345 results on '"Chuang Xu"'
Search Results
2. Mitochondrial Calcium Uniporter Regulator 1 (MCUR1) Relieves Mitochondrial Damage Induced by Lipopolysaccharide by Mediating Mitochondrial Ca2+ Homeostasis in Bovine Mammary Epithelial Cells
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Xudong Sun, Shuang Gao, Shengbin Luo, Renxu Chang, Hongdou Jia, Qiushi Xu, Qianming Jiang, Juan J. Loor, and Chuang Xu
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General Chemistry ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Published
- 2023
3. Distributed prescribed-time attitude consensus for multiple spacecraft via quantized communication
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Chuang Xu, Baolin Wu, Danwei Wang, and Fei Han
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Atmospheric Science ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Aerospace Engineering ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics - Published
- 2023
4. Fabrication and mechanism analysis of wood polymer composites with improved hydrophobicity, dimensional stability and mechanical strength
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Tiantian Yang, Haomin Zhong, Chuang Xu, Dan Luo, and Changtong Mei
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Polymers and Plastics - Published
- 2023
5. Phosphorus Overload Promotes Hepatic Lipolysis by Suppressing GSK3β-Dependent Phosphorylation of PPARα at Ser84 and Thr265 in a Freshwater Teleost
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Yi-Chuang Xu, Kostas Pantopoulos, Hua Zheng, Ester Zito, Tao Zhao, Xiao-Ying Tan, Xiao-Lei Wei, Yu-Feng Song, and Zhi Luo
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Environmental Chemistry ,General Chemistry - Published
- 2023
6. Sirtuin 3 relieves inflammatory responses elicited by lipopolysaccharide via the PGC1α-NFκB pathway in bovine mammary epithelial cells
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Lei Liu, Baogen Wang, Wei Yang, Qianming Jiang, Juan J. Loor, Lu Ouyang, Huilun Tang, Renxu Chang, Tao Peng, and Chuang Xu
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food Science - Abstract
Excessive inflammation in bovine mammary endothelial cells (BMEC) due to mastitis leads to disease progression and eventual culling of cattle. Sirtuin 3 (SIRT3), a mitochondrial deacetylase, downregulates pro-inflammatory cytokines in BMEC exposed to high concentrations of nonesterified fatty acids by blunting nuclear factor-κB (NFκB) signaling. In nonruminants, SIRT3 is under the control of PGC1α, a transcriptional cofactor. Specific aims were to study (1) the effect of SIRT3 on inflammatory responses of lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-challenged bovine mammary epithelial cells (bovine mammary alveolar cells-T, MAC-T) models, and (2) the role of PGC1α in the attenuation of NFκB signaling via SIRT3. To address these objectives, first, MAC-T cells were incubated in triplicate with 0, 50, 100, 150, or 200 μg/mL LPS (derived from Escherichia coli O55:B5) for 12 h with or without a 2-h incubation of the NFκB inhibitor ammonium pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (APDC, 10 μM). Second, SIRT3 was overexpressed using adenoviral expression (Ad-SIRT3) at different multiplicity of infection (MOI) for 6 h followed by a 12 h incubation with 150 μg/mL LPS. Third, cells were treated with the PGC1α agonist ZLN005 (10 μg/mL) for 24 h and then challenged with 150 μg/mL LPS for 12 h. Fourth, cells were initially treated with the PGC1α inhibitor SR-18292 (100 μM) for 6 h followed by a 6-h culture with or without 50 MOI Ad-SIRT3 and a challenge with 150 μg/mL LPS for 12 h. Data were analyzed using one-way ANOVA with subsequent Bonferroni correction. Linear and quadratic contrasts were used to determine dose-responses to LPS. There were linear and quadratic effects of LPS dosage on cell viability. Incubation with 150 and 200 μg/mL LPS for 12 h decreased cell viability to 78.6 and 34.9%, respectively. Compared with controls, expression of IL1B, IL6, and TNFA was upregulated by 5.2-, 5.9-, and 2.7-fold with 150 μg/mL LPS; concentrations of IL-1β, IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) in cell medium also increased. Compared with the LPS group, LPS+APDC increased cell viability and reversed the upregulation of IL1B, IL6, and TNFA expression. However, mRNA and protein abundance of SIRT3 decreased linearly with increasing LPS dose. Ad-SIRT3 infection (50 MOI) reduced IL1B, IL6, and TNFA expression and also their concentrations in cell medium, and decreased pNFκB P65/NFκB P65 ratio and nuclear abundance of NFκB P65. The PGC1α agonist increased SIRT3 expression, whereas it decreased cytokine expression, pNFκB P65/NFκB P65 ratio, and prevented NFκB P65 nuclear translocation. Contrary to the agonist, the PGC1α inhibitor had opposite effects, and elevated the concentrations of IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α in cell medium. Overall, data suggested that SIRT3 activity could attenuate LPS-induced inflammatory responses in mammary cells via alterations in the PGC1α-NFκB pathway. As such, there may be potential benefits for targeting SIRT3 in vivo to help prevent or alleviate negative effects of mastitis.
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- 2023
7. Activation of PINK1-mediated mitophagy protects bovine mammary epithelial cells against lipopolysaccharide-induced mitochondrial and inflammatory damage in vitro
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Renxu, Chang, Yan, Tang, Hongdou, Jia, Zhihao, Dong, Shuang, Gao, Qian, Song, Hao, Dong, Qiushi, Xu, Qianming, Jiang, Juan J, Loor, Xudong, Sun, and Chuang, Xu
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Physiology (medical) ,Biochemistry - Abstract
Increased metabolic stress during early lactation results in damage of mitochondria and inflammatory responses in bovine mammary epithelial cells, both of which could be aggravated by inhibition of mitophagy. PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1)-mediated mitophagy is essential in the removal of damaged mitochondria and the regulation of inflammatory responses. The aim of the present study was to elucidate the role of PINK1-mediated mitophagy on mitochondrial damage and inflammatory responses in bovine mammary epithelial cells challenged with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Exogenous LPS activated mitophagy and led to lower protein abundance of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) complexes (COI-V) and lower oxygen consumption rate (OCR) along with increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (Mito-ROS) content. These effects were also associated with increased protein abundance of Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-like receptor containing pyrin domain 3 (NLRP3) in a time-dependent manner. Pretreatment with 3-Methyladenine (3-MA) or knockdown of PINK1 aggravated the downregulation of COI-V protein abundance, the increase in Mito-ROS content, and the protein abundance of NLRP3, Cleaved-Caspase-1 and IL-1β induced by LPS. Overexpression of PINK1 activated mitophagy and alleviated LPS-induced NLRP3 inflammasome activation by reducing Mito-ROS production. Overall, the data suggested that PINK1-mediated mitophagy is a crucial anti-inflammatory mechanism that removes damaged mitochondria in bovine mammary epithelial cells experiencing an increased inflammatory load.
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- 2023
8. Fish Meal Replacement by Mixed Plant Protein in the Diets for Juvenile Yellow Catfish Pelteobagrus fulvidraco: Effects on Growth Performance and Health Status
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Ya-Kang Han, Yi-Chuang Xu, Zhi Luo, Tao Zhao, Hua Zheng, and Xiao-Ying Tan
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Article Subject ,Aquatic Science - Abstract
Increasing dietary replacement levels of fish meal by alternative plant proteins are of value for aquaculture. Here, a 10-week feeding experiment was undertaken to explore the effects of fish meal replacement by mixed plant protein (at a 2 : 3 ratio of cottonseed meal to rapeseed meal) on growth performance, oxidative and inflammatory responses, and mTOR pathway of yellow catfish Pelteobagrus fulvidraco. Yellow catfish ( 2.38 ± 0.1 g , mean ± SEM ) were randomly divided into 15 indoors fiberglass tanks, 30 fish each tank, and fed five isonitrogenous (44% crude protein) and isolipidic (9% crude fat) diets with fish meal replaced by mixed plant protein at 0% (the control), 10% (RM10), 20% (RM20), 30% (RM30), and 40% (RM40), respectively. Among five groups, fish fed the control, and RM10 diets tended to have higher growth performance, higher protein content, and lower lipid content in livers. Dietary mixed plant protein substitute increased hepatic free gossypol content and damaged liver histology and reduced the serum total essential amino acids, total nonessential amino acids, and total amino acid contents. Yellow catfish fed the control, and RM10 diets tended to have higher antioxidant capacity. Dietary mixed plant protein replacement tended to promote proinflammatory responses and inhibited mTOR pathway. Based on the second regression analysis of SGR against mixed plant protein substitutes, the optimal replacement level of fish meal by mixed plant protein was 8.7%.
