Publications by authors named "Ying An"

Article Synopsis
  • The study introduces TCC@M, a nanoprobe that combines CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing and photothermal therapy to treat cancer more effectively by targeting specific cells at the right time.
  • TCC@M is activated by near-infrared light, allowing for controlled release of the Cas9 protein, which specifically alters a gene linked to cancer cell survival, making the cells more susceptible to increased temperatures.
  • The research demonstrates that this innovative method not only improves cancer treatment precision but also allows for real-time monitoring through various imaging techniques.
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The application of acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) has shown great potential in the treatment of scald or burn wounds with high morbidity and mortality, especially in promoting the repair of deep partial-thickness wounds. However, its short half-life and instability in vivo do pose challenges for clinical application. Herein, two kinds of bio-inspired modified piezoelectric chitosan (CS) films, namely heparin-coated CS film (HCS) and polydopamine-coated CS film (DCS), are facially fabricated and adopted as controlled-release platforms for local delivery of aFGF.

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  • The study focuses on improving the release of siRNA from nanoparticles (NPs) inside cells, a process that typically results in rapid release, making it hard to achieve sustained effects.
  • By using layer-by-layer (LbL) techniques, researchers developed NPs with multiple layers that enable effective siRNA delivery, demonstrating significant gene knockdown (SPARC) over 21 days.
  • The results highlight the ability to measure the release of siRNA over time, linking the quantity released to the effectiveness of gene silencing, providing a valuable method for testing new nanocarrier designs.
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Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a group of chronic liver disease which ranges from simple steatosis (NAFL) to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and is characterized by lipid accumulation, inflammation activation, fibrosis, and cell death. To date, a number of preclinical studies or clinical trials associated with therapies targeting fatty acid metabolism, inflammatory factors and liver fibrosis are performed to develop effective drugs for NAFLD/NASH. However, few therapies are cell death signaling-targeted even though the various cell death modes are present throughout the progression of NAFLD/NASH.

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  • The study emphasizes the urgent need for innovative protective clothing against biological and chemical warfare agents due to their threats to national security and health.
  • Researchers introduced a new method to immobilize metal-organic frameworks and silver nanoparticles onto polypropylene fibers, enhancing the degradation efficiency of harmful simulants.
  • The resulting composite fiber not only exceeds existing standards for protective clothing in terms of strength and moisture permeability but also shows great potential for future applications in bioprotective gear.
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The present study employed powdered activated coke (PAC) for the adsorptive removal of refractory COD from the bio-treated paper wastewater (BTPW). The adsorption reached equilibrium after 3 h, resulting in a decrease in the COD concentration from 98.9 mg L in BTPW to 42.

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  • Periodontitis is linked to the development of diabetes, with the bacteria Porphyromonas gingivalis potentially contributing to insulin resistance (IR) through periodontal inflammation.
  • The study analyzed clinical samples and conducted experiments on cultured cells and mice, finding a correlation between P. gingivalis and IR, suggesting that the bacteria negatively impacts insulin receptor expression and glucose uptake.
  • Results indicate that P. gingivalis can degrade insulin receptors via its protease (gingipain), leading to IR, and highlight the potential for targeting periodontal pathogens as a strategy to prevent diabetes.*
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Efflux pumps play a crucial role in the development of antibiotic resistance. The aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between efflux pump gene expression and resistance gene mutations in . Twenty-six clinical strains with varying resistance characteristics were selected for further experiment.

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Background: Critical patients may experience various adverse events during transportation within hospitals. Therefore, quickly evaluating and classifying patients before transporting them from the emergency department and focusing on managing high-risk patients are critical. At present, no unified classification method exists; all the current approaches are subjective.

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Colorectal cancer is a major global health burden, with limited efficacy of traditional treatment modalities in improving survival rates. However, recently advances in immunotherapy has improved treatment outcomes for patients with this cancer. To address the continuing need for improved treatment efficacy, this study introduced a novel tri-specific antibody, IMT030122, that targets EpCAM, 4-1BB, and CD3.

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Diabetic kidney disease (DKD), is a common microvascular complication and a major cause of death in patients with diabetes. Disorders of immune cells and immune cytokines can accelerate DKD development of in a number of ways. As the kidney is composed of complex and highly differentiated cells, the interactions among different cell types and immune cells play important regulatory roles in disease development.

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Objective: The reconstruction of complex soft tissue defects with exposure of bones and tendons represents an increasing challenge in wound care, especially in large extremity wounds. The aim of this study was to detect the clinical efficacy of combined use of negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT), artificial dermis (ADM), platelet-rich plasma (PRP) and split-thickness skin grafting (STSG) in the reconstruction of large traumatic extremity skin defects.

Method: In this study, eight cases were treated with combined therapies for repairing complex extremity wounds and the results were reviewed retrospectively.

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Filamentous prophages are widespread among bacteria and play crucial functions in virulence, antibiotic resistance, and biofilm structures. The filamentous Pf4 particles, extruded by an important pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, can protect producing cells from adverse conditions. Contrary to the conventional belief that the Pf4-encoding cells resist reinfection, we herein report that the Pf4 prophage is reciprocally and commonly exchanged within P.

