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The latest paper from Xiamen University: A new mechanism of adaptive thermogenesis mediated by beige adipose tissue under long-term cold stimulation
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
Paper link: class="vsbcontent_end" _msthash="101744" _msttexthash="978393">(Photo/text Li Boan's research group) Adaptive thermogenesis is a metabolic thermogenic mechanism of the body to external stimuli, which plays an important role in regulating energy homeostasis and is essential for maintaining body temperature and promoting the survival of animals in cold environments.
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Wang Hongwei and his collaborators jointly developed a new functional graphene for improving the advantage orientation of cryo-EM
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
In response to these problems, Wang Hongwei's research group, Rao Liao's research group and Peking University Peng Hailin's group jointly developed a new functional graphene electron microscope carrier network, which can help solve the problems of sample particle advantage orientation and gas-liquid interface.
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THE JIN LAB PUBLISHED A PAPER AT MICROORGANISMS
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
3390/microorganisms10102056Published: OCT 2022Document type: ArticleAttachment: Full text link :Screening of Bacteria Inhibiting Clostridium perfringens and Assessment of Their Beneficial Effects In Vitro and In Vivo with Whole Genome Sequencing Analysis( IF=5.
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Tang Hongzhi's research group of Shanghai Jiaotong University reviewed the theory of microbiome engineering and its application and prospect in the field of environment
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
The collaborative review "Guided by the principles of microbiome engineering: Accomplishments and perspectives for environmental use" by Professor Tang Hongzhi of Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Associate Professor Nie Yong of Peking University was officially launched on mLife on November 3, 2022 。 This review was jointly completed by young scholars from Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Peking University and ETH Zurich, and supported by Professor Wu Xiaolei of Peking University.
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Nature: Identification of cells associated with colon cancer recurrence
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
Scientists at IRB Barcelona, led by ICREA researcher and CIBER Network (CIBERONC) group leader Dr. Eduard Batlle, have for the first time identified residual tumor cells hidden in the liver and lungs and described how they evolved to cause metastasis in these organs.
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Qin Li's research group from the School of Environment reveals the long-range coupling mechanism of global snowmelt dependence and climate risk in irrigated agriculture
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
As a preliminary work on this achievement, Qin Li published a cover article in Nature Climate Change in 2020 revealing the historical dependence of global irrigated agriculture on snowmelt runoff and the immediate potential risks faced by climate change.
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Scientists discovered an unexpected gene in nematodes that challenged the theory of nuclear structure
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
elegans homologs of Nucleolin and GAR1 contribute to sub-nucleolar phase separation The left panel is a super-resolution image of the nucleoli of a live wild-type Caenorhabditis elegans, showing the good tissue structure of the internal condensate.
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The differences between the brains of primates — humans, apes and monkeys — are small but significant
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
A new study recently published in the journal Science by Andre Sousa, a professor of neuroscience at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, looked at similarities and differences between prefrontal cortex cells in humans and non-human primates such as chimpanzees, rhesus monkeys and velvet monkeys.
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The "silent killer" – COVID-19 affects the brain in a similar way to dementia
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
The University of Queensland research team was led by Professor Trent Woodruff and Dr Eduardo Albornoz Balmaceda from the University of Queensland's School of Biomedical Sciences and virologists from the School of Chemical and Molecular Biosciences.
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The "silent killer" – COVID-19 affects the brain in a similar way to dementia
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
The University of Queensland research team was led by Professor Trent Woodruff and Dr Eduardo Albornoz Balmaceda from the University of Queensland's School of Biomedical Sciences and virologists from the School of Chemical and Molecular Biosciences.
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Yale University found that fruit flies can smell the movement of odors and use them to navigate
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
Odour motion sensing enhances navigation of complex plumes In a new study, researchers at Yale University genetically modified the tentacles of fruit flies to detect light and then observed how the flies responded to changes in the fictitious light odor packets.
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Yale University found that fruit flies can smell the movement of odors and use them to navigate
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
Odour motion sensing enhances navigation of complex plumes In a new study, researchers at Yale University genetically modified the tentacles of fruit flies to detect light and then observed how the flies responded to changes in the fictitious light odor packets.
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PENG JINRONG'S LAB AT BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICA...
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
032Published: OCT 1 2022Document type: ArticleAttachment: Full text link :An 86 amino acids motif in CAPN3 is essential for formation of the nucleolus-localized Def-CAPN3 complex(IF=3.
032Published: OCT 1 2022Document type: ArticleAttachment: Full text link :An 86 amino acids motif in CAPN3 is essential for formation of the nucleolus-localized Def-CAPN3 complex(IF=3.
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Nature's dominoes of hormones
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
At the same time, during directed mutagenesis, we change the structure of the protein, which means that we exclude three functional amino acids in one sequence or in one group, which completely takes away the activity of the studied adenylate cyclase.
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DNA barcoding reveals the ability of cancer cells to evade immune system defenses
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
According to a new scientific study from the Gavin Institute for Medical Research, some cancer cells can use parallel mechanisms to circumvent the immune system's defenses and resist immunotherapy treatments.
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A new way to measure bone movement without X-rays
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
Now the Department of Behavior and Brain Organization at the Max Planck Institute for Behavioral Neurobiology in Bonn, Germany, has developed a video-based method to 3D track bones at the resolution of individual joints when not being tethered to their environment.
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A new way to measure bone movement without X-rays
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
Now the Department of Behavior and Brain Organization at the Max Planck Institute for Behavioral Neurobiology in Bonn, Germany, has developed a video-based method to 3D track bones at the resolution of individual joints when not being tethered to their environment.
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The latest research in the South China Botanical Garden shows that convergent evolution at the gene level promotes convergent evolution in plant morphology
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
The research team of Zhang Dianxiang of the South China Botanical Garden of the Chinese Academy of Sciences took Gelsemium elegans as the research object, combined with genomics, morphology, reproductive biology and other multiple methods, and identified the supergene (S-locus) that controls the development of type II flower column in hook kiss supergene) and its 4 constituent genes, and systematically elucidating its genetic structure and evolution.
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Guangzhou Health Center has made progress in the research of antibody immune response in the new coronavirus escaping population
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
The study found a human neutralizing antibody R1-32 that targets the viral protein receptor binding domain (RBD) semi-hidden epitope and has a high affinity, mainly Prevents the virus from entering the cell by breaking open the spike protein and disintegrating it; Analysis of the antibody panel library showed that R1-32-like antibodies encoded by IGHV1-69 were widely induced in people infected with the new crown.
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Personalized genome sequencing doubles the rate of diagnosis of rare diseases
Time of Update: 2023-01-06
1038/s41467-022-32908-7 Researchers at University College London (UCL) recently published an article in the journal Nature Communications that tailoring whole genome sequencing analysis to individual patients can double the diagnostic rate of rare diseases.