124 results on '"Qin Xu"'
Search Results
2. Mediation Analysis using Semi-parametric Shape-Restricted Regression with Applications.
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Yin, Qing, Jeong, Jong-Hyeon, Qin, Xu, Peddada, Shyamal D, and Adibi, Jennifer J
- Abstract
Often linear regression is used to estimate mediation effects. In many instances the underlying relationships may not be linear. Although, the exact functional form of the relationship may be unknown, based on the underlying science, one may hypothesize the shape of the relationship. For these reasons, we develop a novel shape-restricted inference-based methodology for conducting mediation analysis. This work is motivated by an application in fetal endocrinology where researchers are interested in understanding the effects of pesticide application on birth weight, with human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) as the mediator. Using the proposed methodology on a population-level prenatal screening program data, with hCG as the mediator, we discovered that while the natural direct effects suggest a positive association between pesticide application and birth weight, the natural indirect effects were negative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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3. Nonparametric binary regression models with spherical predictors based on the random forests kernel.
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Qin, Xu and Gao, Huiqun
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RANDOM forest algorithms , *KERNEL functions , *REGRESSION analysis , *DATA analysis , *STATISTICS - Abstract
Spherical data arise widely in various settings. Spherical statistics is an analysis of data on a unit hyper-spherical domain. In this paper, we mainly consider the local kernel estimators for regression models with a binary response and the predictors including spherical variables. We apply the random forests kernel to nonparametric binary regression models with spherical predictors. Simulation experiments and real examples are used to validate the performance of the new models. Compared with the classical von Mises–Fisher kernel and the linear-spherical kernel, the random forests kernel has better fitting effect and faster computation speed. Compared with other classifiers, the models proposed in this paper have better classification performance in both low and high dimensional cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. An introduction to causal mediation analysis.
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Qin, Xu
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Causal mediation analysis has gained increasing attention in recent years. This article guides empirical researchers through the concepts and challenges of causal mediation analysis. I first clarify the difference between traditional and causal mediation analysis and highlight the importance of adjusting for the treatment-by-mediator interaction and confounders of the treatment–mediator, treatment–outcome, and mediator–outcome relationships. I then introduce the definition of causal mediation effects under the potential outcomes framework and different methods for the identification and estimation of the effects. After that, I highlight the importance of conducting a sensitivity analysis to assess the sensitivity of analysis results to potential unmeasured confounding. I also list various statistical software that can conduct causal mediation analysis and sensitivity analysis and provide suggestions for writing a causal mediation analysis paper. Finally, I briefly introduce some extensions that I made with my colleagues, including power analysis, multisite causal mediation analysis, causal moderated mediation analysis, and relaxing the assumption of no post-treatment confounding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. A "set" of ancient bronze bells excavated in Changsha, Hunan Province, China.
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Li, Kin Sum, Liu, Yu, Ma, Guancong, Liu, Kwong Ip, Ng, Michael Kwok-Po, Liu, Haiwang, Wilson, Keith, Chen, Xueqing, Lee, Kin San, Fang, Qin, Poon, Johnny M., Qin, Xu, Chun, Tsz Hin, and Jiang, Haoran
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MUSICAL pitch ,SOUND design ,MUSICAL instruments ,MUSICAL form ,MUSICAL intervals & scales ,BELLS - Abstract
This article explores the criteria used to ascertain whether or not, and how, ancient Chinese bronze bells might form sets of musical instruments, thus clarifying their original intended use by ancient musicians. The focus is on ten bells unearthed from Changsha city in Hunan province in China, which date to the twelfth century BCE. A range of diverse relationships between these bells provide valuable insights that can be explored. Debate is ongoing among music historians regarding the nature of the bells. Some argue that the ten bells do not constitute a set of musical instruments because their designs and acoustic properties lack sufficient similarity and correlation. Conversely, another group of historians suggests that nine of the ten bells could indeed be seen as a set, but with the tenth bell being an outlier due to its distinct design. The third group of historians contends that the ten bells should be considered a musical set because of their organized sequence of consecutive semi-tones, while the design differences of the bells are less significant and can be overlooked if we focus on their musical functions. In this study, we scrutinize the assumptions made by these music historians, including their definitions of design similarity and the sequence of progressive pitches. Further previously overlooked criteria, such as the geographical proximity of these ten bells and others found in neighboring areas, and the incremental changes in the bell sizes, are also considered. Through the use of these criteria we aim to explore a wide range of relationships between ancient Chinese bells and to reassess what other new evidence the bells may offer to the study of ancient Chinese musical concepts. The concept of the chromatic scale discovered by ancient Chinese musicians was embodied on the casting of bronze bells. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Altering biomolecular condensates as a potential mechanism that mediates cannabidiol effect on glioblastoma.
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Wang, Lei P., Chagas, Pablo Shimaoka, Salles, Évila Lopes, Naeini, Sahar Emami, Gouron, Jules, Rogers, Hannah M., Khodadadi, Hesam, Bhandari, Bidhan, Alptekin, Ahmet, Qin, Xu, Vaibhav, Kumar, Costigliola, Vincenzo, Hess, David C., Dhandapani, Krishnan M., Arbab, Ali S., Rutkowski, Martin J., Yu, Jack C., and Baban, Babak
- Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is an extremely aggressive primary brain tumor with poor prognosis, short survival time post-diagnosis and high recurrence. Currently, no cure for GBM exists. The identification of an effective therapeutic modality for GBM remains a high priority amongst medical professionals and researches. In recent studies, inhalant cannabidiol (CBD) has demonstrated promise in effectively inhibiting GBM tumor growth. However, exactly how CBD treatment affects the physiology of these tumor cells remains unclear. Stress granules (SG) (a sub-class of biomolecular condensates (BMC)) are dynamic, membrane-less intracellular microstructures which contain proteins and nucleic acids. The formation and signaling of SGs and BMCs plays a significant role in regulating malignancies. This study investigates whether inhaled CBD may play an intervening role towards SGs in GBM tumor cells. Integrated bioinformatics approaches were preformed to gain further insights. This includes use of Immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry to measure SGs, as well as expression and phosphorylation of eukaryotic initiation factor-2α (eIF2α). The findings of this study reveal that CBD receptors (and co-regulated genes) have the potential to play an important biological role in the formation of BMCs within GBM. In this experiment, CBD treatment significantly increased the volume of TIAR-1. This increase directly correlated with elevation in both eIF2α expression and p-eIF2α in CBD treated tissues in comparison to the placebo group (p < 0.05). These results suggest that inhalant CBD significantly up-regulated SGs in GBM, and thus support a theory of targeting BMCs as a potential therapeutic substrate for treating GBM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Fostering the efficiency of the natural resource market for a comprehensive, long-term energy transition.
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Qin, Xu and Yong, Yu
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The article explores tactics to promote natural resource market efficiency to enable a thorough and sustainable energy transition. The research investigates the natural resource market's critical influence on developing sustainable energy practices through a comprehensive analysis of critical publications. The paper analyzes the relationship between financial security, industrial composition, natural resources, and their efficiency using the 2004–2019 entropy weight approach and the level of coupling coordination evaluation method. The summary highlights the need for all-encompassing strategies and examines how maximizing the effectiveness of natural resource usage might advance a sustainable energy transition. The shift, essential to reducing climate change, requires a deliberate concentration on regulatory frameworks and market processes. This study provides insights into possible avenues for improving the natural resource market's efficiency to encourage a long-lasting and sustainable energy transition via a review of recent research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Sarcopenia is associated with leukopenia in urothelial carcinoma patients who receive tislelizumab combined with gemcitabine and cisplatin therapy.
