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Hui-Ling Liu

Researcher at Fourth Military Medical University

Publications -  5
Citations -  294

Hui-Ling Liu is an academic researcher from Fourth Military Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neural stem cell & Cellular differentiation. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 276 citations.

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Notch activation promotes cell proliferation and the formation of neural stem cell-like colonies in human glioma cells

TL;DR: Notch signaling promote the formation of cancer stem cell-like cells in human glioma, suggesting that Notch signaling play roles in cancer stem cells and cancer cells with a stem cell phenotype.
Journal Article

Spontaneous recovery of locomotion induced by remaining fibers after spinal cord transection in adult rats.

TL;DR: The fact that the degree of locomotor recovery is correlated with the percentage of remaining fibers in the ventrolateral spinal cord, exclusive of most of the descending motor tracts, may imply an essential role of propriospinal connections in the initiation of spontaneous locomotion recovery.
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Secondary degeneration reduced by inosine after spinal cord injury in rats.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that administration of inosine as late as 12 h after injury significantly reduced the total volume of spinal cord degenerative areas and the number of apoptotic cells 3 days following the trauma.
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Transcription factor RBP-J-mediated signaling represses the differentiation of neural stem cells into intermediate neural progenitors.

TL;DR: Results indicated that the RBP-J-mediated signaling might inhibit the differentiation of NSCs into INPs and support the generation of certain early born neurons at early neurogenic stages.
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Different regions of the mouse nestin enhancer may function differentially in nestin expression in an NSC-like cell line and astrocytes.

TL;DR: This study shows that both C17.2 cells and astrocytes express nestin, and cloned the second intron of the mouse nestin gene, which is homologous to the human and rat counterparts as shown by DNA sequencing.