays-Wehle, S. Heppelmann, A. Hirsch, G.W. Hoffmann, D.J. Hofman, S. Horvat, B. Huang, H.Z. Huang, P. Huck, T.J. Humanic, L. Huo, G. Igo, W.W. Jacobs, C. Jena, J. Joseph, E.G. Judd, S. Kabana, K. Kang, J. Kapitan, K. Kauder, H.W. Ke, D. Keane, A. Kechechyan, A. Kesich, D.P. Kikola, J. Kiryluk, I. Kisel, A. Kisiel, V. Kizka, S.R. Klein, D.D. Koetke, T. Kollegger, J. Konzer, I. Koralt, L. Koroleva, W. Korsch, L. Kotchenda, P. Kravtsov, K. Krueger, I. Kulakov, L. Kumar, M.A.C. Lamont, J.M. Landgraf, S. LaPointe, J. Lauret, A. Lebedev, R. Lednicky, J.H. Lee, W. Leight, M.J. LeVine, C. Li, L. Li, W. Li, X. Li, Y. Li, Z.M. Li, L.M. Lima, M.A. Lisa, F. Liu, T. Ljubicic, W.J. Llope, R.S. Longacre, Y. Lu, X. Luo, A. Luszczak, G.L. Ma, Y.G. Ma, D.M.M.D. Madagodagettige Don, D.P. Mahapatra, R. Majka, O.I. Mall, S. Margetis, C. Markert, H. Masui, H.S. Matis, D. McDonald, T.S. McShane, S. Mioduszewski, M.K. Mitrovski, Y. Mohammed, B. Mohanty, M.M. Mondal, B. Morozov, M.G. Munhoz, M.K. Mustafa, M. Naglis, B.K. Nandi, Md. Nasim, T.K. Nayak, J.M. Nelson, L.V. Nogach, J. Novak, G. Odyniec, A. Ogawa, K. Oh, A. Ohlson, V. Okorokov, E.W. Oldag, R.A.N. Oliveira, D. Olson, P. Ostrowski, M. Pachr, B.S. Page, S.K. Pal, Y.X. Pan, Y. Pandit, Y. Panebratsev, T. Pawlak, B. Pawlik, H. Pei, C. Perkins, W. Peryt, P. Pile, M. Planinic, J. Pluta, D. Plyku, N. Poljak, J. Porter, A.M. Poskanzer, C.B. Powell, C. Pruneau, N.K. Pruthi, M. Przybycien, P.R. Pujahari, J. Putschke, H. Qiu, R. Raniwala, S. Raniwala, R.L. Ray, R. Redwine, R. Reed, C.K. Riley, H.G. Ritter, J.B. Roberts, O.V. Rogachevskiy, J.L. Romero, J.F. Ross, L. Ruan, J. Rusnak, N.R. Sahoo, P.K. Sahu, I. Sakrejda, S. Salur, A. Sandacz, J. Sandweiss, E. Sangaline, A. Sarkar, J. Schambach, R.P. Scharenberg, A.M. Schmah, B. Schmidke, N. Schmitz, T.R. Schuster, J. Seele, J. Seger, P. Seyboth, N. Shah, E. Shahaliev, M. Shao, B. Sharma, M. Sharma, S.S. Shi, Q.Y. Shou, E.P. Sichtermann, R.N. Singaraju, M.J. Skoby, D. Smirnov, N. Smirnov, D. Solanki, P. Sorensen, U.G. deSouza, H.M. Spinka, B. Srivastava, T.D.S. Stanislaus, S.G. Steadman, J.R. Stevens, R. Stock, M. Strikhanov, B. Stringfellow, A.A.P. Suaide, M.C. Suarez, M. Sumbera, X.M. Sun, Y. Sun, Z. Sun, B. Surrow, D.N. Svirida, T.J.M. Symons, A. Szanto de Toledo, J. Takahashi, A.H. Tang, Z. Tang, L.H. Tarini, T. Tarnowsky, D. Thein, J.H. Thomas, J. Tian, A.R. Timmins, D. Tlusty, M. Tokarev, S. Trentalange, R.E. Tribble, P. Tribedy, B.A. Trzeciak, O.D. Tsai, J. Turnau, T. Ullrich, D.G. Underwood, G. Van Buren, G. van Nieuwenhuizen, J.A. Vanfossen, R. Varma, G.M.S. Vasconcelos, F. Videbæk, Y.P. Viyogi, S. Vokal, S.A. Voloshin, A. Vossen, M. Wada, F. Wang, G. Wang, H. Wang, J.S. Wang, Q. Wang, X.L. Wang, Y. Wang, G. Webb, J.C. Webb, G.D. Westfall, C. Whitten, H. Wieman, S.W. Wissink, R. Witt, W. Witzke, Y.F. Wu, Z. Xiao, W. Xie, K. Xin, H. Xu, N. Xu, Q.H. Xu, W. Xu, Y. Xu, Z. Xu, L. Xue, Y. Yang, P. Yepes, Y. Yi, K. Yip, I-K. Yoo, M. Zawisza, H. Zbroszczyk, J.B. Zhang, S. Zhang, W.M. Zhang, X.P. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Z.P. Zhang, F. Zhao, J. Zhao, C. Zhong, X. Zhu, Y.H. Zhu, Y. Zoulkarneeva, and M. Zyzak
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Astronomy ,Star (graph theory) - Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. J/ψ production at high transverse momenta in p+p and Au + Au collisions at sNN=200 GeV
- Author
-
