Publications by authors named "Yu Rong Liu"

The neurotoxin methylmercury (MeHg) is produced mainly from the transformation of inorganic Hg by microorganisms carrying the gene pair. Paddy soils are known to harbor diverse microbial communities exhibiting varying abilities in methylating inorganic Hg, but their distribution and environmental drivers remain unknown at a large spatial scale. Using gene amplicon sequencing, this study examined Hg-methylating communities from major rice-producing paddy soils across a transect of ∼3600 km and an altitude of ∼1300 m in China.

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We report a step-economic strategy for the direct synthesis of novel polycyclic -heterocycle-fused naphthoquinones by merging intramolecular oxidative coupling and cascade [4 + 2] cycloaddition. In the protocol, mechanistic investigations suggest that the cascade reaction involves the intermediate spiro polycyclic -heterocycles and [4 + 2] cycloaddition processes. This protocol is featured with moderate to excellent yields, wide substrate scope, and divergent structures of products.

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Article Synopsis
  • Legacy-contaminated sites can leak mercury into the environment, which is harmful to both nature and people.
  • When it rains a lot (especially frequently), mercury moves deeper into the soil more than when it rains heavily but less often.
  • Rain also helps certain microbes turn mercury into a more toxic form called methylmercury, which can create bigger problems for the environment.
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Mercury, a neurotoxic substance, circulates globally, significantly stored in soils through atmospheric deposition and plant decay. Despite being deposited, mercury can be remobilized and released into the atmosphere and water, enhancing its global cycle. Recent research suggests that climate warming may amplify the remobilization of soil mercury, facilitating its incorporation into food webs that humans exploit.

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Background: Joint articular injection of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) has emerged as a novel treatment approach for osteoarthritis (OA). However, the effectiveness of MSCs derived from different sources in treating OA patients remains unclear. Therefore, this study aimed to explore the differences between the effectiveness and safety of different sources of MSCs.

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  • Foliar assimilation of elemental mercury (Hg) from the atmosphere is essential for the global Hg cycle, affecting how Hg is removed from the air and deposited in soil.
  • New research combined extensive data on foliar Hg levels with machine learning to create the first global map of foliar Hg concentrations, estimating a global average of 24.0 ng g and a total of 4561.3 Mg in these pools.
  • The study identified tropical regions, such as the Amazon and Central Africa, as hotspots for foliar Hg and estimated that annual assimilation ranges from 2268.5 to 2727.0 Mg, contributing to a better understanding of Hg cycling in relation to climate change.
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  • Plant-soil biodiversity interactions are crucial for terrestrial ecosystems, yet it's unclear which specific topsoil microbial and small invertebrate organisms consistently associate with land plants.
  • A field survey of 150 land plant species across 124 locations revealed that these plants only shared less than 1% of the soil organisms, mostly generalist decomposers and phagotrophs, with their presence linked to important functional genes.
  • Environmental factors like aridity, soil pH, and carbon content can significantly disrupt the relationships between land plants and soil organisms, potentially impacting soil ecosystem processes in the face of climate change.
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Soil biodiversity contains the metabolic toolbox supporting organic matter decomposition and nutrient cycling in the soil. However, as soil develops over millions of years, the buildup of plant cover, soil carbon and microbial biomass may relax the dependence of soil functions on soil biodiversity. To test this hypothesis, we evaluate the within-site soil biodiversity and function relationships across 87 globally distributed ecosystems ranging in soil age from centuries to millennia.

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  • Paddy fields are identified as crucial sites for microbial denitrification, which often occurs alongside the oxidation of methane under low-oxygen conditions.
  • A large field study in China and laboratory experiments show that aerobic methane oxidation significantly supports denitrification processes, revealing a positive correlation between these activities across different climates.
  • The research uncovers over 70 microbial types involved in these processes and highlights the role of organic compounds produced during methane oxidation in facilitating denitrification, emphasizing its relevance for agricultural nitrogen management and greenhouse gas emission control.
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  • The study investigates how certain soil microbes contribute to the formation of the neurotoxin methylmercury (MeHg) in rice, emphasizing the complexity of microbial communities in predicting MeHg accumulation.
  • Researchers identified Geobacteraceae as crucial indicators of MeHg bioaccumulation in paddy soils, highlighting their influence over other factors like mercury input.
  • By modeling the biogeochemical processes in rice paddies, findings suggest that small changes in Geobacteraceae abundance significantly affect MeHg levels, paving the way for improved strategies to reduce health risks from contaminated rice.
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The neurotoxic methylmercury (MeHg) is a product of inorganic mercury (IHg) after microbial transformation. Yet it remains unclear whether microbial activity or IHg supply dominates Hg methylation in paddies, hotspots of MeHg formation. Here, we quantified the response of MeHg production to changes in microbial activity and Hg supply using 63 paddy soils under the common scenario of straw amendment, a globally prevalent agricultural practice.

