6 results on '"Dai, Can"'
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2. Electropulsing rapidly refined the microstructure and enhanced the strength and plasticity of Cu-3.5Ti alloy
- Author
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Wang, Lijuan, Meng, Xiangpeng, Jiang, Yanbin, Wang, Meng, Zhang, Jia’ning, Tang, Ning, Mo, Yongda, Xiao, Zhu, Lou, Huafen, Dai, Can, and Li, Zhou
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Disruption of pollination by herbivores is rescued by nectar yeasts.
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Deng, Guo‐Cui, Dai, Can, Song, Qing‐Qing, Zhang, You‐Xuan, Zhang, Xiao‐Xiao, Wang, Xiao‐Fan, and Gong, Yan‐Bing
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PLANT reproduction , *POLLINATORS , *MICROBIAL metabolism , *NECTARIES , *NECTAR , *BIOLOGICAL fitness , *POLLINATION - Abstract
Attracting pollinators to achieve successful reproduction is a key challenge for wild plants that may be disturbed by complex multispecies interactions in nature. Pairwise plant–pollinator interactions have traditionally been studied for decades, while ignoring other ecological players may obscure a comprehensive understanding on how plants recruit partners or combat enemies in the pollination process. Hence, integrated studies considering the inherent complexity of ecological interactions are needed, which may open up new perspectives for deciphering intricate systems and predicting ecological consequences.We examined the presence of nectar yeasts using a combination of high‐throughput sequencing, cultivation and microscopy and quantified floral herbivory by evaluating the incidence of flowers with visible holes in 13 natural populations of Iris bulleyana in the Hengduan Mountains of southwest China during 2017–2022. We combined yeast inoculation and herbivore manipulation treatments to illustrate the isolated and combined impacts of two contrasting nectarivorous organisms, the ascomycetous yeast Metschnikowia reukaufii and adult sawflies, on pollinator visitation and plant reproductive success in two populations. In the lab, we first employed gas chromatography–mass spectrometry to profile the volatile metabolites of yeast‐inoculated nectar relative to control, followed by a behavioural bioassay to test the preference of honeybees for these microbial volatiles.Yeasts commonly inhabited floral nectar and insect herbivores frequently bit holes in the perianth tube to consume nectar and nectaries. Nectar yeasts indirectly facilitated plant reproduction through increased pollinator visits, probably because of microbial metabolism as honeybees preferred nectar volatiles produced by yeasts in behavioural bioassays. Insect herbivores increased total floral visits but reduced legitimate visits by inducing legitimate‐to‐robbing behavioural changes of honeybees, thus leading to lower seed production. The detrimental effect of herbivory was mitigated by the presence of yeasts, which diminished the relative proportion of robbing visits and thereby 'rescued' flowers from reproductive failure.Synthesis: Overall, we found contrasting effects of non‐pollinator species, including both micro‐ and macro‐organisms, on plant–pollinator interactions in a biodiversity hotspot, where pollination deficit may be a ubiquitous phenomenon. Our findings suggest that both microbial and herbivory effects are likely to be important in explaining the exact causes of pollen limitation in species‐rich areas, highlighting the biological context dependence of species interactions in natural ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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- View/download PDF
4. Successive stamen movement in Saxifraga candelabrum is responsive to weather and pollinator visits.
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Luo, Yumei, Xie, Jiming, Zhu, Lin, and Dai, Can
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SEX ratio ,STAMEN ,POLLINATORS ,WEATHER ,POLLEN ,CLOUDINESS - Abstract
Background: Successive stamen movement is a complex plant behavior involving successive uplift of stamens and pollen release, which plays a role in reducing sexual interference, increasing pollen deposition and promoting pollen export. Although reported from several taxa, studies on whether the movement can be influenced by abiotic and biotic factors are scarce. Methods: In this study, we here for the first time described a pattern of successive stamen movement in Saxifraga candelabrum (Saxifragaceae). We then compared the rates of stamen movement in S. candelabrum under different weather and varying pollinator visits. Pollen packaging and presentation schedule of S. candelabrum were also investigated. Results: The results showed that the number of stamens bent per day in sunny days was significantly higher than overcast and rain. Flowers that receive more pollinator visits (control treatment) had significantly higher number of stamen movement than those that received fewer (removal treatment) and none (bagging treatment). Throughout the staminate phase of a flower, there was a progressive increase in both pollen quantity of individual stamens and pollen presentation during each day. Conclusion: Our research demonstrates that successive stamen movement in S. candelabrum was accelerated by favorable weather and increased pollinator visits, which may promote pollen export. Moreover, incremental pollen packaging is likely an adaptation to seasonal regularity in variations of sex ratio resulting from protandry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Evaluation of a concise fall risk stratification among older adults with cataracts in day surgery settings: A historically controlled study.