L. Adamczyk, G. Agakishiev, M.M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, A.V. Alakhverdyants, I. Alekseev, J. Alford, C.D. Anson, D. Arkhipkin, E. Aschenauer, G.S. Averichev, J. Balewski, A. Banerjee, Z. Barnovska, D.R. Beavis, R. Bellwied, M.J. Betancourt, R.R. Betts, A. Bhasin, A.K. Bhati, H. Bichsel, J. Bielcik, J. Bielcikova, L.C. Bland, I.G. Bordyuzhin, W. Borowski, J. Bouchet, A.V. Brandin, S.G. Brovko, E. Bruna, S. Bültmann, I. Bunzarov, T.P. Burton, J. Butterworth, X.Z. Cai, H. Caines, M. Calderón de la Barca Sánchez, D. Cebra, R. Cendejas, M.C. Cervantes, P. Chaloupka, Z. Chang, S. Chattopadhyay, H.F. Chen, J.H. Chen, J.Y. Chen, L. Chen, J. Cheng, M. Cherney, A. Chikanian, W. Christie, P. Chung, J. Chwastowski, M.J.M. Codrington, R. Corliss, J.G. Cramer, H.J. Crawford, X. Cui, S. Das, A. Davila Leyva, L.C. De Silva, R.R. Debbe, T.G. Dedovich, J. Deng, R. Derradi de Souza, S. Dhamija, L. Didenko, F. Ding, A. Dion, P. Djawotho, X. Dong, J.L. Drachenberg, J.E. Draper, C.M. Du, L.E. Dunkelberger, J.C. Dunlop, L.G. Efimov, M. Elnimr, J. Engelage, G. Eppley, L. Eun, O. Evdokimov, R. Fatemi, S. Fazio, J. Fedorisin, R.G. Fersch, P. Filip, E. Finch, Y. Fisyak, C.A. Gagliardi, D.R. Gangadharan, F. Geurts, A. Gibson, S. Gliske, Y.N. Gorbunov, O.G. Grebenyuk, D. Grosnick, S. Gupta, W. Guryn, B. Haag, O. Hajkova, A. Hamed, L.-X. Han, J.W. Harris, J.P. Hays-Wehle, S. Heppelmann, A. Hirsch, G.W. Hoffmann, D.J. Hofman, S. Horvat, B. Huang, H.Z. Huang, P. Huck, T.J. Humanic, L. Huo, G. Igo, W.W. Jacobs, C. Jena, E.G. Judd, S. Kabana, K. Kang, J. Kapitan, K. Kauder, H.W. Ke, D. Keane, A. Kechechyan, A. Kesich, D.P. Kikola, J. Kiryluk, I. Kisel, A. Kisiel, V. Kizka, S.R. Klein, D.D. Koetke, T. Kollegger, J. Konzer, I. Koralt, L. Koroleva, W. Korsch, L. Kotchenda, P. Kravtsov, K. Krueger, I. Kulakov, L. Kumar, M.A.C. Lamont, J.M. Landgraf, S. LaPointe, J. Lauret, A. Lebedev, R. Lednicky, J.H. Lee, W. Leight, M.J. LeVine, C. Li, L. Li, W. Li, X. Li, Y. Li, Z.M. Li, L.M. Lima, M.A. Lisa, F. Liu, T. Ljubicic, W.J. Llope, R.S. Longacre, Y. Lu, X. Luo, A. Luszczak, G.L. Ma, Y.G. Ma, D.M.M.D. Madagodagettige Don, D.P. Mahapatra, R. Majka, O.I. Mall, S. Margetis, C. Markert, H. Masui, H.S. Matis, D. McDonald, T.S. McShane, S. Mioduszewski, M.K. Mitrovski, Y. Mohammed, B. Mohanty, M.M. Mondal, B. Morozov, M.G. Munhoz, M.K. Mustafa, M. Naglis, B.K. Nandi, Md. Nasim, T.K. Nayak, J.M. Nelson, L.V. Nogach, J. Novak, G. Odyniec, A. Ogawa, K. Oh, A. Ohlson, V. Okorokov, E.W. Oldag, R.A.N. Oliveira, D. Olson, P. Ostrowski, M. Pachr, B.S. Page, S.K. Pal, Y.X. Pan, Y. Pandit, Y. Panebratsev, T. Pawlak, B. Pawlik, H. Pei, C. Perkins, W. Peryt, P. Pile, M. Planinic, J. Pluta, D. Plyku, N. Poljak, J. Porter, A.M. Poskanzer, C.B. Powell, C. Pruneau, N.K. Pruthi, M. Przybycien, P.R. Pujahari, J. Putschke, H. Qiu, R. Raniwala, S. Raniwala, R.L. Ray, R. Redwine, R. Reed, C.K. Riley, H.G. Ritter, J.B. Roberts, O.V. Rogachevskiy, J.L. Romero, J.F. Ross, L. Ruan, J. Rusnak, N.R. Sahoo, P.K. Sahu, I. Sakrejda, S. Salur, A. Sandacz, J. Sandweiss, E. Sangaline, A. Sarkar, J. Schambach, R.P. Scharenberg, A.M. Schmah, B. Schmidke, N. Schmitz, T.R. Schuster, J. Seele, J. Seger, P. Seyboth, N. Shah, E. Shahaliev, M. Shao, B. Sharma, M. Sharma, S.S. Shi, Q.Y. Shou, E.P. Sichtermann, R.N. Singaraju, M.J. Skoby, D. Smirnov, N. Smirnov, D. Solanki, P. Sorensen, U.G. deSouza, H.M. Spinka, B. Srivastava, T.D.S. Stanislaus, S.G. Steadman, J.R. Stevens, R. Stock, M. Strikhanov, B. Stringfellow, A.A.P. Suaide, M.C. Suarez, M. Sumbera, X.M. Sun, Y. Sun, Z. Sun, B. Surrow, D.N. Svirida, T.J.M. Symons, A. Szanto de Toledo, J. Takahashi, A.H. Tang, Z. Tang, L.H. Tarini, T. Tarnowsky, D. Thein, J.H. Thomas, J. Tian, A.R. Timmins, D. Tlusty, M. Tokarev, S. Trentalange, R.E. Tribble, P. Tribedy, B.A. Trzeciak, O.D. Tsai, J. Turnau, T. Ullrich, D.G. Underwood, G. Van Buren, G. van Nieuwenhuizen, J.A. Vanfossen, R. Varma, G.M.S. Vasconcelos, F. Videbæk, Y.P. Viyogi, S. Vokal, S.A. Voloshin, A. Vossen, M. Wada, F. Wang, G. Wang, H. Wang, J.S. Wang, Q. Wang, X.L. Wang, Y. Wang, G. Webb, J.C. Webb, G.D. Westfall, C. Whitten, H. Wieman, S.W. Wissink, R. Witt, W. Witzke, Y.F. Wu, Z. Xiao, W. Xie, K. Xin, H. Xu, N. Xu, Q.H. Xu, W. Xu, Y. Xu, Z. Xu, L. Xue, Y. Yang, P. Yepes, Y. Yi, K. Yip, I.-K. Yoo, M. Zawisza, H. Zbroszczyk, J.B. Zhang, S. Zhang, X.P. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Z.P. Zhang, F. Zhao, J. Zhao, C. Zhong, X. Zhu, Y.H. Zhu, Y. Zoulkarneeva, and M. Zyzak
- Subjects
