👤 Liqin Li

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Also published as: Xiaocun Li, Jianyu Li, Xinzhi Li, Guanqiao Li, Zequn Li, Guang-Xi Li, Yubo Li, Bugao Li, Qingchao Li, Xikun Li, Hong-Tao Li, Guobin Li, Xihao Li, Rongqing Li, Chang-Da Li, Meng-Yue Li, DaZhuang Li, Shunqin Li, Jiajie Li, Yaqiong Li, Yuan-hao Li, Yongmei Li, X Y Li, Peilin Li, Ran Li, Chunshan Li, Yixiang Li, Guanglve Li, Ye Li, Zili Li, Yihao Li, Qing Run Li, Liling Li, Meng-Yang Li, Ziyun Li, Jun-Ying Li, Xinhai Li, Yongjiang Li, Wanru Li, Wenhao Li, Shisheng Li, Sai Li, Guangwen Li, Hua Li, Dongmei Li, Jiayang Li, Zunjiang Li, Minglong Li, Wenzhe Li, Zihan Li, Jin-Long Li, Hongxin Li, Caiyu Li, Fa-Hui Li, Guangpu Li, Teng Li, Wen-Jie Li, Hegen Li, Ang Li, Zhizong Li, Lu-Yun Li, Peng Li, Shiyu Li, Fang Li, Jiuke Li, Miyang Li, Mingxu Li, Chen-Xi Li, Panlong Li, Changwei Li, Biyu Li, Yaoqi Li, San-Feng Li, Jiaming Li, Jiyuan Li, Rongkai Li, Yani Li, Linke Li, C Y Li, Thomas Li, Siting Li, Yongnan Li, Jinchen Li, Jin-Ping Li, Xuewen Li, R Li, Xianlong Li, Aixin Li, Xuening Li, Guang Li, Xiaoming Li, Z-H Li, Yongli Li, Baohong Li, Shuyuan Li, L Li, Yuanmei Li, Yanwu Li, Hualing Li, Sibing Li, Xining Li, Qinghe Li, Zonghua Li, Jingya Li, Youjun Li, Zheng-Dao Li, Zhenshu Li, Heng-Zhen Li, Yuhui Li, Wen-Ying Li, Wei Li, Shuanglong Li, Fei-feng Li, Letai Li, Kangli Li, Ming Li, Wenbo Li, Runwen Li, Yarong Li, Weidong Li, S E Li, Xin-Tao Li, Ruotong Li, Shuguang Li, Xiuzhen Li, Lingxi Li, Chuan-Hai Li, Tingting Li, Guanghua Li, Zhongyu Li, Zhen-Yu Li, Deyu Li, Hansen Li, Jinzhi Li, Yijing Li, Kaifeng Li, Wen-Xing Li, Qintong Li, Naishi Li, Xin-Ping Li, Han-Ni Li, Jiaying Li, Cui-lan Li, Ruonan Li, Jun-Jie Li, Shuhao Li, Ruitong Li, Suyan Li, Gen-Lin Li, Dianjie Li, Junhui Li, Ya-Jun Li, Xue Cheng Li, Ding-Biao Li, Xiying Li, Yansong Li, Weiyong Li, Xinyang Li, Cui Li, Xiaoyong Li, Y L Li, Xueyi Li, Jingxiang Li, Wenxue Li, Jianglin Li, Yingpu Li, Yan-Hua Li, Jing-Yao Li, Shawn Shun-Cheng Li, Xiao-Min Li, Wan Jie Li, Ya-Ting Li, Dongbiao Li, Keguo Li, Yuanfei Li, Longhui Li, Jing-Yi Li, Zhonghua Li, Chunyi Li, Peiyun Li, Qinglan Li, Yue-Ting Li, Da Li, YiPing Li, Demin Li, Haipeng Li, Chuan Li, Ze-An Li, Jianmin Li, Minhui Li, Yu Li, Yiwei Li, Xiangzhe Li, Minglun Li, Xue-Min Li, Kenneth Kai Wang Li, Chunlan Li, Chiyang Li, Hulun Li, Juan-Juan Li, Hua-Zhong Li, Jiaomei Li, Xiangyun Li, Jing Li, Yingshuo Li, Baixing Li, Dengke Li, Qingling Li, Rui-Han Li, Dong Li, Xiaoxia Li, Dezhi Li, Sheng-Jie Li, Ying-Qing Li, Xin-Jian Li, Guangxi Li, Yanhui Li, Sha-Sha Li, Mengxuan Li, Ziyu Li, Gang Li, Panyuan Li, Hong-Wen Li, Xiaojuan Li, Dongnan Li, Huaiyuan Li, Ji-Liang Li, Huaping Li, C H Li, Bohua Li, Pei-Ying Li, Shaobin Li, Ronald Li, Shilun Li, Shi-Hong Li, John Zhong Li, Xinyu Li, Lujiao Li, Song-Chao Li, Chenghong Li, Baohua Li, Nianfu Li, Jun-Cheng Li, Yimeng Li, Chunting Li, Chien-Feng Li, Mei-Zhen Li, Zhengjie Li, Liwei Li, Yan-Yan Li, Huijun Li, Chengyun Li, Lijun Li, Hening Li, Fengxia Li, Jialing Li, Xin Li, Ningyan Li, Zhenghui Li, Ailing Li, Chaochen Li, Tengyan Li, Xianlu Li, Jiaqi Li, Jiabei Li, Wenjing Li, Jingshu Li, Han-Bo Li, Zengyang Li, Chunyan Li, Runzhen Li, Xi-Hai Li, Xuezhong Li, MengGe Li, Pei-Lin Li, Wan-Xin Li, Ruobing Li, Ning Li, Meitao Li, Xia Li, Ziqiang Li, Wen-Xi Li, Shenghao Li, Hehua Li, Yucheng Li, Dujuan Li, Yuying Li, Shaofei Li, Shaoguang Li, Min-Rui Li, Shuqiang Li, Dan C Li, Huashun Li, Ganggang Li, Haoqi Li, Handong Li, Yan-Nan Li, Xianglong Li, Jing-Jing Li, Songhan Li, Conglin Li, Qingli Li, Miao Li, Chenyu Li, Ke Li, Zhen-Hua Li, Chuan-Yun Li, Gaoyuan Li, Youming Li, Qingrun Li, Dong-Yun Li, Shuangfei Li, Fengfeng Li, Qinggang Li, Huixia Li, Xingye Li, Xiangjun Li, Huiying Li, Xingyu Li, Zhaoping Li, Wenying Li, Honghui Li, Cheung Li, Xuelian Li, Zhenming Li, Changyan Li, Mulin Jun Li, Shangjia Li, Jingjing Li, Suhong Li, Xinping Li, Siyu Li, Guangzhen Li, Xiangyan Li, Shiyun Li, Xiaoyu Li, Yaobo Li, Xuewang Li, Mei Li, Manjiang Li, Wan Li, Xiao-Li Li, Xiaoya Li, Shan Li, Shitao Li, Zehan Li, Lijia Li, Huiliang Li, Chunqiong Li, Junjun Li, Hui-Long Li, Zhao-Cong Li, Zhi-Wei Li, Wenxi Li, Chang-hai Li, Yuqiu Li, Xue-Yan Li, Yuan-Yuan Li, Xiang-Jun Li, Chia Li, Y X Li, Yunyun Li, Zhen-Jia Li, Qiuxuan Li, De-Jun Li, Keqing Li, Junxian Li, Shuwen Li, Lingjun Li, Deheng Li, Si-Xing Li, Yaodong Li, Shigang Li, Gao-Fei Li, Minle Li, Le-Le Li, Ziwen Li, Yongqiu Li, Pu-Yu Li, Nan-Nan Li, Lan-Lan Li, Hongming Li, Shuang Li, Wanting Li, Gong-Hua Li, Zhengyu Li, Weiguang Li, Guoqing Li, Xiaomeng Li, Yuanze Li, Yunqi Li, Yuandong Li, Changcheng Li, Shiyue Li, Hanbo Li, Yinggao Li, Dingshan Li, Linlin Li, Jin-Wei Li, Cheng-Tian Li, Yaxi Li, Wei-Ming Li, Ming-Han Li, Wenchao Li, Guangyan Li, Zhaosha Li, Xuesong Li, Chun-Quan Li, Yongzhen Li, Tao Li, Xiankai Li, Yaxuan Li, Tian-wang Li, Yuchan Li, Jiaxi Li, Yalin Li, Pei-Zhi Li, Guanyu Li, Jinlan Li, Huizi Li, Jianping Li, Yun-Lin Li, Yadong Li, Sujing Li, Wenzhuo Li, Xuri Li, Mengqiu Li, Yun Li, Ling-Ling Li, Chengwen Li, Shu-Feng Li, Haojing Li, Zhiyu Li, Ziyang Li, Yaochen Li, Qian Li, Bohao Li, Wenyang Li, Wenming Li, Mingxuan Li, Bingsong Li, Anqi Li, Shuai Li, Xiaoju Li, Na Li, Huibo Li, Chuanfang Li, Pengsong Li, Ruotian Li, Chunya Li, En-Min Li, Zong-Xue Li, Yan Ning Li, Honglin Li, Min-jun Li, Jinhua Li, Qian-Qian Li, Yuanheng Li, Chunxiao Li, Shijun Li, Kuan Li, Baoguang Li, Jie-Shou Li, Zimeng Li, Mengmeng Li, W-B Li, Binkui Li, Yu-Sheng Li, Junjie Li, Xiaoqi Li, Xiucui Li, Haihua Li, Yu-Lin Li, Tsai-Kun Li, Shujing Li, Mengyun Li, Mingna Li, Lanlan Li, Moyi Li, Xiyun Li, Ya-Pei Li, Zhongjie Li, Zhenbei Li, Shuangshuang Li, Hongwei Li, Ding-Jian Li, Xiao-Qiang Li, Danni Li, Min Li, Pengyang Li, Kun-Xin Li, Xiangpan Li, Zesong Li, Mingfei Li, Shuwei Li, Mingdan Li, Xihe Li, Jianfeng Li, Dexiong Li, Rongsong Li, Yinxiong Li, Hong-Yu Li, Weijian Li, Changhui Li, Dechao Li, Wenxia Li, Guoxiang Li, Ziru Li, Juxue Li, Man Li, Huayin Li, Xiao-yu Li, Jianyi Li, Guowei Li, Xingya Li, Gongda Li, Yajun Li, Wei-Ping Li, Nanjun Li, P H Li, Ranran Li, Suping Li, Jason Li, Monica M Li, Xianlun Li, Qi Li, Xiaoli Li, Xionghui Li, Fei Li, Hongmei Li, Xu-Wei Li, Mengsen Li, Quanpeng Li, Yajiao Li, Qilan Li, Qiuhong Li, Zongyun Li, Xiao-Yun Li, Cheng-Lin Li, Yousheng Li, Wen-Ting Li, Guoping Li, A Li, Simin Li, Weiguo Li, Xue-Nan Li, Xiaoying Li, Shengsheng Li, Hong Li, Yuqi Li, Zihua Li, Qing Li, Jiaping Li, Weiyang Li, Feng Li, Peihong Li, Jin-Mei Li, Lisha Li, Cuicui Li, Kaibo Li, Hanbing Li, Meng-Hua Li, J T Li, Xiangwei Li, Baiqiang Li, Ziliang Li, Donghe Li, Zheng Li, Congfa Li, Wenrui Li, Yong Li, Xiuling Li, Jingqi Li, Zhiyong Li, Xiao-Kang Li, Hanqi Li, Yangyang Li, Dongfang Li, Zhuorong Li, X-H Li, Dong Sheng Li, Lan-Juan Li, Xianrui Li, Zhigao Li, Chenlin Li, Zihui Li, Guoli Li, Huanqiu Li, Zhan Li, Weisong Li, Xinglong Li, Xiaozhen Li, Zhiyang Li, Cunxi Li, Ying Li, Jianlin Li, Yanshu Li, Guiying Li, Jinku Li, Cuiling Li, Zhisheng Li, Changgui Li, Xuekun Li, Yuguang Li, Wenke Li, Jiayi Li, Suwen Li, Peihua Li, Chang-Ping Li, Guangda Li, Jieming Li, Chunhui Li, Tongyao Li, Peiyu Li, Linfeng Li, Yuzhe Li, Qifang Li, Chang-Yan Li, Xiaolin Li, Duanxiang Li, Vivian Li, Justin Li, Meiting Li, Xue-Er Li, Hongchang Li, Youwei Li, Ronggui Li, Xingwang Li, Tiange Li, Yongjia Li, Dacheng Li, Xinmin Li, Luquan Li, Guoxing Li, Jianyong Li, Zongchao Li, Jia Li, Haimin Li, Sheng-Qing Li, Lingjie Li, Yiwen Li, Baoqi Li, Leyao Li, Xiao-Qin Li, Jiajing Li, Yanlin Li, Liao-Yuan Li, Yongkai Li, Hangwen Li, Hengguo Li, An-Qi Li, Xuehua Li, AnHai Li, Chenli Li, Zhengrui Li, Rumei Li, Yan-Yu Li, Lipeng Li, Qinqin Li, Qinghua Li, Leilei Li, Lianyong Li, Zhou Li, Q Li, Bizhi Li, Cheng-Wei Li, Wenwen Li, Jian'an Li, Guangqiang Li, Sichong Li, Wenyi Li, Qing-Min Li, Meiyan Li, Yun-Da Li, Jian-Qiang Li, Yingrui Li, Chenfeng Li, Shen Li, Ziqi Li, Yunfeng Li, Shufen Li, Yueqi Li, Xiao-Guang Li, Jiali Li, Zhencheng Li, Qiufeng Li, Pinghua Li, Xu Li, Zhenli Li, Yunxiao Li, Rosa J W Li, Hsin-Yun Li, XiaoQiu Li, Zhankui Li, Zhi Li, Zhijie Li, Huimin Li, Ruifang Li, Xiao-xu Li, Man-Xiang Li, Cong Li, Chengbin Li, Yuping Li, G Li, Zhi-Yong Li, Yukun Li, Xiong Bing Li, Wen Lan Li, Qingjie Li, Han Li, Yutang Li, Hankun Li, Hongling Li, Zhifan Li, Yan-Guang Li, Ji-Min Li, Peipei Li, Tian-Yi Li, Zhihao Li, Yao Li, Zheyun Li, Zhonglin Li, Lin Li, Jinfang Li, Chenjie Li, Yanming Li, S L Li, Ben-Shang Li, Hong-Lan Li, Xionghao Li, Shunqing Li, Ming-Kai Li, Lan Li, Yanwei Li, Chien-Te Li, Wenyan Li, Xiaoheng Li, Zeyuan Li, Hongqin Li, Zhenhao Li, Jonathan Z Li, Yong-Liang Li, M Li, Jiehan Li, Hongguo Li, Chenxin Li, Yongsen Li, Qingyun Li, Pengyu Li, Ai-Qin Li, Zichao Li, Cien Li, Qingyu Li, Xijing Li, Jingshang Li, Xingyuan Li, Dehua Li, Yanjiao Li, Jia-Huan Li, Guoxi Li, Xudong Li, Xingfang Li, Jisheng Li, Rongyao Li, Ru Li, Jiangya Li, Yiche Li, Yilang Li, Yunshen Li, Jingchun Li, Hexin Li, H J Li, Yanping Li, Qing-Wei Li, Qiang Li, Hsiao-Hui Li, L I Li, Hongzheng Li, Laiqing Li, Ningyang Li, Zhongxia Li, Guangquan Li, Shun Li, Hui-Jun Li, Xuefei Li, Guojun Li, Hung Li, Senlin Li, Jinping Li, Sainan Li, Jinghui Li, Zulong Li, Chengsi Li, P Li, Fulun Li, Yonghao Li, Mingli Li, Yehong Li, Pei Li, Quanshun Li, Yongping Li, Liguo Li, Weimin Li, Mingxia Li, Xue-Hua Li, M V Li, Gan Li, Shichao Li, Dapei Li, Zejian Li, Lihong Li, Haixia Li, Jingmei Li, Ao Li, Yitong Li, Siwen Li, Yanlong Li, Zhao Li, Kui Li, Yunxu Li, Xuanfei Li, Zilin Li, Mingqiang Li, Xiaojiao Li, Yinzhen Li, Yunsheng Li, Li-Min Li, Xiangqi Li, Jia-Peng Li, Wenqi Li, Haibo Li, Xiao-Jun Li, Yan-Hong Li, Shi Li, Xueling Li, Conghui Li, Xiaoxiong Li, Wanni Li, Chitao Li, Haiyang Li, Xiaobai Li, Pingping Li, Mingquan Li, Suran Li, Yuanfang Li, Yingqin Li, Qiner Li, Jiafang Li, Shanhang Li, Han-Bing Li, Zongzhe Li, Yikang Li, Si-Yuan Li, Hongmin Li, Caihong Li, Yajing Li, Benyi Li, Yuquan Li, Hongzhi Li, Chengxin Li, Xiaojiaoyang Li, Xinxin Li, Jian-Shuang Li, Yubin Li, Dazhi Li, Chenglan Li, Yuhong Li, Fengqiao Li, Di Li, Yanbing Li, Jufang Li, Zecai Li, Qipei Li, Xiaoning Li, Xiyue Li, Minghua Li, Tianchang Li, Zhuoran Li, Hongru Li, Shiqi Li, Mei-Ya Li, Wuyan Li, Yi-Ling Li, Yingjian Li, Zhirong Li, Wang Li, Mingyang Li, Weijun Li, Boyang Li, Cai Li, Jingcheng Li, Ivan Li, Mengshi Li, Manxia Li, Ya Li, Dan-Ni Li, Wen-Chao Li, Sunan Li, Zhencong Li, Lai K Li, Jiong Li, Daiyue Li, Bingong Li, Chunxue Li, Yunlong Li, Jianshuang Li, Juanling Li, Xinbin Li, Xue-jing Li, Yuling Li, Yetian Li, Xianlin Li, Chuangpeng Li, Mingrui Li, Yanjun Li, Jiequn Li, Zhongding Li, Jiangui Li, Zhengyang Li, Cyril Li, Xinghui Li, Yuefei Li, Xinyan Li, Xiaoyun Li, Yushan Li, Ping'an Li, Weiping Li, Huan Li, Changjiang Li, Chengping Li, He-Zhen Li, G-P Li, Yinliang Li, Wen Li, Weihai Li, Yu-Kun Li, Jiangan Li, Zhaojin Li, Bingxin Li, Wenjuan Li, Chia-Yang Li, Wenyu Li, Hairong Li, Su Li, Mei-Lan Li, Wenjun Li, Jiaxin Li, Chenguang Li, Ming D Li, Ruyue Li, Xiaolian