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- 2022
9. Role of sortilin 1 (SORT1) on fatty acid–mediated cholesterol metabolism in primary calf hepatocytes
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Shuang Wang, Qianming Jiang, Juan J. Loor, Changhong Gao, Mingmao Yang, Yan Tian, Wenwen Fan, Bingbing Zhang, Ming Li, Chuang Xu, and Wei Yang
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3-Hydroxybutyric Acid ,Fatty Acids ,Ketosis ,Fatty Acids, Nonesterified ,Lipid Metabolism ,Adaptor Proteins, Vesicular Transport ,Cholesterol ,Liver ,Hepatocytes ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cattle ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,RNA, Messenger ,Food Science - Abstract
Ketosis is a common metabolic disorder in peripartal dairy cows that is caused by excessive mobilization of fat and incomplete hepatic metabolism of fatty acids (FFA). Recent data in nonruminant models revealed that sortilin 1 (SORT1) is involved in a variety of lipid metabolism-related diseases. It plays important roles in the regulation of triglyceride (TAG) and total cholesterol (TC) levels. In this study, we first used liver biopsies from healthy cows (serum β-hydroxybutyrate concentration0.6 mM) and cows diagnosed with clinical ketosis (serum β-hydroxybutyrate concentration3.0 mM) to assess alterations in cholesterol synthesis, transport, and excretion. Then, to assess mechanistic links between SORT1 and fatty acid-mediated cholesterol metabolism, hepatocytes isolated from 4 healthy female calves (1 d old, 35-45 kg) were challenged with or without a mixture of free fatty acids (FFA; 1.2 mM) to induce metabolic stress. Hepatocytes were then treated with empty adenovirus vectors (with green fluorescent protein; Ad-GFP) or with SORT1-overexpressing adenovirus (Ad-SORT1) for 6 h or with SORT1 inhibitor (SORT1i) for 2 h, followed by a challenge with (Ad-GFP+FFA, Ad-SORT1+FFA, or SORT1i+FFA) or without (Ad-GFP, Ad-SORT1, or SORT1i) 1.2 mM FFA mixture for 12 h. Data analysis of calf hepatocyte treatment comparisons were assessed by 2-way ANOVA, and multiplicity for each experiment was adjusted using the Bonferroni procedure. Expression levels of factors related to cholesterol synthesis, transport, and excretion in liver tissue of cows with ketosis was lower. Hepatocytes challenged with FFA had lower concentrations of TC and mRNA and protein abundances of sterol regulatory element-binding protein 2 (SREBF2), acetyl acyl coenzyme A-cholesterol acyltransferase 2 (ACAT2), ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1), ABC subfamily G member 5 (ABCG5), and ABC subfamily G member 8 (ABCG8). Compared with FFA challenge alone, SORT1i + FFA led to greater protein abundance of 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl coenzyme A reductase (HMGCR), ACAT2, and ABCG5, and greater mRNA abundance of ABCG5. Compared with FFA challenge alone, SORT1 overexpression led to lower protein abundance of SREBF2. In contrast, protein abundance of ABCA1 was greater. Overall, our data suggested that exogenous FFA induced abnormal cholesterol metabolism in hepatocytes, whereas a high abundance of SORT1 affected cholesterol esterification and potentially influx into bile. Thus, downregulation of hepatic SORT1 might be a cholesterol-regulated protective mechanism in the presence of a marked increase in FFA.
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- 2022
10. Multilayer Densities of the Crust and Upper Mantle in the South China Sea Using Gravity Multiscale Analysis
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Wang, Hangtao Yu, Chuang Xu, Haopeng Chen, Yi Chai, Pengbo Qin, Gongxiang Wang, Hui Zhang, Ming Xu, Congcong Xing, and Hao
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density structure ,wavelet multiscale analysis ,South China Sea ,high-density body ,gravity inversion - Abstract
The South China Sea (SCS) is the result of several major tectonic plates’ interaction, and a more detailed density structure is essential to study the tectonic evolution of the marginal seas. In the past decades, density studies in the SCS have focused more on profiles, and the lateral density structure has been less mentioned by scholars. Previously, gravity data have been used many times to study the SCS; this can satisfy the demands of large-scale lateral studies, but a point that cannot be ignored is that the gravity method has certain deficiencies in vertical resolution. Therefore, this paper applies a gravity multiscale analysis method to isolate the Bouguer gravity anomaly signal in the SCS, and then uses the power spectrum method to estimate the mean field source depth, which corresponds to the decomposed gravity anomaly signal. On this basis, we modeled stratified crustal and upper mantle structures in the SCS to determine the lateral density distribution at different depths. The results show the following: (1) There are two large high-density materials in the SCS. The first one is located near the Yinggehai Basin, where the depth ranges from 42.4 km to 71.2 km, with a diameter of nearly 220 km; the second one is located near the northwest sub-basin, where the depth ranges from 106.8 km to 128.8 km, which is probably part of the Paleo-Pacific remnant in the SCS. (2) The proto South China Sea subduction zone is located in the northwestern part of the Sulu Sea and has a northeast–southwest trend.
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- 2023
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11. Molecular Characteristics of Bovine Viral Diarrhea Virus Strains Isolated from Persistently Infected Cattle
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Fan, Yinghao Wu, Guangzhi Zhang, Hui Jiang, Ting Xin, Li Jia, Yichen Zhang, Yifei Yang, Tong Qin, Chuang Xu, Jie Cao, Gobena Ameni, Arfan Ahmad, Jiabo Ding, Limin Li, Yuzhong Ma, and Xuezheng
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bovine viral diarrhea virus ,persistently infected cattle ,BVDV-1b ,molecular characteristics - Abstract
In this study, we reported the isolation, identification, and molecular characteristics of nine BVDV strains that were isolated from the serum of persistently infected cattle. The new strains were designated as BVDV TJ2101, TJ2102, TJ2103, TJ2104, TJ2105, TJ2106, TJ2107, TJ2108 and TJ2109. The TJ2102 and TJ2104 strains were found to be cytopathic BVDV, and the other strains were non-cytopathic BVDV. An alignment and phylogenetic analysis showed that the new isolates share 92.2–96.3% homology with the CP7 strain and, thus, were classified as the BVDV-1b subgenotype. A recombination analysis of the genome sequences showed that the new strains could be recombined by the major parent BVDV-1a NADL strain and the minor parent BVDV-1m SD-15 strain. Some genome variations or unique amino acid mutations were found in 5′-UTR, E0 and E2 of these new isolates. In addition, a potential linear B cell epitopes prediction showed that the potential linear B cell epitope at positions 56–61 is highly variable in BVDV-1b. In conclusion, the present study has identified nine strains of BVDV from persistently infected cattle in China. Further studies on the virulence and pathogenesis of these new strains are recommended.
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- 2023
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12. Effects of Chromium Propionate and Calcium Propionate on Lactation Performance and Rumen Microbiota in Postpartum Heat-Stressed Holstein Dairy Cows
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Wang, Chenxu Zhao, Bingyu Shen, Yan Huang, Yezi Kong, Panpan Tan, Yi Zhou, Jiaqi Yang, Chuang Xu, and Jianguo
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chromium propionate ,calcium propionate ,heat stress ,rumen microbiota ,dairy cows - Abstract
Chromium propionate (Cr-Pro) and calcium propionate (Ca-Pro) are widely applied in dairy production, especially in the alleviation of heat stress (HS). HS can reduce the abundance of rumen microbiota and the lactation performance of dairy cows. The present work mainly focused on evaluating the effects of Cr-Pro and Ca-Pro on the performance, ruminal bacterial community, and stress of postpartum HS dairy cows as well as identifying the differences in their mechanisms. Fifteen multiparous postpartum Holstein cows with equivalent weights (694 ± 28 kg) and milk yields (41.2 ± 1.21 kg/day) were randomly divided into three groups: control (CON), Cr-Pro (CRPR), and Ca-Pro (CAPR). The control cows received the basal total mixed ration (TMR) diet, while the CRPR group received TMR with 3.13 g/day of Cr-Pro, and the CAPR group received TMR with 200 g/day of Ca-Pro. The rumen microbial 16S rRNA was sequenced using the Illumina NovaSeq platform along with the measurement of ruminal volatile fatty acids (VFAs) and milking performance. Cr-Pro and Ca-Pro improved lactation performance, increased the rumen VFA concentration, and altered the rumen microbiota of the HS dairy cows. Cr-Pro significantly improved the milk yield (p < 0.01). The richness and diversity of the microbial species significantly increased after feeding on Ca-Pro (p < 0.05). Gene function prediction revealed increased metabolic pathways and biological-synthesis-related function in the groups supplemented with Cr-Pro and Ca-Pro. Our results indicate that the application of Cr-Pro or Ca-Pro can provide relief for heat stress in dairy cows through different mechanisms, and a combination of both is recommended for optimal results in production.
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- 2023
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13. Dietary supplementation with nanoparticle CMCS-20a enhances the resistance to GCRV infection in grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella)
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Zhensheng Wang, Chuang Xu, Yanqi Zhang, Xingchen Huo, and Jianguo Su
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Fish Proteins ,Chitosan ,Fish Diseases ,Carps ,Adjuvants, Immunologic ,Dietary Supplements ,Animals ,Nanoparticles ,Environmental Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Aquatic Science ,Reoviridae ,Reoviridae Infections - Abstract
Combination of antimicrobial proteins and nanomaterials provides a platform for the development of immunopotentiators. Oral administration of immunopotentiators can significantly enhance the immunity of organisms, which provides ideas for disease prevention. In this study, we confirmed that nanoparticles CMCS-20a can efficiently prevent grass carp reovirus (GCRV) infection. Firstly, we verified that CiCXCL20a is involved in the immune responses post GCRV challenge in vivo and alleviates the cell death post GCRV challenge in CIK cells. Then, we prepared nanoparticles CMCS-20a using carboxymethyl chitosan (CMCS) loaded with grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon idella) CXCL20a (CiCXCL20a). Meanwhile, we confirmed nanoparticles CMCS-20a can alleviate the degradation in intestine. Subsequently, we added it to the feed by low temperature vacuum drying method and high temperature spray drying method, respectively. Grass carp were oral administration for 28 days and challenged by GCRV. Low temperature vacuum drying group (LD-CMCS-20a) significantly improve grass carp survival rate, but not high temperature spray drying group (HD-CMCS-20a). To reveal the mechanisms, we investigated the serum biochemical indexes, intestinal mucus barrier, immune gene regulation and tissue damage. The complement component 3 content, lysozyme and total superoxide dismutase activities are highest in LD-CMCS-20a group. LD-CMCS-20a effectively attenuates the damage of GCRV to the number of intestinal villous goblet cells and mucin thickness. LD-CMCS-20a effectively regulates mRNA expressions of immune genes (IFN1, Mx2, Gig1 and IgM) in spleen and head kidney tissues. In addition, LD-CMCS-20a obviously alleviate tissue lesions and viral load in spleen. These results indicated that the nanoparticles CMCS-20a can enhance the disease resistance of fish by improving their immunity, which provides a new perspective for fish to prevent viral infections.
