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Yu Yang

Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service

ORCID: 0000-0002-4834-4748

Publishes on Toxic Organic Pollutants Impact, Marine and coastal ecosystems, Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques. 105 papers and 3.3k citations.

105Publications
3.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Eco-Corona vs Protein Corona: Effects of Humic Substances on Corona Formation and Nanoplastic Particle Toxicity in <i>Daphnia magna</i>
Oluniyi O. Fadare, Bin Wan, Keyang Liu et al.|Environmental Science & Technology|2020
Cited by 177Open Access

Despite many studies on the toxicity of nanoplastic particles (NPPs) to aquatic invertebrates, the effects of ecological constituents such as humic substances (HSs) are often neglected. In our study, Daphnia magna was used to evaluate the effects of three HSs, natural organic matter (NOM), fulvic acid (FA), and humic acid (HA), on NPP toxicity and corona formation. Acute toxicities of NPPs were reduced by all HSs at environmentally relevant concentrations. NPPs elicited the upregulation of all genes related to detoxification, oxidative stress, and endocrine activity after 7 days of exposure. The presence of NOM or HA resulted in the mitigation of gene expression, whereas significantly higher upregulation of all of the genes was observed with FA. The presence of FA led to increased protein adsorption on NPPs in D. magna culture medium (eco-corona, EC) and homogenates (protein corona, PC), while there was less adsorption in the presence of HA. The highly abundant proteins identified in EC are involved in immune defense, cell maintenance, and antipredator response, while those in PC are responsible for lipid transport, antioxidant effects, and estrogen mediation. Our findings revealed the key influence of HSs on the toxicity of NPPs and provide an analytical and conceptual foundation for future study.

Bisphenol AF and Bisphenol B Exert Higher Estrogenic Effects than Bisphenol A via G Protein-Coupled Estrogen Receptor Pathway
Lin-Ying Cao, Xiaomin Ren, Chuan-Hai Li et al.|Environmental Science & Technology|2017
Cited by 169Open Access

Numerous studies have indicated estrogenic disruption effects of bisphenol A (BPA) analogues. Previous mechanistic studies were mainly focused on their genomic activities on nuclear estrogen receptor pathway. However, their nongenomic effects through G protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) pathway remain poorly understood. Here, using a SKBR3 cell-based fluorescence competitive binding assay, we found six BPA analogues bound to GPER directly, with bisphenol AF (BPAF) and bisphenol B (BPB) displaying much higher (∼9-fold) binding affinity than BPA. Molecular docking also demonstrated the binding of these BPA analogues to GPER. By measuring calcium mobilization and cAMP production in SKBR3 cells, we found the binding of these BPA analogues to GPER lead to the activation of subsequent signaling pathways. Consistent with the binding results, BPAF and BPB presented higher agonistic activity than BPA with the lowest effective concentration (LOEC) of 10 nM. Moreover, based on the results of Boyden chamber and wound-healing assays, BPAF and BPB displayed higher activity in promoting GPER mediated SKBR3 cell migration than BPA with the LOEC of 100 nM. Overall, we found two BPA analogues BPAF and BPB could exert higher estrogenic effects than BPA via GPER pathway at nanomolar concentrations.

Chemiluminescence of carbon dots under strong alkaline solutions: a novel insight into carbon dot optical properties
Lixia Zhao, Di Fan, Da-Bin Wang et al.|Nanoscale|2013
Cited by 160

We report the surprising chemiluminescence (CL) behavior of fluorescent carbon dots in the presence of a strong alkaline solution, such as NaOH or KOH. The CL intensity was dependent on the concentration of the base and carbon dots in a certain range. A possible CL mechanism was studied by UV-Vis, fluorescence, CL, FTIR, XPS and EPR spectroscopy. Radiative recombination of the injected electrons by "chemical reduction" of carbon dots with thermally excited generated holes was proposed, which sheds new light on the characteristics of carbon dots.