Publications by authors named "Meng-Sha Li"

Article Synopsis
  • Atmospheric nitrogen deposition significantly affects soil microorganisms in wetland ecosystems, making it important to study soil carbon metabolism in these areas for effective protection and management.
  • The study utilized Biolog-Eco technology to examine how five years of simulated nitrogen deposition impacted the carbon metabolic capacity of soil microorganisms, revealing notable differences in soil characteristics such as moisture and nutrient content under varying nitrogen conditions.
  • Results indicated that low nitrogen deposition reduced microbial diversity and substrate utilization, while high nitrogen deposition altered how microorganisms utilized specific carbon sources, with notable environmental factors like ammonium, dissolved organic carbon, and pH influencing microbial function.
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Because of a limited capacity of information processing in the brain, the efficient processing of visual information requires selecting only a very small fraction of visual inputs at any given moment in time. Attention is the main mechanism that controls this selection process, namely selective attention. Selective attention is the mechanism by which the subset of incoming information is preferentially processed from the complex external environment.

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Reactivating post-natal myocardial regeneration potential may be a feasible strategy to regenerate the injured adult heart. Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been implicated in regulating cellular differentiation, but whether they can elicit a regenerative response in the post-natal heart remains unknown. In this study, by characterizing the lncRNA transcriptome in human hearts during the fetal-to-adult transition, we found that 3,092 lncRNAs were differentially expressed, and we further identified a novel upregulated fetal lncRNA that we called endogenous cardiac regeneration-associated regulator (ECRAR), which promoted DNA synthesis, mitosis, and cytokinesis in post-natal day 7 and adult rat cardiomyocytes (CMs).

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Antibody-drug conjugate (ADC) is a new class of therapeutics composed of a monoclonal antibody and small cytotoxin moieties conjugated through a chemical linker. ADC molecules bind to the target antigens expressed on the tumor cell surfaces guided by the monoclonal antibody component. The binding ADC molecules can be internalized and subsequently the toxin moieties can be released within the tumor cells via chemical and/or enzymatic reactions to kill the target cells.

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