66 research outputs found

    High-Salt Diet Has a Certain Impact on Protein Digestion and Gut Microbiota: A Sequencing and Proteome Combined Study

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    High-salt diet has been considered to cause health problems, but it is still less known how high-salt diet affects gut microbiota, protein digestion, and passage in the digestive tract. In this study, C57BL/6J mice were fed low- or high-salt diets (0.25 vs. 3.15% NaCl) for 8 weeks, and then gut contents and feces were collected. Fecal microbiota was identified by sequencing the V4 region of 16S ribosomal RNA gene. Proteins and digested products of duodenal, jejunal, cecal, and colonic contents were identified by LC-MS-MS. The results indicated that the high-salt diet increased Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio, the abundances of genera Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcus (P < 0.05), but decreased the abundance of Lactobacillus (P < 0.05). LC-MS-MS revealed a dynamic change of proteins from the diet, host, and gut microbiota alongside the digestive tract. For dietary proteins, high-salt diet seemed not influence its protein digestion and absorption. For host proteins, 20 proteins of lower abundance were identified in the high-salt diet group in duodenal contents, which were involved in digestive enzymes and pancreatic secretion. However, no significant differentially expressed proteins were detected in jejunal, cecal, and colonic contents. For bacterial proteins, proteins secreted by gut microbiota were involved in energy metabolism, sodium transport, and protein folding. Five proteins (cytidylate kinase, trigger factor, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, transporter, and undecaprenyl-diphosphatase) had a higher abundance in the high-salt diet group than those in the low-salt group, while two proteins (acetylglutamate kinase and PBSX phage manganese-containing catalase) were over-expressed in the low-salt diet group than in the high-salt group. Consequently, high-salt diet may alter the composition of gut microbiota and has a certain impact on protein digestion

    The Spatial Spillover Effect of College Students’ Entrepreneurial Activeness Degree

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    Analyzing the influence of the spatial spillover effect of college students’ Entrepreneurial Activeness Degree (EAD) in each region on the cultivation intensity of their Innovation and Entrepreneurial Ability (IEA) is of certain theoretical and practical significance. However, in the research of domestic scholars, when studying the relationship between the EAD of college students and the cultivation intensity of their IEA, they generally give comprehensive evaluations based on the Evaluation Index Systems (EISs) they built, few of them have concerned about the spatial spillover effect of the EAD of college students, and relevant analysis based on spatial measurement method is rarely seen. To fill in this research blank, this paper aims to study the spatial spillover effect of the EAD of college students based on the improvement of IEA. At first, the paper gave the analysis framework of EAD, and adopted a layer-by-layer vertical and horizontal scatter degree method to perform dynamic measurement on the EAD of college students based on evaluation data collected from different regions. Then, this paper built a college student innovation and entrepreneurial Knowledge Production Function (KPF) model and used it to analyze the relationship between IEA cultivation intensity and the EAD of college students, thereby attaining the development status and spatial spillovers of the entrepreneurial activities of college students. At last, experimental results proved the effectiveness of the measurement method and the constructed model, and the analysis results of the spatial spillover effect in the study regions were given

    Estimation of Open Boundary Conditions for an Internal Tidal Model with Adjoint Method: A Comparative Study on Optimization Methods

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    Based on an internal tidal model, the practical performances of the limited-memory BFGS (L-BFGS) method and two gradient descent (GD) methods (the normal one with Wolfe’s line search and the simplified one) are investigated computationally through a series of ideal experiments in which the open boundary conditions (OBCs) are inverted by assimilating the interior observations with the adjoint method. In the case that the observations closer to the unknown boundary are included for assimilation, the L-BFGS method performs the best. As compared with the simplified GD method, the normal one really uses less iteration to reach a satisfactory solution, but its advantage over the simplified one is much smaller than expected. In the case that only the observations that are further from the unknown boundary are assimilated, the simplified GD method performs the best instead, whereas the performances of the other two methods are not satisfactory. The advanced L-BFGS algorithm and Wolfe’s line search still need to be improved when applied to the practical cases. The simplified GD method, which is controllable and easy to implement, should be regarded seriously as a choice, especially when the classical advanced optimization techniques fail or perform poorly

    Effective Strategy of the Combination of High-Intensity Focused Ultrasound and Transarterial Chemoembolization for Improving Outcome of Unresectable and Metastatic Hepatoblastoma: a Retrospective Cohort Study

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    The combination of high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU) and transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) has been experimentally performed in a variety of malignant tumors, and its validity has not yet been evaluated for hepatoblastoma (HB). We evaluated the disease-response rate, resection rate, and toxicity in children with unresectable or metastatic HB (stage III and stage IV HB) after sequential treatment with TACE plus HIFU in a controlled clinical trial. The 35 patients with unresectable or metastatic HB were nonrandomly assigned to HIFU ablation (n = 12) or C5V chemotherapy (n = 23). The rates of complete resection, tumor response, and treatment toxicity were evaluated for both regimens. Nine patients who received C5V and 10 patients who received TACE plus HIFU became operable (P = .02). The 3-year event-free survival and overall survival rates were 43.03% and 56.68% in the C5V group and 38.57% and 57.86% in the TACE plus HIFU group, respectively. Acute grade 3 or 4 adverse events, including neutropenia, thrombocytopenia, and anemia, were more frequent in patients treated with C5V therapy than in patients receiving TACE plus HIFU. HIFU ablation achieved a higher rate of complete resection and a lower rate of severe complications compared with C5V treatment in children with advanced HB (Chinese Clinical Trials Registry No. ChiCTR-PRCH-08000182)
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