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- 2022
14. Isogeometric FE-BE method with non-conforming coupling interface for solving elasto-thermoviscoelastic problems
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Yunsheng Zhan, Chuang Xu, Huashi Yang, Chunying Dong, Rui Dai, and Xiangyang Liu
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Computational Mathematics ,Applied Mathematics ,General Engineering ,Analysis - Published
- 2022
15. Distributed dynamic event-triggered adaptive attitude consensus control of multiple spacecraft
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Chuang Xu, Baolin Wu, Danwei Wang, and Yingchun Zhang
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Aerospace Engineering - Published
- 2022
16. Sirt3-Sod2-mROS-Mediated Manganese Triggered Hepatic Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Lipotoxicity in a Freshwater Teleost
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Tao Zhao, Wu-Hong Lv, Christer Hogstrand, Dian-Guang Zhang, Yi-Chuang Xu, Yi-Huan Xu, and Zhi Luo
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PPAR gamma ,Manganese ,Oxidative Stress ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Sirtuin 3 ,Animals ,Humans ,Environmental Chemistry ,Fresh Water ,General Chemistry ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Antioxidants ,Mitochondria - Abstract
Exposure to excessive manganese (Mn) is toxic to humans and animals. However, the toxic effects and mechanisms of excessive Mn influencing the vertebrates have been highly overlooked. In the present study, dietary Mn overload significantly increased hepatic lipid and Mn contents, decreased superoxide dismutase 2 (Sod2) activity, increased the Sod2 acetylation level, and induced mitochondrial dysfunction; Mn induced mitochondrial dysfunction through Mtf1/sirtuin 3 (Sirt3)-mediated acetylation of Sod2 at the sites K55 and K70. Meanwhile, mitochondrial oxidative stress was involved in Mn-induced lipotoxicity. Mechanistically, Mn-induced lipotoxicity was via oxidative stress-induced Hsf1 nucleus translocation and its DNA binding capacity to the regions of a
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- 2022
17. Role of sortilin 1 (SORT1) on lipid metabolism in bovine liver
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Wei Yang, Shuang Wang, Juan J. Loor, Qianming Jiang, Changhong Gao, Mingmao Yang, Yan Tian, Wenwen Fan, Yingying Zhao, Bingbing Zhang, and Chuang Xu
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Fatty Acids ,Lipoproteins, VLDL ,Lipid Metabolism ,Fatty Liver ,Adaptor Proteins, Vesicular Transport ,Liver ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cattle ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,RNA, Messenger ,Triglycerides ,Apolipoproteins B ,Food Science - Abstract
High circulating concentrations of fatty acids cause triacylglycerol (TAG) accumulation in hepatocytes of dairy cows, a common metabolic disorder after calving. Low secretion of apolipoprotein B (APOB) and very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) are thought to be the major factors for TAG accumulation in hepatocytes. Recent data in nonruminant models revealed that sortilin 1 (SORT1) is a key regulator of VLDL secretion in part due to its ability to bind APOB. Thus, SORT1 could play a role in the susceptibility of dairy cows to develop fatty liver. To gain mechanistic insights in vivo and in vitro, we performed experiments using liver biopsies or isolated primary hepatocytes. For the in vivo study, blood and liver samples were collected from healthy multiparous dairy cows (n = 6; 9.0 ± 2.1 d in milk) and cows with fatty liver (n = 6; 9.7 ± 2.2 d in milk). In vitro, hepatocytes isolated from 4 healthy female calves (1 d old, 42-51 kg) were challenged with (fatty acids) or without (control) a 1.2 mM mixture of fatty acids in an attempt to induce metabolic stress. Furthermore, hepatocytes were treated with empty adenovirus vectors (Ad-GFP) or SORT1 overexpressing adenovirus (Ad-SORT1) for 6 h, or SORT1 inhibitor for 2 h followed by a challenge with (Ad-GFP + fatty acids, Ad-SORT1 + fatty acids, or SORT1 inhibitor + fatty acids) or without (Ad-GFP, Ad-SORT1, or SORT1 inhibitor) the 1.2 mM mixture of fatty acids for 12 h. Data from liver biopsies were compared using a 2-tailed unpaired Student's t-test. Data from calf hepatocytes were analyzed by one-way ANOVA. Data revealed that both fatty liver and in vitro challenge with fatty acids were associated with greater concentrations of TAG and mRNA and protein abundance of SORT1, SREBF1, FASN, and ACACA. In contrast, mRNA and protein abundance of CPT1A and APOB, and mRNA abundance of MTTP were markedly lower. Compared with fatty acid challenge alone, SORT1 overexpression led to greater concentration of TAG and mRNA abundance of SREBF1, FASN, ACACA, DGAT1, and DGAT2, and protein abundance of SREBF1, FASN, and ACACA. In contrast, concentration of secreted VLDL-APOB and mRNA abundance of APOB and MTTP, and protein abundance of CPT1A, APOB, and MTTP were lower. Compared with fatty acid challenge alone, SORT1 inhibitor + fatty acids led to lower concentrations of TAG and mRNA abundance of SREBF1, FASN, and DGAT2, and protein abundance of FASN, ACACA, and DGAT1. Concentrations of secreted VLDL-APOB and mRNA abundance of CPT1A and protein abundance of CPT1A and APOB were greater. Overall, in vitro data suggested that greater SORT1 abundance induced by exogenous fatty acids caused a reduction in VLDL-APOB secretion and increased hepatocyte TAG synthesis. Such mechanism was also apparent in tissue from cows with fatty liver. Thus, targeted downregulation of hepatic SORT1 could represent a viable mechanism to unload lipid during conditions where the influx of fatty acids increases markedly.
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- 2022
18. Store-operated Ca2+ entry-sensitive glycolysis regulates neutrophil adhesion and phagocytosis in dairy cows with subclinical hypocalcemia
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Bingbing Zhang, Wei Zhang, Yuxin He, Xinru Ma, Ming Li, Qianming Jiang, Juan J. Loor, Xinquan Lv, Wei Yang, and Chuang Xu
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food Science - Published
- 2023
19. Prediction and Verification of Curcumin as a Potential Drug for Inhibition of PDCoV Replication in LLC-PK1 Cells
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Xuefei Wang, Xue Wang, Jialu Zhang, Qiang Shan, Yaohong Zhu, Chuang Xu, and Jiufeng Wang
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Inorganic Chemistry ,molecular docking ,curcumin ,PDCoV ,RIG-I ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Molecular Biology ,Spectroscopy ,Catalysis ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Porcine deltacoronavirus (PDCoV) is an emerging swine enteropathogenic coronavirus (CoV) that causes lethal watery diarrhea in neonatal pigs and poses economic and public health burdens. Currently, there are no effective antiviral agents against PDCoV. Curcumin is the active ingredient extracted from the rhizome of turmeric, which has a potential pharmacological value because it exhibits antiviral properties against several viruses. Here, we described the antiviral effect of curcumin against PDCoV. At first, the potential relationships between the active ingredients and the diarrhea-related targets were predicted through a network pharmacology analysis. Twenty-three nodes and 38 edges were obtained using a PPI analysis of eight compound-targets. The action target genes were closely related to the inflammatory and immune related signaling pathways, such as the TNF signaling pathway, Jak-STAT signaling pathway, and so on. Moreover, IL-6, NR3C2, BCHE and PTGS2 were identified as the most likely targets of curcumin by binding energy and 3D protein-ligand complex analysis. Furthermore, curcumin inhibited PDCoV replication in LLC-PK1 cells at the time of infection in a dose-dependent way. In poly (I:C) pretreated LLC-PK1 cells, PDCoV reduced IFN-β production via the RIG-I pathway to evade the host’s antiviral innate immune response. Meanwhile, curcumin inhibited PDCoV-induced IFN-β secretion by inhibiting the RIG-I pathway and reduced inflammation by inhibiting IRF3 or NF-κB protein expression. Our study provides a potential strategy for the use of curcumin in preventing diarrhea caused by PDCoV in piglets.
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- 2023
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20. Fine structure of the lunar crust and upper mantle in the mare serenitatis derived from gravity multi-scale analysis
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Hangtao Yu, Chuang Xu, Yihao Wu, Jinbo Li, Guangyu Jian, and Ming Xu
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Astronomy and Astrophysics - Abstract
It is significant for revealing the formation mechanism of the lunar Mascon to invert the refined 3-D lunar crust and upper mantle structure of the Mare Serenitatis. As the development of space exploration technology, lunar gravity data has advantages of high accuracy and resolution, which can be used to invert the lunar crust and upper mantle structure. However, gravity anomaly reflects all anomalous material during the whole Moon’s interior, and its vertical structure recognition capability is poor. Thus, this paper adopts wavelet multi-scale analysis method to decompose the gravity anomaly in the Mare Serenitatis for enhancing vertical resolution, and the corresponding field source depths of the decomposed gravity anomalies are further estimated by power spectrum method. Subsequently, the layered densities and the crust-mantle interface depth of the Mare Serenitatis are inverted. The research results show that the 3-D morphological character of two large high-density materials in the Mare Serenitatis is clearly depicted. The southwest high-density material with its bottom center at approximately (15°E, 25°N) has the depth range of 50 km–80 km and the maximum diameter of approximately 150 km. As for the southeast high-density material, its bottom center is located at approximately (23°E, 25°N), the depth range is 30 km–60 km and the maximum diameter is approximately 100 km. Another new finding is that the crust-mantle interface uplift has obviously fallen back in the center of the Mare Serenitatis. The high-density materials and crust-mantle interface uplift may together promote the formation of the Mascon in the Mare Serenitatis.
