46 results on '"Y. F. Wei"'
Search Results
2. EP08.02-027 T790M Detection Rate After First-Line Treatment with Bevacizumab Plus 1st or 2nd Generation EGFR-TKI in Advanced NSCLC
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C.-H. Kuo, P.-L. Su, Y.-F. Wei, J.-C. Ko, J.-S. Tseng, J. Su, C.-L. Chiang, C.-Y. Chen, C.-C. Lin, C.-C. Wang, C.-C. HO, H.C. Chang, and J.-Y. Hung
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Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,Oncology - Published
- 2022
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3. [Identification and reflection for a case of occupational asbestos-induced lung cancer]
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C, Ma, X, Zuo, R, Sun, L, Wang, C G, Shen, Y M, Zhao, and Y F, Wei
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Lung Neoplasms ,Humans ,Asbestos ,Lung - Abstract
职业病危害因素接触史是诊断职业病的前提,尤其是对诊断结论有异议,申请职业病鉴定时尤为重要。本文报告1例职业性石棉所致肺癌的职业病鉴定病例,探讨诊断鉴定过程中职业病危害因素接触史的判定问题,以利于更好地开展职业病诊断与鉴定工作。.
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- 2021
4. Charge Loss Correction in the Silicon-Tungsten Tracker-Converter for Proton-Helium Charge Identification in the DAMPE Detector
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Zi Qing Xia, F. C. T. Barbato, M. Di Santo, Kai Kai Duan, D. Mo, A. Ruina, A. Kotenko, Tao Ma, Yong Jie Zhang, Yan Fang Wang, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, Yong Qiang Zhang, A. Parenti, Guang Shun Huang, Z. X. Dong, Meng Su, Hui Jun Yao, Jinglai Duan, Xiao Yuan Huang, Yang Haibo, X. J. Teng, Qi Ding, F. de Palma, J. N. Rao, Chang Yi Zhou, Zhi Yong Zhang, J. J. Zang, Lei Feng, Chang Qing Feng, Hao Ran Sun, J. J. Wei, Lihui Wu, Huaguang Wang, Yi Zhang, Yao Ming Liang, Xu Pan, D. D'Urso, Zhan Fang Chen, Yan Zhang, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, E. Casilli, W. H. Shen, Y. Y. Huang, Shi Jun Lei, Cong Zhao, L. Silveri, P. Fusco, A. De Benedittis, M. S. Cai, Deng Yi Chen, F. Alemanno, Peng Xiong Ma, Z. T. Shen, I. De Mitri, D. Droz, Yang Liu, Q. An, Xiao Yong Ma, W. X. Peng, M. Stolpovskiy, M. Y. Cui, Zi Zong Xu, Sheng Xia Zhang, Jin Zhou Wang, K. Gong, Yi-Zhong Fan, Xiang Li, Hong Yun Zhao, M. M. Salinas, Xiao Yang Niu, Ya Peng Zhang, R. Qiao, Z. Y. Sun, G. Z. Shang, Shuang Xue Han, E. Catanzani, Shu Xin Wang, Wen Hao Li, Peng Yang, Di Wu, En Heng Xu, T. S. Cui, A. Surdo, Jian Wu, Jin Chang, P. Azzarello, Chuan Yue, Ya Qing Yang, Shen Wang, Xin Wu, Fang Fang, Kun Fang, Chuan Ning Luo, Maksym Deliyergiyev, F. Gargano, Jian Hua Guo, D. Kyratzis, Y. Z. Gong, Qiang Yuan, X. Y. Peng, S. B. Liu, Xian Qiang Li, M. M. Ma, Y. F. Wei, Y. H. Yu, Yun Long Zhang, C. Liu, Xiao Lian Wang, V. Gallo, W. Zhang, Wei Jiang, Zhe Zhang, C. Perrina, G. F. Xue, Ying Wang, Yu Xing Cui, Sha Sha Wu, Giacinto Donvito, Y. M. Hu, F. Loparco, J. L. Chen, Hao Ting Dai, L. G. Wang, Dong Ya Guo, Guan Wen Yuan, Hao Liu, Jie Liu, G. Marsella, Andrii Tykhonov, Hai Tao Xu, Xiao Jun Bi, Min Gao, Zun Lei Xu, Zhao Qiang Shen, Xun Feng Zhao, Zhi Hui Xu, Da Ming Wei, Wei Liang Li, P. Bernardini, Tie Kuang Dong, Jing Xing Song, R. R. Fan, and Yuan Zhu Wang
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Physics ,Nuclear physics ,chemistry ,Proton ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Dark matter ,Detector ,Gamma ray ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Particle ,Charge (physics) ,Helium ,Ion - Abstract
The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) is a satellite-borne experiment, in operation since 2015, aimed at studying high-energy gamma rays and cosmic nuclei fluxes. Of the various sub-detectors in the DAMPE payload, the Silicon-Tungsten tracKer-converter (STK) plays a significant role in the charge measurement of incoming ions. Depending on the angle of inclination of the impinging particle and its position of impact on these strips, the collected charge can spread between the strips which results in some fractional signal loss. The $\eta$ variable is used to identify this spread of charge across the strips and correct for the associated charge loss. This brings us closer to accurate determination of particle charge which is crucial for ensuring a good discrimination between particles. The $\eta$-correction is, therefore, expected to play an important role in the determination of heavy ions by the DAMPE detector. It has helped reduce the proton background for the helium identification in STK by a factor of 1.5 for MIP tracks. It has been sucessfully applied to carbon nuclei and its application to heavier nuclei is currently being studied.
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- 2021
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5. Performance of the DAMPE silicon-tungsten tracker during the first 5 years of in-orbit operations
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Peng Yang, Jinglai Duan, Xian Qiang Li, Zun Lei Xu, Zhi Yong Zhang, Xiang Li, Zhao Qiang Shen, Xun Feng Zhao, Yang Haibo, Z. X. Dong, M. M. Ma, J. N. Rao, X. J. Teng, Ying Wang, Yang Liu, Guan Wen Yuan, Jin Zhou Wang, Qi Ding, Zhi Hui Xu, Kai Kai Duan, Z. Y. Sun, G. Marsella, Yu Xing Cui, D. Mo, J. J. Zang, Andrii Tykhonov, Da Ming Wei, W. H. Shen, Qiang Yuan, Giacinto Donvito, Y. H. Yu, Yun Long Zhang, P. Azzarello, Huaguang Wang, I. Di Santo, M. S. Cai, Hai Tao Xu, Yan Fang Wang, Di Wu, Chuan Ning Luo, Q. An, Wei Liang Li, S. B. Liu, Z. T. Shen, Xiao Jun Bi, Min Gao, A. Kotenko, Guang Shun Huang, Xiao Yuan Huang, Tie Kuang Dong, Jian Wu, Sha Sha Wu, W. X. Peng, Zhan Fang Chen, T. S. Cui, Ya Qing Yang, Tao Ma, Fang Fang, Jing Xing Song, K. Gong, Zi Zong Xu, R. R. Fan, F. de Palma, Yong Jie Zhang, Jian Hua Guo, Y. F. Wei, Maria Munoz Salinas, F. Loparco, Yan Zhang, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, En Heng Xu, C. Liu, Xiao Lian Wang, A. Surdo, Yi Zhang, J. L. Chen, G. Z. Shang, Shuang Xue Han, Chang Qing Feng, W. Zhang, Y. Z. Gong, Ya Peng Zhang, I. De Mitri, Lei Feng, Wei Jiang, Xiao Yong Ma, R. Qiao, Shu Xin Wang, Deng Yi Chen, Zhe Zhang, Li Bo Wu, Xiao Yang Niu, G. F. Xue, X. Y. Peng, Zi Qing Xia, D. Droz, F. Alemanno, Jin Chang, Yao Ming Liang, E. Catanzani, Wen Hao Li, Xin Wu, L. Silveri, Chang Yi Zhou, Yuan Zhu Wang, F. C. T. Barbato, F. Gargano, Chuan Yue, Yong Qiang Zhang, Yi-Zhong Fan, Meng Su, D. D'Urso, Dampe, Y. Y. Huang, Kun Fang, Maksym Deliyergiyev, P. Fusco, Shi Jun Lei, D. Kyratzis, A. De Benedittis, Peng Xiong Ma, P. Bernardini, A. Parenti, M. Stolpovskiy, M. Y. Cui, A. Ruina, Hui Jun Yao, Hao Ran Sun, J. J. Wei, Shen Wang, Hong Yun Zhao, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, E. Casilli, Sheng Xia Zhang, Y. M. Hu, Hao Ting Dai, C. Perrina, L. G. Wang, Dong Ya Guo, Hao Liu, Jie Liu, Xu Pan, and Cong Zhao
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Physics ,Optics ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,business.industry ,Detector ,Orbit (dynamics) ,Calibration ,Satellite ,Tracking (particle physics) ,business ,Particle detector ,Noise (radio) ,Charged particle - Abstract
Since its launch, in December 2015, the satellite-based DAMPE (DArk Matter Particle Explorer) particle detector is taking data smoothly. The Silicon-Tungsten tracKer-converter (STK) of DAMPE consists of six tracking planes (6x, 6y) of single-sided silicon micro-strip detectors mounted on seven support trays. The STK is able to measure the charge and precisely reconstruct the track of traversing charged particles. Tungsten plates (1 mm thick) are integrated in the second, third and fourth tray from the top to serve as $\gamma \rightarrow e^+e^−$ converters. Commissioned rapidly after the launch, the STK is running extremely well since then. The STK in-orbit calibration and performance during its first more than 5 years of operation, including the noise behaviour and the thermal and mechanical stability, are presented in this contribution.
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- 2021
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6. On-orbit performance of the DAMPE BGO calorimeter
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D. Droz, Yang Liu, Jin Zhou Wang, Guan Wen Yuan, G. Marsella, Zun Lei Xu, Zhao Qiang Shen, Xun Feng Zhao, Zhi Hui Xu, Ya Peng Zhang, Qiang Yuan, S. B. Liu, Andrii Tykhonov, Hai Tao Xu, Y. M. Hu, Xiao Jun Bi, Min Gao, K. Gong, Da Ming Wei, Yi Zhang, Chuan Yue, G. Z. Shang, Shuang Xue Han, Hao Ting Dai, Y. F. Wei, Shu Xin Wang, Jinglai Duan, Chang Qing Feng, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, E. Casilli, Zi Qing Xia, Z. X. Dong, Wei Liang Li, P. Azzarello, M. Di Santo, Yao Ming Liang, Fang Fang, Yuan Zhu Wang, Y. Y. Huang, F. C. T. Barbato, Tie Kuang Dong, Peng Xiong Ma, P. Fusco, L. Silveri, J. J. Zang, Huaguang Wang, L. G. Wang, X. J. Teng, M. Y. Cui, Sha Sha Wu, C. Liu, Xiao Lian Wang, V. Gallo, W. Zhang, Dong Ya Guo, Yi-Zhong Fan, Tao Ma, Chuan Ning Luo, F. Loparco, Jing Xing Song, W. H. Shen, R. R. Fan, Yong Jie Zhang, M. S. Cai, Shen Wang, J. L. Chen, Hao Liu, Deng Yi Chen, J. N. Rao, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, Jie Liu, Yan Zhang, Z. T. Shen, Hui Jun Yao, Yifeng Wei, Y. H. Yu, P. Bernardini, W. X. Peng, Yun Long Zhang, A. Parenti, Wei Jiang, Yong Qiang Zhang, Meng Su, Kai Kai Duan, Zhe Zhang, D. Mo, F. Alemanno, Hao Ran Sun, Xiao Yang Niu, Peng Yang, Zhan Fang Chen, A. Ruina, J. J. Wei, Lihui Wu, Ying Wang, Xiao Yuan Huang, Yan Fang Wang, G. F. Xue, Sheng Xia Zhang, Di Wu, F. de Palma, Kun Fang, Zi Zong Xu, Chang Yi Zhou, Xin Wu, Yu Xing Cui, D. D'Urso, C. Perrina, D. Kyratzis, Yang Haibo, Q. An, Xian Qiang Li, Jian Wu, En Heng Xu, Shi Jun Lei, M. M. Ma, Jian Hua Guo, Qi Ding, Xu Pan, Giacinto Donvito, Ya Qing Yang, Jin Chang, Z. Y. Sun, R. Qiao, Cong Zhao, F. Gargano, I. De Mitri, Hong Yun Zhao, T. S. Cui, Xiao Yong Ma, Zhi Yong Zhang, E. Catanzani, Y. Z. Gong, Wen Hao Li, A. Surdo, X. Y. Peng, Dampe, M. M. Salinas, Guang Shun Huang, Lei Feng, A. De Benedittis, M. Stolpovskiy, A. Kotenko, and Xiang Li
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Physics ,Scintillation ,Range (particle radiation) ,Calorimeter (particle physics) ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Payload ,business.industry ,Detector ,Dark matter ,Optics ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Satellite ,Optical filter ,business - Abstract
The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) is the first Chinese cosmic-ray direct detection experiment. It has been operating smoothly on-orbit since its successful launch at the end of 2015. Currently, its sub-detectors and the satellite are in good working order. The DAMPE payload employs a BGO Calorimeter for energy measurements, trigger and e/p identification. The calorimeter is constructed of 308 BGO crystals, and PMTs are coupled to the crystals with optical filters to readout scintillation light. In this work, we present the status and performance of the calorimeter, including status of detector units, energy measurement, especially in TeV range, detector endurance, and long term performance in a duration of 65 months.
