139 research outputs found
A High-Strength Neuromuscular System That Implements Reflexes as Controlled by a Multiquadrant Artificial Efferent Nerve
We demonstrate an artificial efferent nerve that distinguishes
environment-responsive conditioned and unconditioned reflexes, i.e.,
hand-retraction reflex and muscle memory, respectively. These reflex
modes are immediately switchable by altering the polarity of charge
carriers in a parallel-channeled artificial synapse; this ability
emulates multiplexed neurotransmission of different neurotransmitters
to form glutamine-induced short-term plasticity and acetylcholine-induced
long-term plasticity. This is the successful control of high-strength
artificial muscle fibers by using an artificial efferent nerve to
form a neuromuscular system that can realize curvature and force simultaneously
and in which all these aspects far surpass currently available neuromuscular
systems. Furthermore, the special four-quadrant information-processing
mechanism of our artificial efferent nerve allows complex application
extensions, i.e., relative-position tracking of sound sources, immediate
switchable learning modes between fast information processing and
long-term memory, and high-accuracy pattern cognition. This work is
a step toward development of human-compatible artificial neuromuscular
systems
Coke-Resistant Ni–Co/ZrO<sub>2</sub>–CaO-Based Microwave Catalyst for Highly Effective Dry Reforming of Methane by Microwave Catalysis
The dry reforming of methane (DRM)
reaction is an attractive approach
to convert two greenhouse gases into valuable syngas. However, the
DRM reaction remains a great challenge due to catalyst deactivation
caused by coke formation. Herein, we reported a new method for a highly
efficient DRM reaction by microwave catalysis and developed a novel
Ni-Co/ZrO2-CaO-based microwave catalyst. Importantly, the
CH4 conversion and CO2 conversion for Ni-Co/ZrO2-CaO + SiC in microwave catalytic reaction mode (MCRM) are
highly up to 97.1 and 99.2%, respectively, at 800 °C. Comparatively,
under identical reaction conditions in conventional reaction mode
(CRM), the CH4 conversion and CO2 conversion
is only 75.7 and 82%. Ni-Co/ZrO2-CaO + SiC catalyst showed
favorable stability at 800 °C in the MCRM during the DRM reaction
for 30 h. More importantly, it is found that microwave irradiation
significantly reduced the coke formation compared with the CRM. Interestingly,
microwave irradiation can accelerate the elimination of coke by dramatically
speeding up the reaction between C and CO2, which exhibits
a significant microwave selective catalytic effect. In addition, microwave
radiation shows the direct catalytic effect of the microwave, which
can reduce the apparent activation energy of the DRM reaction. Our
work provides an innovative approach for the DRM reaction and thus
opens a novel avenue to solve the coke formation in the DRM reaction
Table2_Mutations Status of Chemokine Signaling Pathway Predict Prognosis of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors in Colon Adenocarcinoma.XLSX
In recent years, tumor immunotherapy has become an important treatment program and popular research focus. However, the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) in the treatment of colorectal cancer still has limitations due to the current markers only being able to predict the prognosis of a small number of patients. As the chemokine signaling pathway can promote the anti-tumor response of the immune system by recruiting immune cells, we explored the relationship between mutations in the chemokine signaling pathway and the prognosis of colon adenocarcinoma (COAD) patients receiving ICI treatment. To analyze the relationship between chemokine mutation status and the prognosis of patients receiving ICI treatment, clinical and mutation data, with immunotherapy, for a COAD cohort was obtained from “cbioportal.” Then, combining this with COAD cohort data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database, the panorama of gene mutation, immunogenicity, and difference in tumor microenvironment (TME) of chemokine pathways with different mutation statuses were analyzed. High-mut status has been proved to be a prognostic indicator of COAD patients receiving ICI treatment by Univariate and Multivariate Cox regression analysis. CIBERSORT analysis showed that the infiltration degree of M1 macrophages, neutrophils, and activated natural killer (NK) cells was higher in those with high-mut status. Immunogenicity of the high-mut group was also significantly increased, with the mutation number of tumor mutation burden (TMB), neoantigen load (NAL), DNA damage repair (DDR) pathway and microsatellite instability biomarker (MSI-H) being significantly higher. In this study, we found that the mutation state of chemokine pathways is closely associated with the prognosis of COAD patients undergoing ICI treatment. The higher number of TMB, NAL, and DDR mutations and inflammatory TME, may be the mechanism of behind a better prognosis. This discovery provides a possible idea for ICI therapy of COAD.</p
