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Rothfels, Carl J.; Li, Fay-Wei; Sigel, Erin M.; Huiet, Layne; Larsson, Anders; Burge, Dylan O.; Ruhsam, Markus; Deyholos, Michael; Soltis, Douglas E.; Stewart Jr., C. Neal; Shaw, Shane W.; Pokorny, Lisa; Chen, Tao; dePamphilis, Claude; DeGironimo, Lisa; Chen, Li; Wei, Xiaofeng; Sun, Xiao; Korall, Petra; Stevenson, Dennis W.; Graham, Sean W.; Wong, Gane Ka-Shu; Pryer, Kathleen M.; Stewart, C. Neal; Wong, Gane K-S.; de Pamphilis, Claude 2016-06-24 Premise of the study: Understanding fern (monilophyte) phylogeny and its evolutionary timescale is critical for broad investigations of the evolution of land plants, and for providing the point of comparison necessary for studying the evolution of the fern sister group, seed plants. Molecular phylogenetic investigations have revolutionized our understanding of fern phylogeny, however, to date, these studies have relied almost exclusively on plastid data. Methods: Here we take a curated phylogenomics approach to infer the first broad fern phylogeny from multiple nuclear loci, by combining broad taxon sampling (73 ferns and 12 outgroup species) with focused character sampling (25 loci comprising 35877 bp), along with rigorous alignment, orthology inference and model selection. Key results: Our phylogeny corroborates some earlier inferences and provides novel insights; in particular, we find strong support for Equisetales as sister to the rest of ferns, Marattiales as sister to leptosporangiate ferns, and Dennstaedtiaceae as sister to the eupolypods. Our divergence-time analyses reveal that divergences among the extant fern orders all occurred prior to ∼200 MYA. Finally, our species-tree inferences are congruent with analyses of concatenated data, but generally with lower support. Those cases where species-tree support values are higher than expected involve relationships that have been supported by smaller plastid datasets, suggesting that deep coalescence may be reducing support from the concatenated nuclear data. Conclusions: Our study demonstrates the utility of a curated phylogenomics approach to inferring fern phylogeny, and highlights the need to consider underlying data characteristics, along with data quantity, in phylogenetic studies.
UBC cIRcle BIRS Workshop Lecture Videos Logo
Banff International Research Station for Mathematical Innovation and Discovery
Chen, Li 2019-03-22 I will talk about the dimension-free $L^p$ boundedness of operators on manifolds obtained as conditional expectations of martingale transforms à la Gundy-Varopoulos. Applications on Lie groups of compact type and the Heisenberg group will be introduced. This talk is based on a joint work with R. Bañuelos and F. Baudoin. Non UBC Unreviewed Author affiliation: University of Connecticut Postdoctoral http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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Borealis
Chan, Emily; Serrano, Jesus; Chen, Li; Steib, David M.; Jerrett, Michael; Osornio-Vargas, Alvaro 2018-03-07 Background:<br><br> Socioeconomic status (SES) is an important determinant of health and potential modifier of the effects of environmental contaminants. There has been a lack of comprehensive indices for measuring overall SES in Canada. Here, a more comprehensive SES index is developed aiming to support future studies exploring health outcomes related to environmental pollution in Canada. <br><br> Methods:<br><br> SES variables (n=22, Census Canada 2006) were selected based on: cultural identities, housing characteristics, variables identified in Canadian environmental injustice studies and a previous deprivation index (Pampalon index). Principal component analysis with a single varimax rotation (factor loadings=¦60¦) was performed on SES variables for 52974 census dissemination areas (DA). The final index was created by averaging the factor scores per DA according to the three components retained. The index was validated by examining its association with preterm birth (gestational age<37 weeks), term low birth weight (LBW, <2500 g), small for gestational age (SGA, <10 percentile of birth weight for gestational age) and PM2.5 (particulate matter=2.5 µm) exposures in Edmonton, Alberta (1999–2008). <br><br> Results:<br><br> Index values exhibited a relatively normal distribution (median=0.11, mean=0.0, SD=0.58) across Canada. Values in Alberta tended to be higher than in Newfoundland and Labrador, Northwest Territories and Nunavut (Pearson chi-square p<0.001 across provinces). Lower quintiles of our index and the Pampalon’s index confirmed know associations with a higher prevalence of LBW, SGA, preterm birth and PM2.5 exposure. Results with our index exhibited greater statistical significance and a more consistent gradient of PM2.5 levels and prevalence of pregnancy outcomes. <br><br> Conclusions:<br><br> Our index reflects more dimensions of SES than an earlier index and it performed superiorly in capturing gradients in prevalence of pregnancy outcomes. It can be used for future research involving environmental pollution and health in Canada. <br><br> <strong>These metadata can also be found on SAGE's searchable metadata website:<br> http://sagemetadata.policywise.com/nada/index.php/catalog/14</strong>
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Dryad