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- 2021
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7. Analyzing the Fermi Bubbles with DArk Matter Particle Explorer
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Z. X. Dong, J. N. Rao, D. Droz, Yang Liu, Jin Zhou Wang, Xun Feng Zhao, Zhi Hui Xu, Da Ming Wei, Yong Qiang Zhang, Meng Su, Zhan Fang Chen, Yuan Zhu Wang, Wei Liang Li, F. Alemanno, Yan Zhang, Yi Zhang, P. Azzarello, Guang Shun Huang, Tie Kuang Dong, Sha Sha Wu, A. Surdo, Jinglai Duan, Zhao-Qiang Shen, F. Loparco, J. L. Chen, Zi Qing Xia, I. De Mitri, Xiao Yong Ma, Zhi Yong Zhang, P. Bernardini, Jing Xing Song, F. C. T. Barbato, R. R. Fan, Z. Y. Sun, Yong Jie Zhang, Di Wu, Yang Haibo, Shi Jun Lei, Chuan Ning Luo, Y. H. Yu, Yun Long Zhang, Y. M. Hu, C. Liu, Xiao Lian Wang, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, K. Gong, Jian Wu, E. Catanzani, V. Gallo, W. Zhang, Wen Hao Li, Qi Ding, Ya Qing Yang, T. S. Cui, G. Z. Shang, Shuang Xue Han, Wei Jiang, Zhe Zhang, Zi Zong Xu, Xiang Li, G. F. Xue, Shu Xin Wang, Guan Wen Yuan, Xian Qiang Li, M. M. Ma, Hao Ting Dai, Ying Wang, Tao Ma, D. Mo, Hong Yun Zhao, G. Marsella, Andrii Tykhonov, Hai Tao Xu, Xiao Jun Bi, Min Gao, Yu Xing Cui, Yao Ming Liang, L. Silveri, Giacinto Donvito, Yan Fang Wang, L. G. Wang, Jin Chang, F. Gargano, Y. F. Wei, M. M. Salinas, Dong Ya Guo, Y. Z. Gong, Xu Pan, Xin Wu, Hao Liu, Jie Liu, X. Y. Peng, Cong Zhao, M. S. Cai, Jian Hua Guo, A. Parenti, Deng Yi Chen, Chang Qing Feng, Peng Xiong Ma, W. X. Peng, Ya Peng Zhang, En Heng Xu, A. Ruina, M. Y. Cui, Chang Yi Zhou, D. D'Urso, C. Perrina, J. J. Zang, Huaguang Wang, I. Di Santo, Chuan Yue, Shen Wang, Z. Xu, A. De Benedittis, Kun Fang, Yi-Zhong Fan, Xiao Yuan Huang, Kai-Kai Duan, D. Kyratzis, F. de Palma, M. Stolpovskiy, Qiang Yuan, S. B. Liu, Y. Y. Huang, P. Fusco, Lei Feng, A. Kotenko, Li Bo Wu, Xiao Yang Niu, Fang Fang, X. J. Teng, W. H. Shen, Z. T. Shen, Q. An, R. Qiao, Hui Jun Yao, Hao Ran Sun, J. J. Wei, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, E. Casilli, Sheng Xia Zhang, and Peng Yang
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Physics ,Range (particle radiation) ,High energy particle ,Photon ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Dark matter ,Galactic Center ,Cosmic ray ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Galactic plane ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope - Abstract
The Fermi bubbles are two large structures above and below the Galactic Plane. They are first discovered by Fermi-LAT and thought to be related to the jet or the wind from the Galactic center. The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) is a space-borne high energy particle telescope aiming at measuring cosmic rays and photons in a broad energy range. In this work, we use 4.8 years of DAMPE photon data to search for the emission from the Fermi Bubbles. We calculate the TS values of the lobes and the significance of its curved spectrum. The obtained spectral parameters are then compared with those from the Fermi-LAT. We also search for the emission from the cocoon in the southeast part of lobes. Since the Galactic diffuse emission (GDE) model is a major source of systematic uncertainty, we also switch to the GDE models calculated with Galprop and evaluate the influence.
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- 2021
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8. Measurement of the Boron to Carbon Flux Ratio in Cosmic Rays with the DAMPE Experiment
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Jinglai Duan, Peng Yang, Xian Qiang Li, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, E. Casilli, Wei Liang Li, M. M. Ma, Yan Zhang, Ya Peng Zhang, Y. Z. Gong, Z. X. Dong, Y. M. Hu, Yi Zhang, Chang Qing Feng, Tie Kuang Dong, K. Gong, X. Y. Peng, G. Z. Shang, Shuang Xue Han, Q. An, Hao Ting Dai, Chuan Yue, Shu Xin Wang, P. Azzarello, Qiang Yuan, D. Kyratzis, Y. Y. Huang, Yuan Zhu Wang, S. B. Liu, Xin Wu, Kai Kai Duan, Y. H. Yu, En Heng Xu, D. Mo, Yun Long Zhang, Jing Xing Song, P. Fusco, Yong Jie Zhang, R. Qiao, A. Parenti, R. R. Fan, C. Perrina, Hui Jun Yao, J. N. Rao, Y. F. Wei, M. M. Salinas, Yan Fang Wang, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, Zun Lei Xu, J. J. Zang, A. Ruina, Deng Yi Chen, Hao Ran Sun, Zhao Qiang Shen, Xun Feng Zhao, Huaguang Wang, J. J. Wei, L. G. Wang, Dong Ya Guo, I. Di Santo, Zhi Hui Xu, Yi-Zhong Fan, P. Bernardini, Tao Ma, Hao Liu, Jie Liu, Guang Shun Huang, Ying Wang, Zhan-Fang Chen, Sha Sha Wu, Dampe, Zi Zong Xu, Yu Xing Cui, Chuan Ning Luo, Sheng Xia Zhang, Yang Haibo, Giacinto Donvito, Xiao Yuan Huang, Yao Ming Liang, F. Loparco, Li-Bo Wu, J. L. Chen, Da Ming Wei, Qi Ding, Zhan Fang Chen, F. de Palma, L. Silveri, Guan Wen Yuan, Kun Fang, D. Droz, Yang Liu, G. Marsella, Andrii Tykhonov, Jin Zhou Wang, Hai Tao Xu, Xiang Li, Xiao Jun Bi, Min Gao, Jin Chang, F. Gargano, Zhi Yong Zhang, Fang Fang, Peng Xiong Ma, Di Wu, Jian Wu, M. Y. Cui, Ya Qing Yang, Li Bo Wu, Xiao Yang Niu, X. J. Teng, W. H. Shen, Z. T. Shen, Xu Pan, Cong Zhao, Ming-Yang Cui, M. S. Cai, Lei Feng, W. X. Peng, Jian Hua Guo, I. De Mitri, Xiao Yong Ma, Zi Qing Xia, A. De Benedittis, E. Catanzani, Wen Hao Li, F. C. T. Barbato, M. Stolpovskiy, A. Kotenko, Shen Wang, A. Surdo, Hong Yun Zhao, F. Alemanno, C. Liu, Xiao Lian Wang, V. Gallo, W. Zhang, Z. Y. Sun, Chang Yi Zhou, Wei Jiang, D. D'Urso, T. S. Cui, Shi Jun Lei, Zhe Zhang, G. F. Xue, Yong Qiang Zhang, and Meng Su
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Physics ,Nuclear physics ,Range (particle radiation) ,High energy particle ,chemistry ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Dark matter ,Detector ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Particle ,Cosmic ray ,Boron ,Carbon - Abstract
The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE), a space-based high energy particle detector, has been operated on-orbit for more than five years. The large geometric factor and good charge resolution enable DAMPE to have very good potential to measure cosmic-rays up to 100 TeV. Knowledge of the boron to carbon (B/C) flux ratio is very important in understanding the prop- agation of cosmic rays, especially in TeV energy range. In this contribution, the latest progress of the B/C flux ratio analysis based on the flight data collected by DAMPE during the 5 years of operation, is presented.
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- 2021
- Full Text
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9. Measurement of the Cosmic Ray Helium Energy Spectrum from 70 GeV to 80 TeV with the DAMPE Space Mission
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Fengtao Zhang, Y. F. Wang, Y. Y. Huang, Xiangpeng Guo, Jinfei Wu, D. Droz, J. N. Rao, Jinglai Duan, Yang Haibo, C. Liu, D. M. Wei, Zongye Zhang, X. Y. Ma, P. Azzarello, P. Fusco, Z. Y. Sun, Niu Xiaoyang, I. De Mitri, W. Zhang, Cihang Luo, C. Q. Feng, Yu Xing Cui, X. X. Li, M. S. Cai, Z.-Q. Shen, G. Marsella, X. L. Wang, S. Wang, F. Loparco, Guan Wen Yuan, Y. F. Wei, Jin Chang, Y. J. Zhang, Giacinto Donvito, W. X. Peng, J. L. Chen, Q. An, S. B. Liu, S. C. Wen, F. Gargano, Xiulian Pan, Y. Z. Gong, Cang Zhao, Yuqing Fan, T. S. Cui, H. T. Xu, A. De Benedittis, E. Catanzani, M. M. Salinas, Y. H. Yu, Zhao-Min Wang, Yun Long Zhang, Andrii Tykhonov, Wei Liu, Dingsong Wu, Zhenyu Zhang, Yifan Yang, G. F. Xue, Fang Fang, Pengtao Yang, M. Di Santo, R. Qiao, Yaohui Zhang, Xian Qiang Li, X. J. Bi, Chuan Yue, Min Gao, Z. Q. Xia, Shumei Wu, X. Y. Peng, M. M. Ma, Wenhan Jiang, J. Z. Wang, F. C. T. Barbato, M. Stolpovskiy, Hengchang Liu, F. Alemanno, P. Bernardini, J. J. Wei, Lihui Wu, Yujuan Liu, J. Liu, Yao Ming Liang, Z. Xu, A. Parenti, L. Feng, Yun-Zhi Zhang, A. Ruina, D. Mo, M. Y. Cui, Xin Wu, L. Silveri, Jun-jun Guo, Yu-Sa Wang, Hong Yun Zhao, W. Li, Hu-Rong Yao, Jinyuo Song, Z. Z. Xu, Z. X. Dong, Yan Fang Wang, Kun Fang, Y. Zhang, A. D'Amone, H. Su, Meng Su, A. Kotenko, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, Shi-Jun Lei, Sheng Xia Zhang, Q. Yuan, Guangshun Huang, R. R. Fan, Peng-Xiong Ma, Xun Feng Zhao, Zhi Hui Xu, S.X. Li, A. Surdo, Yu-Xuan Zhu, X. J. Teng, Tie-Kuang Dong, W. H. Shen, Z. T. Shen, D. D'Urso, Zu-Cheng Chen, L. G. Wang, Dong Ya Guo, Xiaoyuan Huang, Y. M. Hu, F. de Palma, Hao Ting Dai, C. Perrina, Tianxiao Ma, Donghong Chen, Kai-Kai Duan, Maksym Deliyergiyev, D. Kyratzis, K. Gong, Chengrui Zhou, Mn Mazziotta, G. Z. Shang, Shuang Xue Han, J. J. Zang, Huaguang Wang, Alemanno F., An Q., Azzarello P., Barbato F.C.T., Bernardini P., Bi X.J., Cai M.S., Catanzani E., Chang J., Chen D.Y., Chen J.L., Chen Z.F., Cui M.Y., Cui T.S., Cui Y.X., Dai H.T., D'amone A., De Benedittis A., De Mitri I., De Palma F., Deliyergiyev M., Di Santo M., Dong T.K., Dong Z.X., Donvito G., Droz D., Duan J.L., Duan K.K., D'urso D., Fan R.R., Fan Y.Z., Fang K., Fang F., Feng C.Q., Feng L., Fusco P., Gao M., Gargano F., Gong K., Gong Y.Z., Guo D.Y., Guo J.H., Guo X.L., Han S.X., Hu Y.M., Huang G.S., Huang X.Y., Huang Y.Y., Ionica M., Jiang W., Kong J., Kotenko A., Kyratzis D., Lei S.J., Li S., Li W.L., Li X., Li X.Q., Liang Y.M., Liu C.M., Liu H., Liu J., Liu S.B., Liu W.Q., Liu Y., Loparco F., Luo C.N., Ma M., Ma P.X., Ma T., Ma X.Y., Marsella G., Mazziotta M.N., Mo D., Niu X.Y., Pan X., Parenti A., Peng W.X., Peng X.Y., Perrina C., Qiao R., Rao J.N., Ruina A., Salinas M.M., Shang G.Z., Shen W.H., Shen Z.Q., Shen Z.T., Silveri L., Song J.X., Stolpovskiy M., Su H., Su M., Sun Z.Y., Surdo A., Teng X.J., Tykhonov A., Wang H., Wang J.Z., Wang L.G., Wang S., Wang X.L., Wang Y., Wang Y.F., Wang Y.Z., Wang Z.M., Wei D.M., Wei J.J., Wei Y.F., Wen S.C., Wu D., Wu J., Wu L.B., Wu S.S., Wu X., Xia Z.Q., Xu H.T., Xu Z.H., Xu Z.L., Xu Z.Z., Xue G.F., Yang H.B., Yang P., Yang Y.Q., Yao H.J., Yu Y.H., Yuan G.W., Yuan Q., Yue C., Zang J.J., Zhang F., Zhang S.X., Zhang W.Z., Zhang Y., Zhang Y.J., Zhang Y.L., Zhang Y.P., Zhang Y.Q., Zhang Z., Zhang Z.Y., Zhao C., Zhao H.Y., Zhao X.F., Zhou C.Y., Zhu Y., Alemanno, F., An, Q., Azzarello, P., Barbato, F. C. T., Bernardini, P., Bi, X. J., Cai, M. S., Catanzani, E., Chang, J., Chen, D. Y., Chen, J. L., Chen, Z. F., Cui, M. Y., Cui, T. S., Cui, Y. X., Dai, H. T., D’Amone, A., De Benedittis, A., De Mitri, I., de Palma, F., Deliyergiyev, M., Di Santo, M., Dong, T. K., Dong, Z. X., Donvito, G., Droz, D., Duan, J. L., Duan, K. K., D’Urso, D., Fan, R. R., Fan, Y. Z., Fang, K., Fang, F., Feng, C. Q., Feng, L., Fusco, P., Gao, M., Gargano, F., Gong, K., Gong, Y. Z., Guo, D. Y., Guo, J. H., Guo, X. L., Han, S. X., Hu, Y. M., Huang, G. S., Huang, X. Y., Huang, Y. Y., Ionica, M., Jiang, W., Kong, J., Kotenko, A., Kyratzis, D., Lei, S. J., Li, S., Li, W. L., Li, X., Li, X. Q., Liang, Y. M., Liu, C. M., Liu, H., Liu, J., Liu, S. B., Liu, W. Q., Liu, Y., Loparco, F., Luo, C. N., Ma, M., Ma, P. X., Ma, T., Ma, X. Y., Marsella, G., Mazziotta, M. N., Mo, D., Niu, X. Y., Pan, X., Parenti, A., Peng, W. X., Peng, X. Y., Perrina, C., Qiao, R., Rao, J. N., Ruina, A., Salinas, M. M., Shang, G. Z., Shen, W. H., Shen, Z. Q., Shen, Z. T., Silveri, L., Song, J. X., Stolpovskiy, M., Su, H., Su, M., Sun, Z. Y., Surdo, A., Teng, X. J., Tykhonov, A., Wang, H., Wang, J. Z., Wang, L. G., Wang, S., Wang, X. L., Wang, Y., Wang, Y. F., Wang, Y. Z., Wang, Z. M., Wei, D. M., Wei, J. J., Wei, Y. F., Wen, S. C., Wu, D., Wu, J., Wu, L. B., Wu, S. S., Wu, X., Xia, Z. Q., Xu, H. T., Xu, Z. H., Xu, Z. L., Xu, Z. Z., Xue, G. F., Yang, H. B., Yang, P., Yang, Y. Q., Yao, H. J., Yu, Y. H., Yuan, G. W., Yuan, Q., Yue, C., Zang, J. J., Zhang, F., Zhang, S. X., Zhang, W. Z., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y. J., Zhang, Y. L., Zhang, Y. P., Zhang, Y. Q., Zhang, Z., Zhang, Z. Y., Zhao, C., Zhao, H. Y., Zhao, X. F., Zhou, C. Y., and Zhu, Y.
