👤 Mei Zhang

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Also published as: A-Mei Zhang, Ai Zhang, Ai-Min Zhang, Aiguo Zhang, Aihua Zhang, Aijun Zhang, Aileen Zhang, Ailin Zhang, Aimei Zhang, Aimin Zhang, Aixiang Zhang, Alaina Zhang, Alex R Zhang, Amy L Zhang, An Zhang, An-Qi Zhang, Anan Zhang, Andrew Zhang, Ang Zhang, Anli Zhang, Anqi Zhang, Anwei Zhang, Anying Zhang, Ao Zhang, Bangke Zhang, Bangzhou Zhang, Bao Long Zhang, Bao-Fu Zhang, Bao-Rong Zhang, Baohu Zhang, Baojing Zhang, Baojun Zhang, Baoren Zhang, Baorong Zhang, Baotong Zhang, Bei B Zhang, Bei Zhang, Bei-Bei Zhang, Beiyu Zhang, Ben Zhang, Benjian Zhang, Benyou Zhang, Bi-Tian Zhang, Biao Zhang, Bicheng Zhang, Bikui Zhang, Bin Zhang, Binbin Zhang, Bing Zhang, Bing-Qi Zhang, Bingbing Zhang, Bingkun Zhang, Bingqiang Zhang, Bingxue Zhang, Bingye Zhang, Bixia Zhang, Bo Zhang, Bo-Fei Zhang, Bo-Heng Zhang, Bo-Ya Zhang, Bochuan Zhang, Bofang Zhang, Bohao Zhang, Bohong Zhang, Bohua Zhang, Bojian Zhang, Bolin Zhang, Boping Zhang, Boqing Zhang, Bosheng Zhang, Bowei Zhang, Bowen Zhang, Boxi Zhang, Boxiang Zhang, Boya Zhang, Boyan Zhang, C D Zhang, C H Zhang, C Zhang, Cai Zhang, Cai-Ling Zhang, Caihong Zhang, Caiping Zhang, Caiqing Zhang, Caishi Zhang, Caiyi Zhang, Caiying Zhang, Caiyu Zhang, Can Zhang, Cathy C Zhang, Chan-na Zhang, Chang Zhang, Chang-Hua Zhang, Changhua Zhang, Changhui Zhang, Changjiang Zhang, Changjing Zhang, Changlin Zhang, Changlong Zhang, Changquan Zhang, Changteng Zhang, Changwang Zhang, Channa Zhang, Chao Zhang, Chao-Hua Zhang, Chao-Sheng Zhang, Chao-Yang Zhang, ChaoDong Zhang, Chaobao Zhang, Chaoke Zhang, Chaoqiang Zhang, Chaoyang Zhang, Chaoyue Zhang, Chen Zhang, Chen-Qi Zhang, Chen-Ran Zhang, Chen-Song Zhang, Chen-Xi Zhang, Chen-Yan Zhang, Chen-Yang Zhang, Chenan Zhang, Chenfei Zhang, Cheng Cheng Zhang, Cheng Zhang, Cheng-Lin Zhang, Cheng-Wei Zhang, Chengbo Zhang, Chengcheng Zhang, Chengfei Zhang, Chenggang Zhang, Chengkai Zhang, Chenglong Zhang, Chengnan Zhang, Chengrui Zhang, Chengsheng Zhang, Chengshi Zhang, Chenguang Zhang, Chengwu Zhang, Chengxiang Zhang, Chengxiong Zhang, Chengyu Zhang, Chenhong Zhang, Chenhui Zhang, Chenjie Zhang, Chenlin Zhang, Chenlu Zhang, Chenmin Zhang, Chenming Zhang, Chenrui Zhang, Chenshuang Zhang, Chenxi Zhang, Chenyan Zhang, Chenyang Zhang, Chenyi Zhang, Chenzi Zhang, Chi Zhang, Chong Zhang, Chong-Hui Zhang, Chongguo Zhang, Chonghe Zhang, Chris Zhiyi Zhang, Chu-Yue Zhang, Chuan Zhang, Chuanfu Zhang, Chuankuan Zhang, Chuankuo Zhang, Chuanmao Zhang, Chuantao Zhang, Chuanxin