Nuclear physics ,Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Transverse plane ,Particle physics ,Production (computer science) ,Nuclear Experiment ,Quarkonium ,Spectral line - Abstract
We report J / ψ spectra for transverse momenta p T > 5 GeV / c at mid-rapidity in p + p and Au + Au collisions at s NN = 200 GeV . The inclusive J / ψ spectrum and the extracted B-hadron feed-down are compared to models incorporating different production mechanisms. We observe significant suppression of the J / ψ yields for p T > 5 GeV / c in 0–30% central Au + Au collisions relative to the p + p yield scaled by the number of binary nucleon–nucleon collisions in Au + Au collisions. In 30–60% mid-central collisions, no such suppression is observed. The level of suppression is consistently less than that of high- p T π ± and low- p T J / ψ at RHIC and high- p T J / ψ at the LHC.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. [Diagnostic accuracy and safety of US-guided core needle biopsy versus fine needle aspiration biopsy of thyroid nodules: a Meta analysis]
- Author
-
J L, Huo, Y M, Guo, R, Qu, D S, Liu, Z Y, Chen, and W, Hong
- Subjects
China ,Biopsy, Fine-Needle ,Humans ,Biopsy, Large-Core Needle ,Thyroid Neoplasms ,Thyroid Nodule ,Sensitivity and Specificity - Published
- 2017
41. [Breast-conserving surgery with immediate partial breast reconstruction using pedicled thoracodorsal artery perforator flap: a clinical analysis of 33 patients]
- Author
-
X, Wang, Y J, He, J F, Li, Y T, Xie, T F, Wang, Z Q, Fan, L, Huo, and T, Ouyang
- Subjects
Adult ,Mammaplasty ,Breast Neoplasms ,Arteries ,Middle Aged ,Mastectomy, Segmental ,Surgical Flaps ,Young Adult ,Postoperative Complications ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Neoplasm Recurrence, Local ,Perforator Flap - Published
- 2017
42. Single spin asymmetry AN in polarized proton–proton elastic scattering at s=200 GeV
- Author
-
L. Adamczyk, G. Agakishiev, M.M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, A.V. Alakhverdyants, I. Alekseev, J. Alford, C.D. Anson, D. Arkhipkin, E. Aschenauer, G.S. Averichev, J. Balewski, A. Banerjee, Z. Barnovska, D.R. Beavis, R. Bellwied, M.J. Betancourt, R.R. Betts, A. Bhasin, A.K. Bhati, H. Bichsel, J. Bielcik, J. Bielcikova, L.C. Bland, I.G. Bordyuzhin, W. Borowski, J. Bouchet, A.V. Brandin, S.G. Brovko, E. Bruna, S. Bültmann, I. Bunzarov, T.P. Burton, J. Butterworth, X.Z. Cai, H. Caines, M. Calderón de la Barca Sánchez, D. Cebra, R. Cendejas, M.C. Cervantes, P. Chaloupka, Z. Chang, S. Chattopadhyay, H.F. Chen, J.H. Chen, J.Y. Chen, L. Chen, J. Cheng, M. Cherney, A. Chikanian, W. Christie, P. Chung, J. Chwastowski, M.J.M. Codrington, R. Corliss, J.G. Cramer, H.J. Crawford, X. Cui, S. Das, A. Davila Leyva, L.C. De Silva, R.R. Debbe, T.G. Dedovich, J. Deng, R. Derradi de Souza, S. Dhamija, L. Didenko, F. Ding, A. Dion, P. Djawotho, X. Dong, J.L. Drachenberg, J.E. Draper, C.M. Du, L.E. Dunkelberger, J.C. Dunlop, L.G. Efimov, M. Elnimr, J. Engelage, G. Eppley, L. Eun, O. Evdokimov, R. Fatemi, S. Fazio, J. Fedorisin, R.G. Fersch, P. Filip, E. Finch, Y. Fisyak, C.A. Gagliardi, D.R. Gangadharan, F. Geurts, A. Gibson, S. Gliske, Y.N. Gorbunov, O.G. Grebenyuk, D. Grosnick, S. Gupta, W. Guryn, B. Haag, O. Hajkova, A. Hamed, L.-X. Han, J.W. Harris, J.P. Hays-Wehle, S. Heppelmann, A. Hirsch, G.W. Hoffmann, D.J. Hofman, S. Horvat, B. Huang, H.Z. Huang, P. Huck, T.J. Humanic, L. Huo, G. Igo, W.W. Jacobs, C. Jena, E.G. Judd, S. Kabana, K. Kang, J. Kapitan, K. Kauder, H.W. Ke, D. Keane, A. Kechechyan, A. Kesich, D.P. Kikola, J. Kiryluk, I. Kisel, A. Kisiel, V. Kizka, S.R. Klein, D.D. Koetke, T. Kollegger, J. Konzer, I. Koralt, L. Koroleva, W. Korsch, L. Kotchenda, P. Kravtsov, K. Krueger, I. Kulakov, L. Kumar, M.A.C. Lamont, J.M. Landgraf, S. LaPointe, J. Lauret, A. Lebedev, R. Lednicky, J.H. Lee, W. Leight, M.J. LeVine, C. Li, L. Li, W. Li, X. Li, Y. Li, Z.M. Li, L.M. Lima, M.A. Lisa, F. Liu, T. Ljubicic, W.J. Llope, R.S. Longacre, Y. Lu, X. Luo, A. Luszczak, G.L. Ma, Y.G. Ma, D.M.M.D. Madagodagettige