6 results on '"Lin, Jia-Ling"'
Search Results
2. RES transformation for biosynthesis and detoxification.
- Author
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Huang, Jin-Quan, Lin, Jia-Ling, Guo, Xiao-Xiang, Tian, Xiu, Tian, Ye, Shangguan, Xiao-Xia, Wang, Ling-Jian, Fang, Xin, and Chen, Xiao-Ya
- Abstract
The reactive electrophilic species (RES), typically the molecules bearing α,β-unsaturated carbonyl group, are widespread in living organisms and notoriously known for their damaging effects. Many of the mycotoxins released from phytopathogenic fungi are RES and their contamination to cereals threatens food safety worldwide. However, due to their high reactivity, RES are also used by host organisms to synthesize specific metabolites. The evolutionary conserved glyoxalase (GLX) system scavenges the cytotoxic α-oxoaldehydes that bear RES groups, which cause host disorders and diseases. In cotton, a specialized enzyme derived from glyoxalase I (GLXI) through gene duplications and named as specialized GLXI (SPG), acts as a distinct type of aromatase in the gossypol pathway to transform the RES intermediates into the phenolic products. In this review, we briefly introduce the research progress in understanding the RES, especially the RES-type mycotoxins, the GLX system and SPG, and discuss their application potential in detoxification and synthetic biology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Before and after: craving, mood, and background stress in the hours surrounding drug use and stressful events in patients with opioid-use disorder.
- Author
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Preston, Kenzie L., Kowalczyk, William J., Phillips, Karran A., Jobes, Michelle L., Vahabzadeh, Massoud, Lin, Jia-Ling, Mezghanni, Mustapha, and Epstein, David H.
- Subjects
ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) ,OPIOID abuse ,MOOD (Psychology) ,COCAINE ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Rationale: Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) of specific events usually focuses more on antecedents and concomitants than on aftermaths.Objectives: To examine mental state both before and after discrete episodes of stress and drug use.Methods: For up to 16 weeks, outpatients on opioid-agonist treatment carried smartphones on which they initiated entries for stressful events (SEs) or lapses to drug use (DUs), and thrice daily when randomly prompted (RPs). Participants rated their stress, opioid craving, cocaine craving, and moods. RP entries within 5 h of an event were analyzed and compared to other RPs.Results: Stress, negative mood, and craving were generally higher before and after DUs and SEs compared to background levels in participants with at least one DU (n = 149) or SE (n = 158). Before DUs, there were increases in negative mood, opioid craving, and cocaine craving, but not background stress. Before SEs, there were increases in background stress, opioid craving, and cocaine craving, but not negative mood. These changes were more variable after events than before. Neither DUs nor SEs were significantly related to positive mood.Conclusions: Stress increased before stressful-event entries, but was less evident before drug use. Craving increased in the hours before drug use and stressful events—and remained elevated in the hours after either event. These results suggest a stronger link between drug use and craving than between drug use and stress. Lapses to drug use did not improve mood or reduce stress, at least not at our 1-h-bin time resolution, suggesting that if such benefits exist, they are brief. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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4. Context and craving during stressful events in the daily lives of drug-dependent patients.
- Author
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Preston, Kenzie, Kowalczyk, William, Phillips, Karran, Jobes, Michelle, Vahabzadeh, Massoud, Lin, Jia-Ling, Mezghanni, Mustapha, and Epstein, David
- Subjects
SUBSTANCE-induced disorders ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,DESIRE ,OPIOIDS ,ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) ,THERAPEUTICS - Abstract
Rationale: Knowing how stress manifests in the lives of people with substance-use disorders could help inform mobile 'just in time' treatment. Objectives: The purpose of this paper is to examine discrete episodes of stress, as distinct from the fluctuations in background stress assessed in most EMA studies. Methods: For up to 16 weeks, outpatients on opioid-agonist treatment carried smartphones on which they initiated an entry whenever they experienced a stressful event (SE) and when randomly prompted (RP) three times daily. Participants reported the severity of stress and craving and the context of the report (location, activities, companions). Decomposition of covariance was used to separate within-person from between-person effects; r sizes below are within-person. Results: Participants (158 of 182; 87%) made 1787 stress-event entries. Craving for opioids increased with stress severity ( r = 0.50). Stress events tended to occur in social company (with acquaintances, 0.63, friends, 0.17, or on the phone, 0.41) rather than with family (spouse, −0.14; child, −0.18), and in places with more overall activity (bars, 0.32; outside, 0.28; walking, 0.28) and more likelihood of unexpected experiences (with strangers, 0.17). Being on the internet was slightly protective (−0.22). Our prior finding that being at the workplace protects against background stress in our participants was partly supported in these stressful-event data. Conclusions: The contexts of specific stressful events differ from those we have seen in prior studies of ongoing background stress. However, both are associated with drug craving. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
