722 research outputs found
The Effect of Calcium and Phosphorous on Growth, Feed Efficiency, Mineral Content and Body Composition of Brown Marbled Grouper (Epinephelus Fuscoguttatus) Juvenile
The objectives of this study were to know concentration of calcium (Ca) and posphorus (P) in feed for growth, feed efficiency, proximate composition of the body and mineral content of brown marbled grouper juvenile. The study was conducted in the Center for Brackiswater Aquaculture Development, Takalar with randomized completed design 6 x 3 with the treatment of Ca and P supplement in feed i.e., (A) the supplement of 0 g/kg Ca and 0 g/kg P, (B) the supplement of 6 g/kg Ca and 0 g/kg P, (C) the supplement of 0 g/kg Ca and 6 g/kg P, (D) the supplement of 6 g/kg Ca and 6 g/kg P, (E) the supplement of 12 g/kg Ca and 6 g/kg P, and (F) the supplement of 18 g/kg Ca and 6 g/kg P. The result showed that P supplement with doses of 6 g/kg and Ca of 0 g/kg in feed are significantly affects on relative growth, feed efficiency, proximate composition and mineral content of brown marbled grouper juvenile
Beneficial Metabolic Effects of 2′,3′,5′-tri-acetyl-N6- (3-Hydroxylaniline) Adenosine in the Liver and Plasma of Hyperlipidemic Hamsters
BACKGROUND: Pharmaceutical research of hyperlipidemia has been commonly pursued using traditional approaches. However, unbiased metabonomics attempts to explore the metabolic signature of hyperlipidemia in a high-throughput manner to understand pathophysiology of the disease process. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: As a new way, we performed (1)H NMR-based metabonomics to evaluate the beneficial effects of 2',3',5'-tri-acetyl-N(6)- (3-hydroxylaniline) adenosine (WS070117) on plasma and liver from hyperlipidemic Syrian golden hamsters. Both plasma and liver profiles provided a clearer distinction between the control and hyperlipidemic hamsters. Compared to control animals, hyperlipidemic hamsters showed a higher content of lipids (triglyceride and cholesterol), lactate and alanine together with a lower content of choline-containing compounds (e.g., phosphocholine, phosphatidylcholine, and glycerophosphocholine) and betaine. As a result, metabonomics-based findings such as the PCA and OPLS-DA plotting of metabolic state and analysis of potential biomarkers in plasma and liver correlated well to the assessment of biochemical assays, Oil Red O staining and in vivo ultrasonographic imaging suggesting that WS070117 was able to regulate lipid content and displayed more beneficial effects on plasma and liver than simvastatin. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This work demonstrates the promise of applying (1)H NMR metabonomics to evaluate the beneficial effects of WS070117 which may be a good drug candidate for hyperlipidemia
Spatial Autoregressive Coding for Graph Neural Recommendation
Graph embedding methods including traditional shallow models and deep Graph
Neural Networks (GNNs) have led to promising applications in recommendation.
Nevertheless, shallow models especially random-walk-based algorithms fail to
adequately exploit neighbor proximity in sampled subgraphs or sequences due to
their optimization paradigm. GNN-based algorithms suffer from the insufficient
utilization of high-order information and easily cause over-smoothing problems
when stacking too much layers, which may deteriorate the recommendations of
low-degree (long-tail) items, limiting the expressiveness and scalability. In
this paper, we propose a novel framework SAC, namely Spatial Autoregressive
Coding, to solve the above problems in a unified way. To adequately leverage
neighbor proximity and high-order information, we design a novel spatial
autoregressive paradigm. Specifically, we first randomly mask multi-hop
neighbors and embed the target node by integrating all other surrounding
neighbors with an explicit multi-hop attention. Then we reinforce the model to
learn a neighbor-predictive coding for the target node by contrasting the
coding and the masked neighbors' embedding, equipped with a new hard negative
sampling strategy. To learn the minimal sufficient representation for the
target-to-neighbor prediction task and remove the redundancy of neighbors, we
devise Neighbor Information Bottleneck by maximizing the mutual information
between target predictive coding and the masked neighbors' embedding, and
simultaneously constraining those between the coding and surrounding neighbors'
embedding. Experimental results on both public recommendation datasets and a
real scenario web-scale dataset Douyin-Friend-Recommendation demonstrate the
superiority of SAC compared with state-of-the-art methods.Comment: preprin
Sterological analysis of podocyte mitochondria in adriamycin nephropathy rats
