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Kui Wang

Researcher at Tsinghua University

Publications -  538
Citations -  15741

Kui Wang is an academic researcher from Tsinghua University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Voltage & Capacitor. The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 444 publications receiving 11275 citations. Previous affiliations of Kui Wang include State Oceanic Administration & Curtin University.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Guidelines for the use and interpretation of assays for monitoring autophagy (4th edition)

Daniel J. Klionsky, +2983 more
- 08 Feb 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a set of guidelines for investigators to select and interpret methods to examine autophagy and related processes, and for reviewers to provide realistic and reasonable critiques of reports that are focused on these processes.
Book ChapterDOI

Automated high-dimensional flow cytometric data analysis

TL;DR: This work presents a direct multivariate finite mixture modeling approach, using skew and heavy-tailed distributions, to address the complexities of flow cytometric analysis and to deal with high-dimensional cytometric data without the need for projection or transformation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Voltage Balancing and Fluctuation-Suppression Methods of Floating Capacitors in a New Modular Multilevel Converter

TL;DR: A voltage-fluctuation-suppression method which can reduce the amplitude of the voltage fluctuation in low-frequency region and improve the start-up performance significantly is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quercetin induces protective autophagy in gastric cancer cells: involvement of Akt-mTOR- and hypoxia-induced factor 1α-mediated signaling.

TL;DR: Functional studies revealed that quercetin activated autophagy by modulation of Akt-mTOR signaling and hypoxia-induced factor 1α (HIF-1α) signaling, and a xenograft model provided additional evidence for occurrence of quercETin-induced apoptosis and Autophagy in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exceptionally abundant exceptions: comprehensive characterization of intrinsic disorder in all domains of life

TL;DR: This work comprehensively characterized intrinsic disorder at proteomic and protein levels from all significant perspectives, including abundance, cellular localization, functional roles, evolution, and impact on structural coverage, and shows that intrinsic disorder is more abundant and has a unique profile in eukaryotes.