Li, Ya-Ge Li, Yinyan Li, Guangli Li, Rujia Li, Qijun Li, Lixia Li, Yunrui Li, Yuhuang Li, Shanshan Li, Wan-Shan Li, Jing-gao Li, Yiyang Li, Fengxiang Li, Nana Li, Jingui Li, Huamao Li, Xiankun Li, Jingke Li, Tianyao Li, Xiaowei Li, Junming Li, Hai-Yun Li, Zhongxian Li, H-J Li, Zhixiong Li, Lingyan Li, Xuhang Li, Chen-Lu Li, Jialun Li, Xinjian Li, Zilu Li, Sheng-Fu Li, Zezhi Li, Xue-Fei Li, Yudong Li, Hongjiang Li, Jingyun Li, Binghua Li, Hanjun Li, Qihua Li, Jin-Qiu Li, Jiaxuan Li, Guangjin Li, Xutong Li, Ranwei Li, Kai Li, Wei-Li Li, Keanning Li, Ling Li, Peiqin Li, Xiaodong Li, Nanxing Li, Qihang Li, Baoguo Li, Jianrong Li, Zhehui Li, Chenghao Li, Weike Li, Chuanbao Li, Zhixuan Li, Chuzhong Li, M D Li, Yuan-Tao Li, Kening Li, Guilan Li, Wanshi Li, Ling-Zhi Li, Hengtong Li, Yifan Li, Ya-Li Li, Songyun Li, Xiaoran Li, Bolun Li, Linchuan Li, Jiachen Li, Haibin Li, Huangbao Li, Guo-Chun Li, Xinli Li, S Li, Wenqing Li, Wenhua Li, Caiyun Li, Xinrui Li, Hanbin Li, Wanwan Li, Jia Li Li, Wan-Hong Li, Mingke Li, Huanhuan Li, Xiaoyuan Li, Zongfang Li, Yang Li, BoWen Li, Duoyun Li, Yimei Li, Zhi-qiang Li, Yi-Ting Li, Jiangxia Li, Yujie Li, Zhiping Li, Yan-Li Li, Haiming Li, Gaijie Li, Yuemei Li, Xuefeng Li, Xiao-Hong Li, Mengjuan Li, Yinglin Li, Yaofu Li, Ren-Ke Li, Yi Li, Baosheng Li, Mian Li, Yujun Li, Lixi Li, Jin-Xiu Li, Jiwen Li, Zhouhua Li, Qingqin S Li, Honglei Li, Guojin Li, Xin-Yue Li, Dingchen Li, Xiaoling Li, Meng-Jun Li, Peining Li, Congjiao Li, Huilin Li, Songtao Li, Fusheng Li, Dai Li, Meiyue Li, Kechun Li, Keshen Li, Yuxin Li, Shaoliang Li, Shu-Xin Li, Hong-Zheng Li, Tianye Li, Qun Li, Zhen Li, Mengling Li, Jia-Da Li, Baoqing Li, Pu Li, Xingli Li, Bingkun Li, Nien-Chi Li, Tiewei Li, Daniel Tian Li, Rong-Bing Li, Wei-Yang Li, Rong Li, Mingkun Li, Binxing Li, Zixiao Li, Guixin Li, Quanzhang Li, Da-wei Li, Xiumei Li, Melody M H Li, Peibo Li, Huanjun Li, Chung-Hao Li, Liuzheng Li, Zhanjun Li, Yifei Li, Tianming Li, Chang-Sheng Li, Tianyou Li, Jipeng Li, Longxuan Li, Shi-Guang Li, Wenxiu Li, Zhuang Li, Yu-Hao Li, Shilin Li, Shili Li, Meiqing Li, Hengyu Li, Yinhao Li, Junying Li, Mufan Li, Chun-Lai Li, Shiya Li, Xiao-Jiao Li, Li Li, Hanxue Li, Lulu Li, L P Li, Xiaoqin Li, Chunmei Li, Mingjun Li, Yuanhua Li, Qiaolian Li, Ji-Cheng Li, Haolong Li, Xuanzheng Li, Peng-li Li, Quan Li, Xue-Ying Li, Yongzhe Li, Tianyi Li, Qingfeng Li, Nanlong Li, Ping Li, Fangzhou Li, Nien-Chen Li, Yuanchuang Li, Haiying Li, Yunting Li, Hong-Yan Li, Shengbiao Li, Yue-Rui Li, Ruidong Li, Y M Li, Sijie Li, Meilan Li, D C Li, Andrew C Li, Jianye Li, Qiuyan Li, Tingguang Li, Xiangyang Li, Chunjie Li, Tianfeng Li, Anna Fen-Yau Li, Minghui Li, Jiangfeng Li, Jie-Pin Li, Kaiyi Li, Junyi Li, Dongtao Li, Fengyuan Li, Chenxi Li, Zuo-Lin Li, Zhengwei Li, Yan-Chun Li, Suiyan Li, Qiaoqiao Li, Xiaotian Li, Zhenguang Li, Jia-Ru Li, Pei-Qin Li, Chun-Xiao Li, Shu-Hong Li, Shuyue Li, Quan-Zhong Li, Tongzheng Li, Fangyan Li, Duo Li, Ren Li, Hongye Li, Lanfang Li, Mingwei Li, Wenxin Li, W J Li, Zhijia Li, Jingtong Li, Lucy Li, Zhengpeng Li, Xiayu Li, Baolin Li, Cuilan Li, Yuting Li, Xiaobo Li, Meijia Li, Shujiao Li, Kun-Ping Li, Weirong Li, Weihua Li, Runzhao Li, Xiang-Dong Li, Yanxin Li, Xiufeng Li, Yingjun Li, Xiaohuan Li, Ying-Qin Li, Fan Li, Jun Z Li, Yiheng Li, Taiwen Li, Xiaorong Li, Haifeng Li, Liping Li, Rena Li, Jiangtao Li, Yu-Jui Li, Rui-Jún Eveline Li, Xuanxuan Li, Bing-Mei Li, Yunman Li, Shuhua Li, Chunying Li, Leipeng Li, Weiheng Li, Baizhou Li, Han-Ru Li, Sheng Li, Yaqiang Li, Guoyin Li, Qiwei Li, Chengjun Li, Jianxiong Li, Ji Li, Huaying Li, Tuojian Li, Yixin Li, Ziyue Li, Juntong Li, Xiang Li, Chaonan Li, Yu-Chia Li, Heying Li, Shaomin Li, Yuxuan Li, Xuan-Ling Li, Bingshan Li, Jiahao Li, Shibao Li, Ruijin Li, Kunlong Li, Xiaofeng Li, Zhaolun Li, Litao Li, Ruyi Li, Wanxin Li, Jinsong Li, Ying-Lan Li, Yulin Li, Shaojian Li, Mohan Li, Yan-Xue Li, Enhong Li, Xiangnan Li, Yong-Jun Li, Hang Li, Ziming Li, Jing-Ming Li, Yuanchang Li, Xiao-Lin Li, Yicun Li, Zhao-Yang Li, K-L Li, Xinjia Li, Bin Li, Jianhai Li, Peiwu Li, Youran Li, Changyu Li, Ming Zhou Li, Z Li, Xinmei Li, Wulan Li, Haoxian Li, Xiaozhao Li, Da-Lei Li, Jinming Li, Huihui Li, Kailong Li, Qiankun Li, Shengxu Li, Xiuli Li, Yulong Li, Ru-Hao Li, Zhi-Peng Li, Lanzhou Li, Tingsong Li, Binjun Li, Chen Li, Yawei Li, Chao Bo Li, Donghua Li, Siming Li, Fengli Li, Song Li, Hsin-Hua Li, You Li, Dongfeng Li, Zhen-Yuan Li, Xuelin Li, Xueyang Li, Bao Li, Yin Li, Cai-Hong Li, Dejun Li, Yufeng Li, Miaoxin Li, Hu Li, Bei Li, W H Li, Sha Li, Ya-Qiang Li, Xiushen Li, Jinlin Li, Xiaoqing Li, Shuaicheng Li, Xuebiao Li, Yingyi Li, Maolin Li, Jiyang Li, Zhongxuan Li, Linting Li, Zhong-Xin Li, Enhao Li, Shengliang Li, Hujie Li, Yue-Ming Li, Zhaohan Li, Alexander Li, Wen-juan Li, Pilong Li, Yun-Peng Li, C X Li, Huanan Li, Miao X Li, KeZhong Li, Linying Li, Chu-Qiao Li, Fa-Hong Li, Changzheng Li, Yaokun Li, Zhi-Gang Li, Yufan Li, Liangqian Li, Guanghui Li, Xiongfeng Li, Side Li, Timmy Li, Jiezhen Li, Qiuya Li, Haitao Li, Yufen Li, Qin Li, Annie Li, Wenge Li, Xueren Li, Chun-Mei Li, Meng-Yao Li, Chung-I Li, Zhi-Bin Li, Junping Li, Xiao Li, PeiQi Li, Xiaobing Li, Liangdong Li, Yan Li, Shengchao A Li, Pan Li, Huiqiong Li, Guigang Li, Lucia M Li, Chunzhu Li, Chengquan Li, Zexu Li, Zhilei Li, Tiantian Li, Wenyong Li, Desen Li, Tianjun Li, Zihao Li, Fadi Li, Huawei Li, Yu-quan Li, Jihua Li, Jingping Li, Zhiquan Li, Zeyu Li, Zongdi Li, Ming V Li, Aowen Li, L K Li, Aimin Li, Tiehua Li, Guohong Li, Botao Li, L-Y Li, Xiuqi Li, Zhenhua Li, Zhengda Li, Haotong Li, Luhan Li, Yuancong Li, Tian Li, Yuxiu Li, Beibei Li, Changhong Li, Yvonne Li, Zhichao Li, Jiayuan Li, Yige Li, Siguang Li, Chengqian Li, Weiye Li, Dong-fei Li, Xiangchun Li, Hailong Li, Kun-Peng Li, Haijun Li, Si Li, Ji-Feng Li, Wanqian Li, Zijing Li, Wentao Li, Yuchuan Li, Xuhong Li, Hongyun Li, Zhonggen Li, Xiong Li, Penghui Li, Huiting Li, Xiaolong Li, Linqing Li, Jiawei Li, Defa Li, X L Li, Yuyan Li, Kawah Li, Shupeng Li, Zhenfei Li, Zhuo Li, Han-Wei Li, Weina Li, Xiao-Hui Li, Rui-Fang Li, Jianzhong Li, Bing Li, Huihuang Li, Yunmin Li, Yanying Li, Gui Lin Li, Chenrui Li, Dengfeng Li, N Li, Xiaotong Li, Chensheng Li, Ming-Qing Li, Yongxue Li, Bao-Shan Li, Zhimei Li, Jiao Li, Jingming Li, Jinxia Li, De-Tao Li, Shu Li, Julia Li, Huilan Li, Xin-Ya Li, Chunsheng Li, Chengjian Li, Ying-na Li, Guihua Li, Zhiyuan Li, Supeng Li, Yiju Li, Yuanhe Li, Guangxiao Li, Xueqin Li, Peixin Li, Feng-Feng Li, Zu-Ling Li, Yunjiu Li, Dayong Li, Zonghong Li, Lingjiang Li, Yuhan Li, Fuyuan Li, H-F Li, Chunxia Li, Zhen-Li Li, Zhengying Li, Zhaoshui Li, Yali Li, Yu-Hui Li, Chuang Li, Jiajun Li, Can Li, Zhe Li, Stephen Li, Shuangding Li, Mangmang Li, Kaiyuan Li, Xiaopeng Li, Anan Li, Luying Li, Jiajv Li, Xiaoquan Li, Yanxi Li, Yongjing Li, Huayao Li, Jiqing Li, Huixue Li, Boxuan Li, Yongqi Li, Qingyuan Li, Fengqi Li, Yuqing Li, Zhigang Li, Guiyang Li, Guo-Qiang Li, Yanbo Li, Sanqiang Li, Hongyu Li, Guangping Li, Jinxin Li, Xinrong Li, Yayu Li, Huaixing Li, Minyue Li, Hong-Mei Li, Jutang Li, Mengxia Li, Yongxiang Li, Qilong Li, Songlin Li, Dijie Li, Yizhe Li, Yan Bing Li, Jiani Li, Lianjian Li, Yiliang Li, Xinpeng Li, Hongxing Li, Wanyi Li, Mi Li, Guo Li, Jingxia Li, Xiu-Ling Li, Fuhai Li, Ruijia Li, Yumiao Li, Jiexi Li, Kecheng Li, Junxu Li, Junya Li, Jiang Li, Shengxian Li, Qingyang Li, Yuxi Li, Chenxuan Li, Xiao-Dong Li, Xinghuan Li, Zhenlu Li, Xiaolei Li, Huilong Li, Xiao-Gang Li, Zhenhui Li, Chunjun Li, Shu-Fen Li, Yinghua Li, Yanjie Li, Chaoying Li, Juanjuan Li, Qiu Li, Kunlun Li, Shiquan Li, Xiangdong Li, Zhenjia Li, Jifang Li, Zhizhong Li, Ding Yang Li, Chenlong Li, Shujin Li, Weining Li, Wu-Jun Li, Yumao Li, Bin-Kui Li, Honglian Li, Ya-Zhou Li, Hongyi Li, Fu-Rong Li, Honghua Li, Lanjuan Li, Man-Zhi Li, Xiancheng Li, Yanmei Li, Zhihua Li, Minqi Li, Saijuan Li, Danxi Li, Mimi Li, Yingjie Li, Yuan-Hai Li, Lujie Li, Minghao Li, Meifen Li, Yifeng Li, Huanqing Li, Yuhang Li, Jianhua Li, Chanjuan Li, Lingyi Li, Yanchuan Li, Bai-Qiang Li, Chunmiao Li, Jiong-Ming Li, Yongqiang Li, Linsheng Li, Mingyao Li, Ze Li, R H L Li, Guisen Li, Dongyang Li, Jinglin Li, Honglong Li, Mingfang Li, Hanmei Li, Chenmeng Li, Shiyang Li, Jianing Li, Xinsheng Li, Jin-Jiang Li, Zhi-Xing Li, Chang Li, Jiwei Li, Weifeng Li, Wenhui Li, Sichen Li, Qingsheng Li, Liangji Li, Lixiang Li, Jin-Liang Li, Xiaoqiong Li, You Ran Li, Yixiao Li, Kathy H Li, Yuhua Li, Deqiang Li, Y Li, Mingyue Li, Zipeng Li, Caixia Li, Hongli Li, Yanfeng Li, Yaqin Li, Yu-He Li, Shasha Li, S-C Li, Xi Li, Siyi Li, Minmin Li, Manna Li, Dawei Li, Xun Li, Ming-Jiang Li, Sitao Li, Tinghua Li, Zhenfen Li, Shuo Li, Si-Ying Li, Xinyi Li, Jenny J Li, Xue-zhi Li, Xiaonan Li, Zhenyu Li, Ting Li, Xiang-Yu Li, Duan Li, Lei Li, Hongde Li, Fengqing Li, Yanchang Li, Xunjia Li, Ruixia Li, Nanzhen Li, Hongxue Li, Bingjie Li, Xiaojing Li, Xinlin Li, Yu-Ying Li, Wenli Li, Mengze Li, Kaiwei Li, Huangyuan Li, Lili Li, Junxin Li, Wei-Jun Li, Guoyan Li, Fei-Lin Li, Nuomin Li, Yanyan Li, Shulin Li, Shanglai Li, Taibo Li, Yue Li, Junqin Li, JunBo Li, Jun-Ru Li, Xueying Li, Zhongcai Li, Zhaobing Li, Linxin Li, Jen-Ming Li, Chen-Chen Li, Hongquan Li, Chuan F Li, Yanxiang Li, Yi-Wen Li, Shihong Li, Rulin Li, Huifeng Li, Lijuan Li, Yuanhong Li, Shengbin Li, Jingyu Li, Xuewei Li, Long Li, Min-Dian Li, Wenjia Li, Xiatian Li, Yangxue Li, Chengnan Li, Chuanyin Li, Yiqiang Li, Zhenzhou Li, Xiawei Li, Binglan Li, Yutong Li, Yingnan Li, Ge Li, Xinzhong Li, Chenyao Li, Jun-Yan Li, Boru Li, Ruixue Li, Zemin Li, Jixi Li, Chris Li, Jicheng Li, Chuanning Li, Jiafei Li, Yingying Li, Gaizhi Li, Chien-Hsiu Li, Xiangcheng Li, Siqi Li, Chunxing Li, Qiao-Xin Li, Huang Li, Shu-Fang Li, Qiusheng Li, Weiqin Li, Xinming Li, Yongjun Li, Mengyang Li, Guo-Jian Li, Chenglong Li, Nan Li, Yipeng Li, Mingxing Li, Xin-Yu Li, Chunyu Li, Jinwei Li, Xuhua Li, Yu-Xiang Li, Long Shan Li, Yanze Li, Xiao-Feng Li, W Li, Fengjuan Li, Hainan Li, Yutian Li, Xiliang Li, Shuangmei Li, Ying-Bo Li, Duanbin Li, Maogui Li, Dan Li, Sumei Li, Peilong Li, Kang Li, Yinghao Li, Lirong Li, Wenhong Li, Audrey Li, Yijian Li, Guang Y Li, Xianyong Li, Shilan Li, Guang-Li Li, Bang-Yan Li, Enxiao Li, Jianrui Li, Guohua Li, Kezhen Li, Xingxing Li, Ellen Li, Yijie Li, Suwei Li, Shuyu D Li, Ruiwen Li, Jiandong Li, Fangyong Li, Binru Li, Yuchao Li, Hanlu Li, Jianang Li, Xue-Peng Li, Sheng-Tien Li, Shihao Li, Yazhou Li, Jun-Ling Li, Caesar Z Li, Lang Li, Feifei Li, Kejuan Li, Qinghong Li, Qiqiong Li, Xinxiu Li, Chongyi Li, Yi-Ying Li, Shaodan Li, Yongzheng Li, Da-Hong Li, Xiao-mei Li, Jiejie Li, Ruihuan Li, Yaoyao Li, Yueguo Li, Mo Li, Ming-Hao Li, Hongsen Li, Menghua Li, Ka Li, Kaixin Li, Fuping Li, Jianbo Li, Xing-Wang Li, Chong Li, Fugen Li, Yuwei Li, Xiaochen Li, Zizhuo Li, Xiaoxiao Li, Le-Ying Li, Pengcui Li, Bing-Heng Li, Xiaoman Li, Xiaohong Li, Yuan Hao Li, Jianchun Li, Wenxiang Li, Zhaoliang Li, Guo-Ping Li, Zhifei Li, Jinhui Li, Yuanyou Li, Chongyang Li, Wanyan Li, Yumin Li, Longyu Li, X B Li, Jianguo Li, En Li, Ximei Li, Shaoyong