Don, D.P. Mahapatra, R. Majka, O.I. Mall, S. Margetis, C. Markert, H. Masui, H.S. Matis, D. McDonald, T.S. McShane, S. Mioduszewski, M.K. Mitrovski, Y. Mohammed, B. Mohanty, M.M. Mondal, B. Morozov, M.G. Munhoz, M.K. Mustafa, M. Naglis, B.K. Nandi, Md. Nasim, T.K. Nayak, J.M. Nelson, L.V. Nogach, J. Novak, G. Odyniec, A. Ogawa, K. Oh, A. Ohlson, V. Okorokov, E.W. Oldag, R.A.N. Oliveira, D. Olson, P. Ostrowski, M. Pachr, B.S. Page, S.K. Pal, Y.X. Pan, Y. Pandit, Y. Panebratsev, T. Pawlak, B. Pawlik, H. Pei, C. Perkins, W. Peryt, P. Pile, M. Planinic, J. Pluta, D. Plyku, N. Poljak, J. Porter, A.M. Poskanzer, C.B. Powell, C. Pruneau, N.K. Pruthi, M. Przybycien, P.R. Pujahari, J. Putschke, H. Qiu, R. Raniwala, S. Raniwala, R.L. Ray, R. Redwine, R. Reed, C.K. Riley, H.G. Ritter, J.B. Roberts, O.V. Rogachevskiy, J.L. Romero, J.F. Ross, L. Ruan, J. Rusnak, N.R. Sahoo, P.K. Sahu, I. Sakrejda, S. Salur, A. Sandacz, J. Sandweiss, E. Sangaline, A. Sarkar, J. Schambach, R.P. Scharenberg, A.M. Schmah, B. Schmidke, N. Schmitz, T.R. Schuster, J. Seele, J. Seger, P. Seyboth, N. Shah, E. Shahaliev, M. Shao, B. Sharma, M. Sharma, S.S. Shi, Q.Y. Shou, E.P. Sichtermann, R.N. Singaraju, M.J. Skoby, D. Smirnov, N. Smirnov, D. Solanki, P. Sorensen, U.G. deSouza, H.M. Spinka, B. Srivastava, T.D.S. Stanislaus, S.G. Steadman, J.R. Stevens, R. Stock, M. Strikhanov, B. Stringfellow, A.A.P. Suaide, M.C. Suarez, M. Sumbera, X.M. Sun, Y. Sun, Z. Sun, B. Surrow, D.N. Svirida, T.J.M. Symons, A. Szanto de Toledo, J. Takahashi, A.H. Tang, Z. Tang, L.H. Tarini, T. Tarnowsky, D. Thein, J.H. Thomas, J. Tian, A.R. Timmins, D. Tlusty, M. Tokarev, S. Trentalange, R.E. Tribble, P. Tribedy, B.A. Trzeciak, O.D. Tsai, J. Turnau, T. Ullrich, D.G. Underwood, G. Van Buren, G. van Nieuwenhuizen, J.A. Vanfossen, R. Varma, G.M.S. Vasconcelos, F. Videbæk, Y.P. Viyogi, S. Vokal, S.A. Voloshin, A. Vossen, M. Wada, F. Wang, G. Wang, H. Wang, J.S. Wang, Q. Wang, X.L. Wang, Y. Wang, G. Webb, J.C. Webb, G.D. Westfall, C. Whitten, H. Wieman, S.W. Wissink, R. Witt, W. Witzke, Y.F. Wu, Z. Xiao, W. Xie, K. Xin, H. Xu, N. Xu, Q.H. Xu, W. Xu, Y. Xu, Z. Xu, L. Xue, Y. Yang, P. Yepes, Y. Yi, K. Yip, I.-K. Yoo, M. Zawisza, H. Zbroszczyk, J.B. Zhang, S. Zhang, X.P. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Z.P. Zhang, F. Zhao, J. Zhao, C. Zhong, X. Zhu, Y.H. Zhu, Y. Zoulkarneeva, and M. Zyzak
- Subjects
Physics ,Elastic scattering ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Particle physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Scattering ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Hadron ,01 natural sciences ,Nuclear physics ,Scattering amplitude ,Pomeron ,Amplitude ,0103 physical sciences ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Spin-flip ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics ,Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider - Abstract
We report a high precision measurement of the transverse single spin asymmetry A(N) at the center of mass energy root s = 200 GeV in elastic proton-proton scattering by the STAR experiment at RHIC. The A(N) was measured in the four-momentum transfer squared t range 0.003
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Complementary DNA cloning, sequence analysis, and tissue transcription profile of a novel U2AF2 gene from the Chinese Banna mini-pig inbred line
- Author
-
W.M. Cheng, Wang Shuyan, J L Huo, Yongwang Miao, and Y.Z. Zeng
- Subjects
DNA, Complementary ,Swine ,Sequence analysis ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Protein Structure, Secondary ,Conserved sequence ,Evolution, Molecular ,Transcription (biology) ,Complementary DNA ,Genetics ,Animals ,Coding region ,Protein Interaction Domains and Motifs ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Phylogeny ,Expressed sequence tag ,Base Sequence ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Nuclear Proteins ,RNA ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,General Medicine ,Splicing Factor U2AF ,Molecular biology ,MicroRNAs ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Ribonucleoproteins ,Organ Specificity ,Female ,Sequence Alignment - Abstract