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Gao, Zhimin, Pang, Yubin, Qin, Xu, Li, Gang, Wang, Zewei, Zhang, Lei, Wang, Junqi, Qi, Nienie, and Li, Hailong
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SARCOPENIA ,TRANSITIONAL cell carcinoma ,POISONS ,CISPLATIN ,LEUCOPENIA - Abstract
Background: In the era of combination therapy, there has been limited research on body composition. Specific body composition, such as sarcopenia, possesses the potential to serve as a predictive biomarker for toxic effects and clinical response in patients with urothelial carcinoma (UC) undergoing tislelizumab combined with gemcitabine and cisplatin (T + GC). Materials and Methods: A total of 112 UC patients who received T + GC were selected at the Affiliated Hospital of Xuzhou Medical University from April 2020 to January 2023. Baseline patient characteristics and detailed hematological parameters were collected using the electronic medical system and laboratory examinations. The computed tomography images of patients were analyzed to calculate psoas muscle mass index (PMI). We evaluated the association between sarcopenia (PMI < 4.5 cm
2 /m2 in men; PMI < 3.3 cm2 /m2 in women) and both hematological toxicity and tumor response. Results: Overall, of the 112 patients (65.2% male, median age 56 years), 43 (38.4%) were defined as sarcopenia. Patients with sarcopenia were notably older (p = 0.037), more likely to have hypertension (p = 0.009), and had poorer ECOG-PS (p = 0.027). Patients with sarcopenia were more likely to develop leukopenia (OR 2.969, 95% CI 1.028–8.575, p = 0.044) after receiving at least two cycles of T + GC. However, these significant differences were not observed in thrombocytopenia and anemia. There were no significant differences in the tumor response and grade 3–4 hematological toxicity between patients with sarcopenia and those without sarcopenia. Conclusions: Patients with sarcopenia were more likely to develop leukopenia after receiving T + GC. There were no notable alterations observed in relation to anemia or thrombocytopenia. No significant difference was found between the sarcopenia group and non-sarcopenia group in terms of tumor response and grade 3–4 hematological toxicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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9. Potential scale of industrial outputs of the bronze bell casting industry in 500 BCE China.
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Li, Kin Sum, Liu, Haiwang, Wilson, Keith, Chen, Xueqing, Lee, Kin San, Fang, Qin, Qin, Xu, Liu, Yu, Chun, Tsz Hin, and Jiang, Haoran
- Abstract
The potential scale of industrial outputs in the ancient world is often underestimated in current archaeological studies due to the lack of surviving artifacts for validation of the production scale. However, production traces left on extant artifacts can help us reconstruct production methods, and thus reveal the potential scale of production outputs of certain industries, even although there may not be a sufficient number of existing artifacts to demonstrate such volumes. The bronze bell casting industry operating in around 500 BCE in Xinzheng in Henan province, China, can be used as an example to demonstrate the then use by bell casters of the “pattern-block method” to efficiently create multiple bells sharing identical components. With their strong focus on efficiency, production speed, and low production costs, these casters intelligently designed assembly lines and assembled identical components replicated from models to prepare molds for casting. Knowledge of their production methods and currently preserved bells can provide evidence that the bell casting industry produced industrial outputs on a massive scale that was rare in the ancient world. This article also shows how innovative methods such as 3D model superimposition can be used to validate these hypotheses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Sample size and power calculations for causal mediation analysis: A Tutorial and Shiny App.
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Qin, Xu
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SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *WEB-based user interfaces , *PACKAGING waste , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MOBILE apps - Abstract
When designing a study for causal mediation analysis, it is crucial to conduct a power analysis to determine the sample size required to detect the causal mediation effects with sufficient power. However, the development of power analysis methods for causal mediation analysis has lagged far behind. To fill the knowledge gap, I proposed a simulation-based method and an easy-to-use web application (https://xuqin.shinyapps.io/CausalMediationPowerAnalysis/) for power and sample size calculations for regression-based causal mediation analysis. By repeatedly drawing samples of a specific size from a population predefined with hypothesized models and parameter values, the method calculates the power to detect a causal mediation effect based on the proportion of the replications with a significant test result. The Monte Carlo confidence interval method is used for testing so that the sampling distributions of causal effect estimates are allowed to be asymmetric, and the power analysis runs faster than if the bootstrapping method is adopted. This also guarantees that the proposed power analysis tool is compatible with the widely used R package for causal mediation analysis, mediation, which is built upon the same estimation and inference method. In addition, users can determine the sample size required for achieving sufficient power based on power values calculated from a range of sample sizes. The method is applicable to a randomized or nonrandomized treatment, a mediator, and an outcome that can be either binary or continuous. I also provided sample size suggestions under various scenarios and a detailed guideline of app implementation to facilitate study designs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Causal moderated mediation analysis: Methods and software.
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Qin, Xu and Wang, Lijuan
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STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *RESEARCH questions , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *STATISTICAL models , *SENSITIVITY analysis - Abstract
Research questions regarding how, for whom, and where a treatment achieves its effect on an outcome have become increasingly valued in substantive research. Such questions can be answered by causal moderated mediation analysis, which assesses the heterogeneity of the mediation mechanism underlying the treatment effect across individual and contextual characteristics. Various moderated mediation analysis methods have been developed under the traditional path analysis/structural equation modeling framework. One challenge is that the definitions of moderated mediation effects depend on statistical models of the mediator and the outcome, and no solutions have been provided when either the mediator or the outcome is binary, or when the mediator or outcome model is nonlinear. In addition, it remains unclear to empirical researchers how to make causal arguments of moderated mediation effects due to a lack of clarifications of the underlying assumptions and methods for assessing the sensitivity to violations of the assumptions. This article overcomes the limitations by developing general definition, identification, estimation, and sensitivity analysis for causal moderated mediation effects under the potential outcomes framework. We also developed a user-friendly R package moderate.mediation (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/moderate.mediation/index.html) that allows applied researchers to easily implement the proposed methods and visualize the initial analysis results and sensitivity analysis results. We illustrated the application of the proposed methods and the package implementation with a re-analysis of the National Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies (NEWWS) Riverside data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. High-permittivity ceramics enabled highly homogeneous zero-index metamaterials for high-directivity antennas and beyond.
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Liu, Yueyang, Dong, Tian, Qin, Xu, Luo, Weijia, Leng, Ning, He, Yujing, Yuan, Yong, Bai, Ming, Sun, Jingbo, Zhou, Ji, Li, Yue, and Li, Yang
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ANTENNAS (Electronics) ,UNIT cell ,CERAMICS ,METAMATERIALS ,QUANTUM optics ,FOCAL length - Abstract
Zero-index metamaterials (ZIMs) can support uniform electromagnetic field distributions at any frequency, but their applications are hampered by the ZIM's homogenization level—only 3 unit cells per free-space wavelength, which is fundamentally limited by the low-permittivity inclusions (ε
r ≈ 12) and background matrix (εr ≈ 1). Here, by filling high-permittivity SrTiO3 ceramic (εr ≈ 294) pillars in BaTiO3 (εr ≈ 25) background matrix, we demonstrate a highly homogeneous microwave ZIM with an over threefold increase in the homogenization level. Leveraging such a ZIM, we achieve not only an antenna, approaching the fundamental limit in the directivity with outstanding scalability, but also a concave lens with a focal length of as short as 1λ0 . Our highly homogeneous ZIM has profound implications in ceramics, ZIM-based waveguides and cavities, free-space wavefront manipulation, and microwave quantum optics, and opens up enormous possibilities in wireless communications, remote sensing, global positioning satellites, etc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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13. Negative capacitors and inductors enabling wideband waveguide metatronics.