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- 2023
21. Sonocatalysis and sono-photocatalysis in CaCu3Ti4O12 ceramics
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Min Wang, Jiajun Liu, Chuang Xu, and Li Feng
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Process Chemistry and Technology ,Materials Chemistry ,Ceramics and Composites ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials - Published
- 2022
22. Role of ORAI calcium release-activated calcium modulator 1 (ORAI1) on neutrophil extracellular trap formation in dairy cows with subclinical hypocalcemia
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Bingbing Zhang, Xinru Ma, Juan J. Loor, Qianming Jiang, Han Guo, Wei Zhang, Ming Li, Xinquan Lv, Yufeng Yin, Jianan Wen, Jingjing Wang, Chuang Xu, and Wei Yang
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Hypocalcemia ,ORAI1 Protein ,Neutrophils ,Genetics ,Animals ,Cattle Diseases ,Lactation ,Calcium ,Cattle ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Extracellular Traps ,Food Science - Abstract
Hypocalcemia in dairy cows is associated with decreased neutrophil phagocytosis, adhesion capacity, migration, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production through alterations in ORAI calcium release-activated calcium modulator 1 (ORAI1). Neutrophils can resist the invasion of pathogenic microorganisms by releasing neutrophil extracellular traps (NET). However, the mechanisms controlling NET formation during hypocalcemia are unknown. To address the role of ORAI1 in NET formation, neutrophils were isolated at 2 d postcalving from lactating Holstein dairy cows (n = 10 per group) diagnosed as clinically healthy (control) or with plasma concentrations of Ca
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- 2022
23. Effects of dietary copper (Cu) on growth performance, body composition, mineral content, hepatic histology and Cu transport of the GIFT strain of Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus)
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Chong-Chao Zhong, Jiang Ke, Chang-Chun Song, Xiao-Ying Tan, Yi-Chuang Xu, Wu-Hong Lv, Yu-Feng Song, and Zhi Luo
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Aquatic Science - Published
- 2023
24. Spatiotemporal Action Detection Based on Improved Action Tube Connection
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Xiangzhen Xu, Yun Yi, Tinghua Wang, Wenyu Hu, and Chuang Xu
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- 2023
25. Mass testing of the JUNO experiment 20-inch PMTs readout electronics
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Alberto Coppi, Beatrice Jelmini, Marco Bellato, Antonio Bergnoli, Matteo Bolognesi, Riccardo Brugnera, Vanessa Cerrone, Chao Chen, Barbara Clerbaux, Marta Colomer Molla, Daniele Corti, Flavio dal Corso, Jianmeng Dong, Wei Dou, Lei Fan, Alberto Garfagnini, Arsenii Gavrikov, Guanghua Gong, Marco Grassi, Rosa Maria Guizzetti, Shuang Hang, Cong He, Jun Hu, Roberto Isocrate, Xiaolu Ji, Xiaoshan Jiang, Fei Li, Zehong Liang, Ivano Lippi, Hongbang Liu, Hongbin Liu, Shenghui Liu, Xuewei Liu, Daibin Luo, Ronghua Luo, Filippo Marini, Daniele Mazzaro, Luciano Modenese, Zhe Ning, Yu Peng, Pierre-Alexandre Petitjean, Alberto Pitacco, Mengyao Qi, Loris Ramina, Mirco Rampazzo, Massimo Rebeschini, Mariia Redchuk, Andrea Serafini, Yunhua Sun, Andrea Triossi, Riccardo Triozzi, Fabio Veronese, Katharina von Sturm, Peiliang Wang, Peng Wang, Yangfu Wang, Yusheng Wang, Yuyi Wang, Zheng Wang, Ping Wei, Jun Weng, Shishen Xian, Xiaochuan Xie, Benda Xu, Chuang Xu, Donglian Xu, Hai Xu, Xiongbo Yan, Ziyue Yan, Fengfan Yang, Yan Yang, Yifan Yang, Mei Ye, Tingxuan Zeng, Shuihan Zhang, Wei Zhang, Aiqiang Zhang, Bin Zhang, Siyao Zhao, Changge Zi, Sebastiano Aiello, Giuseppe Andronico, Vito Antonelli, Andrea Barresi, Davide Basilico, Marco Beretta, Augusto Brigatti, Riccardo Bruno, Antonio Budano, Barbara Caccianiga, Antonio Cammi, Stefano Campese, Davide Chiesa, Catia Clementi, Marco Cordelli, Stefano Dusini, Andrea Fabbri, Giulietto Felici, Federico Ferraro, Marco Giulio Giammarchi, Cecilia Landini, Paolo Lombardi, Claudio Lombardo, Andrea Maino, Fabio Mantovani, Stefano Maria Mari, Agnese Martini, Emanuela Meroni, Lino Miramonti, Michele Montuschi, Massimiliano Nastasi, Domizia Orestano, Fausto Ortica, Alessandro Paoloni, Sergio Parmeggiano, Fabrizio Petrucci, Ezio Previtali, Gioacchino Ranucci, Alessandra Carlotta Re, Barbara Ricci, Aldo Romani, Paolo Saggese, Simone Sanfilippo, Chiara Sirignano, Monica Sisti, Luca Stanco, Virginia Strati, Francesco Tortorici, Cristina Tuvé, Carlo Venettacci, Giuseppe Verde, Lucia Votano, Coppi, Alberto, Jelmini, Beatrice, Bellato, Marco, Bergnoli, Antonio, Bolognesi, Matteo, Brugnera, Riccardo, Cerrone, Vanessa, Chen, Chao, Clerbaux, Barbara, Corti, Daniele, dal Corso, Flavio, Dong, Jianmeng, Dou, Wei, Fan, Lei, Garfagnini, Alberto, Gavrikov, Arsenii, Gong, Guanghua, Grassi, Marco, Guizzetti, Rosa Maria, Hang, Shuang, He, Cong, Hu, Jun, Isocrate, Roberto, Ji, Xiaolu, Jiang, Xiaoshan, Li, Fei, Liang, Zehong, Lippi, Ivano, Liu, Hongbang, Liu, Hongbin, Liu, Shenghui, Liu, Xuewei, Luo, Daibin, Luo, Ronghua, Marini, Filippo, Mazzaro, Daniele, Modenese, Luciano, Molla, Marta Colomer, Ning, Zhe, Peng, Yu, Petitjean, Pierre-Alexandre, Pitacco, Alberto, Qi, Mengyao, Ramina, Lori, Rampazzo, Mirco, Rebeschini, Massimo, Redchuk, Mariia, Serafini, Andrea, Sun, Yunhua, Triossi, Andrea, Triozzi, Riccardo, Veronese, Fabio, von Sturm, Katharina, Wang, Peiliang, Wang, Peng, Wang, Yangfu, Wang, Yusheng, Wang, Yuyi, Wang, Zheng, Wei, Ping, Weng, Jun, Xian, Shishen, Xie, Xiaochuan, Xu, Benda, Xu, Chuang, Xu, Donglian, Xu, Hai, Yan, Xiongbo, Yan, Ziyue, Yang, Fengfan, Yang, Yan, Yang, Yifan, Ye, Mei, Zeng, Tingxuan, Zhang, Shuihan, Zhang, Wei, Zhang, Aiqiang, Zhang, Bin, Zhao, Siyao, Zi, Changge, Aiello, Sebastiano, Andronico, Giuseppe, Antonelli, Vito, Barresi, Andrea, Basilico, Davide, Beretta, Marco, Brigatti, Augusto, Bruno, Riccardo, Budano, Antonio, Caccianiga, Barbara, Cammi, Antonio, Campese, Stefano, Chiesa, Davide, Clementi, Catia, Cordelli, Marco, Dusini, Stefano, Fabbri, Andrea, Felici, Giulietto, Ferraro, Federico, Giammarchi, Marco Giulio, Landini, Cecilia, Lombardi, Paolo, Lombardo, Claudio, Maino, Andrea, Mantovani, Fabio, Mari, Stefano Maria, Martini, Agnese, Meroni, Emanuela, Miramonti, Lino, Montuschi, Michele, Nastasi, Massimiliano, Orestano, Domizia, Ortica, Fausto, Paoloni, Alessandro, Parmeggiano, Sergio, Petrucci, Fabrizio, Previtali, Ezio, Ranucci, Gioacchino, Re, Alessandra Carlotta, Ricci, Barbara, Romani, Aldo, Saggese, Paolo, Sanfilippo, Simone, Sirignano, Chiara, Sisti, Monica, Stanco, Luca, Strati, Virginia, Tortorici, Francesco, Tuvé, Cristina, Venettacci, Carlo, Verde, Giuseppe, and Votano, Lucia
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Instrumentation - Abstract
The Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) is a multi-purpose, large size, liquid scintillator experiment under construction in China. JUNO will perform leading measurements detecting neutrinos from different sources (reactor, terrestrial and astrophysical neutrinos) covering a wide energy range (from 200 keV to several GeV). This paper focuses on the design and development of a test protocol for the 20-inch PMT underwater readout electronics, performed in parallel to the mass production line. In a time period of about ten months, a total number of 6950 electronic boards were tested with an acceptance yield of 99.1%.