U2 small nuclear RNA auxiliary factor 2 (U2AF2) is an important gene for pre-messenger RNA splicing in higher eukaryotes. In this study, the Banna mini-pig inbred line (BMI) U2AF2 coding sequence (CDS) was cloned, sequenced, and characterized. The U2AF2 complete CDS was amplified using the reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) technique based on the conserved sequence information of cattle and known highly homologous swine expressed sequence tags. This novel gene was deposited into the National Center for Biotechnology Information database (Accession No. JQ839267). Sequence analysis revealed that the BMI U2AF2 coding sequence consisted of 1416 bp and encoded 471 amino acids with a molecular weight of 53.12 kDa. The protein sequence has high sequence homology with U2AF65 of 6 species - Homo sapiens (100%), Equus caballus (100%), Canis lupus (100%), Macaca mulatta (99.8%), Bos taurus (74.4%), and Mus musculus (74.4%). The phylogenetic tree analysis revealed that BMI U2AF65 has a closer genetic relationship with B. taurus U2AF65 than with U2AF65 of E. caballus, C. lupus, M. mulatta, H. sapiens, and M. musculus. RT-PCR analysis showed that BMI U2AF2 was most highly expressed in the brain; moderately expressed in the spleen, lung, muscle, and skin; and weakly expressed in the liver, kidney, and ovary. Its expression was nearly silent in the spinal cord, nerve fiber, heart, stomach, pancreas, and intestine. Three microRNA target sites were predicted in the CDS of BMI U2AF2 messenger RNA. Our results establish a foundation for further insight into this swine gene.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Molecular cloning and tissue expression analyses of two novel pepper genes: heterotrimeric G protein beta 2 subunit and ArcA1
- Author
-
M.H. Deng, Jin-Fen Wen, H Zhou, H S Zhu, and J L Huo
- Subjects
Protein Conformation ,Protein subunit ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Gene Expression ,Molecular cloning ,Biology ,Conserved sequence ,Open Reading Frames ,Heterotrimeric G protein ,Pepper ,Genetics ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Phylogeny ,Plant Proteins ,Base Sequence ,GTP-Binding Protein beta Subunits ,fungi ,Nucleic acid sequence ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,Molecular biology ,Organ Specificity ,Capsicum ,Transcription Factor Gene ,Sequence Alignment - Abstract
We isolated two transcription factor genes, heterotrimeric G protein beta 2 subunit (Gβ2) and ArcA1, from pepper (Capsicum annuum). The complete coding sequences were amplified using reversed transcriptase PCR based on conserved sequence information of Solanum lycopersicum and several other plant species. Nucleotide sequence analysis of these two genes revealed that the pepper Gβ2 gene encodes a protein of 376 amino acids that belongs to the WD40 superfamily. Tissue expression analysis indicated that this gene is highly expressed in the pericarp, moderately expressed in stem, flower, placenta, and leaves, and weakly expressed in seed. There was no expression in the roots. The ArcA1 gene encodes a protein of 331 amino acids that also belongs to the WD40 superfamily. Tissue expression analysis indicated that the pepper ArcA1 gene is moderately expressed in the pericarp and weakly expressed in seed. There was no expression in root, stem, flower, placenta, or leaves.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Isolation, molecular cloning, and characterization of a novel porcine lymphotoxin beta receptor gene
- Author
-
H L Huo, F Q Li, W Z Li, Wang Shuyan, J L Huo, Qiaoling Zhang, Lei Liu, Yongwang Miao, and Zhang Yongyun
- Subjects