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Qin, Xu, Fu, Pengyu, Yan, Wendi, Wang, Shuyu, Lv, Qihao, and Li, Yue
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LUMPED elements ,INTEGRATED circuits ,CAPACITORS ,IMPEDANCE matching ,CIRCUIT elements ,SUBMILLIMETER waves ,WAVEGUIDES ,SUBSTRATE integrated waveguides - Abstract
Waveguide metatronics, known as an advanced platform of metamaterial-inspired circuits, provides a promising paradigm for millimeter-wave and terahertz integrated circuits in future fifth/sixth generation (5/6G) communication systems. By exploiting the structural dispersion properties of waveguides, a lumped type of waveguide integrated elements and circuits could be developed in deep subwavelength scales with intrinsic low loss and low crosstalk. In this study, we focus on constructing negative capacitors and inductors for waveguide metatronics, effectively expanding the operating frequency range of waveguide integrated circuits. The incorporation of negative elements enables wideband impedance matching in waveguide, which have been both theoretically explored and experimentally validated within the waveguide metatronics paradigm. Furthermore, we have demonstrated that the negative elements can also be realized in the optical domain through the utilization of a silicon waveguide with photonic crystal cladding, indicating the feasibility and universality of wideband waveguide metatronics. The negative lumped elements could boost the progress of the waveguide metatronic technique, achieving superior performance on the conventional lumped circuits within waveguides that solely rely on positive elements. The authors showcase a method to design negative lumped elements by engineering the effective permittivity within the waveguide, which enables realizations of wideband waveguide metatronics and promises performance enhancement in various fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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14. Anchored sutures for fixation of the anterolateral thigh flap and prevention of orocutaneous fistula in oral and oropharyngeal cancer reconstruction.
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Xin, Pengfei, Huang, Chunming, Qin, Xu, and Hu, Chuanyu
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OROPHARYNGEAL cancer ,ORAL cancer ,MUSCULOCUTANEOUS flaps ,SUTURES ,FREE flaps ,THIGH ,FISTULA - Abstract
Objective: This study aims to assess the efficacy of anchored sutures (AS) in securing the anterolateral thigh (ALT) flap during oral and oropharyngeal reconstructions, and its impact on the occurrence of orocutaneous fistula (OCF). Materials and Methods: A retrospective study was performed on patients who underwent ALT flap reconstruction in our department in the year 2022. The patients were divided into two groups based on whether the AS technique was used. The incidence of OCF was compared between the two groups, and AS-related complications were reported. Fisher's exact test was employed to assess the differences in baseline characteristics and the incidence of OCF between the two groups. Results: The study included 214 patients, with 156 in the conventional suture (CS) group and 58 in the AS group. The incidence of OCF in the AS group was significantly lower compared to that in the CS group (P = 0.039). However, there was a weak correlation between OCF and the AS technique (φ = -0.149). Among the 58 cases in the AS group, three (5.17%) experienced AS-related granuloma (ASRG) as complications. Conclusion: The use of ALT flap reconstruction with the AS technique reduces the incidence of OCF; however, ASRG may be a potential complication. Clinical relevance: This study demonstrates the effectiveness of AS technique in securing ALT flaps, leading to a decreased risk of OCF in oral and oropharyngeal defect reconstruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. Ionomic analysis reveals the mechanism of mercaptosilane-modified palygorskite on reducing Cd transport from soil to wheat.
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Zhang, Yu, Xu, Yingming, Liang, Xuefeng, Wang, Lin, Sun, Yuebing, Huang, Qingqing, and Qin, Xu
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PALYGORSKITE ,WHEAT ,ACID soils ,THERAPEUTIC immobilization ,SOILS - Abstract
Mercaptosilane-modified palygorskite (MP) can immobilize Cd in acid soil and reduce the enrichment of Cd in rice. However, the immobilization effect and its durability on alkaline field were unclear. Meanwhile, whether MP could reduce Cd in different wheat parts at different stages also needs further exploration. Here, we determined the dynamic change of Cd in soil and wheat at different periods, studied the interaction mechanism at key organs, and calculated the contribution of coexisting metals on the reduction of Cd to study the effect of MP on the transfer of Cd in soil-wheat system. Results showed MP was highly effective to immobilize Cd in alkaline farmland and could take effect during the whole growing season but not change pH values. DTPA-Cd and EXE-Cd of soil were reduced by 34.88–49.71% and 49.36–84.81%, respectively, while OX-Cd was increased by 34.61–43.60% at the whole stages. Cd in grains at maturity stage was reduced from 0.118 to 0.069 mg/kg, lower than the limit standard of the China and Codex Alimentarius Commission (0.1 mg/kg). Root and nodes were critical organs influenced by MP to reduce Cd in grains, and the reduction efficiency on wheat was relatively weak at flowering and filling stage. MP regulated the antagonism or synergy effects of coexisting elements on Cd to modulate the Cd accumulation in grains. Besides, the contributions of different elements on Cd were also evaluated by path models. This will provide an important basis for the precision remediation of Cd-polluted alkaline wheat fields. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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16. Mitochondria-derived H2O2 triggers liver regeneration via FoxO3a signaling pathway after partial hepatectomy in mice.
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Bai, Hua, Fang, Cong-Wen, Shi, Ying, Zhai, Song, Jiang, An, Li, Ying-Na, Wang, Lin, Liu, Qi-Ling, Zhou, Geng-Yao, Cao, Jia-Hao, Li, Jia, Yang, Xue-Kang, and Qin, Xu-Jun
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- 2023
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17. Effects of water–organic fertilizer coupling on immobilization remediation technology using sepiolite.
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Liu, Yiyun, Xu, Yingming, Huang, Qingqing, Qin, Xu, Zhao, Lijie, Liang, Xuefeng, Wang, Lin, and Sun, Yuebing
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MEERSCHAUM ,ACID soils ,BROWN rice ,FERTILIZERS ,ORGANIC fertilizers ,MANURES - Abstract
Sepiolite shows great potential to reduce pollution risk of cadmium (Cd)-contaminated rice of acidic paddy soils, but its effect was the synergy of water–organic fertilizer coupling in practical application. In this study, we studied the effect of goat manure (GM) in primordial and sepiolite (SP) amended soil under aerobic, intermittent, and flooded irrigation condition. The results showed that the application of goat manure in SP-amended soil increased soil pH by 15.6%–23.6%. The application of goat manure increased the content of DOM by 244.3%, 135.2% in unamended and sepiolite amended soil, respectively. As a consequence, the application of GM increased available Cd extracted by DTPA in SP-amended soil under aerobic and flooded condition, but decreased available Cd under intermittent irrigation condition. The application of sepiolite alone in Cd polluted soil decreased the accumulation of Cd in unpolished rice at the first year, but Cd content witnessed slight increase at the second year. Under intermittent condition, the application of goat manure in SP-amended soil decreased Cd content by 229.2%, 59.3% of unpolished rice in the first and second year, respectively. As a result, the application of goat manure and intermittent irrigation pattern could present a water–organic fertilizer coupling effect in SP-amended soil and further increased the long-term passivation effect of sepiolite. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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18. The Diversity of Vaginal Microbiota Predicts Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy Responsiveness in Locally Advanced Cervical Cancer.
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Wang, Zizhuo, Xiao, Rourou, Huang, Jia, Qin, Xu, Hu, Dianxing, Guo, Ensong, Liu, Chen, Lu, Funian, You, Lixin, Sun, Chaoyang, and Chen, Gang
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NEOADJUVANT chemotherapy ,CERVICAL cancer ,MISOPROSTOL ,HUMAN microbiota ,PAPILLOMAVIRUSES ,BACTERIAL colonies ,CANCER patients - Abstract
The vaginal microbiota is closely related to HPV infection and cervical cancer (CC), but its relationship with platinum-based chemotherapy responsiveness is unknown. The study aimed to investigate the vaginal microbiota diversity of women with locally advanced cervical cancer (LACC) and compare the differences between responders and nonresponders. We characterized the 16S rRNA gene sequencing of vaginal microbiome of 66 vaginal samples, including 26 LACC patients before neoadjuvant chemotherapy and 40 healthy controls. Compared with the healthy controls, alpha diversity was significantly increased in CC patients (p <0.05) with more unconventionality bacterial colonization. Beta diversity also significantly differed between cervical cancer patients and controls (p <0.01). Within the CC patients, alpha diversity in vaginal samples was significantly higher in the nonresponders versus the responders (p <0.01), and the Ace index and Chao index were negatively correlated with mass reduction (p <0.001). Moreover, the Bacteroides genus enriched in the nonresponders had a ROC-plot AUC value reaching 0.84. The study suggests the vaginal microbiota in LACC patients is associated with platinum-based chemotherapy responsiveness. Alpha diversity and Bacteroides abundance have the potential of identifying platinum-resistant patients at an early time. These findings provide a basis for further research on the relationship between vaginal microbiome and chemotherapy effect in LACC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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19. Metagenomic analysis of the microbiome of the upper reproductive tract: combating ovarian cancer through predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine.