- Author
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Wang, Ya‐ping, Dai, Can, Ou‐yang, Ping, Zhao, Yan‐hua, and Xu, Dan
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RISK assessment , *RESEARCH funding , *RECEIVER operating characteristic curves , *CATARACT surgery , *HOSPITAL admission & discharge , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ELECTRONIC health records , *DATA analysis software , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *ACCIDENTAL falls , *PREDICTIVE validity , *OLD age - Abstract
Aim: This study aimed to evaluate the use of a concise fall risk stratification in assessing and predicting falls compared with the Morse Falls Scale among older adults with cataracts in day surgery settings. Methods: A historically controlled study conducted from July 2020 to June 2022 was used in a municipal ophthalmic hospital in China. The concise fall risk stratification which directly graded fall risk by multifactorial judgment was used during the intervention period, while the Morse Falls Scale which graded fall risk by scale scores was used during the control period. The fall risk levels, fall assessment time, fall rates, fall‐related injuries, predictive validity, and patient satisfaction with day surgery care were extracted. Propensity score matching was performed to balance baselines. Results: After matching, 4132 patients were included in the final analysis. Compared with the control group, the intervention group had significantly higher assessment results for fall risk level, a significantly shorter (by 48.15%) fall assessment time, and higher patient satisfaction. There were no differences in fall rates and fall‐related injuries. Compared with the Morse Falls Scale, the concise fall risk stratification had higher sensitivity and negative predictive validity, and lower specificity and positive predictive validity, while the area under curve did not differ significantly. Conclusion: The use of the concise fall risk stratification reduced fall assessment time, improved patient satisfaction, and is unlikely to impact falls with an overall predictive performance comparable to that of the Morse Falls Scale for older cataract adults in day surgery settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Defects in phospholipase C zeta cause polyspermy and low fertilization after conventional IVF: not just ICSI failure.
- Author
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Che, Jian-Fang, Wu, Hui-Xia, Zeng, Si-Cong, Wu, Yue-Ren, Dai, Jing, Cheng, De-Hua, Gong, Fei, Lu, Guang-Xiu, Lin, Ge, and Dai, Can
- Abstract
Phospholipase C zeta (PLCζ) is a key sperm-borne oocyte-activating factor that triggers Ca
2+ oscillations and the subsequent block to polyspermy following gamete fusion. Mutations in PLCZ1, the gene encoding PLCζ, cause male infertility and intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) fertilization failure; and PLCζ expression and localization patterns are significantly correlated with ICSI fertilization rate (FR). However, in conventional in vitro fertilization (cIVF), whether and how sperm PLCζ affects fertilization remain unclear. Herein, we identified one previously reported and two novel PLCZ1 mutations associated with polyspermy in vitro that are characterized by excessive sperm–zona binding and a delay in pronuclei (PN) formation. Immunofluorescence staining and oocyte activation testing revealed that virtually all spermatozoa from patients lacked functional PLCζ and were thus unable to evoke Ca2+ oscillations. ICSI with an artificial oocyte activation treatment successfully rescued the polyspermic phenotype and resulted in a live birth. Furthermore, we analyzed PLCζ in an additional 58 males after cIVF treatment in the Reproductive and Genetic Hospital of CITIC-Xiangya (Changsha, China) between February 2019 and January 2022. We found that the proportion of spermatozoa that expressed PLCζ was positively correlated with both 2PN rate and total FR. The optimal cutoff value below which males were likely to experience low FR (total FR ≤30%) after cIVF was 56.7% for the proportion of spermatozoa expressing PLCζ. Our study expands the mutation and the phenotypic spectrum of PLCZ1 and further suggests that PLCζ constitutes a promising biomarker for identifying low FRs cases in cIVF due to sperm-related oocyte activation deficiency and that sperm PLCζ analysis may benefit the wider male population and not only men with ICSI failure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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