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Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Dark matter ,General Physics and Astronomy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Cosmic ray ,Space (mathematics) ,01 natural sciences ,7. Clean energy ,Cosmic ray, helium ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,0103 physical sciences ,Energy spectrum ,cosmic rays, dark matter, space ,crystals ,010306 general physics ,Helium ,Physics ,High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,COSMIC cancer database ,detector ,Settore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentale ,calibration ,chemistry ,Particle ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Nucleon ,performance - Abstract
The measurement of the energy spectrum of cosmic ray helium nuclei from 70 GeV to 80 TeV using 4.5 years of data recorded by the DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) is reported in this work. A hardening of the spectrum is observed at an energy of about 1.3 TeV, similar to previous observations. In addition, a spectral softening at about 34 TeV is revealed for the first time with large statistics and well controlled systematic uncertainties, with an overall significance of $4.3\sigma$. The DAMPE spectral measurements of both cosmic protons and helium nuclei suggest a particle charge dependent softening energy, although with current uncertainties a dependence on the number of nucleons cannot be ruled out., Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, published in Phys. Rev. Lett. Add one more digit for first three columns in Table S2
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- 2021
10. Abnormal ventral attention network homogeneity in patients with right temporal lobe epilepsy
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D-B, Li, R-S, Liu, X, Wang, P-A, Xiong, H-W, Ren, Y-F, Wei, L-M, Zhang, and Y-J, Gao
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Adult ,Male ,Epilepsy, Temporal Lobe ,Brain ,Default Mode Network ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Female - Abstract
The attention network is the structural basis of cognitive function. As one of the two known attention networks, the ventral attention network (VAN) has a significant impact on the cognitive impairment of patients with epilepsy. Nevertheless, changes in network homogeneity (NH) are rarely reported in the VAN of right temporal lobe epilepsy (rTLE) patients. Therefore, we explored the NH of the VAN in rTLE patients in this study.Seventy rTLE patients and 69 healthy controls were recruited. All participants underwent resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which was the primary method of evaluation. The executive control reaction time (ECRT) was examined via the attentional network test. The Data Processing Assistant for Resting-State fMRI (DPARSF) was used to analyze NH. The independent component analysis (ICA) and correlation analysis were used in data analysis.Compared to the control group, patients with right temporal lobe epilepsy showed a lower NH in the right superior temporal gyrus, and a longer ECRT. However, abnormal NH values had no significant association with the clinical measurements.Patients with right temporal lobe epilepsy have abnormal NH values in the VAN, and the executive functions in rTLE patients are also altered. The altered NH values in VAN may help provide new insights into the pathophysiology of cognitive impairment in rTLE.
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- 2021
11. Spirometra erinaceieuropaei severely infect frogs and snakes from food markets in Guangdong, China: implications a highly risk for zoonotic sparganosis
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F M, Wang, W Y, Li, S P, Gong, Y F, Wei, Y, Ge, G D, Yang, and J J, Xiao
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Sparganosis is a parasitic disease caused by plerocercoid larvae of the genus Spirometra. In China, the main source of sparganosis is from Guangdong, 16.1% of the country's human sparganosis cases occur in this province. Frequent international trade of amphibians and reptiles in Guangdong may introduce new species of Spirometra into the local market. In this study, a large-scale, high-intensity sampling survey was conducted to find out the causative species and epidemic situation of Sparganosis in Guangdong. The prevalence of sparganum infection in five species of frogs (Boulengerana guentheri, Fejervarya multistriata, Hoplobatrachus chinensis, Pelophylax nigromaculatus and Quasipaa spinosa) and nine species of snakes (Elaphe carinata, Lycodon rufozonatum, Hypsiscopus plumbea, Ptyas dhumnades, P. korros, P. mucosa, Naja atra, Sinonatrix annularis and Xenochrophis piscator) was investigated in Guangdong, Southern China from May 2014 to August 2015. The results showed that 9.8% (50/511) of the frogs and 40.8% (141/ 346) of snakes were found to be infected by plerocercoids (spargana). To identify the species of the collected spargana, a partial sequence of the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit1 gene (cox1) was amplified and sequenced. Phylogenetic analysis identified all the spargana specimens as Spirometra erinaceieuropaei. Our study indicated that S. erinaceieuropaei, a highly pathogenic parasite, is the only causative agent of sparganosis in Guangdong, China. This study suggests that the large numbers of frogs and snakes in food markets in Guangdong may impact public health in China by transmitting S. erinaceieuropaei sparganum. Additional steps should be considered by the governments and public health agencies to prevent the risk of food-associated Spirometra infections in humans in China.
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- 2021
12. [Interpretation for the group standards in technical specification for health risk investigation of central air conditioning ventilation system during coronavirus disease 2019 epidemic]
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Y P, Jia, G Q, Cao, R, Zhao, Y, Zhang, L W, He, Y F, Wei, L, Huang, R L, Li, X D, Gao, N, Jia, C, Yang, and F, Shen
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Beijing ,Pneumonia, Viral ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Air Conditioning ,Equipment Design ,Coronavirus Infections ,Epidemics ,Pandemics ,Risk Assessment ,Ventilation - Abstract
The central air conditioning ventilation system plays an important role in the air circulation of buildings such as centralized isolation medical observation points and general public buildings. In order to meet the requirements of COVID-19 epidemic prevention and control, Beijing Preventive Medicine Association organized Beijing CDC and other professional institutes to write up the group standard entitled "Technical specification for health risk investigation of central air conditioning ventilation system during the COVID-19 epidemic (T/BPMA 0006-2020)" . According to the particularity of central air conditioning ventilation system risk control during the outbreak of similar respiratory infectious diseases, based on current laws and regulations and the principle of scientific, practical, consistency and normative, 8 key points of risk investigations were summarized, which were the location of fresh air outlet, air conditioning mode, air return mode, air system, air distribution, fresh air volume, exhaust and air conditioner components. The contents, process, method, data analysis and conclusion of the investigation implementation were also defined and unified. It could standardize and guide institutions such as disease control and health supervision to carry out relevant risk managements, and provided solutions and technical supports for such major public health emergencies in city operations.集中空调通风系统对集中隔离医学观察点和一般楼宇等建筑物内部的空气流通起着重要作用。为满足北京市应对新型冠状病毒肺炎疫情联防联控、平战结合的工作要求,北京预防医学会组织北京市CDC等多单位撰写了《新型冠状病毒肺炎疫情期间集中空调通风系统风险调查实施技术规范(T/BPMA 0006-2020)》团体标准,针对类似呼吸道传染病暴发流行期间集中空调风险防控特殊性,从传染病预防控制角度,以现行法律法规为基础,以"科学性、实用性、统一性、规范性"为原则,梳理归纳了集中隔离医学观察点和一般楼宇集中空调通风系统新风口位置、空调方式、空调回风方式、空调风系统、气流组织、新风量、排风和空调部件8项风险调查要点,并对调查实施内容、流程、方法、资料分析和结论建议等提出明确定义和统一要求。规范和指导疾病控制和卫生监督等机构开展相关风险防控工作,为城市管理中的此类重大突发公共卫生事件提供解决思路和标准支持。.
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- 2020
13. [Investigation and analysis of reproductive health status of female street cleaners in a district]
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L, Wang, Y F, Wei, C G, Shen, Y M, Zhao, R, Sun, C, Ma, and X, Zuo
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Adult ,Reproductive Health ,Beijing ,Health Status ,Reproduction ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Humans ,Female ,Occupations ,Sanitation ,Occupational Health - Published
- 2020
14. Construction of SNP-STR Multiplex Amplification System with Genetic Markers and Its Forensic Application
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Q Y, Wang, Y W, Yang, Y Y, Cao, Q, Zhu, Y G, Huang, Y H, Hu, Y J, Zhou, X, Li, Y F, Wei, P Y, Shu, Y F, Wang, and J, Zhang
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Genetic Markers ,China ,Gene Frequency ,Humans ,DNA Fingerprinting ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,DNA Primers ,Microsatellite Repeats - Abstract
Objective To select and develop a SNP-STR multiplex amplification system with genetic markers compatible with current STR databases. To understand its genetic polymorphisms in Sichuan Han population and its application value in DNA mixture analysis. Methods Based on the STR genetic markers in commercial kits, SNPs adjacent to these STR markers were selected to be SNP-STR genetic markers. A SNP-STR multiplex amplification system with genetic markers based on allele-specific amplification was constructed using allele-specific amplification primers. The genetic polymorphism of the system in the Sichuan Han population was investigated and the efficiency of systems with different numbers of loci to detect the two individual DNA mixture samples was evaluated. Results An allele-specific multiplex amplification system constituted of 13 SNP-STR genetic markers was selected and constructed. In Sichuan Han population, the heterozygosity of each locus ranged from 0.76 to 0.88, and the combined discrimination power reached 0.999 999 999 999 999 968. In the analysis of the two individual DNA mixture samples: for single-locus amplification, the genotype of the minor components can still be detected when the mixture ratio reaches 1 000∶1; for multiple loci multiplex amplification, the maximum mixture ratio can reach 500∶1. As the number of loci in the system increased, the detection efficiency of the minor components in the DNA mixture decreased. Conclusion SNP-STR genetic markers have a higher polymorphism than STR. The multiplex amplification system made of SNP-STR genetic markers has a better analysis efficiency for mixed samples than traditional STR multiplex amplification system.SNP-STR遗传标记复合扩增体系的构建及法医学应用.目的 筛选并构建与目前STR数据库兼容的SNP-STR遗传标记复合扩增体系,调查其在四川汉族群体中的遗传多态性,并探讨其在混合DNA样本分析中的应用价值。 方法 以现有商业试剂盒中使用的STR遗传标记为基础,筛选与STR遗传标记相邻的SNP位点并组成SNP-STR遗传标记。运用SNP等位基因设计特异性引物,构建基于等位基因特异性扩增的SNP-STR遗传标记复合扩增体系。调查该体系在四川汉族群体的遗传多态性,并评价不同位点数目的体系对两个体混合DNA样本的检测效能。 结果 筛选并构建了由13个SNP-STR遗传标记构成的等位基因特异性复合扩增体系。在四川汉族群体中,各位点杂合度为0.76~0.88,累积个体识别率达0.999 999 999 999 999 968。在对两个体混合DNA的分析中:单位点扩增时,混合样本的混合比例达到1 000∶1时依然可以检测到少量成分所特有的分型;多位点复合扩增时,混合比例最大可达500∶1;随着体系中位点数量的增加,对混合DNA中少量成分的检测效能降低。 结论 SNP-STR遗传标记较STR具有更高的多态性,其构成的复合扩增体系对混合样本的分析效能优于传统的STR复合扩增体系。.法医遗传学;多态性,单核苷酸;短串联重复;等位基因特异性聚合酶链反应;混合DNA.
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- 2019
15. Effects of APELIN-13 on the expression of IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-γ in rats with experimental autoimmune neuritis
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Y F, Wei, P, Yin, L, Liu, S S, Wu, L, Jia, and S, Sun
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Interferon-gamma ,Interleukin-6 ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Animals ,Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Neuritis, Autoimmune, Experimental ,Rats - Abstract
The objective of this paper was to study the effects of PYR-ARG-PRO-ARG-LEU-SER-HIS-YSGLY-PRO-MET-PRO-PHE-OH (APELIN-13) on the expression of inflammatory factors interleukin-6 (IL-6), tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) in rats with experimental autoimmune neuritis (EAN). A total of 30 rats were divided into a control group, an EAN group, and an APELIN-13 group. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was used to detect the levels of IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-γ in rat plasma. Real-time quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) and Western blot were used to detect the protein and mRNA expression of IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-γ in rat lymph nodes. In the EAN group, the infiltration of various types of inflammatory cells and focal demyelination were observed near the nerve fascicles of sciatic nerves. Compared with the EAN group, the infiltration of inflammatory cells and demyelination in the APELIN-13 group decreased significantly. The levels of plasma IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-γ in the EAN group were significantly higher than those in the control group (P0.05) but significantly lower than those in the APELIN-13 group (P0.05). Compared with the control group, the mRNA and protein expression of IL-6, TNF-α, and IFN-γ increased significantly (P0.05) in the EAN group but decreased significantly in the APELIN-13 group (P0.05). In conclusion, APELIN-13 exerted a protective effect against EAN in rats.
