7 results match your criteria: "Lu Dong University[Affiliation]"

Responses of the structure and function of microbes in Yellow River Estuary sediments to different levels of mercury.

Mar Environ Res

September 2023

Institute for Advanced Study of Coastal Ecology, Lu Dong University, Yantai, 264025, China. Electronic address:

Article Synopsis
  • The Yellow River estuary ecosystem is facing challenges from heavy metal pollution, especially mercury, which impacts microbial health and function.
  • Researchers collected sediment samples to analyze microbial communities, mercury levels, and other environmental factors like pH and organic carbon content.
  • Findings showed that higher mercury levels correlated with reduced microbial diversity and specific gene functions related to metabolism and mercury resistance, helping to understand how these communities respond to contamination.
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Purpose: To measure motor function improvements in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) using Health Qigong exercises.

Patients And Methods: Fifty-two PD patients (Hoehn and Yahr stages I to IV) were randomly divided into experimental and control groups. Twenty-six PD patients in the experimental group were intervened with routine medicine and fitness Qigong exercise.

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The binding epitope of sintilimab on PD-1 revealed by AbMap.

Acta Biochim Biophys Sin (Shanghai)

April 2021

Key Laboratory of Systems Biomedicine (Ministry of Education), Shanghai Center for Systems Biomedicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 200240, China.

PD-1 plays an important role as an immune checkpoint. Sintilimab is a newly approved PD-1 antibody for cancer immunotherapy with an unknown binding epitope on PD-1. In this study, to elucidate the molecular mechanism by which sintilimab blocks PD-1 activation, we applied Antibody binding epitope Mapping (AbMap) to identify the binding epitope of sintilimab.

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Antibody Binding Epitope Mapping (AbMap) of Hundred Antibodies in a Single Run.

Mol Cell Proteomics

January 2022

Key Laboratory of Systems Biomedicine (Ministry of Education), Shanghai Center for Systems Biomedicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China; State Key Laboratory for Oncogenes, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai, China. Electronic address:

Antibodies play essential roles in both diagnostics and therapeutics. Epitope mapping is essential to understand how an antibody works and to protect intellectual property. Given the millions of antibodies for which epitope information is lacking, there is a need for high-throughput epitope mapping.

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Identification of protein complexes and functional modules in E. coli PPI networks.

BMC Microbiol

August 2020

Research Center for Intelligence Information Technology, Nantong University, Nantong, 226019, Jiangsu, China.

Background: Escherichia coli always plays an important role in microbial research, and it has been a benchmark model for the study of molecular mechanisms of microorganisms. Molecular complexes, operons, and functional modules are valuable molecular functional domains of E. coli.

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Functional identification of Ammopiptanthus mongolicus anion channel AmSLAC1 involved in drought induced stomata closure.

Plant Physiol Biochem

October 2019

College of Forestry, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, 210037, China; Co-Innovation Center for the Sustainable Forestry in Southern China, Nanjing Forest University, Nanjing, 210037, China. Electronic address:

Drought, one of the most acute abiotic stressors plants encountered, can adversely affect plants growth and development. The fast adjustment of stomatal aperture is necessary for effective drought tolerance in plants. Anion channels were identified as important controllers of stomatal closing via mediating anion efflux.

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Here we report a homologue of the apolipoprotein D gene (AmphiApoD) in amphioxus, Branchiostoma belcheri tsingtauense, the first such finding in a basal chordate cephalochordate. The main features of the protein predicted from AmphiApoD are characteristic of the apolipoprotein D. Phylogenetic analysis places AmphiApoD at the base of the phylogenetic tree, suggesting that AmphiApoD is the archetype of the vertebrate ApoD genes.

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