Objective: To disclose the relationship between mitochondrial morphology, density and pro-teinuria in adriamycin nephropathy rats. Method: Thirty Sprague Dawley rats of clean grade were divided into adriamycin group and control group. In adriamycin nephropathy group, rats were given adriamycin at dosage of 0.7 mg /100 g body weight by tail vein injection. The control rats received equal volume of sa-line. At 2 weeks (control group = 3, adriamycin group = 3) , 4 weeks (control = 3, adriamycin group =6) and 6 weeks (control = 8, adriamycin group = 7) after adriamycin injection, the rats were sacrificed and kidneys were harvested for preparation of ultra-thin sections. Electron microscopy was performed, and podocyte mitochondrial morphology was observed. Sterological analysis was performed on morphology and density of mitochondria in podocytes. Results: 4 weeks after adriamycin injection, the rats developed proteinuria until 6 weeks. Mitochondria in the podocytes from control rats showed ellipsoid shape. Differ-ent shaped and sized mitochondria were observed in podocytes of the adriamycin nephropathy rats. No sig-nificant statistical difference was revealed in the mitochondrial area, circumference, form factor and aspect ratio between adriamycin and control groups. Before development of proteinuria, the mitochondrial density increased significantly at 2 weeks after adriamycin injection compared with that in control rats (0.17±0.00 vs. 0.14±0.01, t = 6.173, P < 0.01). Meanwhile, the surface density of mitochondria showed an increasing trend (0.78±0.03 vs. 0.71±0.04, t =-2.526, P = 0.065). 6 weeks after adriamycin injection, the surface density of mitochondria decreased significantly compared with that in the control rats (0.71±0.11 vs. 0.87±0.12, P = 0.02) , the density of mitochondria did not change significantly. Conclusions Dysmorphic mitochondria are involved in the development of proteinuria in adriamycin ne-phropathy. The increase of mitochondrial density is an early event in the development of proteinuria. De-crease of mitochondria surface density is involved in podocyte injury and development of adriamycin ne-phropathy rats
Exploration of the Protection of Riboflavin Laurate on Oral Mucositis Induced by Chemotherapy or Radiotherapy at the Cellular Level: What Is the Leading Contributor?
Oral or gastrointestinal mucositis is a frequent phenomenon in cancer patients receiving chemotherapy or radiotherapy. In addition, several clinical investigations have demonstrated in recent years that riboflavin laurate has the potential to protect the patients from the disease induced by chemotherapy or radiotherapy. In our studies, it is observed that riboflavin laurate can ameliorate either chemotherapy- or radiotherapy-induced toxicities on Helf cells, and the effect is greater than that of riboflavin. In addition, riboflavin laurate is able to transport through the Caco-2 cell monolayer as the prototype, indicating the protective effects may be produced by the prototype of riboflavin laurate, rather than simply by the released riboflavin
Pan-Cancer Analysis of lncRNA Regulation Supports Their Targeting of Cancer Genes in Each Tumor Context
Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) are commonly dys-regulated in tumors, but only a handful are known toplay pathophysiological roles in cancer. We inferredlncRNAs that dysregulate cancer pathways, onco-genes, and tumor suppressors (cancer genes) bymodeling their effects on the activity of transcriptionfactors, RNA-binding proteins, and microRNAs in5,185 TCGA tumors and 1,019 ENCODE assays.Our predictions included hundreds of candidateonco- and tumor-suppressor lncRNAs (cancerlncRNAs) whose somatic alterations account for thedysregulation of dozens of cancer genes and path-ways in each of 14 tumor contexts. To demonstrateproof of concept, we showed that perturbations tar-geting OIP5-AS1 (an inferred tumor suppressor) andTUG1 and WT1-AS (inferred onco-lncRNAs) dysre-gulated cancer genes and altered proliferation ofbreast and gynecologic cancer cells. Our analysis in-dicates that, although most lncRNAs are dysregu-lated in a tumor-specific manner, some, includingOIP5-AS1, TUG1, NEAT1, MEG3, and TSIX, synergis-tically dysregulate cancer pathways in multiple tumorcontexts
County development and sustainability in China: a systematic scoping of the literature
Despite the importance of research and innovation in facilitating sustainable county development in China, little evidence is available concerning the output and characteristics of that research. This scoping review assesses key features or characteristics of the research output, the extent to which researchers engage with concepts of sustainability and the potential impact of the research. Publications were identified and classified using a process consistent with Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA). The R programming packages igraph and wordcloud respectively were used to analyse and graphically depict the strength of authorship networks and keyword frequency. Findings revealed that this field of research is an evolving one with a widely-dispersed network of researchers increasingly using new keywords. The implications of the review findings for improving the value and impact of sustainable county development research are explored
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