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Yu Haifeng Group in the School of Materials Science and Engineering has made progress in liquid crystal block copolymers
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
The use of liquid crystal block copolymers realizes the efficient and high-density flexible storage of solar thermal dye cellsThe results of the research group were selected as the inner cover of Chemistry of Materials1)Cai, Feng; Yang, Bowen; Lv, Xuande; Feng, Wei*; and Yu, Haifeng*.
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Science Sub-Journal: Another important function of gut bacteria? Causes rheumatoid arthritis
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
abn5166 Researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine have found that a unique bacterium found in the gut may be responsible for triggering rheumatoid arthritis (RA), an autoimmune disease that is inherently at risk.
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New clues to the cause of high cholesterol genes
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
100155 A new study by geneticists at the University of Pittsburgh's School of Public Health, in collaboration with other groups such as the University of Otago and the Samoa Health Research Group, shows that a genetic variant is relatively common in people of Polynesian ancestry but extremely rare in most other populations, providing clues to the genetic basis of high cholesterol in all people.
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Science offers new insights into how plants rely on calcium waves to respond systematically to injury and other stresses
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Previous hypotheses explaining how calcium waves pass through plant cells involve the active mechanism of calcium signaling propagation.
Previous hypotheses explaining how calcium waves pass through plant cells involve the active mechanism of calcium signaling propagation.
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Control of the intestinal flora can reduce mortality in critically ill patients
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Effect of selective decontamination of the digestive tract on hospital mortality in critically ill patients receiving mechanical ventilation New research suggests that preventing severe lung infections in mechanically ventilated intensive care patients with topical antibiotics to the upper gastrointestinal tract significantly improves clinical survival.
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Aquatic organisms reveal the positive effects of submerged plant diversity on ecosystem function under eutrophication pressure
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Based on the Dali Erhai Sea, the research team of Cao Te, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, through extensive investigation of submerged vegetation in lakes, reservoirs and other natural water bodies in Yunnan, combined with multi-angle diversity indices (species diversity, functional diversity (FD) and β diversity) revealed that submerged plant biodiversity can buffer the pressure of eutrophication on ecosystem functions.
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Chinese scholars and overseas collaborators have made progress in using Zn isotopes to trace the earth's deep carbon cycle
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
This carbonated peridotite is eventually carried by the rising mantle plume to the shallow upper mantle and melts, and the resulting magma erupts the surface to form the HIMU type OIB.
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Progress has been made in the zoning of groundwater resilience in the inland river basin of the arid region of Xinjiang
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
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"It just sounds wrong" — new research sheds light on how our brains tell us when sounds are turned off
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
A team of neuroscientists recently discovered how the brain distinguishes between "right" and "wrong" sounds, and this research provides a deeper understanding of how we learn complex auditory-motor tasks like speaking or playing music.
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The journal Nature published the important research results of Professor Jiang Changtao's team
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
1038/s41586-022-05299-4On October 20, 2022, the international academic journal Nature published the team of Professor Jiang Changtao, School of Basic Medicine of Peking University Health Science Center and Institute of Medical Innovation, Peking University Third Hospital and co-author research paper "Gut bacteria alleviate smoking-related NASH by degrading gut nicotine".
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A unique set of hearing-restoring proteins, transcription factors, support hearing cell regeneration
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
References:A regulatory network of Sox and Six transcription factors initiate a cell fate transformation during hearing regeneration in adult zebrafish Researchers at the National Institutes of Health have identified a special protein network necessary for zebrafish cells to regenerate and restore hearing.
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Use one type of immune cell to target another
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Researchers at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York say a new cancer immunotherapy that uses one immune cell to kill another cell, rather than directly attacking cancer, will stimulate a powerful anti-tumor immune response to shrink ovarian, lung and pancreatic tumors in preclinical disease models.
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Hemophilia: Train the immune system to be tolerant
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Professor Christian Kurts, Director of IMMEI, explains: "Our experiment allowed us to detect for the first time regulatory T cells, which can only activate this self-destruct button in very specific B cells to specifically prevent unwanted immune responses.
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The relationship between octopuses and shellfish
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
”Gene recruitments and dismissals in the argonaut genome provide insights into pelagic lifestyle adaptation and shell-like egg case reacquisition
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Synthetic genetic circuits reprogram plant root systems
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
This research developed new genetic circuits that allow precise control of root structures.
This research developed new genetic circuits that allow precise control of root structures.
This research developed new genetic circuits that allow precise control of root structures.
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Researchers at the University of Kentucky have created new cancer-fighting compounds
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Image credit: University of KentuckyA team of researchers at the University of Kentucky's Markey Cancer Center has developed a new compound that promises to be a potential anti-cancer therapy to treat aggressive tumors.
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Mass inactivation allows scientists to discover this human "mysterious gene" for the first time
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Reference: Actin maturation requires the ACTMAP/C19orf54 protease Before a protein can be completely "finished" — or, as the researchers describe it in Science, before it matures — and can fully perform its function in the cell, it must usually be stripped of a specific amino acid.
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Progress has been made in the study of the effects of different irrigation methods on cotton rhizosphere microbiota and soil function in Xinjiang Habitat
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
In view of the above problems, the team of researcher Tian Changyan of Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences based on field experiments, using 16S rRNA amplification sequencing technology and co-occurrence network analysis method, explored the effects of different irrigation methods on cotton rhizosphere microbial communities and their potential functions.
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The time required for CAR-T cell production is shortened
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
" Researchers at Cleveland-University Hospital Seidman Cancer Center and a biotech startup have developed a simplified method to produce CAR-T cells for immunotherapy in 24 hours, an improvement over the team's previous standard 8 days and the 3 weeks typically taken by commercial vendors.
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PNAS: Looks inside the brain while sleeping, deciphering how memories are stored
Time of Update: 2022-10-31
Article Electrophysiological Markers of Memory Consolidation in the Human Brain When Memories are Reactivated during Sleep Fig. 4 MRI scan showing the location of intratemporal electrodes in the sagittal and coronal planes of typical patients (P1).