Male ,Swine ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Molecular cloning ,Biology ,Mice ,Open Reading Frames ,Dogs ,Esophagus ,Lymphotoxin beta Receptor ,Genetics ,Coding region ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Horses ,Isoelectric Point ,Cloning, Molecular ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Peptide sequence ,Cloning ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Prostate ,General Medicine ,Molecular biology ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Molecular Weight ,Open reading frame ,Organ Specificity ,Pituitary Gland ,Cattle ,Lymphotoxin beta receptor ,Ursidae ,Brain Stem - Abstract
The lymphotoxin beta receptor (LTβR) is a member of the tumor necrosis factor family of receptors (TNFR). It plays a role in regulating lymphoid organogenesis and homeostasis of the immune system. In the present study, the full coding region of a putative LTβR gene of Sus scrofa was amplified by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and cloned for the first time (accession Nos. JX457347 and AFU74012). In addition, analysis of the tissue expression profile was carried out via RT-PCR. The full-length coding region of porcine LTβR had 1266 nucleotides (molecular weight, 45.61 kDa; pI, 5.71) and encoded 421 amino acids. Bioinformatic prediction indicates that LTβR belongs to the TNFR superfamily and contains a TNFR domain. The sequence homology analysis revealed that the amino acid sequences of S. scrofa LTβR had 82.9, 82.4, 81.3, 80.5, 78.7, 74.6, and 73.0% identity with those of Equus caballus, Canis lupus, Ailuropoda melanoleuca, Oryctolagus cuniculus, Bos taurus, Mus musculus, and Homo sapiens, respectively. The phylogenetic tree based on the amino acid sequences of LTβR from 8 species revealed that S. scrofa was more closely related to E. caballus, C. lupus, and A. melanoleuca. RT-PCR analysis showed that the porcine LTβR gene was differentially expressed (e.g., high, moderate, low, or nonexistent) in various tissues (e.g., prostate, pituitary, brainstem, and esophagus, respectively). This may be related to differences in the regulation of LTβR in the different tissues.
- Published
- 2014
46. Use of automated, imaging methods for the support of structural inspection
- Author
-
C. Qu, L. Huo, and H. Li
- Subjects
Control theory ,Performance estimation ,Negative stiffness ,Structure (category theory) ,Bilinear interpolation ,Single degree of freedom ,Multi degree of freedom ,Mathematics - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Performance Estimation for Multi Degree of Freedom Structure with Negative Stiffness by A Bilinear Elastic Single Degree of Freedom System
- Author
-
C. Qu, H. Li, and L. Huo
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Histocytological examination on organogenesis and somatic embryogenesis of HBsAg-transgenic cherry tomato mutant
- Author
-
Guan Z-J, "null", B Guo, Y-L Huo, J-K Dai, and Y-H Wei
- Subjects
Somatic embryogenesis ,Physiology ,Botany ,Gene transfer ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology - Abstract
La iniciacion y desarrollo de yemas organogenicas y embriones somaticos en el mutante Lycopersicon esculentum var. cera - ciforme transgenico-HBsAg fueron estudiadas histologicamente. Los explantos foliares del mutante se cultivaron en medio basal Murashige y Skoog suplementado con 6-BA 1,0 mg/L y IAA 0,05 mg/L para inducir la formacion de callos. Estudios histologicos en los explantos foliares del mutante en varios estados del desarrollo revelaron que las yemas organogenicas aparecieron primero en la posicion axilar de los explantos despues de 14 dias de iniciado el estudio, y los embriones so - maticos se formaron en los mismos explantos del mutante despues de 35 dias de cultivo. Microscopia electronica de transmision y de barrido indicaron que hubo cambios significativos en la morfologia y cantidad de algunas organelas en las celulas del callo del mutante comparado con el control. Luego de 7 dias de cultivo, las celulas del