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Qin, Xu, Zhou, Jianglin, Wang, Zizhuo, Feng, Chenzhao, Fan, Junpeng, Huang, Jia, Hu, Dianxing, Baban, Babak, Wang, Shengqi, Ma, Ding, Sun, Chaoyang, Zhou, Zhe, and Chen, Gang
- Abstract
Purpose: We investigated whether ovarian cancer could alter the genital microbiota in a specific way with clinical values. Furthermore, we proposed how such changes could be envisioned in a paradigm of predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine (PPPM). Methods: The samples were collected using cotton swabs from the cervical, uterine cavity, fallopian tubes, and ovaries of patients subjected to the surgical procedures for the malignant/benign lesions. All samples were then analyzed by metagenomic shotgun sequencing. The distribution patterns and characteristics of the microbiota in the reproductive tract of subjects were analyzed and were interpreted in relation to the clinical outcomes of the subjects. Results: While the ovarian cancer was able to alter the genital microbiota, the bacteria were the dominant microorganisms in all samples across all cohorts in the study (median 99%). The microbiota of the upper female reproductive tract were mainly from the cervical, identified by low bacterial biomass and high bacterial diversity. Ovarian cancer had a distinct microbiota signature. The tubal ligation affects its microbial distribution. There were no different species on the surface of platinum-sensitive ovarian tissues compared to samples from platinum-resistant patients. Conclusion: The ovarian cancer–induced changes in microbiota magnify the potential of microbiota as a biotherapeutic modality in the treatment of ovarian cancer in this study and very likely for several malignancies and other conditions. Our findings demonstrated, for the first time, that microbiota could be dissected and applied in more specific fashion based on a predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine (PPPM) model in the treatment of ovarian cancer. Utilizing microbiota portfolio in a PPPM system in ovarian cancer would provide a unique opportunity to a clinically intelligent and novel approach in the treatment of ovarian cancer as well as several other conditions and malignancies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Retraction Note: Fostering the efficiency of the natural resource market for a comprehensive, long-term energy transition.
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Qin, Xu and Yong, Yu
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- 2024
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21. Effects of argon blowing at tundish upper nozzle on multiphase flow behavior in nozzle.
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Qin, Xu-feng, Cheng, Chang-gui, Li, Yang, Wu, Wei-li, and Jin, Yan
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- 2022
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22. Remediation of heavy metal–polluted alkaline vegetable soil using mercapto-grafted palygorskite: effects of field-scale application and soil environmental quality.
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Qin, Xu, Liu, Yetong, Wang, Lin, Li, Boyan, Wang, Haiyan, and Xu, Yingming
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SODIC soils ,PALYGORSKITE ,ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,SOIL quality ,HEAVY metal toxicology - Abstract
Remediation materials are the most critical factors for in situ immobilization of soil contaminated by heavy metals. In this study, in order to improve the performance of palygorskite (Pal), a new remediation material, mercapto-grafted palygorskite (MPal) was synthesized by grafting mercapto groups onto the surface of Pal. The results of field application in northern China showed that at a dosage of 0.12–0.23 kg m
−2 , MPal significantly reduced the available concentrations of Cd, Pb, and Cr in the soil by 52.2%, 29.9%, and 46.2%, respectively. Concurrently, Cd, Pb, and Cr concentrations in the shoots of head lettuce also decreased significantly, with the highest reduction being 44.0%, 61.5%, and 50.0%, respectively. At the same dosage, MPal had a better immobilization effect than Pal. There was no significant change in the pH of the vegetable soil, while the zeta potential decreased significantly, indicating that the MPal did not immobilize the heavy metals by increasing the pH, making it suitable for alkaline farmland soil. In addition, soil environmental quality was improved overall. MPal increased the activities of urease, β-glucosidase, cellulase, and catalase by 15.4%, 56.5%, 7.8%, and 14.9%, respectively. It increased the number of fungi and actinomycetes by 4.5% and 23.1%, respectively. MPal, as a new remediation material for soil contaminated by heavy metals, could achieve efficient remediation effects when applied in small doses. Compared with Pal, it is environmentally friendly, is low cost, and is more suitable for the treatment of heavy metal pollution in large areas of farmland. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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23. Effects of S,S-ethylenediamine disuccinic acid on the phytoextraction efficiency of Solanum nigrum L. and soil quality in Cd-contaminated alkaline wheat soil.
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Wang, Yale, Xu, Yingming, Qin, Xu, Zhao, Lijie, Huang, Qingqing, and Liang, Xuefeng
- Subjects
SODIC soils ,SOLANUM nigrum ,SOIL quality ,PHYTOREMEDIATION ,BERRIES ,SOIL solutions - Abstract
Degradable chelating agent–assisted phytoextraction is a promising method for the remediation of Cd-contaminated agricultural soil. However, there are limited studies that have examined the effect of chelating agents on soil solutions and soil quality in alkaline soil. In this study, the effects of S,S-ethylenediamine disuccinic acid (EDDS) on the growth and phytoextraction of Solanum nigrum L. (S. nigrum) were studied using pot experiments. The influence of EDDS on the soil solutions, heavy metal contents, and soil enzyme activities was evaluated. EDDS application increased the height of S. nigrum by 7.25–29.25 cm and increased the biomass of stem and leaf by 4.26–14.95 and 1.14–10.78 g/pot, respectively. The Cd concentrations in the leaves and berries of S. nigrum were 1.21–2.17 and 1.7–9.47 times higher than that of the control, respectively, and the Cd extraction amount in the shoots of S. nigrum increased by 22.78–256.16 μg/pot after EDDS application. The chelation of EDDS on heavy metals reached a peak after 7 days of application, decreased gradually with the degradation of EDDS, and disappeared after 30 days of application. Soil pH, available metals, metal speciation, and soil urease were significantly related to the application time of EDDS. Importantly, EDDS application 45 days before S. nigrum harvest treatments decreased the available metal concentrations and improved soil pH and urease activity. However, when EDDS was applied 15 days before S. nigrum harvest, the available Cd and Pb concentrations significantly increased and caused additional Pb pollution. Considering the chelation and degradation effects, the environmental implication, and the cost of EDDS, the results of this study showed that one application of EDDS was better than two applications, a 45-day application before harvest was preferred to a 15-day application, and application of 1–3 mM EDDS 30–45 days before S. nigrum harvest was the most promising application method for the remediation of Cd-contaminated alkaline soil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Energy efficient data correlation aware opportunistic routing protocol for wireless sensor networks.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu, Huang, Guanglun, Zhang, Baoxian, and Li, Cheng
- Subjects
WIRELESS sensor networks ,SENSOR networks ,WIRELESS channels ,NETWORK performance ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
In this paper, we study the design of data correlation aware opportunistic routing protocol for wireless sensor networks (WSNs) constituent of lossy links for improved network performance. We focus on a scenario where only M < N sensor nodes are required to report their readings, where N is the number of sensor nodes in the network. We formulate the problem of selecting M such reporting sensors among the N nodes as a mutual information maximization problem such that minimal information loss is resulted. Due to the NP-hardness of this issue, we present a greedy informative sensor selection algorithm. To reduce the transmission redundancy and improve the network lifetime performance, we design an energy efficient correlation aware hop-by-hop opportunistic routing protocol EECAR, which takes the following factors into account: spatial correlation characteristics among sensor readings, broadcast nature of wireless channels, and residual battery energy of sensor nodes. EECAR requires very limited routing information to be kept at nodes in the network. Extensive simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of our greedy informative sensor selection algorithm and also show that EECAR outperforms existing work in terms of network lifetime and data gathering. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Clinical and molecular characteristics of COVID-19 patients with persistent SARS-CoV-2 infection.
