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Chenglian Bai

Researcher at Wenzhou Medical College

Publications -  31
Citations -  1239

Chenglian Bai is an academic researcher from Wenzhou Medical College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Zebrafish & Sperm. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 25 publications receiving 953 citations.

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Toxicity, uptake kinetics and behavior assessment in zebrafish embryos following exposure to perfluorooctanesulphonicacid (PFOS).

TL;DR: This is the first study to define uptake kinetics and to focus on behavioral consequences following PFOS exposure in zebrafish, and further the understanding of the toxicity of PFOS to aquatic organisms and suggest the need for additional research to identify the mode ofPFOS toxicity.
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BDE-47 disrupts axonal growth and motor behavior in developing zebrafish.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the altered patterns of neuronal connectivity may contribute to motor behavior deficits, indicating the relevance of zebrafish as a model for studying toxicant developmental neurotoxicity.
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Chronic zebrafish low dose decabrominated diphenyl ether (BDE-209) exposure affected parental gonad development and locomotion in F1 offspring

TL;DR: It is revealed that parental chronic low dose BDE-209 exposure not only affects F0 growth and reproduction, but also elicits neurobehavior alternations in F1 offspring.
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Developmental lead acetate exposure induces embryonic toxicity and memory deficit in adult zebrafish.

TL;DR: The results suggested that low dose of developmental lead exposure resulted in embryonic toxicity, behavioral alteration, and adult learning/memory deficit in zebrafish.
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Bisphenol A affects axonal growth, musculature and motor behavior in developing zebrafish.

TL;DR: Zebrafish embryo is utilized as a model system to investigate the effect of developmental BPA exposure on larval teratology, motor behaviors, axonal growth of spinal motoneurons and muscle structure at various developmental stages, suggesting the functional relevance of muscle structural changes and the observed deficits in swimming activity.