callo embrio - genico del control mostraron un citoplasma denso y organelas abun - dantes; al mismo tiempo, hubo poco citoplasma o menos organelas, excepto por un gran numero de cuerpos lipidos densos en las celulas del callo del mutante. En estados mas tardios, los cloroplastos, cuerpos de Golgi y mitocondria en las celulas mutantes tambien tuvieron dife - rencias obvias. Estos resultados demostraron que la via de regeneracion in vitro del mutante de tomate Lycopersicon esculentum var. ceraciforme transgenico-HBsAg mostro variabilidad, lo cual fue util para la rege - neracion y el protocolo de transferencia de genes
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Evolution of the differential transverse momentum correlation function with centrality in Au + Au collisions at sNN=200 GeV
- Author
-
G. Agakishiev, M.M. Aggarwal, Z. Ahammed, A.V. Alakhverdyants, I. Alekseev, J. Alford, B.D. Anderson, C.D. Anson, D. Arkhipkin, G.S. Averichev, J. Balewski, D.R. Beavis, N.K. Behera, R. Bellwied, M.J. Betancourt, R.R. Betts, A. Bhasin, A.K. Bhati, H. Bichsel, J. Bielcik, J. Bielcikova, B. Biritz, L.C. Bland, I.G. Bordyuzhin, W. Borowski, J. Bouchet, E. Braidot, A.V. Brandin, A. Bridgeman, S.G. Brovko, E. Bruna, S. Bueltmann, I. Bunzarov, T.P. Burton, X.Z. Cai, H. Caines, M. Calderón de la Barca Sánchez, D. Cebra, R. Cendejas, M.C. Cervantes, Z. Chajecki, P. Chaloupka, S. Chattopadhyay, H.F. Chen, J.H. Chen, J.Y. Chen, L. Chen, J. Cheng, M. Cherney, A. Chikanian, K.E. Choi, W. Christie, P. Chung, M.J.M. Codrington, R. Corliss, J.G. Cramer, H.J. Crawford, A. Davila Leyva, L.C. De Silva, R.R. Debbe, T.G. Dedovich, A.A. Derevschikov, R. Derradi de Souza, L. Didenko, P. Djawotho, S.M. Dogra, X. Dong, J.L. Drachenberg, J.E. Draper, J.C. Dunlop, L.G. Efimov, M. Elnimr, J. Engelage, G. Eppley, M. Estienne, L. Eun, O. Evdokimov, R. Fatemi, J. Fedorisin, R.G. Fersch, P. Filip, E. Finch, V. Fine, Y. Fisyak, C.A. Gagliardi, D.R. Gangadharan, F. Geurts, P. Ghosh, Y.N. Gorbunov, A. Gordon, O.G. Grebenyuk, D. Grosnick, S.M. Guertin, A. Gupta, S. Gupta, W. Guryn, B. Haag, O. Hajkova, A. Hamed, L.-X. Han, J.W. Harris, J.P. Hays-Wehle, M. Heinz, S. Heppelmann, A. Hirsch, E. Hjort, G.W. Hoffmann, D.J. Hofman, B. Huang, H.Z. Huang, T.J. Humanic, L. Huo, G. Igo, P. Jacobs, W.W. Jacobs, C. Jena, F. Jin, J. Joseph, E.G. Judd, S. Kabana, K. Kang, J. Kapitan, K. Kauder, H.W. Ke, D. Keane, A. Kechechyan, D. Kettler, D.P. Kikola, J. Kiryluk, A. Kisiel, V. Kizka, A.G. Knospe, D.D. Koetke, T. Kollegger, J. Konzer, I. Koralt, L. Koroleva, W. Korsch, L. Kotchenda, V. Kouchpil, P. Kravtsov, K. Krueger, M. Krus, L. Kumar, P. Kurnadi, M.A.C. Lamont, J.M. Landgraf, S. LaPointe, J. Lauret, A. Lebedev, R. Lednicky, J.H. Lee, W. Leight, M.J. LeVine, C. Li, L. Li, N. Li, W. Li, X. Li, Y. Li, Z.M. Li, L.M. Lima, M.A. Lisa, F. Liu, H. Liu, J. Liu, T. Ljubicic, W.J. Llope, R.S. Longacre, W.A. Love, Y. Lu, E.V. Lukashov, X. Luo, G.L. Ma, Y.G. Ma, D.P. Mahapatra, R. Majka, O.I. Mall, R. Manweiler, S. Margetis, C. Markert, H. Masui, H.S. Matis, Yu.A. Matulenko, D. McDonald, T.S. McShane, A. Meschanin, R. Milner, N.G. Minaev, S. Mioduszewski, M.K. Mitrovski, Y. Mohammed, B. Mohanty, M.M. Mondal, B. Morozov, D.A. Morozov, M.G. Munhoz, M.K. Mustafa, M. Naglis, B.K. Nandi, T.K. Nayak, P.K. Netrakanti, L.V. Nogach, S.B. Nurushev, G. Odyniec, A. Ogawa, K. Oh, A. Ohlson, V. Okorokov, E.W. Oldag, R.A.N. Oliveira, D. Olson, M. Pachr, B.S. Page, S.K. Pal, Y. Pandit, Y. Panebratsev, T. Pawlak, H. Pei, T. Peitzmann, C. Perkins, W. Peryt, P. Pile, M. Planinic, M.A. Ploskon, J. Pluta, D. Plyku, N. Poljak, J. Porter, A.M. Poskanzer, B.V.K.S. Potukuchi, C.B. Powell, D. Prindle, C. Pruneau, N.K. Pruthi, P.R. Pujahari, J. Putschke, H. Qiu, R. Raniwala, S. Raniwala, R. Redwine, R. Reed, H.G. Ritter, J.B. Roberts, O.V. Rogachevskiy, J.L. Romero, L. Ruan, J. Rusnak, N.R. Sahoo, I. Sakrejda, S. Salur, J. Sandweiss, E. Sangaline, A. Sarkar, J. Schambach, R.P. Scharenberg, A.M. Schmah, N. Schmitz, T.R. Schuster, J. Seele, J. Seger, I. Selyuzhenkov, P. Seyboth, N. Shah, E. Shahaliev, M. Shao, M. Sharma, S.S. Shi, Q.Y. Shou, E.P. Sichtermann, F. Simon, R.N. Singaraju, M.J. Skoby, N. Smirnov, D. Solanki, P. Sorensen, U.G. Souza, H.M. Spinka, B. Srivastava, T.D.S. Stanislaus, D. Staszak, S.G. Steadman, J.R. Stevens, R. Stock, M. Strikhanov, B. Stringfellow, A.A.P. Suaide, M.C. Suarez, N.L. Subba, M. Sumbera, X.M. Sun, Y. Sun, Z. Sun, B. Surrow, D.N. Svirida, T.J.M. Symons, A. Szanto