- Author
-
Yang, Bin, Fan, Junpeng, Huang, Jia, Guo, Ensong, Fu, Yu, Liu, Si, Xiao, Rourou, Liu, Chen, Lu, Funian, Qin, Tianyu, He, Chao, Wang, Zizhuo, Qin, Xu, Hu, Dianxing, You, Lixin, Li, Xi, Wang, Tian, Wu, Peng, Chen, Gang, and Zhou, Jianfeng
- Subjects
COVID-19 ,VIRAL shedding ,REGULATORY T cells ,SARS-CoV-2 ,TUMOR necrosis factors ,KILLER cells - Abstract
The characteristics of COVID-19 patients with persistent SARS-CoV-2 infection are not yet well described. Here, we compare the clinical and molecular features of patients with long duration of viral shedding (LDs) with those from patients with short duration patients (SDs), and healthy donors (HDs). We find that several cytokines and chemokines, such as interleukin (IL)-2, tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and lymphotoxin α (LT-α) are present at lower levels in LDs than SDs. Single-cell RNA sequencing shows that natural killer (NK) cells and CD14
+ monocytes are reduced, while regulatory T cells are increased in LDs; moreover, T and NK cells in LDs are less activated than in SDs. Importantly, most cells in LDs show reduced expression of ribosomal protein (RP) genes and related pathways, with this inversed correlation between RP levels and infection duration further validated in 103 independent patients. Our results thus indicate that immunosuppression and low RP expression may be related to the persistence of the viral infection in COVID-19 patients. Some patients with COVID-19 fail to clear the viral infection quickly, yet our understanding for the underlying immune characteristics is still lacking. Here the authors use single-cell RNA sequencing and other data form such patients to show that persistent infection is associated with immune suppression and reduced expression of ribosomal protein genes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Correction to: Sample size and power calculations for causal mediation analysis: A tutorial and Shiny app.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu
- Subjects
- *
SAMPLE size (Statistics) , *MOBILE apps - Abstract
This document is a correction notice for an article titled "Sample size and power calculations for causal mediation analysis: A tutorial and Shiny app" published in the journal Behavior Research Methods. The correction addresses an error in the equation of INT below Eq. (1). The corrected equation is provided in the document. The correction notice also includes a statement from the publisher, Springer Nature, emphasizing their neutrality regarding jurisdictional claims and institutional affiliations. The correction was reported by Xu Qin. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A modified Canny edge detector based on weighted least squares.
- Author
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Qin, Xu
- Subjects
- *
LEAST squares , *DETECTORS , *COMPUTER vision , *EDGES (Geometry) , *IMAGING systems - Abstract
Edge detection is the front-end processing stage in most computer vision and image understanding systems. Among various edge detection techniques, Canny edge detector is the one of most commonly used. In this paper a modified Canny edge detection technique focusing on change of the Sobel operator is proposed. Instead of convolution kernels, the weighted least squares method is utilized to calculate the horizontal and vertical gradient. Experimental results show that the new detector can detect some edges which are not observed in the results using the Canny edge detector. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Microstructure evolution and its effect on mechanical properties of cast Ti48Al6NbxSi alloys.
- Author
-
Qin Xu, Hong-ze Fang, Chao Wu, Qi Wang, Hong-zhi Cui, and Rui-run Chen
- Subjects
- *
SOLUTION strengthening , *ALLOYS , *VACUUM arcs , *MICROSTRUCTURE , *ULTIMATE strength - Abstract
In order to improve mechanical properties of TiAlNb alloys, different contents of silicon were added into Ti48Al6Nb alloy. The Ti48Al6NbxSi (x=0, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4 and 0.5, at.%) alloys were prepared by vacuum arc melting. The phase constitution, microstructure evolution and mechanical properties of the alloys were studied. Results show that the Ti48Al6NbxSi alloys consist of -TiAl phase, a2-Ti3Al phase and B2 phase, and Ti5Si3 silicide phase is formed when the addition of silicon is higher than 0.3at.%. The addition of silicon leads to the decrease in phase and increase in a2 phase. The formation of silicide decreases the amount of Nb dissolved in the TiAl matrix, and therefore decreases B2 phase. Compressive tests show that the ultimate strength of the alloys increases from 2,063 MPa to 2,281 MPa with an increase in silicon from 0 to 0.5at.%, while the fracture strain decreases from 34.7% to 30.8%. The increase of compressive strength and decrease of fracture strain can be attributed to the decrease of B2 phase and the formation of Ti5Si3 phase by the addition of silicon. The strengthening mechanism is changed from solid solution strengthening when the addition of silicon is less than 0.3at.% to combination of solid solution strengthening and secondary phase strengthening when the addition of silicon is higher than 0.3at.%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Scenario analysis on abating industrial process greenhouse gas emissions from adipic acid production in China.
- Author
-
Tong, Qing, Lin, Han-Yi, Qin, Xu-Ying, Yan, Run-Sheng, Guo, Yue-Feng, and Wei, Xin-Yang
- Subjects
ADIPIC acid ,MANUFACTURING processes ,GREENHOUSE gases ,ROAD maps ,PETROLEUM chemicals - Abstract
Adipic acid is an important petrochemical product, and its production process emits a high concentration of greenhouse gas N
2 O. This paper aims to provide quantitative references for relevant authorities to formulate greenhouse gas control roadmaps. The forecasting method of this paper is consistent with the published national inventory in terms of caliber. Based on the N2 O abatement technical parameters of adipic acid and the production trend, this paper combines the scenario analysis and provides a measurement of comprehensive N2 O abatement effect of the entire industry in China. Four future scenarios are assumed. The baseline scenario (BAUS) is a frozen scenario. Three emission abatement scenarios (ANAS, SNAS, and ENAS) are assumed under different strength of abatement driving parameters. The results show that China's adipic acid production process can achieve increasingly significant N2 O emission abatement effects. Compared to the baseline scenario, by 2030, the N2 O emission abatements of the three emission abatement scenarios can reach 207–399 kt and the emission abatement ratios can reach 32.5%–62.6%. By 2050, the N2 O emission abatements for the three emission abatement scenarios can reach 387–540 kt and the emission abatement ratios can reach 71.4%–99.6%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Effects of EDDS on the Cd uptake and growth of Tagetes patula L. and Phytolacca americana L. in Cd-contaminated alkaline soil in northern China.