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- 2023
26. An Adaptive Nonlinear Iterative Method for Predicting Seafloor Topography From Altimetry‐Derived Gravity Data
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Chuang Xu, Jinbo Li, Guangyu Jian, Yunlong Wu, and Yu Zhang
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Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2023
27. Full classification of dynamics for one-dimensional continuous-Time Markov chains with polynomial transition rates
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Chuang Xu, Mads Christian Hansen, and Carsten Wiuf
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Statistics and Probability ,stochastic reaction networks ,certain absorption ,recurrence ,Applied Mathematics ,transience ,positive and null recurrence ,explosivity ,stationary and quasi-stationary distributions ,Density-dependent continuous-Time Markov chains - Abstract
This paper provides a full classification of the dynamics for continuous-time Markov chains (CTMCs) on the nonnegative integers with polynomial transition rate functions and without arbitrary large backward jumps. Such stochastic processes are abundant in applications, in particular in biology. More precisely, for CTMCs of bounded jumps, we provide necessary and sufficient conditions in terms of calculable parameters for explosivity, recurrence versus transience, positive recurrence versus null recurrence, certain absorption, and implosivity. Simple sufficient conditions for exponential ergodicity of stationary distributions and quasi-stationary distributions as well as existence and nonexistence of moments of hitting times are also obtained. Similar simple sufficient conditions for the aforementioned dynamics together with their opposite dynamics are established for CTMCs with unbounded forward jumps. Finally, we apply our results to stochastic reaction networks, an extended class of branching processes, a general bursty single-cell stochastic gene expression model, and population processes, none of which are birth–death processes. The approach is based on a mixture of Lyapunov–Foster-type results, the classical semimartingale approach, and estimates of stationary measures.
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- 2023
28. Metagenomic Analyses Detected Changes in the Antibiotic Resistome in Manure and Bedding on a Conventional Dairy Farm
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Jingyi Wang, Zhaoju Deng, Chuang Xu, Bo Han, Zhijun Cao, John Kastelic, Yindi Xiong, Jingyue Yang, Chunyan Zhu, and Jian Gao
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- 2023
29. Taraxasterol alleviates fatty acid-induced lipid deposition in calf hepatocytes by decreasing ROS production and endoplasmic reticulum stress
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Ming Li, Yuxin He, Wei Zhang, Yufeng Yin, Qianming Jiang, Juan J Loor, Jingjing Wang, Jianan Wen, Wei Yang, Chuang Xu, and Bingbing Zhang
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Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,General Medicine ,Food Science - Abstract
Increased concentrations of free fatty acids (FFAs) induce reactive oxygen species (ROSs) generation and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, thus, increasing the risk of fatty liver in dairy cows during the periparturient period. In non-ruminants, Taraxasterol (Tara; a pentacyclic triterpenoid found in medicinal plants) plays an important role in anti-inflammatory and antioxidant reactions. Whether Tara can alleviate or prevent fatty liver in ruminants is unknown. We addressed whether Tara supply could dampen lipid accumulation, ROSs production, and ER stress caused by FFAs in calf hepatocytes. Primary calf hepatocytes were isolated from five healthy calves (1 d old, female, 30–40 kg, fasting, rectal temperature 38.7–39.7 °C). In the first experiment, hepatocytes were incubated with various concentrations of Tara (2.5, 5, and 10 μg/mL) for 12 h prior to the 1.2-mM FFAs challenge. Results indicated that the level of ROSs was lowest with 5 μg/mL Tara. Thus, to further characterize the molecular mechanisms whereby Tara protects from FFAs-induced lipid deposition in calf hepatocytes, we performed incubations with 5 μg/mL Tara for 12 h prior to a 1.2-mM FFAs challenge for an additional 12 h. Results indicated that 1.2-mM FFAs challenge increased mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP), enhanced expression of proteins and mRNA associated with ER stress (PERK, IRE1, GRP78, ATF6, and CHOP) and fatty acid synthesis (FASN, ACC1, and SREBP-1c), and ultimately led to increased lipid droplet synthesis. In contrast, Tara treatment alleviated these negative effects after 1.2-mM FFAs challenge. To determine whether Tara protects against FFAs-induced lipid droplet synthesis by alleviating oxidative stress, hepatocytes were treated with 5 μg/mL Tara for 22 h prior to H2O2 (440 μM) challenge for 2 h. Compared with H2O2 treatment alone, results revealed a marked decrease in ROSs, MMP, and protein abundance of ER stress (GRP78, ATF6, and CHOP) and lipid droplet synthesis in response to Tara prior to H2O2 challenge. Data suggested that the increase in mitochondrial ROSs production contributes to lipid accumulation in calf hepatocytes. Collectively, our in vitro data indicate that Tara alleviates fatty acid-induced lipid deposition. Further research is warranted to ascertain that Tara can be helpful in the therapeutic management of early lactating cows to control or alleviate excessive hepatic lipid deposition.
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- 2023
30. Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 protects bovine mammary epithelial cells against free fatty acid-induced mitochondrial dysfunction in vitro
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Hongdou Jia, Juan J. Loor, Shengbin Luo, Zhuo Li, Yan Tang, Chuang Xu, Xudong Sun, Hao Dong, Shuang Gao, Qiushi Xu, Renxu Chang, Xuan Wang, Yuanyuan Chen, Zhihao Dong, Qian Song, and Ahmad Aboragah
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Mitochondrial ROS ,Mitochondrial DNA ,NF-E2-Related Factor 2 ,Chemistry ,Epithelial Cells ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,Fatty Acids, Nonesterified ,Mitochondrion ,TFAM ,medicine.disease_cause ,Mitochondria ,Cell biology ,Oxidative Stress ,Mammary Glands, Animal ,Downregulation and upregulation ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Cattle ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,NRF1 ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Oxidative stress ,Food Science - Abstract
Bovine mammary epithelial cells undergo an increase in metabolic rate, mitochondrial dysfunction, and oxidative stress after calving. Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NFE2L2), a master regulator of cellular redox homeostasis, plays crucial roles in the regulation of mitochondrial function. The objective of this study was to investigate the role of NFE2L2 on mitochondrial function in bovine mammary epithelial cells under hyperlipidemic conditions. Three experiments were conducted as follows: (1) the immortalized bovine mammary epithelial cell line MAC-T was treated with various concentrations of free fatty acids (FFA; 0, 0.6, 1.2, or 2.4 mM) for 24 h to induce stress; (2) MAC-T cells were transfected with small interfering RNA targeting NFE2L2 (si-NFE2L2) and scrambled nontarget negative control (si-Control) for 48 h; and (3) MAC-T cells were pretreated with 10 μM sulforaphane (SFN), an activator of NFE2L2, for 24 h followed by treatment with 1.2 mM FFA for an additional 24 h. Results indicated that exogenous FFA challenge induced linear and quadratic increases in concentrations of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS). Compared with 0 mM FFA, mitochondrial membrane potential, mRNA abundance of oxidative phosphorylation complexes (CO I-V), protein abundance of nuclear respiratory factor 1 (NRF1), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator 1 α (PGC-1α), mitochondrial transcription factor A (TFAM), and NFE2L2 along with the contents of ATP, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), and total mitochondria were greater in the MAC-T challenged with 0.6 mM FFA group, but lower in the 1.2 and 2.4 mM FFA cultures. Knockdown of NFE2L2 via small interfering RNA led to greater mitochondrial ROS content and lower mitochondrial membrane potential along with contents of ATP, mtDNA, and total mitochondria. The SFN pretreatment upregulated protein abundance of NFE2L2 and attenuated the downregulation of NFE2L2 induced by FFA. Pretreatment with SFN attenuated the downregulation induced by FFA of PGC-1α, NRF1, and TFAM protein abundance along with contents of mtDNA and total mitochondria. Furthermore, SFN pretreatment attenuated the upregulation of mitochondrial ROS content, the downregulation of mitochondrial membrane potential, and the decreases in ATP, mtDNA, and mitochondrial content induced by FFA. Overall, data indicated that FFA inhibit NFE2L2, resulting in mitochondrial dysfunction and ROS production in bovine mammary epithelial cells. Thus, NFE2L2 may be a promising therapeutic target against metabolic challenge-driven mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress in bovine mammary epithelial cells.
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- 2021
31. IGABEM of 2D and 3D liquid inclusions
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Deyong Sun, Rui Dai, Chunying Dong, and Chuang Xu
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Power series ,Physics ,Applied Mathematics ,Mathematical analysis ,General Engineering ,Singular integral ,Computational Mathematics ,Singularity ,Transformation (function) ,Minimum bounding box ,Compressibility ,Inclusion (mineral) ,Boundary element method ,Analysis - Abstract
Randomly distributed liquid inclusions in elastic matrix exist in nature, biology, material science and other fields. In this paper, the isogeometic analysis boundary element method (IGABEM) is applied to study the mechanical properties of the elastic matrix with liquid inclusions, in which the liquid inclusion is assumed to be linearly compressible and the interface tension is neglected. Singularity subtraction technique (SST) and Tells transformation method are respectively used to solve the strongly and weakly singular integrals in two-dimensional (2D) problems, while the power series expansion method is used to carry out various singular integrals in three-dimensional (3D) problems. The oriented bounding box (OBB) is adopted to generate the randomly distributed liquid inclusions, which can be formed easily by the control points of the IGA. Numerical examples show the accuracy and effectiveness of the present method in the study of liquid inclusions.