Li, Kai-Wen Li, Guandu Li, Yixue Li, Junfeng Li, Xin-Chang Li, Yue-Ying Li, Kongdong Li, Lian Li, Xinmiao Li, Chenyang Li, Jiacheng Li, Xiaohua Li, Zhuangzhuang Li, Xiaohui Li, Cang Li, Xuepeng Li, Mingjiang Li, Zongyu Li, Shujie Li, Yanbin Li, Shiliang Li, Qinrui Li, Yiming Li, Xiao-Tong Li, Tie Li, Wei-Bo Li, Xiaoyi Li, Liyan Li, Xinke Li, Xiaokun Li, Ming-Wei Li, Minzhe Li, Wenfeng Li, Karen Li, X Li, Meifang Li, Yanjing Li, Maosheng Li, Ju-Rong Li, Shibo Li, Jin Li, Li-Na Li, Hui Li, Fangqi Li, Xiaoguang Li, Xian Li, Danjie Li, Vivian S W Li, Ranchang Li, Defu Li, Amy Li, Haoyu Li, Xiaoyao Li, M-J Li, Jiao-Jiao Li, Zhu Li, Rongling Li, Tong-Ruei Li, Ben Li, Yingxia Li, Yonghe Li, Xinwei Li, Yu-I Li, Shunhua Li, Mingxi Li, Qionghua Li, Guo-Li Li, Xingchen Li, Tianjiao Li, Gui-Rong Li, Yunpeng Li, Qiong Li, Songyu Li, Shi-Fang Li, Shude Li, Zhibin Li, Yaxiong Li, Qing-Fang Li, Shengwen Li, Gui-Bo Li, Xueer Li, Zihai Li, Yue-Jia Li, Haihong Li, Peifen Li, Mingzhou Li, Taixu Li, Jiejing Li, Meng-Miao Li, Meiying Li, Chunlian Li, Meng Li, Cun Li, T Li, Yinghui Li, Feilong Li, Sin-Lun Li, Weiling Li, Mengfan Li, Jie Li, Shiyan Li, Lianbing Li, Yanchun Li, Xuze Li, Jialin Li, Wenjian Li, He Li, Bichun Li, Hanqin Li, Guoge Li, Wen-Wen Li, Keying Li, Minze Li, Xingcheng Li, Wanshun Li, Congxin Li, Xiangrui Li, Caolong Li, Michelle Li, Chaojie Li, J Li, Zhi-Jian Li, Jianwei Li, Jiexin Li, Hongyan Li, Zhen-Xi Li, Guangdi Li, Xiaxia Li, Nien Li, Yuefeng Li, Peiyuan Li, Tiansen Li, Chi-Yuan Li, Xiangfei Li, Xue Li, Fen Li, Jieshou Li, Roger Li, Mengqing Li, Menglu Li, Huiqing Li, Yantao Li, Ruolin Li, Yongle Li, Haying Li, Shao-Dan Li, Muzi Li, Gen Li, Dong-Ling Li, Chenwen Li, Le Li, Yong-Jian Li, Si-Wei Li, Manru Li, Yingxi Li, Caili Li, Yuqian Li, Wei-Dong Li, Guannan Li, Ya-Feng Li, Wenlong Li, Yuna Li, Shengli Li, Shugang Li, Xuan Li, Yongze Li, Yongxin Li, Lu Li, Zhuo-Rong Li, Qinglin Li, Bingbing Li, Runzhi Li, Qi-Jing Li, Zhenyan Li, Ji Xia Li, Yu-Ye Li, Meizi Li, Yuezheng Li, Zhengnan Li, Jianglong Li, Xiaozheng Li, Huili Li, Hongzhe K Li, Xiao-Qiu Li, Jiejia Li, Yi-Yang Li, Zhihui Li, Fujun Li, Ni Li, Luxuan Li, Qiang-Ming Li, Yakui Li, Huafu Li, Xinye Li, Chunliang Li, Ruiyang Li, Chun Li, Jianan Li, Wenfang Li, Xiangling Li, Sung-Chou Li, Lianhong Li, Cheng Li, Tiegang Li, Zhong Li, Shuang-Ling Li, Xiao-Long Li, Xiaofei Li, Hung-Yuan Li, Zhang Li, Jianxin Li, H Li, Dongliang Li, Chenxiao Li, Hongjia Li, Xiao-Jing Li, Y H Li, Jian Li, Daoyuan Li, Baichuan Li, Zhenzhe Li, Jian-Mei Li, Kaimi Li, Peiran Li, Qiao Li, Yi-Yun Li, Xiao-Cheng Li, Yike Li, Yihan Li, Junsheng Li, Jiayu Li, Wen-Ya Li, Rongxia Li, Yunlun Li, Guoqin Li, Huiqin Li, Chunlin Li, Jisen Li, Peng Peng Li, Kenli Li, Guanglu Li, Xiushi Li, Dongmin Li, Jian-Jun Li, Fengyi Li, Yanling Li, Juanni Li, C Li, You-Mei Li, Beixu Li, Guiyuan Li, Suk-Yee Li, Shengjie Li, Yuanyuan Li, Xiaona Li, Shanyi Li, Chih-Chi Li, Hongbo Li, Xinhui Li, Jun Li, Mingzhe Li, Hongjuan Li, Senmao Li, Mingjie Li, Ling-Jie Li, Hong-Chun Li, Yaying Li, Liqun Li, Changxian Li, Chunqing Li, Yanni Li, Yongsheng Li, Xiujuan Li, Huifang Li, Lingling Li, Xinhua Li, Minerva X Li, Alexander H Li, Wendeng Li, Ding Li, Ming-Yang Li, Shengze Li, Linyan Li, Hewei Li, Da-Jin Li, Xiao-kun Li, Yuanhao Li, Ji-Lin Li, Congcong Li, Juan Li, Xiaobin Li, Shaoqi Li, Yuehua Li, Jinfeng Li, Shiheng Li, Hsiao-Fen Li, Mengjiao Li, Tianxiang Li, Meng-Meng Li, Liangkui Li, Tian-chang Li, Yahui Li, Wenlei Li, Xi-Xi Li, Haiyan Li, Xujun Li, Chi-Ming Li, Yi-Ning Li, Dandan Li, Yunan Li, Sherly X Li, Jiazhou Li, Zhijun Li, Zechuan Li, Wanling Li, Zhiwei Li, Xueshan Li, Jiangbo Li, Xiaohan Li, Huijie Li, Zhongwen Li, W W Li, Yalan Li, Xuejun Li, Shunwang Li, Yaqing Li, Chao Li, Yaqiao Li, Bingsheng Li, Jianfang Li, Shubo Li, Qi-Fu Li, Zi-Zhan Li, Haoran Li, Xiaoliang Li, Xinyuan Li, Maoquan Li, Chumei Li, Shijie Li, Zhanquan Li, Wenguo Li, Fangyuan Li, Xiaochun Li, Rui Li, Xuemin Li, Shanpeng Li, Wei-Na Li, Dong-Run Li, Yunxi Li, Xuyi Li, Yunchu Li, Zhengyao Li, Jinghao Li, Y-Y Li, Xiaofang Li, Tuoping Li, Pengyun Li, Lin-Feng Li, Ziqing Li, Shuangxiu Li, Yongjin Li, Chenhao Li, Weizu Li, Deming Li, Jiuyi Li, Chun-Xu Li, Luyao Li, Desheng Li, Long-Yan Li, Fuyu Li, Lingzhi Li, Xiao-Sa Li, Kunlin Li, Shu-Qi Li, Zehua Li, Mengyuan Li, Congye Li, Wensheng Li, Dehai Li, Qingshang Li, Jiannan Li, Guanbin Li, Zhiyi Li, Xing Li, Zhaoyong Li, SuYun Li, Shiyi Li, Suchun Li, Yanan Li, Jiayan Li, YueQiang Li, Xiangping Li, H-H Li, Jinman Li, Dongdong Li, Hao Li, Liliang Li, Mengxi Li, Keyuan Li, Shaojing Li, S S Li, Tong Li, Yilong Li, Lihua Li, Xue-Lian Li, Yansen Li, Hai Li, Zhi-Yuan Li, Jingfeng Li, Yanli Li, Yuan-Jing Li, Kaibin Li, Xiaohu Li, Wenjie Li, Ruikai Li, Qiyong Li, Ruixi Li, Zhonglian Li, Dalin Li, Kun Li, Qizhai Li, Pengju Li, Peifeng Li, Ai-Jun Li, Yueting Li, YaJie Li, Zijian Li, Yanqing Li, Jixuan Li, Zhandong Li, Xuejie Li, Gaizhen Li, Liang Li, Huafang Li, Nianyu Li, Chenlu Li, X-L Li, Shawn S C Li, Cuiguang Li, Dongye Li, F Li, Chunhong Li, Yuan Li, Kunpeng Li, Zhenghao Li, Chun-Bo Li, Zhantao Li, Xinle Li, Wuguo Li, Bing-Hui Li, Honggang Li, Jingyong Li, Shikang Li, Shi-Ying Li, Ming Xing Li, Ming-Xing Li, Marilyn Li, Bei-Bei Li, Hong-Lian Li, Shishi Li, Haitong Li, Yuli Li, Ruibing Li, Qingfang Li, Qibing Li, Wende Li, Heng Li, Xiao-Na Li, Xidan Li, Yixing Li, Chengcheng Li, Yu-Jin Li, Baoting Li, Ka Wan Li, Huiyou Li, Binbin Li, Xinyao Li, Gui-xing Li, Niu Li, Shunle Li, Siyue Li, Diyan Li, Mengyao Li, Yixuan Li, Shan-Shan Li, Zhuanjian Li, Gerard Li, Yuyun Li, Zhiqiong Li, Zonglin Li, Pik Yi Li, Jingxin Li, Defeng Li, Zu-guo Li, Xin-Zhu Li, Jia-Xin Li, Kuiliang Li, Pindong Li, Hualian Li, Junhong Li, Youchen Li, W Y Li, Yi-Heng Li, Runbing Li, Yanmin Li, Jingyi Li, Yuxiang Li, Hao-Fei Li, Yining Li, Xiurong Li, Haiyu Li, Huijuan Li, Yunze Li, Xu-Zhao Li, Yanzhong Li, Kainan Li, Guohui Li, Xiaoyan Li, Xu-Bo Li, Yue-Chun Li, Jiahui Li, Huiping Li, Kangyuan Li, Biao Li, Xiaoxuan Li, Anyao Li, Qing-Chang Li, Hongliang Li, Dalei Li, Zongjun Li, Changqing Li, Hanting Li, Dong-Jie Li, Xiaomin Li, Dengxiong Li, Yi-Shuan J Li, Tinghao Li, Zhouxiang Li, Yun-tian Li, Jianliang Li, Guangzhao Li, Yixi Li, Shuyu Dan Li, S A Li, Jinjie Li, Liming Li, Wenqun Li, Guixia Li, Yinan Li, Aoxi Li, Yuanjing Li, Linqi Li, Xixi Li, Bingjue Li, Binghu Li, Yu-Hang Li, Shuhui Li, Mengying Li, Yihong Li, Yaxian Li, Dali Li, Zhiming Li, Xuemei Li, Xueting Li, Yongting Li, Hongxia Li, Zhenjun Li, Danyang Li, Tiandong Li, Di-Jie Li, Bo Li, Jinliang Li, Qiji Li, Zhipeng Li, Xiaoping Li, Linhong Li, Taoyingnan Li, Lieyou Li, Huabin Li, Mao Li, Yongchao Li, Xiaoting Li, Ruotai Li, Yaojia Li, Xiao-Yao Li, Shangming Li, Yaqi Li, Yibo Li, Gui-Hua Li, Zhihong Li, Yandong Li, Chaowei Li, Huiyuan Li, Yuchun Li, Boya Li, Lamei Li, O Li, Joyce Li, Suheng Li, Hui-Ping Li, Junru Li, Zhiqiang Li, Jiangchao Li, Hecheng Li, Yueping Li, Changkai Li, Zhenglong Li, Yajuan Li, Chaoqian Li, Yu-Cheng Li, Yirun Li, Haomiao Li, Qianqian Li, YiQing Li, Zhengliang Li, Weijie Li, Wei-Qin Li, Zongyi Li, Qingxian Li, Dan-Dan Li, Yeshan Li, Zirui Li, Keke Li, Yongpeng Li, Chanyuan Li, Jianbin Li, Shiying Li, Zhongzhe Li, Yumei Li, Xiang-Ping Li, Wenqiang Li, Pei-Shan Li, Zaibo Li, Guangming Li, Xiaoqiang Li, Hanxiao Li, Jiansheng Li, Shuying Li, Xiaomei Li, Pengjie Li, Jiajia Li, Jingwen Li
articles
Xianan Dong, Liangliang Kong, Lei Huang +6 more · 2023 · Journal of ginseng research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
As a complication of Type II Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM), the etiology, pathogenesis, and treatment of cognitive dysfunction are still undefined. Recent studies demonstrated that Ginsenoside Rg1 (Rg1) ha Show more
As a complication of Type II Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM), the etiology, pathogenesis, and treatment of cognitive dysfunction are still undefined. Recent studies demonstrated that Ginsenoside Rg1 (Rg1) has promising neuroprotective properties, but the effect and mechanism in diabetes-associated cognitive dysfunction (DACD) deserve further investigation. After establishing the T2DM model with a high-fat diet and STZ intraperitoneal injection, Rg1 was given for 8 weeks. The behavior alterations and neuronal lesions were judged using the open field test (OFT) and Morris water maze (MWM), as well as HE and Nissl staining. The protein or mRNA changes of NOX2, p-PLC, TRPC6, CN, NFAT1, APP, BACE1, NCSTN, and Aβ1-42 were investigated by immunoblot, immunofluorescence or qPCR. Commercial kits were used to evaluate the levels of IP3, DAG, and calcium ion (Ca Rg1 therapy improved memory impairment and neuronal injury, decreased ROS, IP3, and DAG levels to revert Ca Rg1 therapy may improve neuronal injury and DACD via mediating PLC-CN-NFAT1 signal pathway to reduce Aβ generation in T2DM mice. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jgr.2022.12.006
BACE1
Jia-Yu Yu, Nancy Cao, Christoph D Rau +12 more · 2023 · Acta pharmacologica Sinica · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Parallel to major changes in fatty acid and glucose metabolism, defect in branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) catabolism has also been recognized as a metabolic hallmark and potential therapeutic target Show more
Parallel to major changes in fatty acid and glucose metabolism, defect in branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) catabolism has also been recognized as a metabolic hallmark and potential therapeutic target for heart failure. However, BCAA catabolic enzymes are ubiquitously expressed in all cell types and a systemic BCAA catabolic defect is also manifested in metabolic disorder associated with obesity and diabetes. Therefore, it remains to be determined the cell-autonomous impact of BCAA catabolic defect in cardiomyocytes in intact hearts independent from its potential global effects. In this study, we developed two mouse models. One is cardiomyocyte and temporal-specific inactivation of the E1α subunit (BCKDHA-cKO) of the branched-chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase (BCKDH) complex, which blocks BCAA catabolism. Another model is cardiomyocyte specific inactivation of the BCKDH kinase (BCKDK-cKO), which promotes BCAA catabolism by constitutively activating BCKDH activity in adult cardiomyocytes. Functional and molecular characterizations showed E1α inactivation in cardiomyocytes was sufficient to induce loss of cardiac function, systolic chamber dilation and pathological transcriptome reprogramming. On the other hand, inactivation of BCKDK in intact heart does not have an impact on baseline cardiac function or cardiac dysfunction under pressure overload. Our results for the first time established the cardiomyocyte cell autonomous role of BCAA catabolism in cardiac physiology. These mouse lines will serve as valuable model systems to investigate the underlying mechanisms of BCAA catabolic defect induced heart failure and to provide potential insights for BCAA targeted therapy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41401-023-01076-9
