1.Study and compare of the bidirectional filtering technique for anti-baseline drift.
Lingfeng KONG ; Daxue WEI ; Yunpeng LIAO
Chinese Journal of Medical Instrumentation 2010;34(4):263-265
Several digital filtering techniques for correcting baseline drift from ECG signals are presented. A bidirectional filter is introduced, which can cantain baseline drift their filtering performance and realization methods are compared.
Electrocardiography
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instrumentation
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methods
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Filtration
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instrumentation
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Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
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instrumentation
2.Effect of leucine on autophagy in focal cerebral ischemia
Yulong LIAO ; Liang HUANG ; Le FU ; Yunpeng YOU ; Jian LIU ; Huawei XIONG ; Chunshui CAO
Chinese Journal of Emergency Medicine 2016;25(12):1259-1262
3.PINK1 kinase dysfunction triggers neurodegeneration in the primate brain without impacting mitochondrial homeostasis.
Weili YANG ; Xiangyu GUO ; Zhuchi TU ; Xiusheng CHEN ; Rui HAN ; Yanting LIU ; Sen YAN ; Qi WANG ; Zhifu WANG ; Xianxian ZHAO ; Yunpeng ZHANG ; Xin XIONG ; Huiming YANG ; Peng YIN ; Huida WAN ; Xingxing CHEN ; Jifeng GUO ; Xiao-Xin YAN ; Lujian LIAO ; Shihua LI ; Xiao-Jiang LI
Protein & Cell 2022;13(1):26-46
In vitro studies have established the prevalent theory that the mitochondrial kinase PINK1 protects neurodegeneration by removing damaged mitochondria in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, difficulty in detecting endogenous PINK1 protein in rodent brains and cell lines has prevented the rigorous investigation of the in vivo role of PINK1. Here we report that PINK1 kinase form is selectively expressed in the human and monkey brains. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated deficiency of PINK1 causes similar neurodegeneration in the brains of fetal and adult monkeys as well as cultured monkey neurons without affecting mitochondrial protein expression and morphology. Importantly, PINK1 mutations in the primate brain and human cells reduce protein phosphorylation that is important for neuronal function and survival. Our findings suggest that PINK1 kinase activity rather than its mitochondrial function is essential for the neuronal survival in the primate brains and that its kinase dysfunction could be involved in the pathogenesis of PD.