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- 2021
32. Discovery of Next-Generation Tropomyosin Receptor Kinase Inhibitors for Combating Multiple Resistance Associated with Protein Mutation
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Zhi-Cheng Yu, Hong-Chuang Xu, Guang-Fu Yang, Feng-Xu Wu, Lin-Sheng Zhuo, Chao Pang, Wei Huang, Yan-Guang Tian, Yi Gong, Ge-Fei Hao, and Ming-Shu Wang
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Models, Molecular ,Mutation ,Macrocyclic Compounds ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Molecular Structure ,Chemistry ,Kinase ,Mutant ,medicine.disease_cause ,Tropomyosin ,In vitro ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Pyrimidines ,In vivo ,Trk receptor ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Humans ,Pyrazoles ,Molecular Medicine ,Receptor, trkA ,Receptor ,Protein Kinase Inhibitors - Abstract
Tropomyosin receptor kinase (TRK) inhibition is an effective therapeutic approach for treatment of a variety of cancers. Despite the use of first-generation TRK inhibitor (TRKI) larotrectinib (1) resulting in significant therapeutic response in patients, acquired resistance develops invariably. The emergence of secondary mutations occurring at the solvent-front, xDFG, and gatekeeper regions of TRK represents a common mechanism for acquired resistance. However, xDFG mutations remain insensitive to second-generation macrocyclic TRKIs selitrectinib (3) and repotrectinib (4) designed to overcome the resistance mediated by solvent-front and gatekeeper mutations. Here, we report the structure-based drug design and discovery of a next-generation TRKI. The structure-activity relationship studies culminated in the identification of a promising drug candidate 8 that showed excellent in vitro potency on a panel of TRK mutants, especially TRKAG667C in the xDFG motif, and improved in vivo efficacy than 1 and 3 in TRK wild-type and mutant fusion-driven tumor xenograft models, respectively.
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- 2021
33. State consensus cooperative control for a class of nonlinear multi-agent systems with output constraints via ADP approach
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Baohua Sun, Xin Fan, Yang Yang, Chuang Xu, and Jinran Wu
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output constraints ,0209 industrial biotechnology ,Observer (quantum physics) ,Computer science ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Multi-agent system ,Graph theory ,02 engineering and technology ,Function (mathematics) ,adaptive dynamic programming ,Optimal control ,Computer Science Applications ,Computer Science::Multiagent Systems ,Dynamic programming ,transformation function ,020901 industrial engineering & automation ,neural network observer ,Artificial Intelligence ,Control theory ,Bounded function ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Affine transformation - Abstract
A state consensus cooperative adaptive dynamic programming (ADP) control strategy is proposed for a nonlinear multi-agent system (MAS) with output constraints. On the basis of the transformation function, state models of leader and followers are transformed into affine ones. By using a monotonically increasing mapping function, the state-consensus cooperative control problem for an MAS with output constraints is equivalently transformed into a cooperative approximately optimal control one for an affine MAS. Then, a neural network observer is constructed for estimation of inner states, and, by graph theory and ADP method, the state consensus cooperative ADP control strategy is developed. The proposed strategy guarantees the performance index of the transformed system is approximately optimal. Furthermore, the stability analysis of whole closed-loop system is presented. Through the Lyapunov Theorem, we prove that the states of the MAS achieve consensus and the output signals of the followers satisfy the constraints. Also, all signals of the closed-loop MAS are bounded, and the trajectory of the leader node is cooperative bounded. The theoretical analysis and effectiveness of the strategy are verified by both a physical and a numerical example.
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- 2021
34. Effect of Myricetin on Lipid Metabolism in Primary Calf Hepatocytes Challenged with Long-Chain Fatty Acids
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Wei Yang, Mingmao Yang, Yan Tian, Qianming Jiang, Juan Loor, Jie Cao, Shuang Wang, Changhong Gao, Wenwen Fan, Bingbing Zhang, and Chuang Xu
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myricetin ,fatty acid metabolism ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,oxidative stress ,primary calf hepatocytes ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Abstract
Triacylglycerol (TAG) accumulation and oxidative damage in hepatocytes induced by high circulating concentrations of fatty acids (FA) are common after calving. In order to clarify the role of myricetin on lipid metabolism in hepatocytes when FA metabolism increases markedly, we performed in vitro analyses using isolated primary calf hepatocytes from three healthy female calves (1 d old, 42 to 48 kg). Two hours prior to an FA challenge (1.2 mM mix), the hepatocytes were treated with 100 μM (M1), 50 μM (M2), or 25 μM (M3) of myricetin. Subsequently, hepatocytes from each donor were challenged with or without FA for 12 h in an attempt to induce metabolic stress. Data from calf hepatocyte treatment comparisons were assessed using two-way repeated-measures (RM) ANOVA with subsequent Bonferroni correction. The data revealed that hepatocytes challenged with FA had greater concentrations of TAG and nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA), oxidative stress-related MDA and H2O2, and mRNA and protein abundance of lipid synthesis-related SREBF1 and inflammatory-related NF-κB. In addition, the mRNA abundance of the lipid synthesis-related genes FASN, DGAT1, DGAT2, and ACC1; endoplasmic reticulum stress-related GRP79 and PERK; and inflammatory-related TNF-α also were upregulated. In contrast, the activity of antioxidant SOD (p < 0.01) and concentrations of GSH (p < 0.05), and the protein abundance of mitochondrial FA oxidation-related CPT1A, were markedly lower. Compared with FA challenge, 50 and 100 μM myricetin led to lower concentrations of TAG, NEFA, MDA, and H2O2, as well as mRNA and protein abundance of SREBF1, DGAT1, GRP78, and NF-κB. In contrast, the activity of SOD (p < 0.01) and mRNA and protein abundance of CPT1A were markedly greater. Overall, the results suggest that myricetin could enhance the antioxidant capacity and reduce lipotoxicity, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and inflammation. All of these effects can help reduce TAG accumulation in hepatocytes.
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- 2022
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35. Prevalence and risk factors associated with high somatic cell count in Chinese dairy herds
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Zhaoju Deng, Kun Wang, Chuang Xu, Jie Cao, and Chong Ma
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General Veterinary - Abstract
This study aimed to (1) estimate the prevalence of cow-level high somatic cell count (SCC) in Chinese dairy herds and (2) identify potential factors associated with cow- and herd-level SCC variables. The monthly data on dairy herd improvement were collected from a total of 131 dairy herds in 11 provinces in China in 2019. Mixed models were constructed using the cow composite milk SCC and the variance of cow SCC as dependent variables separately and parity, seasons, days in milk (DIM), herd size, and farm types (family-owned vs. company-owned) as fixed effects, accounting for the nested random herd and cow effect. We used negative binomial regression using herd-level SCC-related variables, namely, monthly proportion of high SCC, monthly proportion of new high SCC, monthly proportion of chronic high SCC, and monthly proportion of new chronic high SCC as dependent variables separately against seasons, herd size, and farm types with the random herd effect. The overall average prevalence of high SCCs for each month per farm was 0.26 (2.5–97.5% quantile: 0–0.56). Company-owned farms performed better in herd SCC management. Seasons were significantly associated with all the aforementioned variables, and summer and autumn were the seasons associated with worse outcomes in herd SCCs. This study is the first to assess high SCC in a large number of Chinese dairy herds, which is useful for farms to tailor the on-farm mastitis control programs in China.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Transcriptomics of circulating neutrophils in dairy cows with subclinical hypocalcemia
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Bingbing Zhang, Xinru Ma, Baoyin Huang, Qianming Jiang, Juan J. Loor, Xinquan Lv, Wei Zhang, Ming Li, Jianan Wen, Yufeng Yin, Jingjing Wang, Wei Yang, and Chuang Xu
- Subjects
General Veterinary - Abstract
Hypocalcemia is closely associated with inflammatory diseases in dairy cows. Recent research has underscored the key role of calcium in the adaptations of the innate immune system during this period. The main objective in the present study was to compare the transcriptome profiles and analyze differences in the expression of neutrophil (PMNL) immune function-related genes and calcium binding-related genes in hypocalcemic cows. At 2 days postpartum, a concentration >2.10 mmol Ca2+/L was used to classify cows as controls (CON), and a concentration 2+/L used to classify cows as low-calcium (LCAL) (n = 8 in each group). A routine medical examination was conducted by the attending veterinarian to ensure there were no other complications and that the blood β-hydroxybutyrate was via omicsstudio using the R package edgeR. GO and KEGG enrichment analysis were used for bioinformatics. The remaining 3 cows in each group were used for validation of RNA sequencing data via quantitative PCR, which confirmed the observed responses. Compared with CON, 158 genes in LCAL were significantly up-regulated and 296 genes were down-regulated. The downregulation of Interleukin-12 (CXCL12), Tubulin beta chain (TUBB1), L1 cell adhesion molecule (L1CAM), and Myeloperoxidase (MPO) indicated a decrease in immune function of PMNL in LCAL cows. The decreased expression of calcium-binding pathway-related genes in PMNL of LCAL cows indicated a decrease in immune function of PMNL likely related to calcium ions. For example, cartilage acid protein 1 (CRTAC1) and calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase 4 (CAMK4) were significantly reduced in LCAL cows. The upregulation of Cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor 1A (CDKN1A), Perforin 1 (PRF1), and Homeodomain interacting protein kinase 3 (HIPK3) indicated that LCAL led to greater cell apoptosis and senescence. Overall, the analyses indicated that the reduction in PMNL immune function during hypocalcemia is associated with downregulation of intracellular Ca2+ related genes and upregulation of genes controlling apoptosis and senescence. Together, these alterations contribute to an immunosuppressive state during the transition period.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Validation and integration tests of the JUNO 20-inch PMT readout electronics