BCKDK
Tingting Huang, Yichen Long, Yang Ou +3 more · 2023 · BMC medical genomics · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Fatty acids are involved in a wide range of immunological responses in humans. Supplementation of polyunsaturated fatty acids has been reported to help alleviate symptoms and airway inflammation in as Show more
Fatty acids are involved in a wide range of immunological responses in humans. Supplementation of polyunsaturated fatty acids has been reported to help alleviate symptoms and airway inflammation in asthma patients, whereas the effects of fatty acids on the actual risk of asthma remain controversial. This study comprehensively investigated the causal effects of serum fatty acids on asthma risk using two-sample bidirectional Mendelian Randomization (MR) analysis. Genetic variants strongly associated with 123 circulating fatty acid metabolites were extracted as instrumental variables, and a large GWAS data of asthma was used to test effects of the metabolites on this outcome. The inverse-variance weighted method was used for primary MR analysis. The weighted median, MR-Egger regression, MR-PRESSO, and leave-one-out analyses were utilized to evaluate heterogeneity and pleiotropy. Potential confounders were adjusted by performing multivariable MR analyses. Reverse MR analysis was also conducted to estimate the causal effect of asthma on candidate fatty acid metabolites. Further, we performed colocalization analysis to examine the pleiotropy of variants within the fatty acid desaturase 1 (FADS1) locus between the significant metabolite traits and the risk of asthma. Cis-eQTL-MR and colocalization analysis were also performed to determine the association between RNA expression of FADS1 and asthma. Genetically instrumented higher average number of methylene groups was causally associated with a lower risk of asthma in primary MR analysis, while inversely, the higher ratio of bis-allylic groups to double bonds and the higher ratio of bis-allylic groups to total fatty acids, were associated with higher probabilities of asthma. Consistent results were obtained in multivariable MR when adjusted for potential confounders. However, these effects were completely eliminated after SNPs correlated with the FADS1 gene were excluded. The reverse MR also found no causal association. The colocalization analysis suggested that the three candidate metabolite traits and asthma likely share causal variants within the FADS1 locus. In addition, the cis-eQTL-MR and colocalization analyses demonstrated a causal association and shared causal variants between FADS1 expression and asthma. Our study supports a negative association between several PUFA traits and the risk of asthma. However, this association is largely attributed to the influence of FADS1 polymorphisms. The results of this MR study should be carefully interpreted given the pleiotropy of SNPs associated with FADS1. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12920-023-01545-4
FADS1
Xinjian Li, Junjun Ni, Hong Qing +1 more · 2023 · Molecular neurobiology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Rab proteins are important components of small GTPases and play crucial roles in regulating intracellular transportation and cargo delivery. Maintaining the proper functions of Rab proteins is essenti Show more
Rab proteins are important components of small GTPases and play crucial roles in regulating intracellular transportation and cargo delivery. Maintaining the proper functions of Rab proteins is essential for normal cellular activities such as cell signaling, division, and survival. Due to their vital and irreplaceable role in regulating intracellular vesicle transportation, accumulated researches have shown that the abnormalities of Rab proteins and their effectors are closely related to human diseases. Here, this review focused on Rab21, a member of the Rab family, and introduced the structures and functions of Rab21, as well as the regulatory mechanisms of Rab21 in human diseases, including neurodegenerative diseases, cancer, and inflammation. In summary, we described in detail the role of Rab21 in human diseases and provide insights into the potential of Rab21 as a therapeutic target for diseases. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12035-023-03454-0
RAB21
Jing Wang, Linshan Sun, Jingjing You +16 more · 2023 · EMBO reports · added 2026-04-24
Chronic stress induces depression and insulin resistance, between which there is a bidirectional relationship. However, the mechanisms underlying this comorbidity remain unclear. White adipose tissue Show more
Chronic stress induces depression and insulin resistance, between which there is a bidirectional relationship. However, the mechanisms underlying this comorbidity remain unclear. White adipose tissue (WAT), innervated by sympathetic nerves, serves as a central node in the interorgan crosstalk through adipokines. Abnormal secretion of adipokines is involved in mood disorders and metabolic morbidities. We describe here a brain-sympathetic nerve-adipose circuit originating in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) with a role in depression and insulin resistance induced by chronic stress. PVN neurons are labelled after inoculation of pseudorabies virus (PRV) into WAT and are activated under restraint stress. Chemogenetic manipulations suggest a role for the PVN in depression and insulin resistance. Chronic stress increases the sympathetic innervation of WAT and downregulates several antidepressant and insulin-sensitizing adipokines, including leptin, adiponectin, Angptl4 and Sfrp5. Chronic activation of the PVN has similar effects. β-adrenergic receptors translate sympathetic tone into an adipose response, inducing downregulation of those adipokines and depressive-like behaviours and insulin resistance. We finally show that AP-1 has a role in the regulation of adipokine expression under chronic stress. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.15252/embr.202357176
ANGPTL4
Yiran Sun, Feng Wang, Shuwen Li · 2023 · Heart & lung : the journal of critical care · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Peripheral inflammation plays an potential role in both pathogenesis and outcomes of sleep apnea syndrome (SAS). However, this topic has not been explored at the genetic level. The aim of the study wa Show more
Peripheral inflammation plays an potential role in both pathogenesis and outcomes of sleep apnea syndrome (SAS). However, this topic has not been explored at the genetic level. The aim of the study was to investigate the genetic interaction between a total of 56 peripheral inflammatory regulators and SAS, and to further reveal the genetic association of SAS-related inflammatory regulators with several neurological disorders. Summary data for SAS, cerebral atherosclerosis, vascular dementia and peripheral concentrations of these inflammatory regulators were collected from genome-wide association studies. Instrumental variables were extracted from these data for causal inference of exposure and outcome using Two-sample Mendelian randomization methods. All analyses were performed using R (version 3.5.2). First, of the included 56 inflammatory regulators, higher IL-25 level and lower IL-23, IL-24, IL-36γ and MIP-1a levels in peripheral circulation significantly increased the risk of SAS (P<0.05). Second, SAS significantly decreased the peripheral levels of IL-17A, IL-23, IL-27, IL-36α and TRAIL (P<0.05). Third, there was no genetic relationship between SAS and other inflammatory regulators (P>0.05). Fourth, in the SAS-related inflammatory regulators mentioned above, decreased levels of IL-17A and IL-27 in peripheral circulation were significantly associated with the increased risk of cerebral atherosclerosis, and decreased level of TRAIL promoted the elevation of vascular dementia risk (P<0.05). There was a interaction between peripheral inflammation and SAS at the genetic level. Furthermore, peripheral inflammation might involved in the mechanism for SAS causing some neurological diseases mentioned above. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.hrtlng.2023.06.023
IL27
Keke Luo, Jiao Chen, Hui Li +10 more · 2023 · Bioorganic chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Scutellarein hybrids were designed, synthesized and evaluated as multifunctional therapeutic agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Compounds 11a-i, containing a 2-hydroxymethyl-3,5,6-t Show more
Scutellarein hybrids were designed, synthesized and evaluated as multifunctional therapeutic agents for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Compounds 11a-i, containing a 2-hydroxymethyl-3,5,6-trimethylpyrazine fragment at the 7-position of scutellarein, were found to have balanced and effective multi-target potencies against AD. Among them, compound 11e exhibited the most potent inhibition of electric eel and human acetylcholinesterase enzymes with IC Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.bioorg.2023.106596
BACE1
Siqin Chen, Jia Jiang, Minhong Su +9 more · 2023 · BMC infectious diseases · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
The morbidity and mortality of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) remain high among infectious diseases. It was reported that angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) could be a diagnostic biomarker and a therap Show more
The morbidity and mortality of community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) remain high among infectious diseases. It was reported that angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) could be a diagnostic biomarker and a therapeutic target for pneumonia. This study aimed to develop a more objective, specific, accurate, and individualized scoring system to predict the severity of CAP. Totally, 31 non-severe community-acquired pneumonia (nsCAP) patients and 14 severe community-acquired pneumonia (sCAP) patients were enrolled in this study. The CURB-65 and pneumonia severity index (PSI) scores were calculated from the clinical data. Serum ANGPTL4 level was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). After screening factors by univariate analysis and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis, multivariate logistic regression analysis of ANGPTL4 expression level and other risk factors was performed, and a nomogram was developed to predict the severity of CAP. This nomogram was further internally validated by bootstrap resampling with 1000 replications through the area under the ROC curve (AUC), the calibration curve, and the decision curve analysis (DCA). Finally, the prediction performance of the new nomogram model, CURB-65 score, and PSI score was compared by AUC, net reclassification index (NRI), and integrated discrimination improvement (IDI). A nomogram for predicting the severity of CAP was developed using three factors (C-reactive protein (CRP), procalcitonin (PCT), and ANGPTL4). According to the internal validation, the nomogram showed a great discrimination capability with an AUC of 0.910. The Hosmer-Lemeshow test and the approximately fitting calibration curve suggested a satisfactory accuracy of prediction. The results of DCA exhibited a great net benefit. The AUC values of CURB-65 score, PSI score, and the new prediction model were 0.857, 0.912, and 0.940, respectively. NRI comparing the new model with CURB-65 score was found to be statistically significant (NRI = 0.834, P < 0.05). A robust model for predicting the severity of CAP was developed based on the serum ANGPTL4 level. This may provide new insights into accurate assessment of the severity of CAP and its targeted therapy, particularly in the early-stage of the disease. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12879-023-08648-4