- Author
-
Wang, Yale, Xu, Yingming, Qin, Xu, Liang, Xuefeng, Huang, Qingqing, and Peng, Yunying
- Subjects
SODIC soils ,MARIGOLDS ,SOIL pollution ,PHYTOREMEDIATION ,SOIL degradation ,HEAVY metals - Abstract
Phytoextraction has been considered an effective and environment-friendly method for removing heavy metals from contaminated soil. However, the efficiency, mechanism, and adaptability of phytoextraction by hyperaccumulators in Cd-polluted weakly alkaline soil have not been investigated in detail. In this study, pot experiments were conducted to evaluate the enhanced effects of S,S-ethylenediamine disuccinic acid (EDDS) on phytoextraction in alkaline soil by measuring the degradation kinetic characteristics of EDDS and Cd absorption dynamics of Tagetes patula L. (T. patula) and Phytolacca americana L. (P. americana) for a period of 55 days. Results showed that the half-life of EDDS varied from 4.20–7.07 days and 3.35–4.36 days for T. patula and P. americana, respectively. EDDS-activated Cd reached saturation at a low dosage (1 mM) and a single application of EDDS was found to be better than double applications. The activation of EDDS on Cd applied before 45 days of harvest was better than that before 15 days of harvest, and disappeared after a 35-day application. Correspondingly, the Cd concentration in P. americana and T. patula leaves increased significantly after 3 days of the EDDS application. However, T. patula had a biomass 2.57 times and Cd absorption capacity 10.06 times higher than P. americana. EDDS showed almost no influence on the stem and leaf biomass of T. patula; however, the root weight decreased by 9.44–71.77%. The Cd concentration in T. patula leaves of all the treatments was 1.00–1.81 times that of the control group. In comparison with other treatments, the EDDS application (3 mM) before 15 days of harvest extracted the highest amount of Cd (601.45 μg/pot) in T. patula shoots, reaching 1.40 times that in the control group. Therefore, T. patula might be a more suitable phytoremediator for Cd-polluted alkaline soil than P. americana; the most effective method was the EDDS application (3 mM) before 15 days of harvest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Effects of Sepiolite and Biochar on Enzyme Activity of Soil Contaminated by Cd and Atrazine.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu, Liu, Yetong, Huang, Qingqing, Zhao, Lijie, and Xu, Yingming
- Abstract
The effects of sepiolite and biochar on the enzymatic activities of the soil in Cd- and atrazine-contaminated soils were studied. During the growth of pakchoi, the activities of acid phosphatase, sucrase, acid protease, and cellulase decreased, catalase activity increased, and urease activity decreased first and then increased. At the first harvest, compared with that for the control group, the soil pH after treatment with remediation materials increased from 5.41 to 7.43; the activities of urease, acid protease, and catalase increased by 62.8%, 38.6%, and 86.1%, respectively. And the activities of sucrase and acid phosphatase decreased by 17.3% and 24.7%, respectively. At the second harvest, the activities of acid phosphatase, acid protease, and cellulase continued to increase, but those of sucrase and catalase decreased. The results showed that soil enzyme activity was closely related to the type and addition of remediation materials, as well as the type of the enzyme. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Knockout of the Placenta Specific 8 Gene Affects the Proliferation and Migration of Human Embryonic Kidney 293T Cell.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu-Hui, Wang, Hai-Xia, Ma, Liqun, Shen, Jinhua, Liu, Qing-Hua, and Xue, Lu
- Abstract
Candidate oncogene placenta specific 8 (PLAC8) has been identified to participate in different cellular process and human diseases. However, the effects of PLAC8 on cell proliferation and migration in human kidney cancer (KC) remained unclear. In current study, physiological effects of PLAC8 in immortalized human embryonic kidney cell line (HEK293T) were investigated in vitro. Two PLAC8 knockout (KO) cell lines were established via CRISPR/Cas9-mediated methods combined with fluorescence activated single cell sorting. To classify the characteristic of PLAC8 during cell proliferation and migration in HEK293T, cellular proliferative activity was analyzed by cell counting and colony formation assay. Cell cycle distribution was analyzed by flow cytometry. Cellular motile activity was analyzed by wound-healing and migration assay. Further underlying molecular mechanism was explored via western blot. With the KO cell lines, it was found that PLAC8 KO could decrease cell proliferation. Moreover, the inhibitory effects of PLAC8 KO on cell proliferation were associated with a G2/M arrest in cell cycle progression concomitant with a remarkable inhibition of Cyclin B1 and elevation of Cyclin A. The alteration of cell cycle proteins and E-cadherin might further associate with the enhancement of cell motility. Our study revealed a novel role for PLAC8 in cell proliferation and migration of HEK293T cells, which might shed light on further study of PLAC8 on human KC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Effects of chicken manure application on cadmium and arsenic accumulation in rice grains under different water conditions.
- Author
-
Liu, Yiyun, Xu, Yingming, Huang, Qingqing, Qin, Xu, Zhao, Lijie, Liang, Xuefeng, Wang, Lin, and Sun, Yuebing
- Subjects
POULTRY manure ,RICE ,GRAIN ,SOIL acidity ,GRAIN farming ,MANURES - Abstract
Widespread contamination of agricultural soil with Cd and As has resulted in substantial transfer and accumulation of these toxicants in rice grains. In the present study, we investigated the effects of chicken manure application on Cd and As concentrations and As speciation in the rice grains grown under different water conditions by pot experiment. Under aerobic condition, the application of chicken manure increased soil pH and soil Eh during most of the growth period of rice. Consequently, the application of chicken manure has little effect on total Cd, slightly decreased total As and inorganic As of rice grains when applied at rate of 2.0%. Under intermittent irrigation condition, the application of chicken manure increased soil pH and decreased soil Eh during most of the growth period of rice. Thus, chicken manure decreased total Cd, As, and inorganic As of rice grains. Besides, there was increased reduction of Cd and As with increase in the amount of chicken manure applied. Under flooded condition, the application of chicken manure increased soil pH before heading but decreased soil pH after heading. The application of chicken manure dramatically decreased total and inorganic As in rice grains, and slightly decreased Cd of rice grains. There was increased reduction of total As concentration with the increase in the amount of chicken manure applied. Meanwhile, the inorganic As concentration was the lowest when the concentration of chicken manure was 1.0%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Surface reconstruction from unorganized point clouds based on edge growing.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu-Jia, Hu, Zhong-Tian, Zheng, Hong-Bo, and Zhang, Mei-Yu
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Filling mode and regularity of vertical centrifugal casting process of titanium alloy in thin-walled cylinder cavity.
- Author
-
Qin Xu, Xing Wang, Yong-gang Guo, and Shi-ping Wu
- Subjects
- *
CENTRIFUGAL casting , *TITANIUM alloys , *THIN-walled structures , *FILLER materials , *VISCOSITY - Abstract
The mold filling process of titanium alloy in a thin-walled cylinder cavity under vertical centrifugal casting process was studied by means of the hydraulic simulation experiments. Results show that the filling mode of the melt in the cylinder cavity varies with casting wall-thickness. When the casting wall-thickness is less than or equal to the thickness of the first layer during the filling process, the melts fill the cavity from the bottom to the top. When the casting wall-thickness is greater than the thickness of the first layer during the filling process, the melts first fill the largest radius parts of the cavity with a certain thickness of the first layer from the bottom to the top of the cavity, and then they fill the cavity from the larger radius part to the smaller radius part. The melt filling ability increases with the increment of the mold rotational speed and the pouring temperature. In another aspect, the melt filling ability rises with the decrement of the melt viscosity, and the melt with the better filling ability is prone to fill the cylinder cavity layer by layer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The circadian expression of osteogenic factors in periodontal tissue loading mechanical force: new concepts of the personalized orthodontic care.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu, Li, Qilin, Chen, Weimin, Bai, Yumin, Baban, Babak, and Mao, Jing
- Abstract
Objective: The need for orthodontic treatment continues to increase. Strategies that shorten the treatment course and reduce discomfort are most welcome in clinic. Circadian rhythm plays important role in various physiological processes, including bone formation. This study intended to depict a possible circadian releasing property of the osteogenic factors within the periodontal tissue during orthodontic treatment, which may direct a more efficient and satisfactory orthodontic treatment to the patient.Methods: Primary periodontal ligament cells (PDLCs) were obtained from the Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. An equibiaxial strain value of 12% was applied on rat PDLCs (rPDLCs). After 2 h stimuli of 10
−7 M dexamethasone (DX), the osteogenic genes' expressions were detected by real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) at Zeitgeber times 0, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24. An orthodontic appliance was placed on 45 SD rats. Animals were maintained under 12-h light/dark periods and euthanized at 9 time points over the diurnal cycle. The orthodontic sensitive tissues of the mesial root of the maxillary first molar were collected for RT-PCR and immunohistological assay.Results: The rPDLCs displayed typical fibroblastic spindle shape, and subcultured steadily in vitro. Induced by DX, the mRNA expression of Col-1, OPN, and IBSP within the loaded/unloaded rPDLCs oscillated as that of the main clock gene Per-1. The osteogenic genes' expressions as well as the protein releases sustained a circadian oscillation trend in vivo.Conclusions: This study indicates the existence of a circadian rhythm of the osteogenic factors within the orthodontic sensitive tissues, which highlights the importance of precise timing of force loading in further orthodontic treatment. Thus, a periodicity pattern of orthodontic traction at night may prove a more efficient tooth movement while minimizing the treatment window and discomfort complains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Effects of water and organic manure coupling on the immobilization of cadmium by sepiolite.