A High-Strength Neuromuscular System That Implements Reflexes as Controlled by a Multiquadrant Artificial Efferent Nerve
We demonstrate an artificial efferent nerve that distinguishes
environment-responsive conditioned and unconditioned reflexes, i.e.,
hand-retraction reflex and muscle memory, respectively. These reflex
modes are immediately switchable by altering the polarity of charge
carriers in a parallel-channeled artificial synapse; this ability
emulates multiplexed neurotransmission of different neurotransmitters
to form glutamine-induced short-term plasticity and acetylcholine-induced
long-term plasticity. This is the successful control of high-strength
artificial muscle fibers by using an artificial efferent nerve to
form a neuromuscular system that can realize curvature and force simultaneously
and in which all these aspects far surpass currently available neuromuscular
systems. Furthermore, the special four-quadrant information-processing
mechanism of our artificial efferent nerve allows complex application
extensions, i.e., relative-position tracking of sound sources, immediate
switchable learning modes between fast information processing and
long-term memory, and high-accuracy pattern cognition. This work is
a step toward development of human-compatible artificial neuromuscular
systems
A High-Strength Neuromuscular System That Implements Reflexes as Controlled by a Multiquadrant Artificial Efferent Nerve
We demonstrate an artificial efferent nerve that distinguishes
environment-responsive conditioned and unconditioned reflexes, i.e.,
hand-retraction reflex and muscle memory, respectively. These reflex
modes are immediately switchable by altering the polarity of charge
carriers in a parallel-channeled artificial synapse; this ability
emulates multiplexed neurotransmission of different neurotransmitters
to form glutamine-induced short-term plasticity and acetylcholine-induced
long-term plasticity. This is the successful control of high-strength
artificial muscle fibers by using an artificial efferent nerve to
form a neuromuscular system that can realize curvature and force simultaneously
and in which all these aspects far surpass currently available neuromuscular
systems. Furthermore, the special four-quadrant information-processing
mechanism of our artificial efferent nerve allows complex application
extensions, i.e., relative-position tracking of sound sources, immediate
switchable learning modes between fast information processing and
long-term memory, and high-accuracy pattern cognition. This work is
a step toward development of human-compatible artificial neuromuscular
systems
A High-Strength Neuromuscular System That Implements Reflexes as Controlled by a Multiquadrant Artificial Efferent Nerve
We demonstrate an artificial efferent nerve that distinguishes
environment-responsive conditioned and unconditioned reflexes, i.e.,
hand-retraction reflex and muscle memory, respectively. These reflex
modes are immediately switchable by altering the polarity of charge
carriers in a parallel-channeled artificial synapse; this ability
emulates multiplexed neurotransmission of different neurotransmitters
to form glutamine-induced short-term plasticity and acetylcholine-induced
long-term plasticity. This is the successful control of high-strength
artificial muscle fibers by using an artificial efferent nerve to
form a neuromuscular system that can realize curvature and force simultaneously
and in which all these aspects far surpass currently available neuromuscular
systems. Furthermore, the special four-quadrant information-processing
mechanism of our artificial efferent nerve allows complex application
extensions, i.e., relative-position tracking of sound sources, immediate
switchable learning modes between fast information processing and
long-term memory, and high-accuracy pattern cognition. This work is
a step toward development of human-compatible artificial neuromuscular
systems
A High-Strength Neuromuscular System That Implements Reflexes as Controlled by a Multiquadrant Artificial Efferent Nerve
We demonstrate an artificial efferent nerve that distinguishes
environment-responsive conditioned and unconditioned reflexes, i.e.,
hand-retraction reflex and muscle memory, respectively. These reflex
modes are immediately switchable by altering the polarity of charge
carriers in a parallel-channeled artificial synapse; this ability
emulates multiplexed neurotransmission of different neurotransmitters