ANGPTL4
Da Li, Jun Yan, Kang Li +5 more · 2023 · PeerJ · added 2026-04-24
In this study, to screen for candidate markers of temozolomide (TMZ) resistance in glioblastoma, we artificially established TMZ drug-resistant glioblastoma (GBM) cell lines, U251-TMZ and U87-TMZ. In Show more
In this study, to screen for candidate markers of temozolomide (TMZ) resistance in glioblastoma, we artificially established TMZ drug-resistant glioblastoma (GBM) cell lines, U251-TMZ and U87-TMZ. In the U251-TMZ and U87-TMZ cell lines, we screened and analyzed differentially expressed proteins using ultra-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (UPLC-MS) differential proteomics. Compared with the U251 and U87 control cell lines, 95 differential proteins were screened in the U251-TMZ and U87-TMZ cell lines, of which 28 proteins were upregulated and 67 proteins were down-regulated. Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) analyses of the co-upregulated proteins showed that most of the differentially expressed proteins were located in the cytoplasm and were significantly upregulated in the biological processes related to vesicular transport in the intimal system and inflammatory response mediated by myeloid leukocytes. Seven candidates were identified as potential GBM markers of TMZ resistance. Combined with existing research findings, our study supports that UAP1L1 and BCKDK are promising potential markers of TMZ resistance in GBM. This is important for further understanding the molecular mechanisms that drive the development and enhancement of TMZ resistance. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.7717/peerj.16426
BCKDK
Chunjie Xu, Lei Gu, Lipeng Hu +10 more · 2023 · Nature communications · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Colonocyte metabolism shapes the microbiome. Metabolites are the main mediators of information exchange between intestine and microbial communities. Arachidonic acid (AA) is an essential polyunsaturat Show more
Colonocyte metabolism shapes the microbiome. Metabolites are the main mediators of information exchange between intestine and microbial communities. Arachidonic acid (AA) is an essential polyunsaturated fatty acid and its role in colorectal cancer (CRC) remains unexplored. In this study, we show that AA feeding promotes tumor growth in AOM/DSS and intestinal specific Apc Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-37590-x
FADS1
Yue Li, Zichuan Xu, Hui Deng +6 more · 2023 · Biochemical and biophysical research communications · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) can induce nephrotic syndrome-like features such as massive proteinuria, hyperlipidemia, and fusion of glomerular podocytes with foot processes (FPs) in mice. Angiopoietin-lik Show more
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) can induce nephrotic syndrome-like features such as massive proteinuria, hyperlipidemia, and fusion of glomerular podocytes with foot processes (FPs) in mice. Angiopoietin-like protein 4 (ANGPTL4) neutralized the negative charge of glomerular basement membrane charge and aggravated renal injury. The mechanism of ANGPTL4 aggravating podocyte injury has not been well clarified. In this study, we aimed to investigate the potential role of ANGPTL4 on podocyte FPs fusion and podocyte signal molecules. We built angptl4 gene knocked out in C57BL6 mice using CRISPR/Cas9 technique. Nephrotic model was built by LPS in wild type and angptl4-/- mice. Expression of ACTN4, podocin and TRPC6 in the glomerulus were determined by immunohistochemistry. In physical condition, the wild type and angptl4-/- mice showed no significant differences in biochemical indicators and kidney pathology. But in nephrotic condition, compared with wild type mice hyperlipidemia and proteinuria with the angptl4-/- mice was significantly relieved. Moreover, the degree of FPs fusion was notably improved in the nephrotic mice knocked out angptl4 gene. Expression of ACTN4 and podocin decreased drastically in the glomerulus of wild-type nephrotic mice. Different from wild-type, the ACTN4 and podocin expression showed slight weakening in angptl4-/- nephrotic mice. As transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily member, TRPC6 expression had no visible change in glomerulus of each group. ANGPTL4 induces hyperlipidemia and podocyte injury in nephrotic mice, thereby promoting the formation of proteinuria. Its molecular mechanism may be related to ANGPTL4 down-regulating actin cytoskeletal regulatory signals ACTN4 and podocin. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2022.11.081
ANGPTL4
Zehao Wang, Dalong Zhang, Cheng Cheng +9 more · 2023 · Nutrients · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
The deterioration of brain glucose metabolism predates the clinical onset of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) positively improve brain glucose Show more
The deterioration of brain glucose metabolism predates the clinical onset of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) positively improve brain glucose metabolism and decrease the expression of AD-related proteins. However, the effects of the combined intervention are unclear. The present study explored the effects of the supplementation of MCTs combined with DHA in improving brain glucose metabolism and decreasing AD-related protein expression levels in APP/PS1 mice. The mice were assigned into four dietary treatment groups: the control group, MCTs group, DHA group, and MCTs + DHA group. The corresponding diet of the respective groups was fed to mice from the age of 3 to 11 months. The results showed that the supplementation of MCTs combined with DHA could increase serum octanoic acid (C8:0), decanoic acid (C10:0), DHA, and β-hydroxybutyrate (β-HB) levels; improve glucose metabolism; and reduce nerve cell apoptosis in the brain. Moreover, it also aided with decreasing the expression levels of amyloid beta protein (Aβ), amyloid precursor protein (APP), β-site APP cleaving enzyme-1 (BACE1), and presenilin-1 (PS1) in the brain. Furthermore, the supplementation of MCTs + DHA was significantly more beneficial than that of MCTs or DHA alone. In conclusion, the supplementation of MCTs combined with DHA could improve energy metabolism in the brain of APP/PS1 mice, thus decreasing nerve cell apoptosis and inhibiting the expression of Aβ. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/nu15194244
BACE1
Mengyao Lin, Shun Hu, Tianyi Zhang +9 more · 2023 · Cancers · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
EBV encodes at least 44 miRNAs involved in immune regulation and disease progression. Exosomes can be used as carriers of EBV-miRNA-BART intercellular transmission and affect the biological behavior o Show more
EBV encodes at least 44 miRNAs involved in immune regulation and disease progression. Exosomes can be used as carriers of EBV-miRNA-BART intercellular transmission and affect the biological behavior of cells. We characterized exosomes and established a co-culture experiment of exosomes to explore the mechanism of miR-BART1-3p transmission through the exosome pathway and its influence on tumor cell proliferation and invasion. Exosomes of EBV-positive and EBV-negative gastric cancer cells were characterized by transmission electron microscopy. NanoSight and Western blotting, and miRNA expression profiles in exosomes were sequenced with high throughput. Exosomes with high or low expression of miR-BART1-3p were co-cultured with AGS cells to study the effects on proliferation, invasion, and migration of gastric cancer cells. The target genes of EBV-miR-BART1-3p were screened and predicted by PITA, miRanda, RNAhybrid, virBase, and DIANA-TarBase v.8 databases, and the expression of the target genes after co-culture was detected by qPCR. The exosomes secreted by EBV-positive and negative gastric cancer cells range in diameter from 30 nm to 150 nm and express the exosomal signature proteins CD9 and CD63. Small RNA sequencing showed that exosomes expressed some human miRNAs, among which hsa-miR-23b-3p, hsa-miR-320a-3p, and hsa-miR-4521 were highly expressed in AGS-exo; hsa-miR-21-5p, hsa-miR-148a-3p, and hsa-miR-7-5p were highly expressed in SNU-719-exo. All EBV miRNAs were expressed in SNU-719 cells and their exosomes, among which EBV-miR-BART1-5p, EBV-miR-BART22, and EBV-miR-BART16 were the highest in SNU-719 cells; EBV-miR-BART1-5p, EBV-miR-BART10-3p, and EBV-miR-BART16 were the highest in SNU-719-exo. After miR-BART1-3p silencing in gastric cancer cells, the proliferation, healing, migration, and invasion of tumor cells were significantly improved. Laser confocal microscopy showed that exosomes could carry miRNA into recipient cells. After co-culture with miR-BART1-3p silenced exosomes, the proliferation, healing, migration, and invasion of gastric cancer cells were significantly improved. The target gene of miR-BART1-3p was FAM168A, MACC1, CPEB3, ANKRD28, and USP37 after screening by a targeted database. CPEB3 was not expressed in all exosome co-cultured cells, while ANKRD28, USP37, MACC1, and FAM168A were all expressed to varying degrees. USP37 and MACC1 were down-regulated after up-regulation of miR-BART1-3p, which may be the key target genes for miR-BART1-3p to regulate the proliferation of gastric cancer cells through exosomes. miR-BART1-3p can affect the growth of tumor cells through the exosome pathway. The proliferation, healing, migration, and invasion of gastric cancer cells were significantly improved after co-culture with exosomes of miR-BART1-3p silenced expression. USP37 and MACC1 may be potential target genes of miR-BART1-3p in regulating cell proliferation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/cancers15102841
ANKRD28
A Li, J I Sasaki, T Inubushi +4 more · 2023 · Journal of dental research · SAGE Publications · added 2026-04-24
Dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) can differentiate into vascular endothelial cells and display sprouting ability. During this process, DPSC responses to the extracellular microenvironment and cell-extra Show more