Zhang, Chuanyong Zhang, Chuchu Zhang, Chumeng Zhang, Chun Zhang, Chun-Lan Zhang, Chun-Mei Zhang, Chun-Qing Zhang, Chungu Zhang, Chunguang Zhang, Chunhai Zhang, Chunhong Zhang, Chunhua Zhang, Chunjun Zhang, Chunli Zhang, Chunling Zhang, Chunqing Zhang, Chunxia Zhang, Chunxiang Zhang, Chunxiao Zhang, Chunyan Zhang, Chunying Zhang, Churen Zhang, Chuting Zhang, Chuyue Zhang, Ci Zhang, Claire Y Zhang, Claire Zhang, Clarence K Zhang, Cong Zhang, Congen Zhang, Cuihua Zhang, Cuijuan Zhang, Cuilin Zhang, Cuiping Zhang, Cuiyu Zhang, Cun Zhang, Da Zhang, Da-Qi Zhang, Da-Wei Zhang, Dachuan Zhang, Dadong Zhang, Daguo Zhang, Dai Zhang, Dalong Zhang, Daming Zhang, Dan Zhang, Dan-Dan Zhang, DanDan Zhang, Danfeng Zhang, Danhua Zhang, Danning Zhang, Danyan Zhang, Danyang Zhang, Daolai Zhang, Daoyong Zhang, Dapeng Zhang, David Y Zhang, David Zhang, Dawei Zhang, Daxin Zhang, Dayi Zhang, De-Jun Zhang, Dekai Zhang, Delai Zhang, Deng-Feng Zhang, Dengke Zhang, Deqiang Zhang, Detao Zhang, Deyi Zhang, Deyin Zhang, Di Zhang, Dian Ming Zhang, Dianbo Zhang, Dianzheng Zhang, Ding Zhang, Dingdong Zhang, Dinghu Zhang, Dingkai Zhang, Dingyi Zhang, Dingyu Zhang, Dong Zhang, Dong-Hui Zhang, Dong-Mei Zhang, Dong-Wei Zhang, Dong-Ying Zhang, Dong-cui Zhang, Dong-juan Zhang, Dong-qiang Zhang, Dongdong Zhang, Dongfeng Zhang, Donghua Zhang, Donghui Zhang, Dongjian Zhang, Dongjie Zhang, Donglei Zhang, Dongmei Zhang, Dongsheng Zhang, Dongxin Zhang, Dongyan Zhang, Dongyang Zhang, Dongying Zhang, Donna D Zhang, Donna Zhang, Duo Zhang, Duoduo Zhang, Duowen Zhang, En Zhang, Enhui Zhang, Enming Zhang, Erchen Zhang, F P Zhang, F Zhang, Fa Zhang, Famin Zhang, Fan Zhang, Fang Zhang, Fanghong Zhang, Fangmei Zhang, Fangting Zhang, Fangyuan Zhang, Fei Zhang, Fei-Ran Zhang, Feifei Zhang, Feixue Zhang, Fen Zhang, Feng Zhang, Fengqing Zhang, Fengshi Zhang, Fengshuo Zhang, Fengwei Zhang, Fengxi Zhang, Fengxia Zhang, Fengxu Zhang, Fomin Zhang, Fred Zhang, Fu-Ping Zhang, Fubo Zhang, Fugui Zhang, Fuhan Zhang, Fujun Zhang, Fukang Zhang, Fuming Zhang, Fuqiang Zhang, Fuquan Zhang, Furen Zhang, Fushun Zhang, Fuxing Zhang, Fuyang Zhang, Fuyuan Zhang, G Zhang, G-Y Zhang, Gan Zhang, Gang Zhang, Ganlin Zhang, Gaoxin Zhang, Gary Zhang, Ge Zhang, Geng Zhang, Genglin Zhang, Genxi Zhang, Geyang Zhang, Gong Zhang, Gu Zhang, Guan-Yan Zhang, Guang Zhang, Guang-Qiong Zhang, Guang-Xian Zhang, Guang-Ya Zhang, Guanghui Zhang, Guangji Zhang, Guanglei Zhang, Guangliang Zhang, Guangping Zhang, Guangqiong Zhang, Guangxian Zhang, Guangxin Zhang, Guangye