J

Jie Liu

Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications

ORCID: 0009-0006-5054-4550

Publishes on Circular RNAs in diseases, Genetic and Kidney Cyst Diseases, Minerals Flotation and Separation Techniques. 392 papers and 3k citations.

392Publications
3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Strain-Driven Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya Interaction for Room-Temperature Magnetic Skyrmions
Yuelin Zhang, Jie Liu, Yongqi Dong et al.|Physical Review Letters|2021
Cited by 94Open Access

Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction in magnets, which is usually derived from inversion symmetry breaking at interfaces or in noncentrosymmetric crystals, plays a vital role in chiral spintronics. Here we report that an emergent Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction can be achieved in a centrosymmetric material, La_{0.67}Sr_{0.33}MnO_{3}, by a graded strain. This strain-driven Dzyaloshinskii-Moriya interaction not only exhibits distinctive two coexisting nonreciprocities of spin-wave propagation in one system, but also brings about a robust room-temperature magnetic skyrmion lattice as well as a spiral lattice at zero magnetic field. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of investigating chiral spintronics in a large category of centrosymmetric magnetic materials.

Intermittent Fasting Improves Functional Recovery after Rat Thoracic Contusion Spinal Cord Injury
Miae Jeong, Ward T. Plunet, Femke Streijger et al.|Journal of Neurotrauma|2011
Cited by 85Open Access

Spinal cord injury (SCI) often results in a loss of motor and sensory function. Currently there are no validated effective clinical treatments. Previously we found in rats that dietary restriction, in the form of every-other-day fasting (EODF), started prior to (pre-EODF), or after (post-EODF) an incomplete cervical SCI was neuroprotective, increased plasticity, and promoted motor recovery. Here we examined if EODF initiated prior to, or after, a T10 thoracic contusion injury would similarly lead to enhanced functional recovery compared to ad libitum feeding. Additionally, we tested if a group fed every day (pair-fed), but with the same degree of restriction as the EODF animals (∼25% calorie restricted), would also promote functional recovery, to examine if EODF's effect is due to overall calorie restriction, or is specific to alternating sequences of 24-h fasts and ad libitum eating periods. Behaviorally, both pre- and post-EODF groups exhibited better functional recovery in the regularity indexed BBB ambulatory assessment, along with several parameters of their walking pattern measured with the CatWalk device, compared to both the ad-libitium-fed group as well as the pair-fed group. Several histological parameters (intensity and symmetry of serotonin immunostaining caudal to the injury and gray matter sparing) correlated with functional outcome; however, no group differences were observed. Thus besides the beneficial effects of EODF after a partial cervical SCI, we now report that alternating periods of fasting (but not pair-fed) also promotes improved hindlimb locomotion after thoracic spinal cord contusion, demonstrating its robust effect in two different injury models.