Dental pulp stem cells (DPSCs) can differentiate into vascular endothelial cells and display sprouting ability. During this process, DPSC responses to the extracellular microenvironment and cell-extracellular matrix interactions are critical in regulating their ultimate cell fate. Heparan sulfate (HS) glycosaminoglycan, a major component of extracellular matrix, plays important roles in various biological cell activities by interacting with growth factors and relative receptors. However, the regulatory function of HS on vasculogenesis of mesenchymal stem cells remains unclear. The objective of this study was to investigate the role of HS in endothelial differentiation and vasculogenesis of DPSCs. Our results show that an HS antagonist suppressed the proliferation and sprouting ability of DPSCs undergoing endothelial differentiation. Furthermore, expression of proangiogenic markers significantly declined with increasing dosages of the HS antagonist; in contrast, expression of stemness marker increased. Silencing of exostosin 1 (EXT1), a crucial glycosyltransferase for HS biosynthesis, in DPSCs using a short hairpin RNA significantly altered their gene expression profile. In addition, Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1177/00220345221130682
EXT1
Tuchen Guan, Beibei Guo, Wenxue Zhang +8 more · 2023 · Journal of neurochemistry · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-24
Schwann cells play an essential role in peripheral nerve regeneration by generating a favorable microenvironment. Gastric inhibitory peptide/gastric inhibitory peptide receptor (GIP/GIPR) axis deficie Show more
Schwann cells play an essential role in peripheral nerve regeneration by generating a favorable microenvironment. Gastric inhibitory peptide/gastric inhibitory peptide receptor (GIP/GIPR) axis deficiency leads to failure of sciatic nerve repair. However, the underlying mechanism remains elusive. In this study, we surprisingly found that GIP treatment significantly enhances the migration of Schwann cells and the formation of Schwann cell cords during recovery from sciatic nerve injury in rats. We further revealed that GIP and GIPR levels in Schwann cells were low under normal conditions, and significantly increased after injury demonstrated by real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and Western blot. Wound healing and Transwell assays showed that GIP stimulation and GIPR silencing could affect Schwann cell migration. In vitro and in vivo mechanistic studies based on interference experiment revealed that GIP/GIPR might promote mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 2 (mTORC2) activity, thus facilitating cell migration; Rap1 activation might be involved in this process. Finally, we retrieved the stimulatory factors responsible for GIPR induction after injury. The results indicate that sonic hedgehog (SHH) is a potential candidate whose expression increased upon injury. Luciferase and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays showed that Gli3, the target transcription factor of the SHH pathway, dramatically augmented GIPR expression. Additionally, in vivo inhibition of SHH could effectively reduce GIPR expression after sciatic nerve injury. Collectively, our study reveals the importance of GIP/GIPR signaling in Schwann cell migration, providing a therapeutic avenue toward peripheral nerve injury. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/jnc.15816
GIPR

lncRNA

Zhen Zhang, Yun-Xin Lu, Fangzhou Liu +16 more · 2023 · Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America · National Academy of Sciences · added 2026-04-24
Notch has been implicated in human cancers and is a putative therapeutic target. However, the regulation of Notch activation in the nucleus remains largely uncharacterized. Therefore, characterizing t Show more
Notch has been implicated in human cancers and is a putative therapeutic target. However, the regulation of Notch activation in the nucleus remains largely uncharacterized. Therefore, characterizing the detailed mechanisms governing Notch degradation will identify attractive strategies for treating Notch-activated cancers. Here, we report that the long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2206694120
WWP2
Mingming Ma, Shuzhi Zhao, Chenxin Li +3 more · 2023 · Experimental eye research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Transient receptor potential channel 6 (TRPC6) is reported to be involved in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications, but its role in diabetic retinopathy (DR) remains unknown. The aim of our study Show more
Transient receptor potential channel 6 (TRPC6) is reported to be involved in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications, but its role in diabetic retinopathy (DR) remains unknown. The aim of our study was to determine the role and mechanism of TRPC6 in DR. High glucose was used to construct a DR cell model using rat retinal Müller cells (rMC-1). Intracellular Ca The knockdown of TRPC6 reduced inflammation and cell pyroptosis in HG induced rMC-1 cells, whereas overexpression of TRPC6 had the opposite effects. The inhibition of ROS and NLRP3 reversed TRPC6-mediated cell pyroptosis in the DR cell model. In addition, EP300 increased the expression of H3K27ac and TRPC6 to promote cell pyroptosis, which was suppressed by the knockdown of TRPC6. Our study revealed a novel EP300/H3K27ac/TRPC6 signaling pathway that may contribute to HG induced Müller cell pyroptosis. TRPC6 played a novel role in Müller cell pyroptosis triggered by HG, and may be a potential target for DR treatment in the future. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.exer.2023.109381
RMC1
Xue Bai, Xingzhen Long, Fang Song +8 more · 2023 · Experimental physiology · added 2026-04-24
What is the central question of this study? Is there a risk of developing diabetes associated with statin treatment? What is the underlying mechanism of the increased incidence rate of new-onset diabe Show more
What is the central question of this study? Is there a risk of developing diabetes associated with statin treatment? What is the underlying mechanism of the increased incidence rate of new-onset diabetes in patients treated with rosuvastatin? What is the main finding and its importance? Rosuvastatin therapy reduced intraperitoneal glucose tolerance and changed the catabolism of branched-chain amino acid (BCAAs) in white adipose tissue and skeletal muscle. Protein phosphatase 2Cm knockdown completely abolished the effects of insulin and rosuvastatin on glucose absorption. This study provides mechanistic support for recent clinical data on rosuvastatin-related new-onset diabetes and underscores the logic for intervening in BCAA catabolism to prevent the harmful effects of rosuvastatin. Accumulating evidence indicates that patients treated with rosuvastatin have an increased risk of developing new-onset diabetes. However, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. In this study, we administered rosuvastatin (10 mg/kg body weight) to male C57BL/6J mice for 12 weeks and found that oral rosuvastatin dramatically reduced intraperitoneal glucose tolerance. Rosuvastatin-treated mice showed considerably higher serum levels of branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) than control mice. They also showed dramatically altered expression of BCAA catabolism-related enzymes in white adipose tissue and skeletal muscle, including downregulated mRNA expression of BCAT2 and protein phosphatase 2Cm (PP2Cm) and upregulated mRNA expression of branched-chain ketoacid dehydrogenase kinase (BCKDK). The levels of BCKD in the skeletal muscle were reduced in rosuvastatin-treated mice, which was associated with lower PP2Cm protein levels and increased BCKDK levels. We also investigated the effects of rosuvastatin and insulin administration on glucose metabolism and BCAA catabolism in C2C12 myoblasts. We observed that incubation with insulin enhanced glucose uptake and facilitated BCAA catabolism in C2C12 cells, which was accompanied by elevated Akt and glycogen synthase kinase 3 β (GSK3β) phosphorylation. These effects of insulin were prevented by co-incubation of the cells with 25 μM rosuvastatin. Moreover, the effects of insulin and rosuvastatin administration on glucose uptake and Akt and GSK3β signaling in C2C12 cells were abolished when PP2Cm was knocked down. Although the relevance of these data, obtained with high doses of rosuvastatin in mice, to therapeutic doses in humans remains to be elucidated, this study highlights a potential mechanism for the diabetogenic effects of rosuvastatin, and suggests that BCAA catabolism could be a pharmacological target for preventing the adverse effects of rosuvastatin. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1113/EP090305
BCKDK
Min Xu, Qianjin Liu, Rui Bi +12 more · 2023 · Biological psychiatry · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Genome-wide association studies have identified dozens of genetic risk loci for Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet the underlying causal variants and biological mechanisms remain elusive, especially for lo Show more
Genome-wide association studies have identified dozens of genetic risk loci for Alzheimer's disease (AD), yet the underlying causal variants and biological mechanisms remain elusive, especially for loci with complex linkage disequilibrium and regulation. To fully untangle the causal signal at a single locus, we performed a functional genomic study of 11p11.2 (the CELF1/SPI1 locus). Genome-wide association study signals at 11p11.2 were integrated with datasets of histone modification, open chromatin, and transcription factor binding to distill potentially functional variants (fVars). Their allelic regulatory activities were confirmed by allele imbalance, reporter assays, and base editing. Expressional quantitative trait loci and chromatin interaction data were incorporated to assign target genes to fVars. The relevance of these genes to AD was assessed by convergent functional genomics using bulk brain and single-cell transcriptomic, epigenomic, and proteomic datasets of patients with AD and control individuals, followed by cellular assays. We found that 24 potential fVars, rather than a single variant, were responsible for the risk of 11p11.2. These fVars modulated transcription factor binding and regulated multiple genes by long-range chromatin interactions. Besides SPI1, convergent evidence indicated that 6 target genes (MTCH2, ACP2, NDUFS3, PSMC3, C1QTNF4, and MADD) of fVars were likely to be involved in AD development. Disruption of each gene led to cellular amyloid-β and phosphorylated tau changes, supporting the existence of multiple likely causal genes at 11p11.2. Multiple variants and genes at 11p11.2 may contribute to AD risk. This finding provides new insights into the mechanistic and therapeutic challenges of AD. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.05.020