de Toledo, J. Takahashi, A.H. Tang, Z. Tang, L.H. Tarini, T. Tarnowsky, D. Thein, J.H. Thomas, J. Tian, A.R. Timmins, D. Tlusty, M. Tokarev, S. Trentalange, R.E. Tribble, P. Tribedy, O.D. Tsai, T. Ullrich, D.G. Underwood, G. Van Buren, G. van Nieuwenhuizen, J.A. Vanfossen, R. Varma, G.M.S. Vasconcelos, A.N. Vasiliev, F. Videbæk, Y.P. Viyogi, S. Vokal, S.A. Voloshin, M. Wada, M. Walker, F. Wang, G. Wang, H. Wang, J.S. Wang, Q. Wang, X.L. Wang, Y. Wang, G. Webb, J.C. Webb, G.D. Westfall, C. Whitten, H. Wieman, S.W. Wissink, R. Witt, W. Witzke, Y.F. Wu, Z. Xiao, W. Xie, H. Xu, N. Xu, Q.H. Xu, W. Xu, Y. Xu, Z. Xu, L. Xue, Y. Yang, P. Yepes, K. Yip, I.-K. Yoo, M. Zawisza, H. Zbroszczyk, W. Zhan, J.B. Zhang, S. Zhang, W.M. Zhang, X.P. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Z.P. Zhang, F. Zhao, J. Zhao, C. Zhong, W. Zhou, X. Zhu, Y.H. Zhu, R. Zoulkarneev, and Y. Zoulkarneeva
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Shear viscosity ,Observable ,Collision ,01 natural sciences ,Nuclear physics ,Entropy density ,0103 physical sciences ,Transverse momentum ,Entropy (information theory) ,Atomic physics ,Nuclear Experiment ,010306 general physics ,Centrality - Abstract
We present first measurements of the evolution of the differential transverse momentum correlation function, C, with collision centrality in Au + Au interactions at root s(NN) = 200 GeV. This observable exhibits a strong dependence on collision centrality that is qualitatively similar to that of number correlations previously reported. We use the observed longitudinal broadening of the near-side peak of C with increasing centrality to estimate the ratio of the shear viscosity to entropy density, eta/s, of the matter formed in central Au + Au interactions. We obtain an upper limit estimate of eta/s that suggests that the produced medium has a small viscosity per unit entropy. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Morphological and physiological characteristics of transgenic cherry tomato mutant with HBsAg gene
- Author
-
Z. J. Guan, Yahui Wei, Y-L Huo, Bin Guo, and H. Y. Hao
- Subjects
biology ,Transgene ,fungi ,Mutant ,food and beverages ,Genetically modified crops ,biology.organism_classification ,Phenotype ,Molecular biology ,Transformation (genetics) ,Cherry tomato ,Botany ,Genetics ,Ploidy ,Gene - Abstract
HBsAg gene was previously introduced into cherry tomato (Lycopersicum esculentum var. cerasiforme) by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. To investigate the side effect of HBsAg gene in cherry tomato, we analyzed morphological and physiological characteristics of the transgenic mutant N244. The process was performed under field conditions. The results suggested that the mutant N244 exhibited morphological, cytological and physiological variation. First of all, compared with the wild plants NK, N244 had fleshy and dark green leaves, the fewer notches of leaf edge, more adventitious roots and barren seeds. Moreover, the chromosome of N244 were found to be triploid (n = 36) by flow cytometric analysis. Furthermore, N244 has obvious physiological alterations, as compared to NK. It was speculated that transformation of the genes probably led to ploidy variation, and further caused phenotype and physiological changes of plants. Our study will reveal side effects of the mutants, and promote cultivation of transgenic plants in the field.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.