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- 2019
16. Measurement of the cosmic ray proton spectrum from 40 GeV to 100 TeV with the DAMPE satellite
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Chi Wang, Y. Z. Gong, Yujuan Liu, Kai-Kai Duan, Yaohui Zhang, L. G. Wang, Dong Ya Guo, Cihang Luo, X. Y. Peng, Jie Liu, Guangshun Huang, Zhi-Yu Sun, S. Wang, R. R. Fan, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, Peng-Xiong Ma, Zhi Hui Xu, Xiaoyuan Huang, Yu-Sa Wang, N. H. Liao, L. Feng, Michael Ma, H. Liu, X. Y. Ma, Z. X. Dong, Dingsong Wu, Jun-jun Guo, Niu Xiaoyang, A. D'Amone, K. Gong, S. C. Wen, I. De Mitri, P. Azzarello, Min Gao, Chengrui Zhou, Shengxia Zhang, Shumei Wu, Mn Mazziotta, G. Z. Shang, K. Xi, Xian-Min Jin, F. Loparco, Xin-Fu Zhao, Z. Z. Xu, Y. Y. Huang, Shuang Xue Han, X. L. Wang, Zhongjie Yang, Y. H. Yu, G. Marsella, Zhao-Min Wang, Jinglai Duan, Andrii Tykhonov, S. B. Liu, Y. Zhang, Meng Su, Q. An, Y. F. Dong, C. Q. Feng, Xiulian Pan, Ju-Xian Song, Peidong Yang, W. Li, Y. M. Hu, S.X. Li, S. Y. Ma, H. T. Xu, Jindong Zhang, Z. Q. Xia, Yali Zhou, Jialong Chen, J. Z. Wang, X. X. Li, H. Su, M. S. Cai, Jian Wu, X. J. Bi, Haiqiong Wang, Yifan Yang, Tianxiao Ma, F. J. Gan, Donghong Chen, J. J. Zang, Hao Ting Dai, Huaguang Wang, Zhoubin Zhang, P. Bernardini, Z.-Q. Shen, F. Gargano, H. S. Chen, Manyu Ding, Y. F. Liang, R. Qiao, D. Droz, Chuan Yue, W. X. Peng, Y. F. Wei, Shi-Jun Lei, Q. Yuan, Y. J. Zhang, P. Fusco, Yun-Zhi Zhang, A. Surdo, YM Liang, Jiang Chang, J. J. Wei, Lihui Wu, D. Mo, Y. Li, Giacinto Donvito, A. De Benedittis, Wangli Chen, Yang Haibo, Quan Wang, R. Asfandiyarov, M. Di Santo, J. Y. Zhang, Xi Zhu, J. N. Rao, D. M. Wei, Zongye Zhang, Hong Yun Zhao, Yu-Xuan Zhu, D. D'Urso, Hu-Rong Yao, S. Vitillo, Yen-Po Wang, Yugang Zhang, M. Y. Cui, M. M. Salinas, Fang Fang, Wei Liu, T. S. Cui, Huan Zhao, Z. Xu, X. J. Teng, Tie-Kuang Dong, W. H. Shen, Z. T. Shen, Shanta M. Zimmer, Xian Qiang Li, Xin Wu, C. Liu, Y. F. Wang, V. Gallo, W. Zhang, Wei Jiang, Yuqing Fan, Fengtao Zhang, G. F. Xue, Pengchao Zhang, Xiangpeng Guo, Xixian Wang, An Q., Asfandiyarov R., Azzarello P., Bernardini P., Bi X. J., Cai M. S., Chang J., Chen D. Y., Chen H. F., Chen J. L., Chen W., Cui M. Y., Cui T. S., Dai H. T., D'Amone A., De Benedittis A., De Mitri I., Di Santo M., Ding M., Dong T. K., Dong Y. F., Dong Z. X., Donvito G., Droz D., Duan J. L., Duan K. K., D'Urso D., Fan R. R., Fan Y. Z., Fang F., Feng C. Q., Feng L., Fusco P., Gallo V., Gan F. J., Gao M., Gargano F., Gong K., Gong Y. Z., Guo D. Y., Guo J. H., Guo X. L., Han S. X., Hu Y. M., Huang G. S., Huang X. Y., Huang Y. Y., Ionica M., Jiang W., Jin X., Kong J., Lei S. J., Li S., Li W. L., Li X., Li X. Q., Li Y., Liang Y. F., Liang Y. M., Liao N. H., Liu C. M., Liu H., Liu J., Liu S. B., Liu W. Q., Liu Y., Loparco F., Luo C. N., Ma M., Ma P. X., Ma S. Y., Ma T., Ma X. Y., Marsella G., Mazziotta M. N., Mo D., Niu X. Y., Pan X., Peng W. X., Peng X. Y., Qiao R., Rao J. N., Salinas M. M., Shang G. Z., Shen W. H., Shen Z. Q., Shen Z. T., Song J. X., Su H., Su M., Sun Z. Y., Surdo A., Teng X. J., Tykhonov A., Vitillo S., Wang C., Wang H., Wang H. Y., Wang J. Z., Wang L. G., Wang Q., Wang S., Wang X. H., Wang X. L., Wang Y. F., Wang Y. P., Wang Y. Z., Wang Z. M., Wei D. M., Wei J. J., Wei Y. F., Wen S. C., Wu D., Wu J., Wu L. B., Wu S. S., Wu X., Xi K., Xia Z. Q., Xu H. T., Xu Z. H., Xu Z. L., Xu Z. Z., Xue G. F., Yang H. B., Yang P., Yang Y. Q., Yang Z. L., Yao H. J., Yu Y. H., Yuan Q., Yue C., Zang J. J., Zhang F., Zhang J. Y., Zhang J. Z., Zhang P. F., Zhang S. X., Zhang W. Z., Zhang Y., Zhang Y. J., Zhang Y. L., Zhang Y. P., Zhang Y. Q., Zhang Z., Zhang Z. Y., Zhao H., Zhao H. Y., Zhao X. F., Zhou C. Y., Zhou Y., Zhu X., Zhu Y., Zimmer S., An, Q., Asfandiyarov, R., Azzarello, P., Bernardini, P., Bi, X. J., Cai, M. S., Chang, J., Chen, D. Y., Chen, H. F., Chen, J. L., Chen, W., Cui, M. Y., Cui, T. S., Dai, H. T., D'Amone, A., De Benedittis, A., De Mitri, I., Di Santo, M., Ding, M., Dong, T. K., Dong, Y. F., Dong, Z. X., Donvito, G., Droz, D., Duan, J. L., Duan, K. K., D'Urso, D., Fan, R. R., Fan, Y. Z., Fang, F., Feng, C. Q., Feng, L., Fusco, P., Gallo, V., Gan, F. J., Gao, M., Gargano, F., Gong, K., Gong, Y. Z., Guo, D. Y., Guo, J. H., Guo, X. L., Han, S. X., Hu, Y. M., Huang, G. S., Huang, X. Y., Huang, Y. Y., Ionica, M., Jiang, W., Jin, X., Kong, J., Lei, S. J., Li, S., Li, W. L., Li, X., Li, X. Q., Li, Y., Liang, Y. F., Liang, Y. M., Liao, N. H., Liu, C. M., Liu, H., Liu, J., Liu, S. B., Liu, W. Q., Liu, Y., Loparco, F., Luo, C. N., Ma, M., Ma, P. X., Ma, S. Y., Ma, T., Ma, X. Y., Marsella, G., Mazziotta, M. N., Mo, D., Niu, X. Y., Pan, X., Peng, W. X., Peng, X. Y., Qiao, R., Rao, J. N., Salinas, M. M., Shang, G. Z., Shen, W. H., Shen, Z. Q., Shen, Z. T., Song, J. X., Su, H., Su, M., Sun, Z. Y., Surdo, A., Teng, X. J., Tykhonov, A., Vitillo, S., Wang, C., Wang, H., Wang, H. Y., Wang, J. Z., Wang, L. G., Wang, Q., Wang, S., Wang, X. H., Wang, X. L., Wang, Y. F., Wang, Y. P., Wang, Y. Z., Wang, Z. M., Wei, D. M., Wei, J. J., Wei, Y. F., Wen, S. C., Wu, D., Wu, J., Wu, L. B., Wu, S. S., Wu, X., Xi, K., Xia, Z. Q., Xu, H. T., Xu, Z. H., Xu, Z. L., Xu, Z. Z., Xue, G. F., Yang, H. B., Yang, P., Yang, Y. Q., Yang, Z. L., Yao, H. J., Yu, Y. H., Yuan, Q., Yue, C., Zang, J. J., Zhang, F., Zhang, J. Y., Zhang, J. Z., Zhang, P. F., Zhang, S. X., Zhang, W. Z., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y. J., Zhang, Y. L., Zhang, Y. P., Zhang, Y. Q., Zhang, Z., Zhang, Z. Y., Zhao, H., Zhao, H. Y., Zhao, X. F., Zhou, C. Y., Zhou, Y., Zhu, X., Zhu, Y., and Zimmer, S.
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dark matter, cosmic rays, space ,Proton ,Milky Way ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Cosmic ray ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Kinetic energy ,01 natural sciences ,0103 physical sciences ,010306 general physics ,Nuclear Experiment ,Research Articles ,Physics ,High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Spectral index ,Multidisciplinary ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,High Energy Physics::Phenomenology ,Settore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentale ,SciAdv r-articles ,Physics::Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Research Article - Abstract
DAMPE satellite has directly measured the cosmic ray proton spectrum from 40 GeV to 100 TeV and revealed a new feature at about 13.6 TeV., The precise measurement of the spectrum of protons, the most abundant component of the cosmic radiation, is necessary to understand the source and acceleration of cosmic rays in the Milky Way. This work reports the measurement of the cosmic ray proton fluxes with kinetic energies from 40 GeV to 100 TeV, with 2 1/2 years of data recorded by the DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE). This is the first time that an experiment directly measures the cosmic ray protons up to ~100 TeV with high statistics. The measured spectrum confirms the spectral hardening at ~300 GeV found by previous experiments and reveals a softening at ~13.6 TeV, with the spectral index changing from ~2.60 to ~2.85. Our result suggests the existence of a new spectral feature of cosmic rays at energies lower than the so-called knee and sheds new light on the origin of Galactic cosmic rays.