to form glutamine-induced short-term plasticity and acetylcholine-induced
long-term plasticity. This is the successful control of high-strength
artificial muscle fibers by using an artificial efferent nerve to
form a neuromuscular system that can realize curvature and force simultaneously
and in which all these aspects far surpass currently available neuromuscular
systems. Furthermore, the special four-quadrant information-processing
mechanism of our artificial efferent nerve allows complex application
extensions, i.e., relative-position tracking of sound sources, immediate
switchable learning modes between fast information processing and
long-term memory, and high-accuracy pattern cognition. This work is
a step toward development of human-compatible artificial neuromuscular
systems
Table1_Mutations Status of Chemokine Signaling Pathway Predict Prognosis of Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors in Colon Adenocarcinoma.XLS
In recent years, tumor immunotherapy has become an important treatment program and popular research focus. However, the use of immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI) in the treatment of colorectal cancer still has limitations due to the current markers only being able to predict the prognosis of a small number of patients. As the chemokine signaling pathway can promote the anti-tumor response of the immune system by recruiting immune cells, we explored the relationship between mutations in the chemokine signaling pathway and the prognosis of colon adenocarcinoma (COAD) patients receiving ICI treatment. To analyze the relationship between chemokine mutation status and the prognosis of patients receiving ICI treatment, clinical and mutation data, with immunotherapy, for a COAD cohort was obtained from “cbioportal.” Then, combining this with COAD cohort data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database, the panorama of gene mutation, immunogenicity, and difference in tumor microenvironment (TME) of chemokine pathways with different mutation statuses were analyzed. High-mut status has been proved to be a prognostic indicator of COAD patients receiving ICI treatment by Univariate and Multivariate Cox regression analysis. CIBERSORT analysis showed that the infiltration degree of M1 macrophages, neutrophils, and activated natural killer (NK) cells was higher in those with high-mut status. Immunogenicity of the high-mut group was also significantly increased, with the mutation number of tumor mutation burden (TMB), neoantigen load (NAL), DNA damage repair (DDR) pathway and microsatellite instability biomarker (MSI-H) being significantly higher. In this study, we found that the mutation state of chemokine pathways is closely associated with the prognosis of COAD patients undergoing ICI treatment. The higher number of TMB, NAL, and DDR mutations and inflammatory TME, may be the mechanism of behind a better prognosis. This discovery provides a possible idea for ICI therapy of COAD.</p
A High-Strength Neuromuscular System That Implements Reflexes as Controlled by a Multiquadrant Artificial Efferent Nerve
We demonstrate an artificial efferent nerve that distinguishes
environment-responsive conditioned and unconditioned reflexes, i.e.,
hand-retraction reflex and muscle memory, respectively. These reflex
modes are immediately switchable by altering the polarity of charge
carriers in a parallel-channeled artificial synapse; this ability
emulates multiplexed neurotransmission of different neurotransmitters
to form glutamine-induced short-term plasticity and acetylcholine-induced
long-term plasticity. This is the successful control of high-strength
artificial muscle fibers by using an artificial efferent nerve to
form a neuromuscular system that can realize curvature and force simultaneously
and in which all these aspects far surpass currently available neuromuscular
systems. Furthermore, the special four-quadrant information-processing
mechanism of our artificial efferent nerve allows complex application
extensions, i.e., relative-position tracking of sound sources, immediate
switchable learning modes between fast information processing and
long-term memory, and high-accuracy pattern cognition. This work is
a step toward development of human-compatible artificial neuromuscular
systems
Copper-Catalyzed Oxidative Amination of sp<sup>3</sup> C–H Bonds under Air: Synthesis of 1,3-Diarylated Imidazo[1,5‑<i>a</i>]pyridines
A copperÂ(II)-catalyzed
tandem reaction between pyridine ketone
and benzylamine was developed by using clean O<sub>2</sub> as an oxidant.
This transformation proceeded via an efficient condensation–amination–oxidative
dehydrogenation process, affording 1,3-diarylated imidazoÂ[1,5-<i>a</i>]Âpyridines in excellent yields
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