Publications by authors named "Yiru Cheng"

Article Synopsis
  • Lactococcus garvieae is a harmful type of bacteria that can be found in fish and dairy products, and it can cause sickness in animals and humans.
  • Scientists are studying how this bacteria affects cow's milk production and the health of cows by testing it in mice.
  • They want to understand how stronger versions of this bacteria might harm cow tissue, which could help figure out better ways to prevent illness in dairy cows.
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  • The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) closely interacts with mitochondria, with the protein FUNDC1 helping to recruit Drp1 for mitochondrial division, especially under low oxygen (hypoxic) conditions.
  • Researchers found that USP19, a protein located in the ER, gathers at ER-mitochondria contact sites during hypoxia and aids in the process of mitochondrial fission.
  • USP19 works by binding to and modifying FUNDC1, enhancing Drp1's ability to promote mitochondrial division, thereby uncovering a new pathway for how the ER regulates mitochondrial behavior during low-oxygen stress.
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Transmembrane AMPA receptor regulatory proteins (TARPs) are auxiliary AMPA receptor subunits that play a key role in receptor trafficking and in modulating receptor gating. The ability of TARPs to slow both deactivation and desensitization is isoform specific. However, TARP isoform-specific modulation of receptor properties remains uncharacterized.

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In cooperatively breeding species, social conflict is typically assumed to underlie destructive behaviours like infanticide. However, an untested alternative hypothesis in birds is that infanticide in the form of egg tossing may simply be a parental response to partial nest predation representing a life-history trade-off. We examined egg tossing behaviour in the colonial and cooperatively breeding grey-capped social weaver (Pseudonigrita arnaudi), a plural breeder in which pairs nest separately, often in the same tree.

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Ginseng, the active ingredients of which are ginsenosides, is the most popular herbal medicine and has potential merit in the treatment of cerebral disorders. To better understand the function of Ginseng in the cerebral system, we examined changes in the protein expression profiles of synaptosomes extracted from the cerebral cortical and hippocampal tissues of rats administered a high or low dose of Ginseng for 2 weeks. More than 5000 proteins belonging to synaptosomes were simultaneously identified and quantitated by an approach combining tandem mass tags with 2D liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS).

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  • Alzheimer's disease (AD) and type II diabetes mellitus (DM2) are closely linked, with amylin aggregation in the brain identified as a potential risk factor for AD.
  • The study explored how different concentrations of human amylin (hAmylin) affect rat hippocampal neurons, revealing that low concentrations activate amylin receptors while high concentrations induce calcium responses through TRPV4 channels.
  • Findings suggest that TRPV4 plays a crucial role in mediating calcium responses in neurons exposed to high levels of hAmylin, highlighting the complex mechanisms of amylin-related cytotoxicity in the brain.
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The relative importance of direct and indirect fitness and, thus, the role of kinship in the evolution of social behavior is much debated. Studying the genetic relatedness of interacting individuals is crucial to improving our understanding of these issues. Here, we used a seven-year data set to study the genetic structure of the Taiwan yuhina (Yuhina brunneciceps), a joint-nesting passerine.

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Different body components are thought to trade off in their growth and development rates, but the causes for relative prioritization of any trait remains a critical question. Offspring of species at higher risk of predation might prioritize development of locomotor traits that facilitate escaping risky environments over growth of mass. We tested this possibility in 12 altricial passerine species that differed in their risk of nest predation.

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Causes of interspecific variation in growth rates within and among geographic regions remain poorly understood. Passerine birds represent an intriguing case because differing theories yield the possibility of an antagonistic interaction between nest predation risk and food delivery rates on evolution of growth rates. We test this possibility among 64 Passerine species studied on three continents, including tropical and north and south temperate latitudes.

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