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Drug repurposing is a strategy aiming at uncovering novel medical indications of approved drugs. This process of discovery can be effectively represented as a link prediction task within a medical knowledge graph by predicting the missing relation between the disease entity and the drug entity. Typically, the links to be predicted pertain to rare types, thereby necessitating the task of few-shot link prediction.

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This retrospective chart review study investigates the long-term clinical outcome of Biodentine® (Tricalcium silicate) as a medicament for pulpotomy in primary molars. Data in this retrospective study was collected from the dental records of all patients that had at least one primary molar receive pulpotomy treatment (CDT code: D3221) between 01 July 2012 and 01 July 2015. This data includes child's age, medical history, dental history, dental radiographs, pulpotomy procedure details and follow-up clinical notes.

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  • Hyperglycaemia causes endothelial dysfunction, which contributes to diabetic complications; this study investigates the role of STING, a newly identified immune regulator, in this process.
  • Using diabetic mouse models and high glucose-treated endothelial cells, researchers found that STING levels were elevated in diabetic conditions, leading to cell dysfunction and death.
  • Inhibiting STING improved endothelial cell health, suggesting that targeting STING could offer a new treatment approach for managing diabetic vascular issues.
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Problem: Myocardial infarction (MI) is a classic cardiovascular disease (CVD) that requires prompt diagnosis. However, due to the complexity of its pathology, it is difficult for cardiologists to make an accurate diagnosis in a short period.

Aim: In the clinical, MI can be detected and located by the morphological changes on a 12-lead electrocardiogram (ECG).

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Background And Objective: Clinical risk prediction of patients is an important research issue in the field of healthcare, which is of great significance for the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of diseases. In recent years, a large number of deep learning-based methods have been proposed for clinical prediction by mining relevant features of patients' health condition from historical Electronic Health Records (EHRs) data. However, most of these existing methods only focus on discovering the time series characteristics of physiological indexes such as laboratory tests and physical examinations, and fail to comprehensively consider the deviation degree of these physiological indexes from the normal range and their stability, thus greatly limiting the prediction performance.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study used two pilot-scale membrane bioreactors to treat landfill sludge while evaluating nitrogen removal under different dissolved oxygen (DO) levels.
  • - High DO conditions (5.0-6.0 mg/L) led to better performance, achieving higher nitrite accumulation (98.5%) and nitrogen removal (98.0%) primarily through a process called partial nitrification-denitrification.
  • - Microbial analysis indicated that higher DO boosted ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) populations, while metagenomic results confirmed the significance of partial nitrification for nitrogen removal in high DO environments.
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  • - Diabetes mellitus leads to high blood sugar levels and causes complications like microangiopathy and macroangiopathy, which increase mortality rates in diabetic patients.
  • - Endothelial dysfunction, primarily influenced by oxidative stress and reduced nitric oxide (NO), plays a crucial role in the damage caused by diabetes to blood vessels.
  • - The review explores sources of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in diabetes and discusses potential treatments like hypoglycemic drugs, antioxidants, and lifestyle changes to mitigate endothelial dysfunction.
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Triplet extraction is one of the fundamental tasks in biomedical text mining. Compared with traditional pipeline approaches, joint methods can alleviate the error propagation problem from entity recognition to relation classification. However, existing methods face challenges in detecting overlapping entities and overlapping relations, which are ubiquitous in biomedical texts.

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Diabetes mellitus is an established risk factor for periodontal disease that can aggravate the severity of periodontal inflammation and accelerate periodontal destruction. The chronic high glucose condition is a hallmark of diabetes-related pathogenesis, and has been demonstrated to impair the osteogenic differentiation of periodontal ligament stem cells (PDLSCs), leading to delayed recovery of periodontal defects in diabetic patients. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are small molecules that can influence cell fate determination and the direction of cell differentiation.

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Predicting the patient's in-hospital mortality from the historical Electronic Medical Records (EMRs) can assist physicians to make clinical decisions and assign medical resources. In recent years, researchers proposed many deep learning methods to predict in-hospital mortality by learning patient representations. However, most of these methods fail to comprehensively learn the temporal representations and do not sufficiently mine the contextual knowledge of demographic information.

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Obesity, characterized by accumulation of adipose, is usually accompanied by hyperlipidemia and abnormal glucose metabolism, which destroys the function and structure of islet β cells. However, the exact mechanism of islet deterioration caused by obesity has not yet been fully elucidated. Here, we fed C57BL/6 mice with a high-fat diet (HFD) for 2 (2M group) and 6 months (6M group) to construct obesity mouse models.

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Chronic hyperglycemia-induced impairment of angiogenesis is important in diabetic foot ulcer (DFU). Additionally, the stimulator of interferon gene (STING), which is a key protein in innate immunity, mediates palmitic acid-induced lipotoxicity in metabolic diseases through oxidative stress-induced STING activation. However, the role of STING in DFU is unknown.

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