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Fuyi Chen

Researcher at University of Connecticut

Publications -  27
Citations -  1006

Fuyi Chen is an academic researcher from University of Connecticut. The author has contributed to research in topics: Syphilis & Glioma. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 26 publications receiving 806 citations. Previous affiliations of Fuyi Chen include Yale University.

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Astrocytes and microglia play orchestrated roles and respect phagocytic territories during neuronal corpse removal in vivo

TL;DR: A precisely orchestrated response and cross-talk between glial cells during corpse removal may be critical for maintaining brain homeostasis.
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A method for stable transgenesis of radial glia lineage in rat neocortex by piggyBac mediated transposition

TL;DR: IUE is combined with a binary piggyBac transposon system (PB-IUE), and it is shown that unlike conventional IUE, a single embryonic transfection of neocortical radial glia with a piggybac transPOSon system results in stable transgene expression in the neural lineage of radial glianes.
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Mutual antagonism between Sox10 and NFIA regulates diversification of glial lineages and glioma subtypes

TL;DR: The antagonistic relationship between Sox10 and NFIA that regulates the balance of OL and AS fate during development is described and it is demonstrated for the first time, to the best of the knowledge, that the transcriptional processes governing glial sub-lineage diversification oversee the generation of glioma subtypes.
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Knockdown of the Dyslexia-Associated Gene Kiaa0319 Impairs Temporal Responses to Speech Stimuli in Rat Primary Auditory Cortex

TL;DR: Results provide the first evidence that decreased expression of the dyslexia-associated gene Kiaa0319 can alter cortical responses and impair phoneme processing in auditory cortex.
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Analysis of 3 Algorithms for Syphilis Serodiagnosis and Implications for Clinical Management

TL;DR: The research supported use of the ECDC algorithm, in which syphilis screening begins with a treponemal immunoassay that is followed by a second, different trep onemal assay as a confirmatory test in high-prevalence populations, and indicated that nontreponemals assay is unnecessary for syphilis diagnosis but can be recommended for determining serological activity and the effect of syphilis treatment.