34,478 research outputs found

    sj-docx-1-jdr-10.1177_00220345221084199 – Supplemental material for Identification of Dental Stem Cells Similar to Skeletal Stem Cells

    No full text
    Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-jdr-10.1177_00220345221084199 for Identification of Dental Stem Cells Similar to Skeletal Stem Cells by J.F. Liang, J. Wang, Y.T. Ji, Q. Zhao, L.T. Han, R.J. Miron and Y.F. Zhang in Journal of Dental Research</p

    DS_10.1177_0022034519871890 – Supplemental material for TNF-α Suppresses Autophagic Flux in Acinar Cells in IgG4-Related Sialadenitis

    No full text
    Supplemental material, DS_10.1177_0022034519871890 for TNF-α Suppresses Autophagic Flux in Acinar Cells in IgG4-Related Sialadenitis by X. Hong, S.N. Min, Y.Y. Zhang, Y.T. Lin, F. Wang, Y. Huang, G.Y. Yu, L.L. Wu and H.Y. Yang in Journal of Dental Research</p

    †Chuchinolepididae Zhang 1978

    No full text
    Family †Chuchinolepididae Zhang 1978, spelling in prevailing recent practice †Chuchinolepidae Zhang 1978a: 296 (family) † Chuchinolepis Zhang 1978 [family name also seen as †Chuchinolepididae; author also seen as Chang] †Qujinolepidae Zhang 1978b: 173 (family) † Qujinolepis Zhang 1978 [family name sometimes seen as † Qujinolepididae] †Procondylolepidae Zhang 1984: 82 (family) † Procondylolepis Zhang 1984Published as part of Laan, Richard Van Der, 2018, Family-group names of fossil fishes, pp. 1-167 in European Journal of Taxonomy 466 on page 27, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2018.466, http://zenodo.org/record/555755

    An enhanced author name dataset for PubMed/MEDLINE

    No full text
    &lt;p&gt;The incompleteness of author names is a well-known issue in the MEDLINE database. It was since 2002, the full author name has been systematically indexed in MEDLINE. Although many full author names have been added to MEDLINE, we still found a significant number of abbreviated names in papers published after 2002.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Here we built an enhanced author name dataset for MEDLINE, called EAN,&nbsp; achieved by linking the whole PubMed to other large literature databases and conducting a large-scale name comparison and restoration with obtained multi-sources author names. Our evaluation shows that more than 90% of author names in EAN are complete as compared to the ratio of ~60% in MEDLINE.&lt;/p&gt

    An enhanced author name dataset for PubMed/MEDLINE

    No full text
    &lt;p&gt;The incompleteness of author names is a well-known issue in the MEDLINE database. It was since 2002, the full author name has been systematically indexed in MEDLINE. Although many full author names have been added to MEDLINE, we still found a significant number of abbreviated names in papers published after 2002.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Here we built an enhanced author name dataset for MEDLINE, called EAN,&nbsp; achieved by linking the whole PubMed to other large literature databases and conducting a large-scale name comparison and restoration with obtained multi-sources author names. Our evaluation shows that more than 90% of author names in EAN are complete as compared to the ratio of ~60% in MEDLINE.&lt;/p&gt

    Cyrtomium calcis Liang Zhang, N. T. Lu & Li Bing Zhang 2023, sp. nov.

