Publications by authors named "Xi'ai Wang"

Article Synopsis
  • The study examined how X-ray radiation affects inflammation-related gene expression in human blood using quantitative real-time PCR, focusing on doses of 0.5, 3, and 10 Gy 24 hours post-exposure.
  • Out of 84 genes tested, 62 showed significant expression changes, with notable genes such as TNFSF4 linked to radiation response and others that were newly identified.
  • The results indicated that gene expression varied with radiation dose: at 0.5 Gy, there were 9 up-regulated and 19 down-regulated genes; at 3 Gy, 8 unique up-regulated genes; and at 10 Gy, 48 genes were significantly altered, revealing that gene response to radiation is
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The present study aims to measure chromosomal aberrations and micronuclei in peripheral blood lymphocytes from 25 subjects exposed to 0.10-0.33 Gy external or internal irradiation 32-41 years ago using conventional cytogenetic analysis methods.

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This study examined ionizing radiation-induced tumor necrosis factor (ligand) superfamily, member 4 (TNFSF4) mRNA expression changes in human peripheral blood cells and their distribution in a normal population. The results showed that expression level of TNFSF4 mRNA exhibited a dose-dependent response after different irradiation doses, but that was independent of incubation time post-irradiation. Moreover, it was not affected by age and gender in 51 healthy donors.

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To investigate the distribution of mitochondria DNA 4 977 bp deletion, a common deletion (CD), in normal populations of Chinese, human peripheral blood samples from sixty healthy donors were collected, and levels of the CD in genomic DNA from the samples were detected using real-time PCR. The results showed that the CD was found in 27 health donors, with its positive rate being 45% (27/60). The CD ratio was between 0 and 0.

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The present study investigated neural correlations underlying the psychological processing of stimuli with various degrees of self-relevance. Event-related potentials were recorded for names that differ in their extent of relevance to the study participant. Participants performed a three-stimulus oddball task.

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