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- 2019
17. [Analysis on occupational hazard cognition of medical personnel in department of pathology and occupational health management situation of 13 hospitals in a city]
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R, Sun, C, Ma, Y M, Zhao, X, Zuo, L, Wang, C G, Shen, and Y F, Wei
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Occupational Diseases ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Health Personnel ,Humans ,Pathology Department, Hospital ,Cities ,Occupational Health - Published
- 2019
18. [The problemand discussion for the identification of a case of occupational pneumoconiosis]
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X, Zuo, C, Ma, Y M, Zhao, and Y F, Wei
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Occupational Diseases ,Humans ,Pneumoconiosis - Published
- 2019
19. A Dose-Ranging Study (TERRANOVA) of Benralizumab for Moderate to Severe Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
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B.R. Celli, G.J. Criner, D. Singh, M. Bafadhel, V. Backer, A. Ramirez-Venegas, Y.-F. Wei, L. Bjermer, V.H. Shih, S. O'Quinn, N. Makulova, P. Newbold, M. Goldman, U.J. Martin, and null on behalf of the TERRANOVA study in
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Moderate to severe ,medicine.medical_specialty ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Pulmonary disease ,Benralizumab ,Dose-ranging study ,business ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2019
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20. The on-orbit calibration of DArk Matter Particle Explorer
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Chang Qing Feng, A. D'Amone, X.Q. Ma, K. Gong, D. Mo, R. Asfandiyarov, G. Ambrosi, Y. M. Hu, Peng-Xiong Ma, Xun Feng Zhao, Zhi Hui Xu, Jinglai Duan, Tianxiao Ma, G. Z. Shang, H. T. Xu, C. Liu, X. Y. Ma, M. Y. Cui, S. C. Wen, Chenchen Wang, J. J. Zang, Deng Yi Chen, Xixian Wang, M. M. Salinas, Niu Xiaoyang, Yaping Wang, Shanta M. Zimmer, J. N. Rao, Haiqiong Wang, Da Ming Wei, Z. Y. Sun, Hao Ting Dai, V. Gallo, Q. An, Peidong Yang, Honglong Wang, D. D’Urso, Yuan Zhu Wang, Xiulian Pan, W. Zhang, I. De Mitri, H. Liu, Yang Haibo, Wei Liang Li, D.L. Zhang, H. S. Chen, Min Gao, Li Bo Wu, A. De Benedittis, Wangli Chen, Xi Zhu, Shuyao Li, X.B. Tian, Paolo Bernardini, J.N. Dong, Sha Wu, Y. Q. Zhang, Hu-Rong Yao, Kai-Kai Duan, Y. F. Wei, Jin Chang, Jiangtao Guo, F. J. Gan, S. Y. Ma, Wei Jiang, Z. Q. Xia, Yifan Yang, L. G. Wang, P. Azzarello, Y. J. Zhang, F. Gargano, Zhenyu Zhang, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, Y. F. Liang, Yali Zhou, Jing Xing Song, M. Di Santo, Xin Wu, Y. F. Wang, R. R. Fan, R. Qiao, M. Caragiulo, Yuqing Fan, N. H. Liao, Jindan Zhang, Qian Wang, Y.L. Xin, Jie Liu, Zhoubin Zhang, Y. H. Yu, Zhao-Qiang Shen, T. S. Cui, Zhao-Min Wang, Yun Long Zhang, Yao Ming Liang, G. F. Xue, Shengxia Zhang, Zhongjie Yang, J. J. Wei, Z. Xu, Dan Jiang, F. Loparco, Laiyu Zhang, S. Vitillo, X. L. Wang, Wei Liu, Y. Zhang, Yongxiang Liu, J.B. Zhang, J. L. Chen, Qing Yuan, Meng Su, Z.Z. Xu, G. Marsella, Andrii Tykhonov, S. Wang, X. J. Teng, Tie-Kuang Dong, M. M. Ma, Zhang Yalan, Shi-Jun Lei, D. Droz, Fengtao Zhang, Huan Zhao, S. B. Liu, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, A. Surdo, Jin Zhou Wang, S. Garrappa, W. H. Shen, Yinlian Zhu, Z. T. Shen, Pengchao Zhang, Guang Shun Huang, Fang Fang, X. X. Li, Hong Yun Zhao, M. S. Cai, W. X. Peng, Y. Li, Y. Z. Gong, Z. X. Dong, Chang Yi Zhou, X. Y. Peng, Lingyan Feng, K. Xi, Jindong Zhang, Di Wu, Jian Wu, Chuan Yue, Y. Y. Huang, P. Fusco, Y. F. Dong, Shan-Shan Gao, Manyu Ding, Xian-Min Jin, Ambrosi, G., An, Q., Asfandiyarov, R., Azzarello, P., Bernardini, P., Cai, M. S., Caragiulo, M., Chang, J., Chen, D. Y., Chen, H. F., Chen, J. L., Chen, W., Cui, M. Y., Cui, T. S., Dai, H. T., D'Amone, A., Benedittis, De, Mitri, De, I., Ding, Di Santo, M., Dong, J. N., Dong, T. K., Dong, Y. F., Dong, Z. X., Droz, D., Duan, K. K., Duan, J. L., D'Urso, D., Fan, R. R., Fan, Y. Z., Iemail, Author, Fang, F., Feng, C. Q., Feng, L., Fusco, P., Gallo, V., Gan, F., Gao, M., Gao, S. S., Gargano, F., Garrappa, S., Gong, K., Gong, Y. Z., Guo, J. H., Email Author, Hu, Y. M., Huang, G. S., Huang, Y. Y., Ionica, M., Jiang, D., Jiang, W., Jin, X., Kong, J., Lei, S. J., Li, S., Li, X., Li, W. L., Li, Y., Liang, Y. F., Liang, Y. M., Liao, N. H., Liu, C. M., Liu, H., Liu, J., Liu, S. B., Liu, W. Q., Liu, Y., Loparco, F., Ma, M., Ma, P. X., Ma, S. Y., Ma, T., Ma, X. Q., Ma, X. Y., Marsella, G., Mazziotta, M. N., Mo, D., Niu, X. Y., Pan, X, Peng, X. Y., Peng, W. X., Qiao, R., Rao, J. N., Salinas, M. M., Shang, G. Z., Shen, W. H., Shen, Z. Q., Shen, Z. T., Song, J. X., Su, H., Su, M., Sun, Z. Y., Surdo, A., Teng, X. J., Tian, X. B., Tykhonov, A., Vitillo, S., Wang, C., Wang, H., Wang, H. Y., Wang, J. Z., Wang, L. G., Wang, Q., Wang, S., Wang, X. H., Wang, X. L., Wang, Y. F., Wang, Y. P., Wang, Y. Z., Wang, Z. M., Wen, S. C., Wei, D. M., Wei J. J., A, Wei Y. F., C, Wu D., J, Wu J., A, H, Wu, L. B., c Wu, S. S., k Wu, X., d Xi, K., j Xia, Z. Q., a h, Xin Y. L., A, Xu H. T., K, Xu Z. H., A, H, Xu, Z. L., a Xu, Z. Z., a Xue, G. F., k Yang, H. B., j Yang, P., j Yang, Y. Q., j Yang, Z. L., j Yao, H. J., j Yu, Y. H., j Yuan, Q., a h, Yue C., A, Zang J. J., A, Zhang D. L., C, Zhang F., M, Zhang J. B., C, Zhang J. Y., M, Zhang J. Z., J, Zhang L., A, I, Zhang, P. F., a Zhang, S. X., j Zhang, W. Z., k Zhang, Y., a i, Zhang Y. J., J, Zhang Y. Q., A, Y. L., c Zhang, Y. P., j Zhang, Z., a Zhang, Z. Y., c Zhao, H., m Zhao, H. Y., j Zhao, X. F., k Zhou, C. Y., k Zhou, Y., j Zhu, X., c Zhu, Y., k Zimmer, Ambrosi G., An Q., Asfandiyarov R., Azzarello P., Bernardini P., Cai M. S., Caragiulo M., Chang J., Chen D. Y., Chen H. F., Chen J. L., Chen W., Cui M. Y., Cui T. S., Dai H. T., D'Amone A., De Beneditti, De Mitri, I. Ding, Dong J. N., Dong T. K., Dong Y. F., Dong Z. X., Droz D., Duan K. K., Duan J. L., D'Urso D., Fan R. R., Fan Y. Z., iEmail Author, Fang F., Feng C. Q., Feng L., Fusco P., Gallo V., Gan F., Gao M., Gao S. S., Gargano F., Garrappa S., Gong K., Gong Y. Z., J. H. Email Author, Hu Y. M., Huang G. S., Huang Y. Y., Ionica M., Jiang D., Jiang W., Jin X., Kong J., Lei S. J., Li S., Li X., Li W. L., Li Y., Liang Y. F., Liang Y. M., Liao N. H., Liu C. M., Liu H., Liu J., Liu S. B., Liu W. Q., Liu Y., Loparco F., Ma M., Ma P. X., Ma S. Y., Ma T., Ma X. Q., Ma X. Y., Marsella G., Mazziotta M. N., Mo D., Niu X. Y., Pan X, Peng X. Y., Peng W. X., Qiao R., Rao J. N., Salinas M. M., Shang G. Z., Shen W. H., Shen Z. Q., Shen Z. T., Song J. X., Su H., Su M., Sun Z. Y., Surdo A., Teng X. J., Tian X. B., Tykhonov A., Vitillo S., Wang C., Wang H., Wang H. Y., Wang J. Z., Wang L. G., Wang Q., Wang S., Wang X. H., Wang X. L., Wang Y. F., Wang Y. P., Wang Y. Z., Wang Z. M., Wen S. C., Wei D. M., Wei J. J. a, Wei Y. F. c, Wu D. j, Wu J. a, h Wu, L. B. c Wu, S. S. k Wu, X. d Xi, K. j Xia, Z. Q. a h, Xin Y. L. a, Xu H. T. k, Xu Z. H. a, h Xu, Z. L. a Xu, Z. Z. a Xue, G. F. k Yang, H. B. j Yang, P. j Yang, Y. Q. j Yang, Z. L. j Yao, H. J. j Yu, Y. H. j Yuan, Q. a h, Yue C. a, Zang J. J. a, Zhang D. L. c, Zhang F. m, Zhang J. B. c, Zhang J. Y. m, Zhang J. Z. j, Zhang L. a, i Zhang, P. F. a Zhang, S. X. j Zhang, W. Z. k Zhang, Y. a i, Zhang Y. J. j, Zhang Y. Q. a, Y. L. c Zhang, Y. P. j Zhang, Z. a Zhang, Z. Y. c Zhao, H. m Zhao, H. Y. j Zhao, X. F. k Zhou, C. Y. k Zhou, Y. j Zhu, X. c Zhu, and Y. k Zimmer
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Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Cosmic ray ,Scintillator ,01 natural sciences ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,0103 physical sciences ,Neutron detection ,Dark Matter ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Physics ,Calorimeter (particle physics) ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Detector ,Settore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentale ,Gamma ray ,Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Cosmic Rays ,South Atlantic Anomaly ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE), a satellite-based cosmic ray and gamma-ray detector, was launched on December 17, 2015, and began its on-orbit operation on December 24, 2015. In this work we document the on-orbit calibration procedures used by DAMPE and report the calibration results of the Plastic Scintillator strip Detector (PSD), the Silicon-Tungsten tracKer-converter (STK), the BGO imaging calorimeter (BGO), and the Neutron Detector (NUD). The results are obtained using Galactic cosmic rays, bright known GeV gamma-ray sources, and charge injection into the front-end electronics of each sub-detector. The determination of the boundary of the South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA), the measurement of the live time, and the alignments of the detectors are also introduced. The calibration results demonstrate the stability of the detectors in almost two years of the on-orbit operation.
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- 2019
21. [Effect of long-term deep slow-wave sleep deprivation on the reproductive system in male rats]
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F, Xu, N, Yang, S Y, Liu, Y F, Wei, J Y, Zhen, Y Y, Tian, Y, Zhou, Q, Yang, Y H, Liang, T P, Yue, and L X, Lin
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Epididymis ,Male ,Time Factors ,Sperm Count ,Genitalia, Male ,Luteinizing Hormone ,Sleep, Slow-Wave ,Spermatozoa ,Rats ,Testis ,Sperm Motility ,Animals ,Sleep Deprivation ,Testosterone ,Follicle Stimulating Hormone ,Rats, Wistar - Published
- 2018
22. The DArk Matter Particle Explorer mission
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M. M. Ma, Y.L. Xin, Shengxia Zhang, Y. Y. Huang, Y. Z. Gong, H.Y. Zhao, P. Fusco, Zhao-Qiang Shen, Peidong Yang, Zhao-Min Wang, Yuan Zhu Wang, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, Yun Long Zhang, F. Loparco, Dan Jiang, J.N. Dong, Y. L. Li, X. Y. Peng, J. L. Chen, H. S. Chen, S. C. Wen, Y. F. Dong, Jinglai Duan, P. Azzarello, N. H. Liao, X. L. Wang, M. M. Salinas, M. Caragiulo, Ya Peng Zhang, M. Pohl, V. Gallo, W. Zhang, Andrii Tykhonov, Niu Xiaoyang, Hai Tao Xu, X. X. Li, Shi-Jun Lei, G. Marsella, Wei Jiang, Min Gao, M. S. Cai, X. Zhu, Z. X. Dong, Yong Zhou, S. Y. Ma, Wei Liang Li, A. De Benedittis, Q. An, Sha Wu, Deng Yi Chen, Y. F. Wei, J.B. Zhang, T.T. Miao, G. F. Xue, Chuan Yue, Z.L. Yang, Y.F. Liang, P. Bernardini, Yifan Yang, Laiyu Zhang, Jianyi Yang, W. X. Peng, Z. M. Zhang, Giacinto Donvito, L. G. Wang, J. G. Lu, Y. J. Zhang, R. Qiao, Shan-Shan Gao, Zi-Qing Xia, Hui Jun Yao, Zhi-Yu Sun, Fang Fang, Yi-Zhong Fan, S. Vitillo, Jie Liu, S. Li, J. J. Wei, R. R. Fan, Lei Feng, Y. Zhu, K. Xi, A. D'Amone, Peng-Xiong Ma, Ping Zhang, Xun Feng Zhao, Jianli Zhang, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, Di Wu, Y. M. Hu, Da Ming Wei, Chang Yi Zhou, A. Surdo, Yang Liu, Yen-Po Wang, D. Droz, D. D'Urso, W. Chen, Jian Wu, Jin Zhou Wang, F. Zhang, Q. Wang, Jian Hua Guo, M. Duranti, X. J. Teng, Tie-Kuang Dong, I. De Mitri, Xiao Yong Ma, W. H. Shen, X.B. Tian, Chao Zhang, Z. T. Shen, Hong Yun Zhao, Z. Xu, Chang Qing Feng, T. S. Cui, Chunjie Wang, Ju-Xian Song, G. Ambrosi, Q.Z. Liu, Xiaohui Wang, Haiyan Wang, Y. Zhang, X.Q. Ma, Meng Su, D. Mo, Yan Fang Wang, R. Asfandiyarov, Yao Ming Liang, B. Bertucci, Stephan Zimmer, Guang Shun Huang, Yang Haibo, X. Jin, Zhenyu Zhang, M. Di Santo, Tao Ma, Xin Wu, M. Y. Cui, Yongjie Zhang, Yu-Hong Yu, H. Liu, J. N. Rao, Qiang Yuan, S. B. Liu, Jilong Zhang, Chi Wang, W.Q. Gan, Wenqiang Liu, V. Vagelli, Zi Zong Xu, Jin Chang, F. J. Gan, F. Gargano, D.L. Zhang, H. W. Wang, Kai-Kai Duan, K. Gong, G. Z. Shang, Shu Xin Wang, J. J. Zang, Chang, J., Ambrosi, G., An, Q., Asfandiyarov, R., Azzarello, P., Bernardini, P., Bertucci, B., Cai, M. S., Caragiulo, M., Chen, D. Y., Chen, H. F., Chen, J. L., Chen, W., Cui, M. Y., Cui, T. S., D'Amone, A., DE BENEDITTIS, Antonio, De Mitri, I., DI SANTO, Margherita, Dong, J. N., Dong, T. K., Dong, Y. F., Dong, Z. X., Donvito, G., Droz, D., Duan, K. K., Duan, J. L., Duranti, M., D'Urso, D., Fan, R. R., Fan, Y. Z., Fang, F., Feng, C. Q., Feng, L., Fusco, P., Gallo, V., Gan, F. J., Gan, W. Q., Gao, M., Gao, S. S., Gargano, F., Gong, K., Gong, Y. Z., Guo, J. H., Hu, Y. M., Huang, G. S., Huang, Y. Y., Ionica, M., Jiang, D., Jiang, W., Jin, X., Kong, J., Lei, S. J., Li, S., Li, X., Li, W. L., Li, Y., Liang, Y. F., Liang, Y. M., Liao, N. H., Liu, Q. Z., Liu, H., Liu, J., Liu, S. B., Liu, W. Q., Liu, Y., Loparco, F., Lã¼, J., Ma, M., Ma, P. X., Ma, S. Y., Ma, T., Ma, X. Q., Ma, X. Y., Marsella, G., Mazziotta, M. N., Mo, D., Miao, T. T., Niu, X. Y., Pohl, M., Peng, X. Y., Peng, W. X., Qiao, R., Rao, J. N., Salinas, M. M., Shang, G. Z., Shen, W. H., Shen, Z. Q., Shen, Z. T., Song, J. X., Su, H., Su, M., Sun, Z. Y., Surdo, A., Teng, X. J., Tian, X. B., Tykhonov, A., Vagelli, V., Vitillo, S., Wang, C., Wang, Chi, Wang, H., Wang, H. Y., Wang, J. Z., Wang, L. G., Wang, Q., Wang, S., Wang, X. H., Wang, X. L., Wang, Y. F., Wang, Y. P., Wang, Y. Z., Wen, S. C., Wang, Z. M., Wei, D. M., Wei, J. J., Wei, Y. F., Wu, D., Wu, J., Wu, S. S., Wu, X., Xi, K., Xia, Z. Q., Xin, Y. L., Xu, H. T., Xu, Z. L., Xu, Z. Z., Xue, G. F., Yang, H. B., Yang, J., Yang, P., Yang, Y. Q., Yang, Z. L., Yao, H. J., Yu, Y. H., Yuan, Q., Yue, C., Zang, J. J., Zhang, C., Zhang, D. L., Zhang, F., Zhang, J. B., Zhang, J. Y., Zhang, J. Z., Zhang, L., Zhang, P. F., Zhang, S. X., Zhang, W. Z., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y. J., Zhang, Y. Q., Zhang, Y. L., Zhang, Y. P., Zhang, Z., Zhang, Z. Y., Zhao, H., Zhao, H. Y., Zhao, X. F., Zhou, C. Y., Zhou, Y., Zhu, X., Zhu, Y., Zimmer, S., DE BENEDITTIS, ANTONIO, DI SANTO, MARGHERITA, and Lü, J.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Satellite launches ,Gamma ray observatories ,Astrophysics ,Galactic cosmic rays ,01 natural sciences ,Cosmology ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,Observatory ,Detectors and Experimental Techniques ,Cosmic rays , dark matter , space experiments ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,physics.ins-det ,Space science missions ,Physics ,High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,astro-ph.HE ,Astrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Cosmology, Galaxies, Gamma rays, Tellurium compounds, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Dark matter particles, Explorer missions, Galactic cosmic rays, Gamma ray observatories, Satellite launches, Scientific objectives, Space science missions, Cosmic rays ,Space Science ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Particle Physics - Experiment ,Astrophysics and Astronomy ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Cosmic ray ,dark matter ,Tellurium compounds ,0103 physical sciences ,Cosmic rays ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,hep-ex ,Gamma rays ,Astronomy ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Galaxies ,Chinese academy of sciences ,Galaxy ,Scientific objectives ,Dark matter particles ,Chinese Academy of Sciences ,Satellite ,space experiments ,Explorer missions ,astro-ph.IM - Abstract
The DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE), one of the four scientific space science missions within the framework of the Strategic Pioneer Program on Space Science of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, is a general purpose high energy cosmic-ray and gamma-ray observatory, which was successfully launched on December 17th, 2015 from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center. The DAMPE scientific objectives include the study of galactic cosmic rays up to $\sim 10$ TeV and hundreds of TeV for electrons/gammas and nuclei respectively, and the search for dark matter signatures in their spectra. In this paper we illustrate the layout of the DAMPE instrument, and discuss the results of beam tests and calibrations performed on ground. Finally we present the expected performance in space and give an overview of the mission key scientific goals., 45 pages, including 29 figures and 6 tables. Published in Astropart. Phys
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- 2017
23. An Optimized Method of Venous Anastomosis for Right Donor Kidney Transplantation in Rat
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Yihao Guo, Minyi He, Jiahua Zhang, Xinjun Deng, Yong-guang Liu, Ming Zhao, and Y.-F. Wei
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Male ,Transplantation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,business.industry ,Anastomosis, Surgical ,Vena Cava, Inferior ,Anastomosis ,Kidney Transplantation ,Renal Veins ,Rats ,Vena caval ,Surgery ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,cardiovascular system ,Animals ,Operative time ,Medicine ,Both kidneys ,Venous anastomosis ,Ligation ,business ,Donor kidney - Abstract
Insufficient length of right renal vein (RV) increases the difficulty of venous anastomosis and blocks the promotion of transplantation of both kidneys, which could significantly reduce operative time and donor numbers. This study sought to discover a quick, safe method of venous anastomosis for right kidney donation.Three venous anastomotic methods (n = 20 in each group) were used for right donor kidney heterotopic transplantation: End-to-side, vena cava bypass, and modified end-to-end, namely, harvesting the right donor kidney with a part of the vena cava and then anastomosing the proximal end to the recipient RV followed by a ligation of the distal end. The conventional end-to-end venous anastomosis was used for left donor kidney orthotopic transplantation as a control (n = 60). We compared operative times and complications.The operative time of the modified end-to-end group (18.45 ± 0.69 minutes) and end-to-side group (17.95 ± 1.54 minutes) were both less than the vena caval bypass group (32.60 ± 2.84 minutes); (P.05), but equal to the control group (17.60 ± 1.89; P.05). The overall complication rate among the modified end-to-end group (2/20) was less than those for the end-to-side (8/20) and vena caval bypass groups (9/20; P.05), but similar to the control group (7/60; P.05).A modified end-to-end technique is the preferred venous anastomotic method for right donor kidney transplantation.
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- 2013
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- View/download PDF
24. Direct detection of a break in the teraelectronvolt cosmic-ray spectrum of electrons and positrons
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J. N. Rao, D. M. Wei, P. Azzarello, Peng-Xiong Ma, Y. H. Yu, Shan-Shan Gao, Chi Wang, Q. An, L. G. Wang, YM Liang, Dong Ya Guo, Min Gao, Z. X. Dong, Jie Liu, Tianxiao Ma, Donghong Chen, Wei Liu, Yifan Yang, Zhihua Zhang, Jun-jun Guo, Y. F. Liang, S. Wang, Huan Zhao, D.L. Zhang, X.Q. Ma, Maria Ionica, Jie Kong, G. Ambrosi, Luzhao Feng, Yu-Sa Wang, Fang Fang, N. H. Liao, D. Mo, Niu Xiaoyang, Yaping Wang, R. Qiao, Qiuju Yuan, I. De Mitri, X.B. Tian, Z. Z. Xu, Zheng Wang, Michael Ma, R. Asfandiyarov, X. X. Li, Y. M. Hu, M. S. Cai, Guangshun Huang, M. Di Santo, H. Liu, J.N. Dong, Z.-Q. Shen, Zhongjie Yang, W. X. Peng, Peidong Yang, Jialong Chen, Stephan Zimmer, Y. F. Wei, K. Xi, Laiyu Zhang, Zhi-Yu Sun, W. Li, F. Loparco, X. L. Wang, Chao Zhang, Y. J. Zhang, Y. Z. Gong, Jindong Zhang, X. Y. Ma, M. Duranti, Kai-Kai Duan, Y. Zhang, Yun-Zhi Zhang, R. R. Fan, Valerio Vagelli, Xixian Wang, Ju-Xian Song, G. Marsella, Meng Su, Yaohui Zhang, Xian-Min Jin, S.X. Li, S. B. Liu, Huijun Yao, Andrii Tykhonov, J. J. Wei, Lihui Wu, X. Y. Peng, H. T. Xu, Yujuan Liu, Hong Yun Zhao, Jie Zhang, S. Y. Ma, Z. Q. Xia, Dan Jiang, Yali Zhou, X. J. Teng, Tie-Kuang Dong, S. C. Wen, Y. Li, A. D'Amone, Yi-Zhong Fan, K. Gong, J. Z. Wang, Yugang Zhang, H. S. Chen, Chengrui Zhou, Giacinto Donvito, Yang Haibo, Zhoubin Zhang, P. Bernardini, W. H. Shen, M. Y. Cui, G. Z. Shang, Chuan Yue, Jindan Zhang, Di Wu, Xin-Fu Zhao, Y. Y. Huang, Z. T. Shen, Qian Wang, P. Fusco, Shumei Wu, J. J. Zang, Y. F. Dong, Jinfei Wu, C. Q. Feng, Jinglai Duan, Huaguang Wang, B. Bertucci, Jin Chang, F. J. Gan, F. Gargano, M. N. Mazziotta, H. Su, Haiqiong Wang, Fengtao Zhang, Z. Xu, Pengchao Zhang, Xin Wu, Y. F. Wang, S. Vitillo, D. Droz, T. S. Cui, V. Gallo, W. Zhang, Wei Jiang, G. F. Xue, S. Garrappa, Yu-Xuan Zhu, D. D'Urso, Shi-Jun Lei, M. M. Salinas, Y.L. Xin, Xi Zhu, Shengxia Zhang, A. Surdo, A. De Benedittis, Wangli Chen, Ambrosi, G., An, Q., Asfandiyarov, R., Azzarello, P., Bernardini, P., Bertucci, B., Cai, M. S., Chang, J., Chen, D. Y., Chen, H. F., Chen, J. L., Chen, W., Cui, M. Y., Cui, T. S., D’Amone, A., De Benedittis, A., De Mitri, I., Di Santo, M., Dong, J. N., Dong, T. K., Dong, Y. F., Dong, Z. X., Donvito, G., Droz, D., Duan, K. K., Duan, J. L., Duranti, M., D’Urso, D., Fan, R. R., Fan, Y. Z., Fang, F., Feng, C. Q., Feng, L., Fusco, P., Gallo, V., Gan, F. J., Gao, M., Gao, S. S., Gargano, F., Garrappa, S., Gong, K., Gong, Y. Z., Guo, D. Y., Guo, J. H., Hu, Y. M., Huang, G. S., Huang, Y. Y., Ionica, M., Jiang, D., Jiang, W., Jin, X., Kong, J., Lei, S. J., Li, S., Li, X., Li, W. L., Li, Y., Liang, Y. F., Liang, Y. M., Liao, N. H., Liu, H., Liu, J., Liu, S. B., Liu, W. Q., Liu, Y., Loparco, F., Ma, M., Ma, P. X., Ma, S. Y., Ma, T., Ma, X. Q., Ma, X. Y., Marsella, G., Mazziotta, M. N., Mo, D., Niu, X. Y., Peng, X. Y., Peng, W. X., Qiao, R., Rao, J. N., Salinas, M. M., Shang, G. Z., H. Shen, W., Shen, Z. Q., Shen, Z. T., Song, J. X., Su, H., Su, M., Sun, Z. Y., Surdo, A., Teng, X. J., Tian, X. B., Tykhonov, A., Vagelli, V., Vitillo, S., Wang, C., Wang, H., Wang, H. Y., Wang, J. Z., Wang, L. G., Wang, Q., Wang, S., Wang, X. H., Wang, X. L., Wang, Y. F., Wang, Y. P., Wang, Y. Z., Wen, S. C., Wang, Z. M., Wei, D. M., Wei, J. J., Wei, Y. F., Wu, D., Wu, J., Wu, L. B., Wu, S. S., Wu, X., Xi, K., Xia, Z. Q., Xin, Y. L., Xu, H. T., Xu, Z. L., Xu, Z. Z., Xue, G. F., Yang, H. B., Yang, P., Yang, Y. Q., Yang, Z. L., Yao, H. J., Yu, Y. H., Yuan, Q., Yue, C., Zang, J. J., Zhang, C., Zhang, D. L., Zhang, F., Zhang, J. B., Zhang, J. Y., Zhang, J. Z., Zhang, L., Zhang, P. F., Zhang, S. X., Zhang, W. Z., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Y. J., Zhang, Y. Q., Zhang, Y. L., Zhang, Y. P., Zhang, Z., Zhang, Z. Y., Zhao, H., Zhao, H. Y., Zhao, X. F., Zhou, C. Y., Zhou, Y., Zhu, X., Zhu, Y., and Zimmer, S.
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Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Dark matter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Cosmic ray ,Electron ,01 natural sciences ,dark matter ,High Energy Physics - Experiment ,Nuclear physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment (hep-ex) ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph) ,Positron ,cosmic rays ,0103 physical sciences ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Cherenkov radiation ,High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Physics ,cosmic rays , dark matter , electrons , space experiments ,Multidisciplinary ,Annihilation ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Settore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentale ,Spectrum (functional analysis) ,electrons ,Galaxy ,High Energy Physics - Phenomenology ,High Energy Physics::Experiment ,space experiments ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
High energy cosmic ray electrons plus positrons (CREs), which lose energy quickly during their propagation, provide an ideal probe of Galactic high-energy processes and may enable the observation of phenomena such as dark-matter particle annihilation or decay. The CRE spectrum has been directly measured up to $\sim 2$ TeV in previous balloon- or space-borne experiments, and indirectly up to $\sim 5$ TeV by ground-based Cherenkov $\gamma$-ray telescope arrays. Evidence for a spectral break in the TeV energy range has been provided by indirect measurements of H.E.S.S., although the results were qualified by sizeable systematic uncertainties. Here we report a direct measurement of CREs in the energy range $25~{\rm GeV}-4.6~{\rm TeV}$ by the DArk Matter Particle Explorer (DAMPE) with unprecedentedly high energy resolution and low background. The majority of the spectrum can be properly fitted by a smoothly broken power-law model rather than a single power-law model. The direct detection of a spectral break at $E \sim0.9$ TeV confirms the evidence found by H.E.S.S., clarifies the behavior of the CRE spectrum at energies above 1 TeV and sheds light on the physical origin of the sub-TeV CREs., Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, Nature in press, doi:10.1038/nature24475
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- 2017
25. Problems with and a system to eliminate single-primer PCR product contamination in simple sequence repeat molecular marker-assisted selection in soybean
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S C Guan, Jideng Ma, Yao Dan, Y F Wei, and P W Wang
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Genetic Markers ,Base Sequence ,fungi ,food and beverages ,General Medicine ,DNA Contamination ,Biology ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Molecular biology ,law.invention ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Genetic marker ,law ,Molecular marker ,Primer dimer ,Genetics ,Soybeans ,Primer (molecular biology) ,Molecular Biology ,Applications of PCR ,Polymerase chain reaction ,DNA Primers ,In silico PCR - Abstract
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) provides a foundation for simple sequence repeat molecular marker-assisted selection (SSR MAS) in soybean. This PCR system and its various conditions have been optimized by many researchers. However, current research on the optimization of the PCR system focuses on double-primer PCR products. We compared single- and double-SSR primer PCR products from 50 soybean samples and found that the use of single-PCR primers in the reaction system can lead to amplified fragments of portions of the SSR primers in the PCR process, resulting in both false-positives and fragment impurity of double-primer PCR amplification, inconvenient for subsequent analysis. We used "single-primer PCR correction" to eliminate interference caused by single-primer nonspecific PCR amplification and improve PCR quality. Using this method, the precision and success rates of SSR MAS in soybean can be increased.