ACP2
Mengling Li, Baosen Zhou, Chang Zheng · 2023 · Frontiers in cell and developmental biology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Targeting the tumor microenvironment is increasingly recognized as an effective treatment of advanced lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD). However, few studies have addressed the efficacy of immunotherapy for Show more
Targeting the tumor microenvironment is increasingly recognized as an effective treatment of advanced lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD). However, few studies have addressed the efficacy of immunotherapy for LUAD. Here, a novel method for predicting immunotherapy efficacy has been proposed, which combines single-cell and bulk sequencing to characterize the immune microenvironment and metabolic profile of LUAD. TCGA bulk dataset was used to cluster two immune subtypes: C1 with "cold" tumor characteristics and C2 with "hot" tumor characteristics, with different prognosis. The Scissor algorithm, which is based on these two immune subtypes, identified GSE131907 single cell dataset into two groups of epithelial cells, labeled as Scissor_C1 and Scissor_C2. The enrichment revealed that Scissor_C1 was characterized by hypoxia, and a hypoxic microenvironment is a potential inducing factor for tumor invasion, metastasis, and immune therapy non-response. Furthermore, single cell analysis was performed to investigate the molecular mechanism of hypoxic microenvironment-induced invasion, metastasis, and immune therapy non-response in LUAD. Notably, Scissor_C1 cells significantly interacted with T cells and cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF), and exhibited epithelial-mesenchymal transition and immunosuppressive features. CellChat analysis revealed that a hypoxic microenvironment in Scissor_C1elevated TGFβ signaling and induced ANGPTL4 and SEMA3C secretion. Interaction with endothelial cells with ANGPTL4, which increases vascular permeability and achieves distant metastasis across the vascular endothelium. Additionally, interaction of tumor-associated macrophages (TAM) and Scissor_C1 Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2023.1163314
ANGPTL4
Xiaoxue Jiang, Yi Lu, Sijie Xie +6 more · 2023 · Non-coding RNA research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
miRNA is a noncoding RNA found in recent years and more than one third of human genes are the target of miRNAs. miR-624, located on human chromosome 14, is associated with tumorigenesis. However, the Show more
miRNA is a noncoding RNA found in recent years and more than one third of human genes are the target of miRNAs. miR-624, located on human chromosome 14, is associated with tumorigenesis. However, the role of miR-624 in human hepatocarcinogenesis is still unclear. Herein, our results indicate that miR-624 accelerates the growth of liver cancer cells Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ncrna.2023.09.005
RAB21
Xialin Zhu, Qingqing Hou, Ling Zhang +6 more · 2023 · Phytotherapy research : PTR · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Hypertension is a progressive metabolic disease characterized by circadian regulation of lipid metabolism disorder. Identifying specific lipid components and maintaining circadian homeostasis of lipid Show more
Hypertension is a progressive metabolic disease characterized by circadian regulation of lipid metabolism disorder. Identifying specific lipid components and maintaining circadian homeostasis of lipid metabolism might be a promising therapeutic strategy for hypertension. Isorhynchophylline (IRP) can regulate lipid metabolism; however, the underlying mechanism of IRP in improving lipid metabolism rhythm disorder is still unclear. The lipid circadian biomarkers and abnormal metabolic pathways intervened by IRP were investigated using diurnal lipidomic research methods. The 24-h circadian changes in mRNA and protein expression levels of circadian genes, including Bmal1, Clock, Cry1, Cry2, Per1, and Per2, and lipid metabolism-related factors (PPARα and LPL) were determined using RT-PCR and western blot analyses, respectively. The underlying mechanisms were intensively investigated by inhibiting Bmal1. Molecular docking and drug affinity responsive target stability analyses were performed to assess the binding affinity of IRP and Bmal1. IRP treatment could effectively improve 24-h blood pressure, ameliorate the lipid metabolic rhythm disorder, reverse the expression levels of circadian rhythm genes, and regulate lipid metabolism-related genes (PPARα and LPL) by mediating Bmal1. This study highlighted the potential effects of IRP in maintaining the circadian homeostasis of lipid metabolism and the treatment of hypertension. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/ptr.8015
LPL
Xinruo Zhang, Jennifer A Brody, Mariaelisa Graff +120 more · 2023 · medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences · Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory · added 2026-04-24
Xinruo Zhang, Jennifer A Brody, Mariaelisa Graff, Heather M Highland, Nathalie Chami, Hanfei Xu, Zhe Wang, Kendra Ferrier, Geetha Chittoor, Navya S Josyula, Xihao Li, Zilin Li, Matthew A Allison, Diane M Becker, Lawrence F Bielak, Joshua C Bis, Meher Preethi Boorgula, Donald W Bowden, Jai G Broome, Erin J Buth, Christopher S Carlson, Kyong-Mi Chang, Sameer Chavan, Yen-Feng Chiu, Lee-Ming Chuang, Matthew P Conomos, Dawn L DeMeo, Margaret Du, Ravindranath Duggirala, Celeste Eng, Alison E Fohner, Barry I Freedman, Melanie E Garrett, Xiuqing Guo, Chris Haiman, Benjamin D Heavner, Bertha Hidalgo, James E Hixson, Yuk-Lam Ho, Brian D Hobbs, Donglei Hu, Qin Hui, Chii-Min Hwu, Rebecca D Jackson, Deepti Jain, Rita R Kalyani, Sharon L R Kardia, Tanika N Kelly, Ethan M Lange, Michael LeNoir, Changwei Li, Loic Le Marchand, Merry-Lynn N McDonald, Caitlin P McHugh, Alanna C Morrison, Take Naseri, NHLBI Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) Consortium, Jeffrey O'Connell, Christopher J O'Donnell, Nicholette D Palmer, James S Pankow, James A Perry, Ulrike Peters, Michael H Preuss, D C Rao, Elizabeth A Regan, Sefuiva M Reupena, Dan M Roden, Jose Rodriguez-Santana, Colleen M Sitlani, Jennifer A Smith, Hemant K Tiwari, Ramachandran S Vasan, Zeyuan Wang, Daniel E Weeks, Jennifer Wessel, Kerri L Wiggins, Lynne R Wilkens, Peter W F Wilson, Lisa R Yanek, Zachary T Yoneda, Wei Zhao, Sebastian Zöllner, Donna K Arnett, Allison E Ashley-Koch, Kathleen C Barnes, John Blangero, Eric Boerwinkle, Esteban G Burchard, April P Carson, Daniel I Chasman, Yii-der Ida Chen, Joanne E Curran, Myriam Fornage, Victor R Gordeuk, Jiang He, Susan R Heckbert, Lifang Hou, Marguerite R Irvin, Charles Kooperberg, Ryan L Minster, Braxton D Mitchell, Mehdi Nouraie, Bruce M Psaty, Laura M Raffield, Alexander P Reiner, Stephen S Rich, Jerome I Rotter, M Benjamin Shoemaker, Nicholas L Smith, Kent D Taylor, Marilyn J Telen, Scott T Weiss, Yingze Zhang, Nancy Heard-Costa, Yan V Sun, Xihong Lin, L Adrienne Cupples, Leslie A Lange, Ching-Ti Liu, Ruth J F Loos, Kari E North, Anne E Justice Show less
Obesity is a major public health crisis associated with high mortality rates. Previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) investigating body mass index (BMI) have largely relied on imputed data fr Show more
Obesity is a major public health crisis associated with high mortality rates. Previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) investigating body mass index (BMI) have largely relied on imputed data from European individuals. This study leveraged whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data from 88,873 participants from the Trans-Omics for Precision Medicine (TOPMed) Program, of which 51% were of non-European population groups. We discovered 18 BMI-associated signals ( Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1101/2023.08.21.23293271
POC5
Sisi Zhang, Yue Hu, Zilong Wu +11 more · 2023 · International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Tumor radiation resistance is the main obstacle to effective radiation therapy for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We identified the role of urea cycle key enzyme carbamoyl phosphate syn Show more
Tumor radiation resistance is the main obstacle to effective radiation therapy for patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). We identified the role of urea cycle key enzyme carbamoyl phosphate synthetase 1 (CPS1) in radioresistance of HCC and explored its mechanism, aiming to provide a novel radiosensitization strategy for the CPS1-deficiency HCC subtype. The expression of CPS1 was measured by western blot and immunohistochemistry. Cell growth assay, EdU assay, cell apoptosis assay, cell cycle assay, clone formation assay, and subcutaneous tumor assay were performed to explore the relationship between CPS1 and radioresistance of HCC cells. Lipid metabonomic analysis was used for investigating the effects of CPS1 on lipid synthesis of HCC cells. RNA sequencing and coimmunoprecipitation assay were carried out to reveal the mechanism of CPS1 participating in the regulation of HCC radiation therapy resistance. Furthermore, 10074-G5, the specific inhibitor of c-Myc, was administered to HCC cells to investigate the role of c-Myc in CPS1-deficiency HCC cells. We found that urea cycle key enzyme CPS1 was frequently lower in human HCC samples and positively associated with the patient's prognosis. Functionally, the present study proved that CPS1 depletion could accelerate the development of HCC and induce radiation resistance of HCC in vitro and in vivo, and deficiency of CPS1 promoted the synthesis of some lipid molecules. Regarding the mechanism, we uncovered that inhibition of CPS1 upregulated CyclinA2 and CyclinD1 by stabilizing oncoprotein c-Myc at the posttranscriptional level and generated radioresistance of HCC cells. Moreover, inactivation of c-Myc using 10074-G5, a specific c-Myc inhibitor, could partially attenuate the proliferation and radioresistance induced by depletion of CPS1. Our results recapitulated that silencing CPS1 could promote HCC progression and radioresistance via c-Myc stability mediated by the ubiquitin-proteasome system, suggesting that targeting c-Myc in CPS1-deficiency HCC subtype may be a valuable radiosensitization strategy in the treatment of HCC. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2022.11.022
CPS1
Jingjing Su, Qingshi Wu, Xiaojie Xing +7 more · 2023 · Journal of the mechanical behavior of biomedical materials · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
The carbon fiber reinforced polyetheretherketone (CFR-PEEK) has been increasingly used in orthopedics dentistry due to its excellent biocompatibility and mechanical properties. However, the biological Show more