5. Some of the people, some of the time: field evidence for associations and dissociations between stress and drug use.
- Author
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Furnari, Melody, Epstein, David, Phillips, Karran, Jobes, Michelle, Kowalczyk, William, Vahabzadeh, Massoud, Lin, Jia-Ling, and Preston, Kenzie
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PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,DRUG abuse ,EVERYDAY life ,OUTPATIENT medical care ,ECOLOGICAL momentary assessments (Clinical psychology) - Abstract
Rationale: Stress's role in drug use is supported by retrospective interview and laboratory studies, but prospective data confirming the association in daily life are sparse. Objectives: This study aims to assess the relationship between drug use and stress in real time with ambulatory monitoring. Methods: For up to 16 weeks, 133 outpatients on opiate agonist treatment used smartphones to report each time they used drugs or felt more stressed than usual. They rated stress-event severity on a 10-point scale and as a hassle, day spoiler, or more than a day spoiler. For analysis, stress reports made within 72 h before a reported use of cocaine or opioid were binned into 24-h periods. Results: Of 52 participants who reported stress events in the 72-h timeframe, 41 reported stress before cocaine use and 26 before opioid use. For cocaine use, the severity of stressors, rated numerically ( r = 0.42, CL95 0.17-0.62, p = 0.00061) and percent rated as 'more than a day spoiler' ( r = 0.34, CL95 0.07-0.56, p = 0.0292)], increased linearly across the three days preceding use. The number of stressors did not predict cocaine use, and no measure of stress predicted opioid use. In ecological momentary assessment (EMA) from the whole sample of 133, stress and drug use occurred independently and there was no overall relationship. Conclusions: EMA did not support the idea that stress is a necessary or sufficient trigger for cocaine or heroin use after accounting for the base rates of stress and use. But EMA did show that stressful events can increase in severity in the days preceding cocaine use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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6. Cocaine craving and use during daily life.
- Author
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Preston, Kenzie, Vahabzadeh, Massoud, Schmittner, John, Lin, Jia-Ling, Gorelick, David, and Epstein, David
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DRUG addiction ,LONGITUDINAL method ,COCAINE abuse ,METHADONE treatment programs ,HEROIN abuse ,URINALYSIS - Abstract
Craving is often assumed to cause ongoing drug use and relapse and is a major focus of addiction research. However, its relationship to drug use has not been adequately documented. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between craving and drug use in real time and in the daily living environments of drug users. In a prospective, longitudinal, cohort design (ecological momentary assessment), 112 cocaine-abusing individuals in methadone maintenance treatment rated their craving and mood at random times (two to five times daily, prompted by electronic diaries) as they went about their everyday activities. They also initiated an electronic diary entry each time they used cocaine. Drug use was monitored by thrice-weekly urine testing. During periods of urine-verified cocaine use, ratings of cocaine craving increased across the day and were higher than during periods of urine-verified abstinence. During the 5 h prior to cocaine use, ratings of craving significantly increased. These patterns were not seen in ratings of heroin craving or mood (e.g., feeling happy or bored). Cocaine craving is tightly coupled to cocaine use in users’ normal environments. Our findings provide previously unavailable support for a relationship that has been seriously questioned in some theoretical accounts. We discuss what steps will be needed to determine whether craving causes use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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