- Author
-
Liu, Yiyun, Xu, Yingming, Qin, Xu, Zhao, Lijie, Huang, Qingqing, and Wang, Lin
- Subjects
MEERSCHAUM ,POULTRY manure ,DIETHYLENETRIAMINEPENTAACETIC acid - Abstract
Purpose: Natural sepiolite (SP) has proven effective on the in-situ immobilization remediation of Cd-contaminated soils. But the practical remediation effect may largely influenced by water management and the application of organic manure. The effects of chicken manure (CM) on SP-amended soils were investigated under normal and saturated water conditions using a pot experiment with Brassica campestris L.Materials and methods: Cd-contaminated paddy soils were amended with CM, SP, and CM + SP with no amendment as control. The amount of sepiolite was 0.5% (w/w, the same below) either in SP or CM + SP amended soils, while the amount of CM was 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0% in CM and CM + SP-amended soils. The plant metal contents, fresh weight, and soluble sugar content of plant edible parts were measured on harvest. Soil Cd was extracted by diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA) and HCl to estimate the mobility of heavy metal. Soil pH and dissolved organic matter (DOM) of rhizosphere soil were determined. The electronegative charges of soils were also measured using the zeta potential.Results and discussion: The application of CM and increasing soil moisture on SP-amended soil increased plant growth to a greater extent than the application of SP alone. The application of CM along with the increase of soil moisture decreased Cd uptake and translocation in plants grown on SP-amended soil compared to the application of SP alone. Cd content of edible plant parts reached a minimum of 0.24 mg kg
−1 with the application of 2.0% CM on SP-amended soils under water-saturated conditions, which was approximately 50% lower than the Cd concentration found when applying SP alone.Conclusions: The results of this study suggest that the application of sepiolite on Cd contaminated soil can effectively reduce Cd uptake by B. campestris L., and the addition of CM combined with effective water management also appears to further reduce Cd absorption and accumulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Localized topology control and on-demand power-efficient routing for wireless ad hoc and sensor networks.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu, Zhang, Baoxian, and Li, Cheng
- Subjects
ROUTING (Computer network management) ,AD hoc computer networks ,WIRELESS sensor networks ,WIRELESS sensor nodes ,DATA transmission systems ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Power use is a crucial design concern in wireless ad hoc and sensor networks since it corresponds directly to the network operational time. In this paper, we study the issue of power-efficient use in the following two aspects: Selecting power-efficient routes and performing efficient localized topology control to assign reduced transmit powers at nodes while preserving the global optimal connectivity. We proposed a localized topology control algorithm using two-hop neighborhood knowledge, which works to build local shortest path tree at each node independently in order to generate a reduced topology while preserving the global optimal connectivity. We derive the energy stretch ratio and maximum degree performance of our proposed algorithm as well as several existing algorithms in this aspect. We then devise three power-efficient on-demand routing protocols on top of various localized topology control algorithms, which are to acquire minimum-power paths while minimizing the associated protocol overhead for route discovery by utilizing local network state information and also packet receipt status at neighbor nodes. We further derive the asymptotical performance of the routing strategy in our protocols in terms of energy stretch ratio and route acquisition latency when network nodes operate at limited discrete power levels. Simulation results are provided to demonstrate the high performance of our topology control algorithm and also the devised routing protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. In-Situ Remediation of Cadmium and Atrazine Contaminated Acid Red Soil of South China Using Sepiolite and Biochar.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu, Liu, Yetong, Huang, Qingqing, Liu, Yiyun, Zhao, Lijie, and Xu, Yingming
- Subjects
CADMIUM ,IN situ remediation ,MEERSCHAUM ,BIOCHAR ,POLLUTION ,ATRAZINE ,ACID soils - Abstract
The in-situ immobilization effect of sepiolite and biochar on the compound pollution of cadmium (Cd) and atrazine in acid red soil of south China was studied. Results showed that in a certain concentration range, sepiolite and biochar can improve the germination rate, ensure normal growth and increase biomass of pakchoi, reduce the content of Cd in edible parts of pakchoi in different degrees and meet international standards, and restrain absorption of atrazine in pakchoi completely. Sepiolite was more effective than biochar for the immobilization of Cd, while biochar was more effective than sepiolite for the immobilization of atrazine. Combined application of sepiolite and biochar in soil contaminated by Cd and atrazine was better than individual applications of sepiolite or biochar. The remediation method applied in this research can effectively repair the acid red soil with combined pollution of Cd and atrazine in south China, while also providing ideas for in-situ remediation of farmland soil with combined pollution of pesticides and metals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Selenium application alters soil cadmium bioavailability and reduces its accumulation in rice grown in Cd-contaminated soil.
- Author
-
Huang, Qingqing, Xu, Yingming, Liu, Yiyun, Qin, Xu, Huang, Rong, and Liang, Xuefeng
- Subjects
SELENIUM ,CHALCOGENS ,BIOAVAILABILITY ,SOILS ,RICE - Abstract
Selenium (Se) alleviates cadmium (Cd) accumulation in several plants. Nevertheless, it is still unclear why it has such effect. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the effects of Se on soil Cd bioavailability, and Cd accumulation in flooded rice plants, and to determine the mechanisms underlying these effects. Concentration of Cd and Se in different rice tissues was determined along Cd and Se concentrations in the soil solution and soil Cd fractions. Results showed that exogenous selenite and selenate treatments significantly increased rice grain Se by 4.25- and 2.39-fold and decreased Cd by 36.5% and 25.3% relative to control treatment, respectively. The addition of Se to Cd-contaminated soil significantly decreased total Cd concentration in the soil solution by 11.2-13.0%, increased soil pH by 0.06-0.32 units, and enhanced soil Cd immobilization in relation to control. Exogenous Se also reduced diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid-Cd, exchangeable, and residual Cd but increased the levels of Cd bound to carbonate and iron and manganese oxides. Thus, amending Cd-contaminated soil with Se may help decrease Cd content as well as increase Se levels in rice grain, as Se may mitigate Cd accumulation in rice plants by increasing soil pH, reducing Cd bioavailability, and inhibiting Cd translocation from roots to shoots. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Untiring Researches for Alternative Resources of Rhizoma Paridis.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu-Jie, Ni, Wei, Chen, Chang-Xiang, and Liu, Hai-Yang
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Rapid Multi-Residue Determination of Pesticides in Animal-Derived Food via Modified QuEChERS Sample Preparation and GC/MS.
