Jiaying Li
South China Agricultural University
5 Papers
3 Citations
Jiaying Li is an academic researcher from South China Agricultural University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Internal medicine & Oxidative stress. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Effects of dietary supplementation of different amounts of yeast extract on oxidative stress, milk components, and productive performance of sows
Chengquan Tan,Jiaying Li,Yongcheng Ji,Yunyu Yang,Xichen Zhao,M.X. Chen,Zhongquan Xin,L.J. Wen,Z.Y. Cui,G. Shu,Q.Y. Jiang +10 more
TL;DR: Results indicated that, with increasing YE amount in the diet, sows had a linear increase in average daily feed intake during the first week of lactation, while a linear decrease in body weight loss during lactation.
12
Dietary adenosine 5’-monophosphate supplementation increases food intake and remodels energy expenditure in mice
S Rakesh Rao,Jiaying Li,Ning-Fa Ding,Jianzhao Chen,Shuo Ma,Chengjun Hu,Haonan Dai,Lijun Wen,Qingyan Jiang,Jinping Deng,Ming Deng,Chengquan Tan +11 more
TL;DR: Dietary AMP supplementation was found to stimulate brown adipose tissue thermogenesis as evidenced by the increase in the uncoupling protein-1 level and the core temperature in mice and was shown to promote white adipOSE tissue lipolysis as indicated by smaller lipid droplet size in mice.
3
An incremental feeding pattern for Guangdong Small-ear Spotted gilts during gestation: effects on stillbirth rate and muscle weight of progeny
J.F. Wei,S.B. Huang,Jin Ping,Jiaying Li,Yunyu Yang,Chengjun Hu,L.F. Yang,Z.W. Zhang,Ming Deng,Jinping Deng +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of two different feeding patterns during gestation on the reproductive performance of Guangdong Small-ear Spotted gilts were investigated by assigning 80 gilts to two feeding pattern groups with a randomized complete block design in accordance with initial body weight and back fat thickness, followed by treatment with an incremental feeding pattern (IFP) and a concaved feeding pattern, respectively.
2
Maternal Diet-Induced Obesity Compromises Oxidative Stress Status and Angiogenesis in the Porcine Placenta by Upregulating Nox2 Expression
Chengjun Hu,Yunyu Yang,Jiaying Li,Hao Wang,Chuanhui Cheng,Linfang Yang,Qiqi Li,Jinping Deng,Zuman Liang,Yulong Yin,Yulong Yin,Zhengjun Xie,Chengquan Tan +12 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that maternal high-energy diet-induced obesity increases placental oxidative stress and decreases placental angiogenesis possibly through the upregulation of Nox2.
Effects of dietary supplementation of nucleotides from late gestation to lactation on the performance and oxidative stress status of sows and their offspring
Chengquan Tan,Yongcheng Ji,Xichen Zhao,Zhongquan Xin,Jiaying Li,Shuangbo Huang,Zhiying Cui,Lijun Wen,Caihua Liu,Sung Woo Kim,Jinping Deng,Yulong Yin +11 more
TL;DR: It is indicated that maternal dietary nucleotides could promote piglet growth, probably due to the higher lactational feed intake and higher concentration of nucleotide in the milk of sows, and lower oxidative stress for both sows and piglets.