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1.
Arch Med Sci ; 19(5): 1270-1280, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37732066

ABSTRACT

Introduction: The present study aimed to investigate the differences in the proteomic expression between uncomplicated parapneumonic pleural effusion (UPPE) and complicated parapneumonic pleural effusion (CPPE). Material and methods: There were 10 patients with UPPE and 10 patients with CPPE. These patients were combined due to the complication of pleural effusion and further divided into group A and group B. An LC-MS analysis was conducted with the extraction of high-abundance proteins, and proteins with 1.5-fold or higher difference multiples were identified as differential proteins. Then, gene ontology (GO) and KEGG analyses were conducted on the differential proteins between the groups. Results: Compared with the UPPE group, there were 38 upregulated proteins and 29 downregulated proteins in the CPPE group. The GO analysis revealed that the CPPE group had enhanced expressions in monosaccharide biosynthesis, glucose catabolism, fructose-6-phosphate glycolysis, glucose-6-phosphate glycolysis, and NADH regeneration as well as reduced expressions in fibrinogen complexes, protein polymerization, and coagulation. Moreover, the KEGG analysis showed that the CPPE group had enhanced expressions in amino acid synthesis, the HIF-1 signalling pathway, and glycolysis/glycoisogenesis and decreased expressions in platelet activation and complement activation. Conclusions: In pleural effusion in patients with CPPE, there are enhanced expressions of proteins concerning glucose and amino acid metabolism, NADH regeneration, and HIF-1 signalling pathways together with decreased expressions of proteins concerning protein polymerization, blood coagulation, platelet activation, and complement activation.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 56(6): 3550-3555, 2017 Mar 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28266848

ABSTRACT

Despite the fact that five kinds of uranium nitrides, i.e., uranium mononitrides (UN, R3̅m and Fm3̅m), a uranium dinitride (UN2, Fm3̅m), and uranium sesquinitrides (α-U2N3, Ia3̅; ß-U2N3,P3̅m1), have been confirmed, until now the phase relations are not well understood because of the puzzling nonstoichiometric issue. This work reinvestigated the crystallographic structures of these phases using cluster formula theory. The principal clusters (cuboctahedron with six squares and eight triangles) in these phases were determined. N atoms can occupy either six octahedral sites (square face centers) or eight tetrahedral sites (formed by a center atom and a triangle) in the principal cluster of 13 U atoms, resulting in these diversified phases and the nonstoichiometric issue. Also, phase transformations at certain temperatures and pressures (from CaF2-type UN2 to Mn2O3-type U2N3, from Mn2O3-type U2N3 to NaCl-type UN, and from NaCl-type UN to HgIn-type UN) were deduced by tracking the bond and angle changes of a simplified cluster [U-U6N6]. This investigation provides an in-depth understanding of the phase relations in a U-N system.

3.
J Exp Child Psychol ; 110(1): 115-24, 2011 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21536307

ABSTRACT

This study examined adults' evaluations of likeability and attractiveness of children's faces from infancy to early childhood. We tested whether Lorenz's baby schema hypothesis (Zeitschrift für Tierpsychologie (1943), Vol. 5, pp. 235-409) is applicable not only to infant faces but also to faces of children at older ages. Adult participants were asked to evaluate children's faces from early infancy to 6 years of age in terms of their likeability and attractiveness, and these judgments were compared with those of adult faces. It was revealed that adults judged faces of younger children as more likeable and attractive than faces of older children, which were in turn judged as more likeable and attractive than adult faces. However, after approximately 4.5 years of age, the baby schema no longer affected adults' judgments of children's facial likeability and attractiveness. These findings suggest that the baby schema affects adults' judgments of not only infant faces but also young children's faces. This influence beyond infancy is likely due to the fact that facial cranial growth is gradual during early childhood and certain crucial infantile facial cues remain readily available during this period. Future studies need to identify these specific cues to better understand why adults generally show positive responses to infantile faces and how such positive responses influence the establishment and maintenance of social relationships between young children and adults.


Subject(s)
Attitude , Child Development , Esthetics , Face , Judgment , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Age Factors , Cephalometry , Child , Child, Preschool , Choice Behavior , Cues , Female , Humans , Infant , Male
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