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- 2011
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26. Development of non-stoichiometric SrBi4+2xTi4O15+3x(−0·04 ≤x≤ 0·04) ceramics
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Y.-F. Wei, C.-Y. Chen, Cheng-Fu Yang, Chien-Jung Huang, and Chien-Han Kao
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Diffraction ,Materials science ,Scanning electron microscope ,Analytical chemistry ,Sintering ,Mineralogy ,Dielectric ,Ferroelectricity ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Grain growth ,visual_art ,Ceramics and Composites ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,Curie temperature ,Ceramic - Abstract
The non-stoichiometric compositions of Bi layered structural SrBi4Ti4O15 ferroelectric materials (SrBi4+2xTi4O15+3x, x=−0·04, −0·02, 0, 0·02 and 0·04) are investigated as the main precursors to find the influence of Bi2O3 content on the characteristics of SrBi4Ti4O15 ceramics. The effect of compositional variation on the sintering and the dielectric characteristics of SrBi4Ti4O15 ceramics are deduced with the aid of X-ray diffraction patterns, scanning electron microscopy observation and dielectric–temperature curves. From the scanning electron microscopy observations, the SrBi3·92Ti4O14·88 and SrBi3·96Ti4O14·94 ceramics reveal two phased grain growth, bar typed and irregularly disc typed grains coexist; the other SrBi4+2xTi4O15+3x ceramics reveal irregularly disc typed grains. From the X-ray patterns, the Bi2Ti2O7 and SrTiO3 phases are observed in the SrBi3·92Ti4O14·88 and SrBi3·96Ti4O14·94 ceramics. Except the SrBi3·96Ti4O14·94 ceramics, the other SrBi4+2xTi4O15+3x ceramics have revealed a spli...
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- 2009
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27. Maximum entropy mobility spectrum analysis of LPE-grown and anodic oxidated Hg1-xCdxTe(x=0.237)
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Y. F. Wei, J. H. Chu, Z. Y. Song, T. Lin, and L. Y. Shang
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History ,Materials science ,Principle of maximum entropy ,Thermodynamics ,Spectrum analysis ,Computer Science Applications ,Education ,Anode - Published
- 2017
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28. Identification, chromosomal mapping and tissue-specific expression of hREV3 encoding a putative human DNA polymerase zeta
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K. C. Carter, B. L. Chow, M. Agustus, Wei Xiao, Y.-F. Wei, Terry Lechler, and T. Fontanie
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Cancer Research ,DNA, Complementary ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Mutant ,DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Biology ,Fungal Proteins ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Gene mapping ,Complementary DNA ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Gene ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Polymerase ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Nucleic acid sequence ,Chromosome Mapping ,General Medicine ,Molecular biology ,chemistry ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1 ,biology.protein ,DNA ,Fluorescence in situ hybridization - Abstract
The Saccharomyces cerevisiae REV3 gene encodes the catalytic subunit of a non-essential DNA polymerase zeta, which is required for mutagenesis. The rev3 mutants significantly reduce both spontaneous and DNA damage-induced mutation rates. We have identified human cDNA clones from two different libraries whose deduced amino acid sequences bear remarkable homology to the yeast Rev3, and named this gene hREV3. The hREV3 gene was mapped to chromosome 1p32-33 by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The hREV3 encodes an mRNA of >10 kb, and its expression varies in different tissues and appears to be elevated in some but not all of the tumor cell lines we have examined. In light of recent reports of a putative mouse REV3, these results indicate that mammalian cells may also contain a mutagenic pathway which aids in cell survival at the cost of increased mutation.
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- 1998
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29. The nonlinear Rashba effect in Hg0.77Cd0.23Te inversion layers probed by weak antilocalization analysis
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J. R. Yang, David J. Lockwood, Y. G. Xu, L. M. Wei, Xinzhi Liu, J. H. Chu, Y. F. Wei, T. Lin, N. L. Rowell, S. L. Guo, and Guolin Yu
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Electron density ,High-electron-density ,Gate voltages ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Schrödinger equation ,symbols.namesake ,Rashba effects ,Rashba spin orbit interaction ,Physics ,Condensed matter physics ,High mobility ,Magneto-transport measurement ,Wide-bandgap semiconductor ,Inversion (meteorology) ,Anti-localization effects ,P-type ,Condensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall Effect ,Interband coupling ,Nonlinear system ,Inversion layers ,Electron gas ,Rashba spin splitting ,symbols ,Weak antilocalization ,Carrier concentration ,Poisson's equation ,Fermi gas ,Electron density measurement ,Rashba effect - Abstract
The Rashba spin-orbit interaction of the two-dimensional electron gas with high mobility in the inversion layer of p-type Hg0.77Cd 0.23Te is investigated by magnetotransport measurements. Both the Rashba spin splitting and Rashba coefficient are extracted by analysis of the weak anti-localization effect using the Golub model. It is found that both the splitting and coefficient increase with increasing electron density (∼3.0-6.0 × 1015 m-2), i.e., with the gate voltage. A self-consistent Schrodinger-Poisson calculation is performed and suggests that the nonlinear Rashba effect caused by the weakening of interband coupling, especially at high electron density, dominates this system. © 2013 American Institute of Physics.
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- 2013
30. Symmetrical peripheral gangrene, an uncommon complication of tuberculosis
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C. F. Chen, Y. F. Wei, and Jiun-Ling Wang
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Tuberculosis ,Physical examination ,Palpation ,Fingers ,Gangrene ,Rare Diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Laparoscopy ,Aged ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,PERIPHERAL GANGRENE ,General Medicine ,Toes ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,Abdominal ultrasonography ,Chills ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Complication - Abstract
A 74-year-old man was admitted with abdominal discomfort, fever and chills in the previous 2 weeks. Physical examination revealed a vague Murphys’ sign on abdominal palpation. Abdominal ultrasonography demonstrated a distended gallbladder and acute cholecystitis was initially diagnosed. He underwent a laparoscopy and multiple caseous nodules …
- Published
- 2011
31. Observation of macroscopic quantum tunneling in a single Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+delta surface intrinsic Josephson junction
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Shao-Xiong, Li, Wei, Qiu, Siyuan, Han, Y F, Wei, X B, Zhu, C Z, Gu, S P, Zhao, and H B, Wang
- Abstract
We report on the first unambiguous observation of macroscopic quantum tunneling (MQT) in a single submicron Bi(2)Sr(2)CaCu(2)O(8+delta) surface intrinsic Josephson junction (IJJ) by measuring its temperature-dependent switching current distribution. All relevant junction parameters were determined in situ in the classical regime and were used to predict the behavior of the IJJ in the quantum regime via MQT theory. Experimental results agree quantitatively with the theoretical predictions, thus confirming the MQT picture. Furthermore, the data also indicate that the surface IJJ, where the current flows along the c axis of the crystal, has the conventional sinphi current-phase relationship.
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- 2006
32. [A novel catalytic spectrophotometric determination for horseradish peroxidase]
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Y F, Wei and H T, Yan
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Rhodamines ,Spectrophotometry ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Hydrogen Peroxide ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Catalysis ,Horseradish Peroxidase - Abstract
A new catalytic-kinetics spectrophotometric method for the determination of horseradish peroxidase was developed. It was based on the catalytic effect of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) on the coloration reaction, in which the reduced rhodamine B was oxidized by H2O2 in pH 6.80 phosphate buffer. It was found that reduced rhodamine B stocking solution could be steady in 0.25% beta-CD solution. The kinetic behavior of the reaction and the effects of some experimental conditions were investigated and discussed in detail. The method has been applied to determine HRP with a satisfactory result. The calibration curve is linear over the range 15-250 pg.10 mL-1 of HRP (r = 0.9989). The limit of detection was 12 pg.10 mL-1 and the relative standard derivative RSD is 4.25% by determining for 20 pg.10 mL-1 HRP (n = 10).
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- 2003
33. [Comprehensive utilization and development of traditional Tibetan medicine in China]
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L Y, Li, B Z, Ciren, D, Zhan, and Y F, Wei
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Quality Control ,Conservation of Natural Resources ,Plants, Medicinal ,Tibet ,Drugs, Chinese Herbal - Abstract
To deal with the further investigation field by discussing the status and present problem of traditional Tibetan medicine.Previous relevant investigations and literatures were summed up in the field. The present situation of traditional Tibetan medicine in China was analysed.The textual research, basic medicinal property, exploration of developable medicinal resource and protection of endangered medicinal species etc. were elaborated and the key problem of further investigation in 21st century was expounded.The textual research, basic medicinal property, exploration of develoable medicinal resources, especially monographic study on protection of major endangered medicinal resources should be intensified. Domestication and cultivation, and exploration of good-quality medicinal resources, quality evaluation and exploitation of effectual prescriptions are the focal field in the study of traditional Tibetan medicine.
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- 2003
34. Carrier dynamics in low-temperature-grownAlxGa1−xAs/GaAsmultiple quantum wells
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Shi-Ping Zhao, P. M. Fu, Lin Guo, Lei Wang, Qingzhen Huang, Y. F. Wei, Q. S. Yang, Zhiguo Zhang, C. Y. Li, and Yu Han
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X-ray absorption spectroscopy ,Materials science ,Semiconductor ,Condensed matter physics ,business.industry ,Carrier dynamics ,business ,Quantum well - Published
- 2003
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35. TRAIL (Apo-2L) and TRAIL receptors in human placentas: implications for immune privilege
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T A, Phillips, J, Ni, G, Pan, S M, Ruben, Y F, Wei, J L, Pace, and J S, Hunt
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Cytotoxicity, Immunologic ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Macrophages ,Placenta ,Receptors, Tumor Necrosis Factor ,Cell Line ,Trophoblasts ,TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand ,Interferon-gamma ,Pregnancy Trimester, First ,Pregnancy ,Immune Tolerance ,Humans ,Female ,RNA, Messenger ,Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins - Abstract
Mechanisms accounting for protection of the fetal semiallograft from maternal immune cells remain incompletely understood. In other contexts, interactions between TRAIL (TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand/Apo-2L) and its receptors kill activated lymphocytes. The purpose of this study was therefore to investigate the potential of the TRAIL/TRAIL-R system to protect the placenta against immune cell attack. Analysis by Northern blotting demonstrated mRNAs encoding TRAIL as well as the four TRAIL receptors (DR4, DR5, DcR1/TRID, DcR2/TRUNDD) in human placentas. Immunohistochemical experiments demonstrated that TRAIL protein is prominent in syncytiotrophoblast, an uninterrupted placental cell layer that is continuously exposed to maternal blood, as well as in macrophage-like placental mesenchymal cells (Hofbauer cells). Studies on cell lines representing trophoblasts (Jar, JEG-3 cells) and macrophages (U937, THP-1 cells) showed that both lineages contained TRAIL mRNA and that steady state levels of transcripts were increased 2- to 11-fold by IFN-gamma. By contrast, cell lineage-specific differences were observed in expression of the TRAIL-R genes. Although all four lines contained mRNA encoding the apoptosis-inducing DR5 receptor, only trophoblast cells contained mRNA encoding the DcR1 decoy receptor and only macrophages contained DcR2 decoy receptor transcripts. DR4 mRNA was present only in THP-1 cells and was the only TRAIL-R transcript increased by IFN-gamma. Cytotoxicity assays revealed that the two trophoblast cell lines were resistant, whereas the two macrophage lines were partially susceptible to killing by rTRAIL. Collectively, the results are consistent with a role for the TRAIL/TRAIL-R system in the establishment of placental immune privilege.
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- 1999
36. Cloning and sequencing a human homolog (hMYH) of the Escherichia coli mutY gene whose function is required for the repair of oxidative DNA damage
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Jeffrey H Miller, Wendy M. Luther, Claudia Baikalov, Ju-Huei Chiang, Malgorzata M. Slupska, and Y F Wei
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DNA Repair ,DNA repair ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Biology ,Microbiology ,DNA Glycosylases ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Exon ,MUTYH ,Escherichia coli ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,N-Glycosyl Hydrolases ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Genetics ,Gene map ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,cDNA library ,Chromosome Mapping ,DNA ,Molecular biology ,chemistry ,DNA glycosylase ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1 ,Oxidation-Reduction ,HeLa Cells ,Research Article - Abstract
We have cloned the human mutY gene (hMYH) from both genomic and cDNA libraries. The human gene contains 15 introns and is 7.1 kb long. The 16 exons encode a protein of 535 amino acids that displays 41% identity to the Escherichia coli protein, which provides an important function in the repair of oxidative damage to DNA and helps to prevent mutations from oxidative lesions. The human mutY gene maps on the short arm of chromosome 1, between p32.1 and p34.3.