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Vanessa Cerrone, Katharina von Sturm, Marco Bellato, Antonio Bergnoli, Matteo Bolognesi, Riccardo Brugnera, Chao Chen, Barbara Clerbaux, Alberto Coppi, Flavio dal Corso, Daniele Corti, Jianmeng Dong, Wei Dou, Lei Fan, Alberto Garfagnini, Guanghua Gong, Marco Grassi, Shuang Hang, Rosa Maria Guizzetti, Cong He, Jun Hu, Roberto Isocrate, Beatrice Jelmini, Xiaolu Ji, Xiaoshan Jiang, Fei Li, Zehong Liang, Ivano Lippi, Hongbang Liu, Hongbin Liu, Shenghui Liu, Xuewei Liu, Daibin Luo, Ronghua Luo, Filippo Marini, Daniele Mazzaro, Luciano Modenese, Zhe Ning, Yu Peng, Pierre-Alexandre Petitjean, Alberto Pitacco, Mengyao Qi, Loris Ramina, Mirco Rampazzo, Massimo Rebeschini, Mariia Redchuk, Andrea Serafini, Yunhua Sun, Andrea Triossi, Riccardo Triozzi, Fabio Veronese, Peiliang Wang, Peng Wang, Yangfu Wang, Yusheng Wang, Yuyi Wang, Zheng Wang, Ping Wei, Jun Weng, Shishen Xian, Xiaochuan Xie, Benda Xu, Chuang Xu, Donglian Xu, Hai Xu, Xiongbo Yan, Ziyue Yan, Fengfan Yang, Yan Yang, Yifan Yang, Mei Ye, Tingxuan Zeng, Shuihan Zhang, Wei Zhang, Aiqiang Zhang, Bin Zhang, Siyao Zhao, Changge Zi, Sebastiano Aiello, Giuseppe Andronico, Vito Antonelli, Andrea Barresi, Davide Basilico, Marco Beretta, Augusto Brigatti, Riccardo Bruno, Antonio Budano, Barbara Caccianiga, Antonio Cammi, Stefano Campese, Davide Chiesa, Catia Clementi, Marco Cordelli, Stefano Dusini, Andrea Fabbri, Giulietto Felici, Federico Ferraro, Marco G. Giammarchi, Cecilia Landini, Paolo Lombardi, Claudio Lombardo, Andrea Maino, Fabio Mantovani, Stefano Maria Mari, Agnese Martini, Emanuela Meroni, Lino Miramonti, Michele Montuschi, Massimiliano Nastasi, Domizia Orestano, Fausto Ortica, Alessandro Paoloni, Sergio Parmeggiano, Fabrizio Petrucci, Ezio Previtali, Gioacchino Ranucci, Alessandra Carlotta Re, Barbara Ricci, Aldo Romani, Paolo Saggese, Simone Sanfilippo, Chiara Sirignano, Monica Sisti, Luca Stanco, Virginia Strati, Francesco Tortorici, Cristina Tuvé, Carlo Venettacci, Giuseppe Verde, and Lucia Votano
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High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Instrumentation ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
The Jiangmen Underground Neutrino Observatory (JUNO) is a large neutrino detector currently under construction in China. JUNO will be able to study the neutrino mass ordering and to perform leading measurements detecting terrestrial and astrophysical neutrinos in a wide energy range, spanning from 200 keV to several GeV. Given the ambitious physics goals of JUNO, the electronic system has to meet specific tight requirements, and a thorough characterization is required. The present paper describes the tests performed on the readout modules to measure their performances., 20 pages, 13 figures
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- 2023
38. Copper induces liver lipotoxicity disease by up-regulating Nrf2 expression via the activation of MTF-1 and inhibition of SP1/Fyn pathway
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Chong-Chao Zhong, Tao Zhao, Christer Hogstrand, Chang-Chun Song, Ester Zito, Xiao-Ying Tan, Yi-Chuang Xu, Yu-Feng Song, Xiao-Lei Wei, and Zhi Luo
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Molecular Medicine ,Molecular Biology - Published
- 2023
39. Glycophagy mediated glucose-induced changes of hepatic glycogen metabolism via OGT1-AKT1-FOXO1Ser238 pathway
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Li-Xiang Wu, Yi-Chuang Xu, Kostas Pantopoulos, Xiao-Ying Tan, Xiao-Lei Wei, Hua Zheng, and Zhi Luo
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry - Published
- 2023
40. Event-triggered adaptive approximately optimal tracking control of a class of non-affine SISO nonlinear systems via output feedback
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Baohua Sun, Shan Zuo, Chuang Xu, Yang Yang, Dong Yue, and Xin Fan
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Output feedback ,Nonlinear system ,Observer (quantum physics) ,Control and Systems Engineering ,Control theory ,Computer science ,Control (management) ,Affine transformation ,Tracking (particle physics) ,Class (biology) ,Event triggered ,Computer Science Applications ,Theoretical Computer Science - Abstract
In this paper, an event-triggered adaptive approximately optimal tracking control approach is proposed for a class of non-affine nonlinear single-input single-output (SISO) systems via output feedb...
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- 2021
41. Effect of negative energy balance on plasma metabolites, minerals, hormones, cytokines and ovarian follicular growth rate in Holstein dairy cows
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Cheng Xia, Yunlong Bai, Zhijie Wang, Chuang Xu, Yuxi Song, and Chang Zhao
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medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,endocrine system diseases ,animal diseases ,Veterinary medicine ,Biology ,follicle ,03 medical and health sciences ,fluids and secretions ,negative energy balance ,Internal medicine ,SF600-1100 ,Follicular phase ,medicine ,Growth rate ,plasma ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,General Veterinary ,dairy cow ,0402 animal and dairy science ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Endocrinology ,Balance (accounting) ,Research Article ,Hormone - Abstract
Introduction The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of negative energy balance (NEB) on the final growth of the dominant ovarian follicle in Holstein cows. Material and Methods Cows at 14 to 21 d postpartum from an intensive dairy farm were randomly selected and allocated into a positive energy balance group (PEB, with β-hydroxybutyric acid (BHBA) level < 1.2 mmol/L, n = 15) and an NEB group (BHBA > 1.2 mmol/L, n = 15). Plasma samples were collected at 21, 50 and 55 d postpartum to assess the concentrations of energy metabolites, minerals, hormones and cytokines. Ovaries were examined by transrectal ultrasound on days 50 and 55 (120 hours later) to evaluate the diameter of the largest follicle. Results Compared with PEB cows, there were a more severe body condition loss and a lower milk yield in NEB cows (P < 0.05) and these had greater concentrations of plasma BHBA, non-esterified fatty acids, triglycerides, urea nitrogen, growth hormone, interleukin 6, and fibroblast growth factor 21 and lesser concentrations of plasma glucose, total cholesterol, insulin, insulin-like growth factor 1, insulin-like growth factor binding protein 3, leptin, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and angiopoietin-like protein 8 on d 21 (P < 0.05), while plasma minerals were not affected by energy status (P > 0.05). These changes persisted until the end of the study period (50–55 days postpartum) resulting in a lower follicular growth rate for cows in the NEB than the PEB group. Conclusion These observations indicate that follicular growth rate is associated with measurable changes in energy metabolite, hormone and cytokine concentrations caused by early postpartum NEB.
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- 2021
42. β-hydroxybutyrate impairs monocyte function via the ROS-NLR family pyrin domain-containing three inflammasome (NLRP3) pathway in ketotic cows
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Zhihao Dong, Xudong Sun, Yan Tang, Shengbin Luo, Hongdou Jia, Qiushi Xu, Qianming Jiang, Juan J. Loor, Wei Xu, and Chuang Xu
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General Veterinary - Abstract
Cows with ketosis display severe metabolic stress and immune dysfunction which renders them more susceptible to infections. Monocytes, one of the major subtypes of white blood cells, play an important role in innate immune defense against infections. Thus, the aim of this study was to investigate alterations in immune function, reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and activity of the NLR family pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome pathway in monocytes (CD14+) of cows with clinical ketosis (CK). Twelve healthy multiparous Holstein cows [blood β-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) concentration < 1.2 mM] and 12 cows with CK (BHB > 3.0 mM) at 3 to 14 days in milk were used for blood sample collection. To determine effects of BHB on phagocytosis, ROS and protein abundance of the NLRP3 inflammasome pathway in vitro, monocytes isolated from healthy cows were treated with 3.0 mM BHB for 0, 6, 12 or 24 h. Dry matter intake (22.7 vs. 19.0 kg) was lower in cows with CK. Serum concentrations of fatty acids (0.30 vs. 0.88 mM) and BHB (0.52 vs. 3.78 mM) were greater in cows with CK, whereas concentration of glucose was lower (4.09 vs. 2.23 mM). The adhesion, migration and phagocytosis of monocytes were lower in cows with CK, but apoptosis and ROS content were greater. Protein abundance of NLRP3, cysteinyl aspartate specific proteinase 1 (caspase 1) and interleukin-1B p17 (IL1B p17) were greater in monocytes of cows with CK, while abundance of NADPH oxidase isoform 2 (NOX2) was lower. Compared with 0 h BHB, ROS content and apoptosis were greater in the monocytes challenged for 6, 12 or 24 h BHB. Compared with 0 h BHB, protein abundance of NLRP3, caspase 1, IL1B p17 and concentration of IL1B in medium were greater in the monocytes challenged for 6, 12 or 24 h BHB. However, compared with 0 h BHB, protein abundance of NOX2 and phagocytosis of monocytes were lower in the monocytes challenged for 6, 12 or 24 h BHB. Overall, the data suggested that exogenous BHB activated the ROS-NLRP3 pathway, which might be partly responsible for immune dysfunction of dairy cows with CK.