- Author
-
Qin, Xu, Zhao, Lijie, Huang, Qingqing, Liu, Yiyun, Xu, Yingming, Qin, Dongmei, and Liu, Yetong
- Abstract
A group of methods were developed for the determination of etofenprox, kresoxim-methyl, cyprodinil, azoxystrobin, and pyrimethanil residues in animal-derived food (milk, egg, pig liver, pig fat, pork, and chicken) by using QuEChERS (quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged, and safe)-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). With acetonitrile as the extraction solvent, the samples were pretreated with the improved QuEChERS method including extraction, salting-out, and purification processes. Then, all the sample extracts were analyzed with GC/MS in selected-ion monitoring (SIM) mode and quantified by the external standard method using the matrix-matched standard method. Under electron ionization conditions, the analysis was carried out with a DB-5 MS capillary column (30 m × 0.25 mm, 0.25 μm) at a flow rate of 2.0 mL min
−1 . 163, 116, 224, 344, and 198 were selected as quantitative ion of etofenprox, kresoxim-methyl, cyprodinil, azoxystrobin, and pyrimethanil, respectively. Under the optimal conditions, the calibration curves showed good linearity in the range of 0.0002-5.0 mg L−1 for the five pesticides mentioned above, with correlation coefficients (R 2 ) were more than 0.99. The average recoveries of the five pesticides spiked at three levels were 72.46-104.88%, with the RSDs (n = 5) of 0.70-11.26%. The LODs (S/N > 3) of five pesticides were 0.0002-0.02 mg L−1 ; the LOQs were 0.0002-0.01 mg kg−1 in milk, egg, pig liver, pig fat, pork, and chicken samples. Such methods showed the advantages of simplicity, rapidness, and sensitivity, and could meet the requirements for the determination of five pesticides residues in various animal derived foods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Stimulating Effect of Low-Temperature Plasma (LTP) on the Germination Rate and Vigor of Alfalfa Seed (Medicago Sativa L.).
- Author
-
Tang, Xin, Liang, Fengchen, Zhao, Lijing, Zhang, Lili, Shu, Jing, Zheng, Huamei, Qin, Xu, Shao, Changyong, Feng, Jinkui, and Du, Keshuang
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Remediation mechanisms of mercapto-grafted palygorskite for cadmium pollutant in paddy soil.
- Author
-
Liang, Xuefeng, Qin, Xu, Huang, Qingqing, Huang, Rong, Yin, Xiuling, Cai, Yanming, Wang, Lin, Sun, Yuebing, and Xu, Yingming
- Subjects
SOIL remediation ,THIOLS ,PALYGORSKITE ,POLLUTANTS ,SOIL chemistry - Abstract
The immobilization agent was the key factor that determined the success of remediation of heavy metal polluted soil. In this study, mercapto-grafted palygorskite (MP) as a novel and efficient immobilization agent was utilized for the remediation of Cd-polluted paddy soil in pot trials, and the remediation mechanisms were investigated in the aspect of soil chemistry and plant physiology with different rice cultivars as model plants. Mercapto-grafted palygorskite at applied doses of 0.1-0.3% could reduce Cd contents of brown rice and straws of different cultivars significantly. Both reduced DTPA-extractable Cd contents in rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soil and decreasing Cd contents in iron plaques on rice root surfaces confirmed that MP was an efficient immobilization agent for Cd pollutant in paddy soil. In the aspect of soil chemistry, the pH values of rhizosphere and non-rhizosphere soils had no statistical changes in the MP treatment groups, but their zeta potentials decreased obviously, indicating that MP could enhance the fixation or sorption of Cd on soil compositions. In the aspect of antioxidant system, MP could increase POD activity of rice roots significantly to alleviate the stress of Cd to roots, and resulted in the decrease of T-AOC, SOD, and CAT activities of rice roots of the selected cultivars. MP had no inhabitation or enhancement effects on TSH of rice roots but enhance the contents of MTs and NPT to binding Cd to complete detoxification process. MP as a novel and efficient immobilization agent could complete the remediation effects through soil chemistry and plant physiological mechanisms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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45. Direct measurement of strain-dependent solid surface stress.
- Author
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Qin Xu, Jensen, Katharine E., Boltyanskiy, Rostislav, Sarfati, Raphaël, Style, Robert W., and Dufresne, Eric R.
- Abstract
Surface stress, also known as surface tension, is a fundamental material property of any interface. However, measurements of solid surface stress in traditional engineering materials, such as metals and oxides, have proven to be very challenging. Consequently, our understanding relies heavily on untested theories, especially regarding the strain dependence of this property. Here, we take advantage of the high compliance and large elastic deformability of a soft polymer gel to directly measure solid surface stress as a function of strain. As anticipated by theoretical work for metals, we find that the surface stress depends on the strain via a surface modulus. Remarkably, the surface modulus of our soft gels is many times larger than the zero-strain surface tension. This suggests that surface stresses can play a dominant role in solid mechanics at larger length scales than previously anticipated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Control System and Control Method for Automatic Adjustment of Outdoor LED Display Brightness.
- Author
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Yang, Feng, Qin, Xu-fei, and Zhai, Lin-bo
- Published
- 2015
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47. Two New Highly Oxygenated Spirostanol Saponins from Paris polyphylla var. stenophylla.
- Author
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Jin, Ling-Yu, Lu, Ting-Xiang, Qin, Xu-Jie, Ni, Wei, Yan, Huan, Chen, Yu, Liu, Hui, He, Hong-Ping, and Liu, Hai-Yang
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Spiralosides A-C, Three New C-Steroidal Glycoalkaloids from the Fruits of Solanum spirale.
- Author
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Li, Dan, Zhao, Yun-Li, Qin, Xu-Jie, Liu, Lu, Yang, Xing-Wei, Chen, Ying-Ying, Wang, Bei, Wei, Xin, Liu, Ya-Ping, and Luo, Xiao-Dong
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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49. Ypsiyunnosides A-E, Five New Cholestanol Glycosides from Ypsilandra yunnanensis.
- Author
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Chen, Yu, Si, Yong-Ai, Ni, Wei, Yan, Huan, Qin, Xu-Jie, Chen, Chang-Xiang, and Liu, Hai-Yang
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The status of glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper protein in the salivary glands in Sjögren's syndrome: predictive and prognostic potentials.
- Author
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Qin, Xu, Liu, Jun, Abdelsayed, Rafik, Shi, Xingming, Yu, Jack, Mozaffari, Mahmood, and Baban, Babak
- Abstract
Background: We recently showed that an imbalance between the pro-inflammatory cytokine, interleukin (IL)-17, and the developmental endothelial locus-1 (Del-1) likely contributes to inflammation and salivary gland abnormalities in Sjögren's syndrome (SS). The glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ) protein is a pivotal player in mediating the anti-inflammatory effects of glucocorticoids. However, its status and role in salivary gland inflammation and dysfunction in SS are not established. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that SS is associated with reduced GILZ expression, thereby contributing to Del-1/Il-17 imbalance and inflammation in salivary glands. Methods: We utilized the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice, a model of SS-like disease as well as lower-lip biopsy samples of subjects without or with a diagnosis of SS in association with immunostaining studies. These studies were complemented with in vitro and flow-cytometry studies whereby interleukin (IL)-23-treated salivary gland cells were co-cultured with GILZ-expressing cells or control cells; IL-23 is known to increase generation of IL-17. Results: Salivary glands of NOD mice displayed marked leukocyte infiltration and reduced GILZ expression in association with increased IL-17 but decreased Del-1 expression. A similar pattern was observed for lower-lip biopsy samples of SS than non-SS subjects. Further, IL-23-treated salivary gland cells displayed marked increase in IL-17 but reduced Del-1 positive cells which were reversed with co-culturing with GILZ-expressing cells but not control cells. Collectively, the results are suggestive of dysregulation of GILZ playing a role in inflammation and associated Del-1/Il-17 imbalance in SS. Conclusions: Complementing our demonstration of Del-1/IL-17 imbalance in salivary glands in SS, the present study has established the relevance and significance of GILZ as a novel predictive and prognostic molecular fingerprint for SS. Thus, assessment of minor salivary gland GILZ expression, in conjunction with Del-1/IL-17 imbalance, could potentially offer a more sensitive approach to help with diagnosis of SS, at early stage of the disease, than that based on leukocyte infiltration. Future studies should establish whether treatment with GILZ ameliorates signs and symptoms of salivary malfunction of SS for which effective treatment options remain elusive. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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