- Published
- 1996
37. Microwave-enhanced dephasing time in a HgCdTe film
- Author
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J. R. Yang, Xinzhi Liu, L. He, L. M. Wei, D. G. Austing, S. L. Guo, T. Lin, Guolin Yu, J. H. Chu, Q. W. Wang, Y. F. Wei, K. H. Gao, and N. Dai
- Subjects
Semiconductor thin films ,Electron density ,Heating mechanisms ,Physics and Astronomy (miscellaneous) ,Condensed matter physics ,Field (physics) ,Chemistry ,HgCdTe ,Dephasing ,Microwave power ,Conductance ,Anti-localization effects ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,HgCdTe films ,Condensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall Effect ,Electron gas ,Mercury compounds ,Microwave field ,Fermi gas ,Microwave - Abstract
The antilocalization effect in a compensated HgCdTe film is observed. With an applied microwave field, both the zero-magnetic-field conductance and the dephasing time are enhanced nonlinearly with microwave power. The observation concerning the dephasing time is inconsistent with a heating mechanism. Such behavior is also in contrast to the microwave-induced suppression of weak-antilocalization and dephasing time seen for a two-dimensional electron gas of the anodic-oxidized HgCdTe. The nonlinear increase in zero-magnetic-field conductance is consistent with a microwave-assisted-hopping mechanism. The increased dephasing time can be explained qualitatively by the microwave-assisted-hopping mechanism and a microwave-induced increase in the electron density. © 2013 American Institute of Physics.
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- 2013
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38. Spin-related magnetoresistance oscillations in the inversion layer on bulk p-Hg1−xCdxTe
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Liu Wei, L. Y. Shang, Y. F. Wei, Pingxiong Yang, Y. H. Sun, Shaoling Guo, Wu Zhou, Tie Lin, and J. H. Chu
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Zeeman effect ,Condensed matter physics ,Magnetoresistance ,Chemistry ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Inversion (meteorology) ,Condensed Matter::Mesoscopic Systems and Quantum Hall Effect ,Magnetic field ,symbols.namesake ,Spin splitting ,Hall effect ,symbols ,Condensed Matter::Strongly Correlated Electrons ,Fermi gas - Abstract
We have investigated spin-related oscillatory magnetoresistances of the two-dimensional electron gas in the inversion layer on bulk p-Hg1−xCdxTe at low temperatures. The oscillatory magnetoresistances are found to display beating pattern at low magnetic fields and to exhibit spin-splitting structure at high magnetic fields. We attribute the beating pattern to zero-field spin splitting due to spin-orbit coupling by analyzing fast-Fourier-transform results and Hall resistance. By modulating the oscillatory magnetoresistances we investigate the influence of spin-orbit coupling, Zeeman splitting, and the second populated subband on the appearance of beating patterns and the spin-splitting structure in oscillatory magnetoresistances. The strong spin-orbit coupling and the large effective g factor are demonstrated to be the significant parameters in controlling the appearance of spin-related oscillatory magnetoresistance in the inversion layer on bulk p-Hg1−xCdxTe. A good agreement between magnetoresistance dat...
- Published
- 2011
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39. Pulmonary infarction from central venous air embolism mimicking round pneumonia
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Y-F Wei, S-C Ku, and L-C Lin
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Pulmonary Infarction ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Article ,Surgery ,Pneumonia ,Embolism ,Superior vena cava ,Heart failure ,Intravascular volume status ,medicine ,Radiology ,business ,Chest radiograph ,Central venous catheter - Abstract
A 49-year-old man was diagnosed with dilated cardiomyopathy after presenting with congestive heart failure since 1995. He experienced a flare-up of symptoms after an upper respiratory tract infection 1 week before admission to the coronary care unit (CCU). His dyspnoea improved after treatment with diuretics and inotropes. On day 4 in the CCU he developed a urinary tract infection complicated by septic shock. A central venous catheter (CVC) was inserted over the right internal jugular vein. There was difficulty in performing the catheterisation, and the procedure was prolonged due to an extremely low intravascular volume. Soon after the procedure a round opacity was noted on the chest radiograph (fig 1). At that time there was no purulent sputum, airway symptoms or physical examination compatible with pneumonia. A chest CT scan revealed air emboli in the superior vena cava (arrow, fig 2A) and wedge-shaped pulmonary infarcts with central necrosis at the bilateral lower lobes (fig 2B). Owing to lack of evidence for pulmonary infection, the necrosis was believed to be sterile. The patient died 1 week later from cardiogenic shock with multi-organ failure. Figure 1 Chest radiograph after central venous cannulation showing a round opacity of homogenous density but without airbronchogram in the right lower lung field. Figure 2 (A) Contrast-enhanced chest CT scan showing air bubble trapped around the central venous catheter in the superior vena cava (arrow). (B) Bilateral pleural-based, wedge-shaped, mass-like consolidations with central necrosis in both lower lobes. Venous air embolism can be observed during CVC insertion, after CVC removal, and during other medical procedures or interventions.1–3 In acute care settings, patients with hypovolaemia are at a higher risk of gas embolism during central venous cannulation because of the subatmospheric pressure in these vessels.1 To our knowledge, there has been no previous report of venous air pulmonary infarction mimicking round pneumonia in the English literature. Learning points Patients with a low intravascular volume are at a higher risk of developing venous gas embolism during CVC insertion. Pulmonary infarction from gas embolism can mimic round pneumonia on the chest radiograph.
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- 2009
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40. Purification of a protein histidine kinase from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The first member of this class of protein kinases
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J M, Huang, Y F, Wei, Y H, Kim, L, Osterberg, and H R, Matthews
- Subjects
Fungal Proteins ,Molecular Weight ,Kinetics ,Adenosine Triphosphate ,Histidine Kinase ,Guanosine Triphosphate ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Amino Acids ,Phosphorylation ,Protein Kinases ,Substrate Specificity - Abstract
An enzyme of molecular weight 32,000 comprising a single subunit has been isolated from whole cell extracts of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In vitro, the enzyme transfers the gamma phosphate of ATP to a protein substrate, histone H4, to produce an alkali-stable phosphorylation. Modification of the substrate histidine with diethylpyrocarbonate prevented phosphorylation. Phosphoamino acid analysis of the phosphorylated substrate showed the presence of 1-phosphohistidine. Hence, the isolated enzyme is a protein histidine kinase. A novel assay for acid-labile alkali-stable protein phosphorylation was used in the purification of the kinase activity to a final specific activity of 2,700 nmol/15 min/mg. The purified enzyme phosphorylates specifically histidine 75 in histone H4 and does not phosphorylate histidine 18 nor histidine residues in any other core histone. Steady state kinetic data are consistent with an ordered sequential reaction with Km values for Mg-ATP and histone H4 of 60 and 17 microM, respectively. The protein histidine kinase requires a divalent cation such as Mg2+, Co2+, or Mn2+ but will not use Ca2+, Zn2+, Cu2+, Fe2+, spermine, or spermidine. This is the first purification of an enzyme that catalyzes N-linked phosphorylation in proteins.
- Published
- 1991
41. Identification of phosphohistidine in proteins and purification of protein-histidine kinases
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Y F, Wei and H R, Matthews
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Kinetics ,Radioisotope Dilution Technique ,Histidine Kinase ,Chromatography, Gel ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Histidine ,Indicators and Reagents ,Carbon Radioisotopes ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Chromatography, Ion Exchange ,Phosphoproteins ,Protein Kinases ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid - Published
- 1991
42. Contribution of macrophages to immediate hypersensitivity reaction
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Y F Wei, K Heghinian, R L Bell, and B A Jakschik
- Subjects
Immunology ,Immunology and Allergy - Abstract
The interaction of mast cells with other leukocytes during immediate hypersensitivity reactions was tested by in vivo and in vitro experiments. Intraperitoneal challenge of passively sensitized rats with antigen caused the production of peptidoleukotrienes, leukotriene (LT)B4, thromboxane (TX)B2, and 6-keto-prostaglandin (PG) F1 alpha in the peritoneal cavity. Pretreatment of the rats with thioglycollate i.p. markedly changed the amount of eicosanoids formed. When polymorphonuclear leukocytes were the predominant cell type in the peritoneal exudate, both LTC4 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha were decreased by 75% each and TXB2 by 50%. When elicited macrophages were predominant, there was an additional reduction in LTC4 by 68% as compared with 18 hr after thioglycollate treatment, but no additional change in the other arachidonic acid metabolites. In vitro antigen challenge of passively sensitized mouse bone marrow-derived mast cells caused the release of LTC4, LTB4, 6-trans-LTB4, 5-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic (5-HETE), and TXB2. Exposure to antigen of these mast cells in the presence of resident peritoneal macrophages markedly altered eicosanoid formation. Early in the time course (2 to 15 min), macrophages markedly enhanced all 5-lipoxygenase products. However, later in the time course (30 to 120 min), these products were decreased. This decrease was reversed by catalase and superoxide dismutase, which suggests the involvement of oxygen radicals. These active oxygen species also seemed to be generated by mast cells, because these enzymes caused an increase in 5-lipoxygenase products when mast cells were challenged alone. RIA of cyclooxygenase products showed that mast cells released only TXB2 when stimulated with antigen. When they were stimulated in the presence of macrophages, TXB2 and also PGE2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha were synthesized. Therefore, macrophages probably contribute the PGE2 and 6-keto-PGF1 alpha. Because the same amount of TXB2 was generated whether macrophages were present or not, the mast cells seem to be the major source of this compound. These data indicate that macrophages and possibly polymorphonuclear leukocytes participate in immediate hypersensitivity reactions.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Heparin interferes with the biological effectiveness of atriopeptin
- Author
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S W Holmberg, C S Devine, Y F Wei, Philip Needleman, K M Leahy, and P O Olins
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Arginine ,medicine.drug_class ,Prohormone ,Diuresis ,Blood Pressure ,Furosemide ,Internal medicine ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Protamines ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,biology ,Heparin ,Chemistry ,Anticoagulant ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,Biological activity ,Protamine ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,biology.protein ,Female ,Atrial Natriuretic Factor ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The chromatographic mobility of atriopeptin-28 or of the prohormone is markedly altered by preincubation of the peptides with heparin before separation on reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography. Protamine prevented the heparin effect and reestablished the original migration pattern of the atrial peptides. The addition of heparin to either rat or human plasma samples did not interfere with the atriopeptin immunoreactivity. The influence of heparin on the biological activity of the atriopeptin-28 in anesthetized rats was also investigated. Infusion of heparin (30 U/min) significantly reduced the dose-dependent fall of blood pressure produced by atriopeptin-28, but did not interfere with the hypotensive effect of nitroglycerin. Similarly, infusion of heparin in volume-expanded rats markedly decreased the diuresis produced by atriopeptin-28 without altering the urine volume excreted in response to furosemide. These data suggest that the highly charged molecule heparin can modify the physical and biological properties of atriopeptins, perhaps by binding to the numerous arginine residues (i.e., 5 arginine residues in atriopeptin-28) in the atriopeptin molecules.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Modulation of eicosanoid production due to mast cell-macrophage interaction
- Author
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B A, Jakschik, Y F, Wei, and T A, Rengers
- Subjects
Hypersensitivity, Immediate ,Thromboxane B2 ,Arachidonate 5-Lipoxygenase ,Macrophages ,Fatty Acids, Unsaturated ,Prostaglandins ,Animals ,SRS-A ,Cell Communication ,Mast Cells ,Anaphylaxis ,Leukotriene B4 - Abstract
The experiments discussed above demonstrate that macrophages and possibly PMN modulate and contribute to immediate hypersensitivity reactions. Antigen stimulation of sensitized mast cells in vitro in the presence of macrophages showed that the latter contribute prostaglandins and modulate the 5-lipoxygenase products. Early in the time course, 5-lipoxygenase products, including leukotrienes, were enhanced and later decreased. The decrease appeared to be due to active oxygen species and may serve as a negative feedback mechanism to maintain relative homeostasis.
- Published
- 1986
45. Developmental changes in the rat atriopeptin hormonal system
- Author
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B R Cole, C P Rodi, Y F Wei, Philip Needleman, L D Needleman, Mark L. Day, and Roger C. Wiegand
- Subjects
Vasopressin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Prohormone ,Blood volume ,Intracardiac pressure ,Biology ,Embryonic and Fetal Development ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Fetus ,Blood Volume ,Heart ,Rats, Inbred Strains ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Endocrinology ,Fetal circulation ,Animals, Newborn ,Regional Blood Flow ,Female ,Atrial Natriuretic Factor ,Hormone ,medicine.drug ,Research Article - Abstract
We undertook a study of fetal synthesis, storage, and release of atriopeptin (AP). Plasma levels of both atriopeptin immunoreactivity (APir) and the NH2-terminal fragment of the prohormone immunoreactivity (NTFir) were very high in the fetus (4 and 20 times the maternal plasma, respectively). However, the atrial content of the AP was low, but surprisingly, ventricular content of AP was quite high (relative to the adult) in the fetus and fell postnatally. Atrial AP messenger RNA (mRNA) increased with postnatal age, whereas ventricular mRNA was extremely high in the fetus and fell rapidly after birth. High fetal plasma peptide levels may derive from the mother since infusion of exogenous atriopeptin 24 into the mother resulted in parallel increases in fetal and maternal peptide levels. Fetal plasma APir and NTFir levels partially reflect the markedly reduced total renal metabolic capacity compared with that of the adult. Plasma levels fell progressively after birth; whereas neonatal atrial content rose substantially. Plasma AP and NTF were simultaneously elevated in both the maternal and fetal circulation after vasopressin injection of the mother. The fetus can also respond to exogenous stimuli (vasopressin or indomethacin--presumably via ductal closure) and promptly release substantial amounts of peptide into its circulation. Thus, it appears that the AP hormonal system is functional during fetal life and responds avidly to increases in intracardiac pressure as does the mature animal.
- Published
- 1987
46. Maximum entropy mobility spectrum analysis of LPE-grown and anodic oxidated Hg1-xCdxTe(x=0.237).
- Author
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Z Y Song, L Y Shang, T Lin, Y F Wei, and J H Chu
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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