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- 2022
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43. Impact of College Students’ Learning Adaptation on Learning Conformity Behavior in Hengyang: Moderating Role of Peer Attachment
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Chuang Xu and Chia-Ching Tu
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Education - Published
- 2022
44. Research on Psychological Service Needs of Paratroopers Based on Stress Events
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Yang Liao, Chuang Xu, Yiwen Hu, Xin Liu, Yuyang Zhu, Yan Zhang, Yishuang Zhang, Miao Jin, and Liu Yang
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- 2022
45. Interannual variabilities, long-term trends, and regulating factors of low-oxygen conditions in the coastal waters off Hong Kong
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Zheng Chen, Bin Wang, Chuang Xu, Zhongren Zhang, Shiyu Li, and Jiatang Hu
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Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The summertime low-oxygen conditions in the Pearl River Estuary (PRE) have experienced a significant spatial expansion associated with notable deoxygenation in recent decades. Nevertheless, there is still a lack of quantitative data on the long-term trends and interannual variabilities in oxygen conditions in the PRE as well as on the driving factors. Therefore, the long-term deoxygenation in a subregion of the PRE (the coastal waters off Hong Kong) was comprehensively investigated in this study using monthly observations during 1994–2018. To evaluate the changes in scope and intensity of oxygen conditions, an indicator (defined as the low-oxygen index, LOI) that integrates several metrics related to low-oxygen conditions was introduced as the result of a principal component analysis (PCA). Moreover, primary physical and biogeochemical factors controlling the interannual variabilities and long-term trends in oxygen conditions were discerned, and their relative contributions were quantified by multiple regression analysis. Results showed that the regression models explained over 60 % of the interannual variations in LOI. Both the wind speeds and concentrations of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) played a significant role in determining the interannual variations (by 39 % and 49 %, respectively) and long-term trends (by 39 % and 56 %, respectively) in LOI. Due to the increasing nutrient loads and alterations in physical conditions (e.g., the long-term decreasing trend in wind speeds), coastal eutrophication was exaggerated and massive marine-sourced organic matter was subsequently produced, thereby resulting in an expansion of intensified low-oxygen conditions. The deteriorating eutrophication has also driven a shift in the dominant source of organic matter from terrestrial inputs to in situ primary production, which has probably led to an earlier onset of hypoxia in summer. In summary, the Hong Kong waters have undergone considerable deterioration of low-oxygen conditions driven by substantial changes in anthropogenic eutrophication and external physical factors.
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- 2022
46. Transcriptional Regulation and Protein Localization of Zip10, Zip13 and Zip14 Transporters of Freshwater Teleost Yellow Catfish Pelteobagrus fulvidraco Following Zn Exposure in a Heterologous HEK293T Model
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Sheng-Zan Liu, Yi-Chuang Xu, Xiao-Ying Tan, Tao Zhao, Dian-Guang Zhang, Hong Yang, and Zhi Luo
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Inorganic Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,General Medicine ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Molecular Biology ,micronutrients ,zinc homeostasis ,SLC39A transporter ,transcriptional regulation ,subcellular localization ,vertebrates ,Spectroscopy ,Catalysis ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Zip family proteins are involved in the control of zinc (Zn) ion homeostasis. The present study cloned the promoters and investigated the transcription responses and protein subcellular localizations of three LIV-1 subfamily members (zip10, zip13, and zip14) from common freshwater teleost yellow catfish, Pelteobagrus fulvidraco, using in vitro cultured HEK293T model cells. The 2278 bp, 1917 bp, and 1989 bp sequences of zip10, zip13, and zip14 promoters, respectively, were subcloned into pGL3-Basic plasmid for promoter activity analysis. The pcDNA3.1 plasmid coding EGFP tagged pfZip10, pfZip13, and pfZip14 were generated for subsequent confocal microscope analysis. Several potential transcription factors’ binding sites were predicted within the promoters. In vitro promoter analysis in the HEK293T cells showed that high Zn administration significantly reduced the transcriptional activities of the zip10, zip13, and zip14 promoters. The −2017 bp/−2004 bp MRE in the zip10 promoter, the −360 bp/−345 bp MRE in the zip13 promoter, and the −1457 bp/−1442 bp MRE in the zip14 promoter were functional loci that were involved in the regulation of the three zips. The −606 bp/−594 bp KLF4 binding site in the zip13 promoter was a functional locus responsible for zinc-responsive regulation of zip13. The −1383 bp/−1375 bp STAT3 binding site in the zip14 promoter was a functional locus responsible for zinc-responsive regulation of zip14. Moreover, confocal microscope analysis indicated that zinc incubation significantly reduced the fluorescence intensity of pfZip10-EGFP and pfZip14-EGFP but had no significant influence on pfZip13-EGFP fluorescence intensity. Further investigation found that pfZip10 localizes on cell membranes, pfZip14 colocalized with both cell membranes and lysosome, and pfZip13 colocalized with intracellular ER and Golgi. Our research illustrated the transcription regulation of zip10, zip13, and zip14 from P. fulvidraco under zinc administration, which provided a reference value for the mechanisms involved in Zip-family-mediated control of zinc homeostasis in vertebrates.
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- 2022
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47. Why Do We Pursue Ed.D.?: A Qualitative Analysis on the Motivation of Chinese Candidates
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Wenting, Gong, Weihua, Wang, and Chuang, Xu
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General Psychology - Abstract
This study aims to explore what motivates Chinese mid-career educational practitioners to pursue Ed. D. A university in South China was selected as a case university, and 18 Ed.D. candidates were recruited to participate in semi-structured interviews. Grounded theory analysis was conducted on the transcripts of the interviewees' information. The findings uncovered four motivational patterns (pre-intrinsic, pre-extrinsic, post-intrinsic, and post-extrinsic) of Ed.D. candidates in China that mutually influence and reinforce one another. A theoretical model was thus constructed in which extrinsic factors moderate intrinsic factors, prepositional factors stimulate post-positional factors, with pre-intrinsic factors act as incentives, pre-extrinsic factors act as preconditions, and post-intrinsic factors and post-extrinsic factors act as internal and external reinforcers, respectively. This study broadens critical understanding of Ed.D. students' motivation and offers several implications that should be of interest to Chinese Ed.D. candidates, educational researchers, universities, and government officials.
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- 2022
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48. An Improved Method to Moho Depth Recovery From Gravity Disturbance and Its Application in the South China Sea
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Jinbo Li, Chuang Xu, and Haopeng Chen
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Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) - Published
- 2022
49. Bacillus subtilis Produces Amino Acids to Stimulate Protein Synthesis in Ruminal Tissue Explants via the Phosphatidylinositol-4,5-Bisphosphate 3-Kinase Catalytic Subunit Beta–Serine/Threonine Kinase–Mammalian Target of Rapamycin Complex 1 Pathway
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Qiuju Wang, Yulong Ren, Yizhe Cui, Bingnan Gao, Hao Zhang, Qianming Jiang, Juan J. Loor, Zhaoju Deng, and Chuang Xu
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General Veterinary - Abstract
BackgroundBacillus subtilis is a probiotic strain that is widely used as a feed supplement for ruminants. In this study, one B. subtilis strain isolated from the ruminal fluid of Holstein dairy cows was used for an ex vivo study with ruminal tissue explants. The main goal was to assess the potential endosymbiotic links between B. subtilis and the ruminal epithelium using molecular analyses and amino acid profiling. The explant culture protocol was first optimized to determine the ideal conditions in terms of tissue viability before performing the actual experiments involving active and inactive bacteria with or without protein synthesis inhibitors, such as LY294002 (phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor) or rapamycin [mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) inhibitor].ResultsThe mRNA levels of phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit beta (PIK3CB), serine/threonine kinase (AKT), mTOR, P70S6K1, and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E binding protein 1 were the highest (p < 0.01), while those of programmed cell death 4 were the lowest when the tissue was incubated with 107 of B. subtilis. Compared with the inactivated bacteria, the expression levels of PIK3CB and AKT, and overall changes in mTOR and P70S6K1 were greater in rumen explants with living bacteria (p < 0.05). With an increase in B. subtilis concentration, the trends of protein and corresponding gene changes were consistent. There were differences in the concentrations of individual amino acids in the supernatants of living and inactivated bacterial culture groups, with most amino acids enriched in pathways, such as aminoacyl tRNA biosynthesis, cyanoamino acid metabolism, monobactam biosynthesis, or glycine, serine, and threonine metabolism. The addition of psilocybin upregulated the expression levels of PIK3CB and AKT. A significant decrease (p < 0.05) in PIK3CB and mTOR protein expression levels was detected after the addition of LY294002 and rapamycin. In addition, These responses were associated with the downregulation (p < 0.05) of AKT and P70S6K protein expression levels.ConclusionsWe confirmed that the in vivo ruminal tissue culture system is a suitable model for studying probiotic-induced alterations in tissue function. As such, this study provides a means for future mechanistic studies related to microbial regulation and the dietary supply of proteins. In addition, living and inactivated B. subtilis can promote protein synthesis in ruminal tissue explants by altering the expression levels of related factors in the PIK3CB–AKT–mTORC1 pathway, which could further aid in optimizing the feed efficiency and increasing the use of inactivated bacteria as additives in dairy cow farming.
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- 2022
50. Event-triggered adaptive fuzzy attitude takeover control of spacecraft
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Chuang Xu, Kai Ning, and Baolin Wu
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Atmospheric Science ,Observational error ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Spacecraft ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Aerospace Engineering ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Fuzzy control system ,01 natural sciences ,Upper and lower bounds ,Fuzzy logic ,Sylvester's law of inertia ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Control theory ,Bounded function ,0103 physical sciences ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,business ,Actuator ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The problem of attitude takeover control of spacecraft by using cellular satellites with limited communication, actuator faults and input saturation is investigated. In order to lighten the communication burden of cellular satellites, an event-triggered control strategy is adopted. The filtered attitude information needs to be transmitted only when the defined measurement error reaches the event-triggered threshold in this strategy. Then, to deal with the unknown inertia matrix, actuator faults, external disturbances and the errors caused by event-triggered scheme, fuzzy logic systems is introduced to estimate the uncertainties directly. Combining fuzzy logic control strategy and the event-triggered method, the first event-triggered adaptive fuzzy control law is developed. Then, torque saturation of cellular satellites is further considered in the second control law, where the upper bound of the uncertainties is estimated by fuzzy logic systems. The resulting closed-loop systems under the two control laws are guaranteed to be bounded. Finally, the effectiveness of two proposed control laws is verified by the numerical simulations.
- Published
- 2021
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