    No full text
    Cyrtomium calcis Liang Zhang, N.T.Lu & Li Bing Zhang, sp. nov., Fig. 1 Type:— VIETNAM. Hagiang Province: Vi Xuyen District, Tung Ba Community, Du Gia National Park (Khau Ca Nature Reserve), Hom Mountain, 22°50’40’’N, 105°07’47’’E, elev. ca. 1150 m, on the top of limestone mountain, 13 December 2013, Li Bing Zhang, Liang Zhang & Ngan T. Lu 6932 (holotype VNMN!; isotypes CDBI!, MO!). Diagnosis: This species is most similar to Cyrtomium pachyphyllum (Rosenstock 1914: 130) C.Christensen (1917: 11) in having erect rhizomes, dense, concolorous, and fimbriate-dentate scales throughout fronds, leathery lamina, ovate pinnae, and dentate indusia, but the new species has ovate scales on stipe base (vs. lanceolate scales in C. pachyphyllum), lanceolate-oblong lamina (vs. oblong lamina in C. pachyphyllum), up to 14 pairs of pinnae (vs. often 1–5 pairs in C. pachyphyllum), lowest pinnae shorter than the middle ones (vs. similar in C. pachyphyllum), fewer rows of areolae (2–(4)) in venation structure (vs. up to 5 rows of areolae in C. pachyphyllum). Plants terrestrial, perennial, evergreen. Rhizome erect, densely covered with ovate, lanceolate, linear, brown scales. Stipe stramineous, 15 cm long, 1–3 mm in diam., base densely scaly, scales membranous, concolorous, reddish-brown, ovate, lanceolate or linear (6–20 × 0.3–4.4 mm), fimbriate-dentate, apex long acuminate or slight twist; upward densely scaly, scales brown, narrow lanceolate, linear (2.5–6.0 × 0.1–0.7 mm). Lamina 1-imparipinnate, lanceolate-oblong (13–23 × 1.9 cm), base cordate to hastate, apex acute to slight acuminate, thick leathery; rachis ca. 1.5 mm in diam. with dense scales abaxially and adaxially, scales similar to scales on distal stipe but smaller (1–1.5 × 0.05–0.5 mm); pinnae alternate, 9 to 14 pairs, short-stalked or nearly sessile, ovate (1.5–3.5 × 1.2–1.9 cm), both adaxial and abaxial sides with microscales, glossy adaxially, margin entire, acroscopic base auriculate, blunt auricle, auricle overlap each other, apex acute; lowest pinnae shorter than middle ones, upper pinnae ovate, up to 3.5 × 1.9 cm; terminal pinna deltoid-ovate (1.5–2.5 cm); venation pinnate, obscure, veinlets form 2, 3, rarely to 4 rows of areola, each areolae with 1 included veinlet. Sori rounded (ca. 1.5 mm in diam.), 1–25 or more per pinna, 1 or 2(–3) rows on each side of midrib; indusia orbicular (1.3–1.9 mm in diam.), dentate; spores large, ellipsoid (54–60.6 µm in diam.), inflated tuberculate folds, plain exospore. Etymology:— The specific epithet, calcis, is formed from the Latin word calcis, relating to lime. It refers to the limestone habitat of this new species. Geographical distribution and habitat:— Types were collected from a limestone peak in primary evergreen broad-leaved forests in Khau Ca Nature Reserve, Vi Xuyen District, Hagiang Province. Community is composed of some taxa accompanying the new species as Cyrtomium hemionitis Christ (1910: 138), Polystichum minimum (Y.T. Hsieh 1989: 17) Li Bing Zhang (2012: 58), P. auriculum Ching (1949: 309), an Ericaceae, a Lauraceae, and an Orchidaceae. Two small populations of the new species were also found in Guangxi, China. Provisional conservation status:— Only a few mature individuals of Cyrtomium calcis were seen in the type locality although a few field investigations have been conducted by Vietnamese colleagues and the first author since 2013. Two populations in Guangxi, China were quite small and the three localities in China and Vietnam are only about 92 km in air distance. Based on current information and following the IUCN Guidelines (IUCN 2022), the new species is temporarily assessed as Critically Endangered C 2a (i, ii). Additional material examined:— CHINA. Guangxi: Napo County, elev. ca, 1300 m, 17 June 1982, Ding Fang, Mao-Xiang Lai & Zhen-Gang Wang 25384 (GXMI); elev. ca. 1250 m, 17 July 1985, Ding Fang & De-Hai Tan 79661 (GXMI). Tianlin County, elev. ca. 1490 m, 29 January 2016, S.L. Jin JSL3613 (CSH, paratype). Notes:— Cyrtomium calcis is endemic to the limestone areas, but it is not closely related to other species endemic to limestone areas, e.g., C. hemionitis, C. nephrolepioides (Christ 1902: 258) Copeland (1929: 136), C. pachyphyllum, and C. shingianum H.S.Kung & P.S.Wang (1997: 23), as shown in our phylogenetic tree (Fig. 2). The phylogenetic relationships of C. calcis are quite isolated and it is resolved as one of the earliest diverging lineages. Therefore, the discovery of C. calcis is quite significant in studying the phylogeny and evolution of the genus. Morphologically, the limestone species of Cyrtomium share a distinct morphological feature, the presence of the cordate pinna base (except C. chingianum P.S.Wang 1997: 24) (Lu & Cheng 2003, Zhang & Barrington 2013) and the new species bears gross morphological features that are consistent with those in other limestone species, e.g., thicker pinna texture, fewer pairs of pinnae per frond, broader pinnae, and more rows of areolae in venation structure (Mitsuta 1977, Lu & Cheng 2003, Zhang & Barrington 2013). The fact that C. calcis is not closely related with other limestone species in the genus suggests that these morphological similarities are homoplasious. The discovery of Cyrtomium calcis is also contribution to the limestone flora in northern Vietnam that is currently not well understood (e.g., Lu et al. 2014, also see below).Published as part of Lu, Ngan Thi, Wei, Hong-Jin, Vuong, Luong Dinh, Toan, Le Chi, Zhang, Li-Bing & Zhang, Liang, 2023, Cyrtomium calcis sp. nov. and six new records of the shield fern family (Dryopteridaceae) from Vietnam, pp. 15-26 in Phytotaxa 583 (1) on pages 16-18, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.583.1.2, http://zenodo.org/record/760903

