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Lv-yun Zhu

Researcher at National University of Defense Technology

Publications -  25
Citations -  1208

Lv-yun Zhu is an academic researcher from National University of Defense Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Acquired immune system. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 20 publications receiving 910 citations. Previous affiliations of Lv-yun Zhu include Zhejiang University.

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Advances in research of fish immune-relevant genes: a comparative overview of innate and adaptive immunity in teleosts.

TL;DR: The current understanding of teleost immune-relevant genes for both innate and adaptive immunity, including pattern recognition receptors, antimicrobial peptides, complement molecules, lectins, interferons and signaling factors, inflammatory cytokines, chemokines, adaptive immunity relevant cytokines and negative regulators are discussed.
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B Cells in Teleost Fish Act as Pivotal Initiating APCs in Priming Adaptive Immunity: An Evolutionary Perspective on the Origin of the B-1 Cell Subset and B7 Molecules

TL;DR: Zebrafish B cells clearly showed a potent Ag-presenting ability to both soluble Ags and bacterial particles to prime naive CD4+ T cell activation, demonstrating the innate-like nature of teleost B cells in the interface of innate and adaptive immunity, and suggesting the costimulatory mechanism originated as early as the origin of adaptive immunity.
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Highly Effective and Low-Cost MicroRNA Detection with CRISPR-Cas9

TL;DR: A novel platform that detects miRNAs at low cost and high efficacy and is the first to use CRISPR-Cas9 in miRNA detection, which is a promising approach capable of being applied in screening, diagnosing, and prognosticating of multiple diseases.
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Essential Role of IL-4 and IL-4Rα Interaction in Adaptive Immunity of Zebrafish: Insight into the Origin of Th2-like Regulatory Mechanism in Ancient Vertebrates

TL;DR: This is the first report showing that a possible Th2-mediated regulatory mechanism may have appeared before the divergence of teleosts and mammals, and adds greater insight into the evolutionary history of adaptive immunity.