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Lingyan Shi

Researcher at University of California, San Diego

Publications -  114
Citations -  1815

Lingyan Shi is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Raman scattering & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 92 publications receiving 1120 citations. Previous affiliations of Lingyan Shi include Columbia University & City College of New York.

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Transmission in near-infrared optical windows for deep brain imaging.

TL;DR: Due to a reduction in scattering and minimal absorption, window III is shown to be the best for deep brain imaging, and windows II and IV show similar but better potential for deep imaging than window I.
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Optical imaging of metabolic dynamics in animals.

TL;DR: A platform that combines deuterium oxide probing with stimulated Raman scattering (DO-SRS) microscopy to image in situ metabolic activities and lipid metabolic dynamics and protein synthesis in cells and in vivo in mice, C. elegans, and zebrafish is introduced.
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Metabolic activity induces membrane phase separation in endoplasmic reticulum

TL;DR: It is discovered that metabolism of palmitate, a prevalent saturated fatty acid (SFA), could drive solid-like domain separation from the presumably uniformly fluidic ER membrane, a previously unknown phenomenon.
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Spectral tracing of deuterium for imaging glucose metabolism

TL;DR: STRIDE provides a high-resolution and chemically informative assessment of glucose anabolic utilization and can be used to optically image glucose metabolism in mice at a detection limit of 10 mM of carbon–deuterium bonds.
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Volumetric chemical imaging by clearing-enhanced stimulated Raman scattering microscopy

TL;DR: A volumetric chemical imaging technique that couples Raman-tailored tissue-clearing with stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy with greater than 10-fold depth increase is developed, which allows us to simultaneously map out metabolic activities of protein and lipid synthesis in glioblastoma.