    Astragalus wui M. Idrees & Z. Y. Zhang 2021, nom. nov.

    No full text
    Astragalus wui M. Idrees & Z.Y. Zhang, nom. nov. Replaced name:— Astragalus sylvaticus Y.H. Wu (2015: 718), nom. illeg., non A. sylvaticus (Pall.) Willd. (1802: 1300). Type:— CHINA. Xinjiang: Yecheng Country, Sukepiya, in border forest, alt. 3000 m, 15 Aug. 1987, Exped. Qinghai-Tibet Wu Yuhu 1067 (holotype: QTPMB, not seen). Etymology:—The specific epithet honours Prof. Dr. Wu Yuhu (Northwest Institute of Plateau Biology, Chinese Academy of Science, Xining, China), author of the replaced name, who first described this new species.Published as part of Idrees, Muhammad & Zhang, Zhiyong, 2021, Astragalus wui, a new replacement name for A. sylvaticus Y. H. Wu (Galegeae, Papilionoideae, Fabaceae), pp. 210-211 in Phytotaxa 524 (3) on page 210, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.524.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record/564936

    Professor Zhang Weihua's Clinical Experience in the Application of Yongquan Acupoint

    No full text
    Summarizing Professor Zhang Weihua's understanding of the bidirectional regulation function of Yongquan Point and his clinical application experience, the author believes that Yongquan is a meeting place of Yin and Yang qi, and both Yin and Yang qi are rooted here, which can be used to balance Yin and Yang, and proposes that Yongquan is the key point of bidirectional regulation, which has the functions of bidirectional regulation, bidirectional lifting, bidirectional replenishing. At the same time, Professor Zhang believes that Yongquan point should be combined with the corresponding stimulation method in the treatment of different diseases, which provides a new idea for the clinical treatment of some difficult diseases

    In Memoriam: Prof. Jingdong Zhang

    No full text
    Celebrating the electrochemistry legacy: Prof. Zhang was a member of the Editorial Board of ChemElectroChem as well as a valued author and reviewer. Together with her friends and colleagues Christian Engelbrekt, Xinxin Xiao and Jens Ulstrup (Technical University of Denmark) as well as Bingwei Mao (Xiamen University, China), we hope to commemorate Prof Zhang′s contributions to the electrochemical sciences by this Special ChemElectroChem Collection on the theme of “Electrochemical Materials and Interfaces”
    corecore