Dawson, Ted; Wang, Hu; Yin, Xiling; Xu, Jinchong; Chen, Li; Karuppagounder, Senthilkumar; Xu, Enquan; Mao, Xiaobo; Dawson, Valina 2024-05-30 <p>Interspecies chimeras offer great potential for regenerative medicine and creation of human disease models. Whether human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC) derived neurons in an interspecies chimera can differentiate into functional neurons and integrate into host neural circuity is not known. Here we show, using Engrailed 1 (En1) as a development niche that human naïve-like ES cells can incorporate into embryonic and adult mouse brains. Human-derived neurons including tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) positive neurons integrate into the mouse brain at low efficiency.  These TH-positive neurons have electrophysiologic properties consistent with their human origin. Additionally, these human-derived neurons in the mouse brain accumulate pathologic phosphorylated α-synuclein in response to α-synuclein preformed fibrils.  Optimization of human/mouse chimeras could be utilized to study human neuronal differentiation and human brain disorders.</p>
UBC cIRcle BIRS Workshop Lecture Videos Logo
Banff International Research Station for Mathematical Innovation and Discovery
Chen, Li 2014-12-20 Non UBC Unreviewed Author affiliation: Universität Mannheim Faculty http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/
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figshare
Chen, Li; Mir, Sartaj Ahmad; Bendt, Anne K.; Chua, Esther W. L.; Narasimhan, Kothandaraman; Tan, Karen Mei-Ling; Loy, See Ling; Tan, Kok Hian; Shek, Lynette P.; Chan, Jerry; Yap, Fabian; Meaney, Michael J.; Chan, Shiao-Yng; Chong, Yap Seng; Gluckman, Peter D.; Eriksson, Johan G.; Karnani, Neerja; Wenk, Markus R. 2023 Additional file 2: Table S1. A. Demographic, anthropometric and clinical characteristics of the study cohort. B. Comparison of characteristics between preconception, pregnancy and postpartum by paired t-test using trio subjects. C. Comparison of characteristics between pre-pregnant and non-pregnant subjects at preconception. D. The differences of lipidomic profiles between pre-pregnant and non-pregnant subjects at preconception. E. The group comparison results between preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using paired t-test and the patterns of lipid change. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
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figshare
Chen, Li; Mir, Sartaj Ahmad; Bendt, Anne K.; Chua, Esther W. L.; Narasimhan, Kothandaraman; Tan, Karen Mei-Ling; Loy, See Ling; Tan, Kok Hian; Shek, Lynette P.; Chan, Jerry; Yap, Fabian; Meaney, Michael J.; Chan, Shiao-Yng; Chong, Yap Seng; Gluckman, Peter D.; Eriksson, Johan G.; Karnani, Neerja; Wenk, Markus R. 2023 Additional file 3: Table S2. A. The association results of plasma lipid changes against body weight changes. B. The association results of multivariate linear regression analysis for changes in lipid profile against body weight changes. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
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figshare
Chen, Li; Mir, Sartaj Ahmad; Bendt, Anne K.; Chua, Esther W. L.; Narasimhan, Kothandaraman; Tan, Karen Mei-Ling; Loy, See Ling; Tan, Kok Hian; Shek, Lynette P.; Chan, Jerry; Yap, Fabian; Meaney, Michael J.; Chan, Shiao-Yng; Chong, Yap Seng; Gluckman, Peter D.; Eriksson, Johan G.; Karnani, Neerja; Wenk, Markus R. 2023 Additional file 4: Table S3. The association results of pre-pregnancy BMI with plasma lipid species at preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using trio subjects. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
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figshare
Chen, Li; Mir, Sartaj Ahmad; Bendt, Anne K.; Chua, Esther W. L.; Narasimhan, Kothandaraman; Tan, Karen Mei-Ling; Loy, See Ling; Tan, Kok Hian; Shek, Lynette P.; Chan, Jerry; Yap, Fabian; Meaney, Michael J.; Chan, Shiao-Yng; Chong, Yap Seng; Gluckman, Peter D.; Eriksson, Johan G.; Karnani, Neerja; Wenk, Markus R. 2023 Additional file 5: Table S4. A. The association results of plasma fasting glucose concentration with plasma lipid species at preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using trio subjects. B. The association results of plasma 2h post-load glucose concentration with plasma lipid species at preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using trio subjects. C. The association results of GDM status with plasma lipid species at preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using trio subjects. D. A panel of 37 lipid species as a potential preconception molecular signature of gestational diabetes mellitus. E. The association results of plasma fasting insulin concentration with plasma lipid species at preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using trio subjects. F. The association results of HOMA-IR level with plasma lipid species at preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using trio subjects. G. The association results of HbA1c (%) with plasma lipid species at preconception, pregnancy and postpartum using trio subjects. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
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figshare
Chen, Li; Mir, Sartaj Ahmad; Bendt, Anne K.; Chua, Esther W. L.; Narasimhan, Kothandaraman; Tan, Karen Mei-Ling; Loy, See Ling; Tan, Kok Hian; Shek, Lynette P.; Chan, Jerry; Yap, Fabian; Meaney, Michael J.; Chan, Shiao-Yng; Chong, Yap Seng; Gluckman, Peter D.; Eriksson, Johan G.; Karnani, Neerja; Wenk, Markus R. 2023 Additional file 6: Table S5. The association results of glycaemic traits with plasma lipid species at preconception using 936 subjects. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode
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figshare
Chen, Li; Mir, Sartaj Ahmad; Bendt, Anne K.; Chua, Esther W. L.; Narasimhan, Kothandaraman; Tan, Karen Mei-Ling; Loy, See Ling; Tan, Kok Hian; Shek, Lynette P.; Chan, Jerry; Yap, Fabian; Meaney, Michael J.; Chan, Shiao-Yng; Chong, Yap Seng; Gluckman, Peter D.; Eriksson, Johan G.; Karnani, Neerja; Wenk, Markus R. 2023 Additional file 7: Table S6. The 87 lipid signatures of pre-pregnant vs. non-pregnant analysis and their corresponding results for ppBMI and glycaemic traits at preconception. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode

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