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Soils is a crucial reservoir influencing mercury (Hg) emissions and soil-air exchange dynamics, partially modulated by microbial reducers aiding Hg reduction. Yet, the extent to which microbial engagements contribute to soil Hg volatilization remains largely unknown. Here, we characterized Hg-reducing bacterial communities in natural and anthropogenically perturbed soil environments and quantified their contribution to soil Hg(0) volatilization.

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  • ELABELA (ELA) is an endogenous ligand for the AT1-related receptor protein (APJ), playing a critical role in human embryonic, cardiac, and renal tissues.
  • It is involved in various biological processes like embryonic development, regulating blood circulation, and maintaining fluid balance in the body.
  • ELA's connection to diseases such as acute kidney injury and diabetic nephropathy highlights its potential as a target for developing new treatments for kidney-related conditions.
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The neurotoxic methylmercury (MeHg) in paddy soils can accumulate in rice grains. Microbial demethylation is an important pathway of MeHg degradation in soil, but the effect of soil type on microbial degradation of MeHg remains unclear. Therefore, we investigated MeHg degradation in eight typical paddy soils and analyzed the associations between soil physiochemical properties and microbial degradation efficiencies of MeHg.

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Soil stores a large amount of mercury (Hg) that has adverse effects on human health and ecosystem safety. Significant uncertainties still exist in revealing environmental drivers of soil Hg accumulation and predicting global Hg distribution owing to the lack of field data from global standardized analyses. Here, we conducted a global standardized field survey and explored a holistic understanding of the multidimensional environmental drivers of Hg accumulation in global surface soils.

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Soil microbial communities have resistance to environmental stresses and thus can maintain ecosystem functions such as decomposition, nutrient provisioning, and plant pathogen control. However, predominant factors driving community resistance of soil microbiome to heavy metal pollution stresses and ecosystem functional stability are still unclear, limiting our ability to forecast how soil pollution might affect ecosystem sustainability. Here, we conducted microcosm experiments to estimate the importance of soil microbiome in predicting community resistance to heavy metal mercury (Hg) stress in paired paddy and upland fields.

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Microplastics (MPs) as emerging contaminants have accumulated extensively in agricultural ecosystems and are known to exert important effects on biogeochemical processes. However, how MPs in paddy soils influence the conversion of mercury (Hg) to neurotoxic methylmercury (MeHg) remains poorly understood. Here, we evaluated the effects of MPs on Hg methylation and associated microbial communities in microcosms using two typical paddy soils in China (i.

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Microbial residues contribute to the long-term stabilization of carbon in the entire soil profile, helping to regulate the climate of the planet; however, how sensitive these residues are to climatic seasonality remains virtually unknown, especially for deep soils across environmental gradients. Here, we investigated the changes of microbial residues along soil profiles (0-100 cm) from 44 typical ecosystems with a wide range of climates (~3100 km transects across China). Our results showed that microbial residues account for a larger portion of soil carbon in deeper (60-100 cm) vs.

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Increasing the number of environmental stressors could decrease ecosystem functioning in soils. Yet this relationship has never been globally assessed outside laboratory experiments. Here, using two independent global standardized field surveys, and a range of natural and human factors, we test the relationship between the number of environmental stressors exceeding different critical thresholds and the maintenance of multiple ecosystem services across biomes.

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Sulfur has a high affinity for mercury (Hg) and can serve as effective treating agent for Hg pollution. However, conflict effects between reducing Hg mobility and promoting Hg methylation by sulfur were found in recent studies, and there is a gap in understanding the potential mechanism of MeHg production under different sulfur-treated species and doses. Here, we investigated and compared the MeHg production in Hg-contaminated paddy soil and its accumulation in rice under elemental sulfur or sulfate treatment at a relatively low (500 mg·kg) or high (1000 mg·kg) level.

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Methylmercury (MeHg) is a potent neurotoxin and has great adverse health impacts on humans. Organisms and sunlight-mediated demethylation are well-known detoxification pathways of MeHg, yet whether abiotic environmental components contribute to MeHg degradation remains poorly known. Here, we report that MeHg can be degraded by trivalent manganese (Mn(III)), a naturally occurring and widespread oxidant.

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Soil contamination is one of the main threats to ecosystem health and sustainability. Yet little is known about the extent to which soil contaminants differ between urban greenspaces and natural ecosystems. Here we show that urban greenspaces and adjacent natural areas (i.

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Biochar amendment is one of the most promising agricultural approaches to tackle climate change by enhancing soil carbon (C) sequestration. Microbial-mediated decomposition processes are fundamental for the fate and persistence of sequestered C in soil, but the underlying mechanisms are uncertain. Here, we synthesise 923 observations regarding the effects of biochar addition (over periods ranging from several weeks to several years) on soil C-degrading enzyme activities from 130 articles across five continents worldwide.

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