The carbon fiber reinforced polyetheretherketone (CFR-PEEK) has been increasingly used in orthopedics dentistry due to its excellent biocompatibility and mechanical properties. However, the biological inertness and poor antibacterial activity limit its clinical applications. This paper focused on the performances of CFR-PEEK with porous morphology that were exposed to different sulfonation periods (1, 3, 5, and 10 min, corresponding to CP-S1, CP-S3, CP-S5, and CP-S10, respectively). Residual sulfuric acid was removed by acetone rinsing, NaOH immersion, and hydrothermal treatment before in vitro and in vivo studies. The results showed some significant difference in the physicochemical properties, including energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) map of sulfur atoms, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) of valences of sulfur ions, Fourier transformation infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), hydrophilicity, hardness, and elastic modulus among CP-S3, CP-S5, and CP-S10. However, CP-S5 and CP-S10 were more effective in promoting the proliferation, adhesion, and osteogenic differentiation of seeded bone mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs) and growth inhibition of S. aureus and P. gingivalis compared with other groups. Furthermore, the CP-S5 and CP-S10 samples achieved better cranial bone repair than the non-sulfonation group in a rat model. Therefore, it can be inferred that both 5 and 10 min are viable sulfonation durations for 30% CFR-PEEK. These findings provide a theoretical basis for developing CFR-PEEK for clinical applications. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jmbbm.2023.105979
CPS1
Xiao-Huan Liu, Yupeng Zhang, Liao Chang +8 more · 2023 · Molecular and cellular endocrinology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Apolipoprotein A-IV (ApoA-IV) plays a role in satiation and serum lipid transport. In diet-induced obesity (DIO) C57BL/6J mice, ApoA-IV deficiency induced in ApoA-IV-/-knock-out (KO mice) resulted in Show more
Apolipoprotein A-IV (ApoA-IV) plays a role in satiation and serum lipid transport. In diet-induced obesity (DIO) C57BL/6J mice, ApoA-IV deficiency induced in ApoA-IV-/-knock-out (KO mice) resulted in increased bodyweight, insulin resistance (IR) and plasma free fatty acid (FFA), which was partially reversed by stable ApoA-IV-green fluorescent protein (KO-A4-GFP) transfection in KO mice. DIO KO mice exhibited increased M1 macrophages in epididymal white adipose tissue (eWAT) as well as in the blood. Based on RNA-sequencing analyses, cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions, T cell and B cell receptors, and especially IL-17 and TNF-α, were up-regulated in eWAT of DIO ApoA-IV KO compared with WT mice. Supplemented ApoA-IV suppressed lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced IKK and JNK phosphorylation in Raw264.7 macrophage cell culture assays. When the culture medium was supplemented to 3T3-L1 adipocytes they exhibited an increased sensitivity to insulin. ApoA-IV protects against obesity-associated metabolic inflammation mainly through suppression in M1 macrophages of eWAT, IL17-IKK and IL17-JNK activity. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.mce.2022.111813
APOA4
Wanlin Zhu, Bin Ye, Shangwen Yang +1 more · 2023 · Journal of molecular histology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Cancer cell stemness contributes significantly to intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) progression. However, the roles of deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) in ICC modulation are poorly understood. Ubiq Show more
Cancer cell stemness contributes significantly to intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (ICC) progression. However, the roles of deubiquitinating enzymes (DUBs) in ICC modulation are poorly understood. Ubiquitin specific peptidase 10 (USP10) was highly expressed in ICC spheres. The interaction between USP10 and snail family transcriptional repressor 1 (SNAI1) reduced the polyubiquitination of the SNAI1 protein and stabilized the SNAI1 protein. USP10 knockdown in RBE cells inhibited cell proliferation, promoted cell apoptosis and decreased the diameter of the formed spheres and the expression levels of CD44, EpCAM, OCT4 and SOX2. SNAI1 overexpression alleviated the effect of USP10 knockdown in RBE cells. In addition, the knockdown of USP10 attenuated the ability of RBE cells to form tumors subcutaneously in nude mice. Our results revealed that USP10 attenuates ICC cell malignancy by deubiquitinating SNAI1, indicating that USP10 could be developed as a therapeutic target for ICC treatment. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s10735-023-10150-9
SNAI1
Manyun Huang, Jian Zhang, Changpeng Song +10 more · 2023 · Journal of the American Heart Association · added 2026-04-24
Background Sarcomere gene mutation and myocardial fibrosis are both associated with poorer clinical outcomes in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The aim of this study was to determine Show more
Background Sarcomere gene mutation and myocardial fibrosis are both associated with poorer clinical outcomes in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The aim of this study was to determine the relationship between sarcomere gene mutation and myocardial fibrosis measured by both histopathology and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR). Methods and Results Two hundred twenty-seven patients with HCM who underwent surgical treatment, genetic testing, and CMR were enrolled. We retrospectively analyzed basic characteristics, sarcomere gene mutation, and myocardial fibrosis measured by CMR and histopathology. In our study, the mean age was 43 years, and 152 patients (67.0%) were men. A total of 107 patients (47.1%) carried a positive sarcomere gene mutation. The myocardial fibrosis ratio was significantly higher in the late gadolinium enhancement (LGE)+ group (LGE+ 14.3±7.5% versus LGE- 9.0±4.3%; Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.122.028293
MYBPC3
Mingxia Wang, Fei Qiao, Zihua Li +5 more · 2023 · Iranian journal of immunology : IJI · added 2026-04-24
Different subtypes of dendritic cells (DCs) can induce different types of immune responses. Our previous study found that Echinococcus granulosus (E. granulosus) antigens (Eg.ferritin, Eg.mMDH and Eg. Show more
Different subtypes of dendritic cells (DCs) can induce different types of immune responses. Our previous study found that Echinococcus granulosus (E. granulosus) antigens (Eg.ferritin, Eg.mMDH and Eg.10) stimulated DC differentiation to different subtypes and produced different immune responses. To further understand whether Eg.ferritin, Eg.mMDH and Eg.10 affect the DC-mediated immune response by promoting the differentiation of monocytes to DCs. Bone marrow-derived monocytes were exposed to three antigens of E. granulosus on days 0, 3, 5, and 7. The percentage of monocyte-derived DCs (moDCs), DCs subsets, and the expression of surface molecules of DCs at different time points in different groups were assessed by flow cytometry. The levels of cytokines of IL-1β, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, IL-13, IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-12p70, IL-18, IL-23, and IL-27 in the cell culture supernatant were detected by multi-factorial detection technology. The percentage of moDCs revealed that none of the three antigens blocked monocyte differentiation to DCs. The monocytes of 7-day-old cultures showed increased sensitivity to these antigens. The Eg.ferritin induced more mature DCs, which expressed high levels of MHC II and costimulatory molecules, and secreted Th1 cytokines. Eg10 and Eg.mMDH induced lower degrees of DC maturation, however differentiated DCs were in a semi-mature state due to low expression of MHC II and costimulatory molecules and secretion of higher Th2 and lower Th1 cytokines. Eg.ferritin promotes full maturation of DCs and induces Th1 immune response, whereas Eg.10 and Eg.mMDH induce semi-mature DCs producing higher levels of Th2 cytokines. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.22034/iji.2023.98163.2557
IL27
Lu Shi, Jingkang Wang, Changhao He +14 more · 2023 · BMC complementary medicine and therapies · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Mulberry (Morus alba L.) leaf, as a medicinal and food homologous traditional Chinese medicine, has a clear therapeutic effect on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), yet its underlying mechanisms have no Show more
Mulberry (Morus alba L.) leaf, as a medicinal and food homologous traditional Chinese medicine, has a clear therapeutic effect on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), yet its underlying mechanisms have not been totally clarified. The study aimed to explore the mechanism of mulberry leaf in the treatment of T2DM through tandem mass tag (TMT)-based quantitative proteomics analysis of skeletal muscle. The anti-diabetic activity of mulberry leaf extract (MLE) was evaluated by using streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats at a dose of 4.0 g crude drug /kg p.o. daily for 8 weeks. Fasting blood glucose, body weight, food and water intake were monitored at specific intervals, and oral glucose tolerance test and insulin tolerance test were conducted at the 7th and 8th week respectively. At the end of the experiment, levels of glycated hemoglobin A1c, insulin, free fat acid, leptin, adiponectin, total cholesterol, triglyceride, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol were assessed and the pathological changes of rat skeletal muscle were observed by HE staining. TMT-based quantitative proteomic analysis of skeletal muscle and bioinformatics analysis were performed and differentially expressed proteins (DEPs) were validated by western blot. The interactions between the components of MLE and DEPs were further assessed using molecular docking. After 8 weeks of MLE intervention, the clinical indications of T2DM such as body weight, food and water intake of rats were improved to a certain extent, while insulin sensitivity was increased and glycemic control was improved. Serum lipid profiles were significantly reduced, and the skeletal muscle fiber gap and atrophy were alleviated. Proteomic analysis of skeletal muscle showed that MLE treatment reversed 19 DEPs in T2DM rats, regulated cholesterol metabolism, fat digestion and absorption, vitamin digestion and absorption and ferroptosis signaling pathways. Key differential proteins Apolipoprotein A-1 (ApoA1) and ApoA4 were successfully validated by western blot and exhibited strong binding activity to the MLE's ingredients. This study first provided skeletal muscle proteomic changes in T2DM rats before and after MLE treatment, which may help us understand the molecular mechanisms, and provide a foundation for developing potential therapeutic targets of anti-T2DM of MLE. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12906-023-04140-3
APOA4