Zhang, Guangyong Zhang, Guangyuan Zhang, Guanqun Zhang, Gui-Ping Zhang, Guicheng Zhang, Guihua Zhang, Guijie Zhang, Guili Zhang, Guiliang Zhang, Guilin Zhang, Guimin Zhang, Guiping Zhang, Guisen Zhang, Guixia Zhang, Guixiang Zhang, Gumuyang Zhang, Guo-Fang Zhang, Guo-Fu Zhang, Guo-Guo Zhang, Guo-Liang Zhang, Guo-Wei Zhang, Guo-Xiong Zhang, Guoan Zhang, Guochao Zhang, Guodong Zhang, Guofang Zhang, Guofeng Zhang, Guofu Zhang, Guoguo Zhang, Guohua Zhang, Guohui Zhang, Guojun Zhang, Guoli Zhang, Guoliang Zhang, Guolong Zhang, Guomin Zhang, Guoming Zhang, Guoping Zhang, Guoqiang Zhang, Guoqing Zhang, Guorui Zhang, Guosen Zhang, Guowei Zhang, Guoxin Zhang, Guoying Zhang, Guozhi Zhang, H D Zhang, H F Zhang, H L Zhang, H P Zhang, H W Zhang, H X Zhang, H Y Zhang, H Zhang, H-F Zhang, Hai Zhang, Hai-Bo Zhang, Hai-Feng Zhang, Hai-Gang Zhang, Hai-Han Zhang, Hai-Liang Zhang, Hai-Man Zhang, Hai-Ying Zhang, Haibei Zhang, Haibing Zhang, Haibo Zhang, Haicheng Zhang, Haifeng Zhang, Haihong Zhang, Haihua Zhang, Haijiao Zhang, Haijun Zhang, Haikuo Zhang, Hailei Zhang, Hailian Zhang, Hailiang Zhang, Hailin Zhang, Hailing Zhang, Hailong Zhang, Hailou Zhang, Haiming Zhang, Hainan Zhang, Haipeng Zhang, Haisan Zhang, Haisen Zhang, Haitao Zhang, Haiwang Zhang, Haiwei Zhang, Haixia Zhang, Haiyan Zhang, Haiyang Zhang, Haiying Zhang, Haiyue Zhang, Han Zhang, Hanchao Zhang, Hang Zhang, Hanqi Zhang, Hanrui Zhang, Hansi Zhang, Hanting Zhang, Hanwang Zhang, Hanwen Zhang, Hanxu Zhang, Hanyin Zhang, Hanyu Zhang, Hao Zhang, Hao-Chen Zhang, Hao-Yu Zhang, Haohao Zhang, Haojian Zhang, Haojie Zhang, Haojun Zhang, Haokun Zhang, Haolin Zhang, Haomin Zhang, Haonan Zhang, Haopeng Zhang, Haoran Zhang, Haotian Zhang, Haowen Zhang, Haoxing Zhang, Haoyu Zhang, Haoyuan Zhang, Haoyue Zhang, Haozheng Zhang, He Zhang, Hefang Zhang, Hejun Zhang, Heng Zhang, Hengming Zhang, Hengrui Zhang, Hengyuan Zhang, Heping Zhang, Hong Zhang, Hong-Jie Zhang, Hong-Sheng Zhang, Hong-Xing Zhang, Hong-Yu Zhang, Hong-Zhen Zhang, Hongbin Zhang, Hongbing Zhang, Hongcai Zhang, Hongfeng Zhang, Hongfu Zhang, Honghe Zhang, Honghong Zhang, Honghua Zhang, Hongjia Zhang, Hongjie Zhang, Hongjin Zhang, Hongju Zhang, Hongjuan Zhang, Honglei Zhang, Hongliang Zhang, Hongmei Zhang, Hongmin Zhang, Hongquan Zhang, Hongrong Zhang, Hongrui Zhang, Hongsen Zhang, Hongtao Zhang, Hongting Zhang, Hongwu Zhang, Hongxia Zhang, Hongxin Zhang, Hongxing Zhang, Hongya Zhang, Hongyan Zhang, Hongyang Zhang, Hongyi Zhang, Hongying Zhang, Hongyou Zhang, Hongyuan Zhang, Hongyun Zhang, Hongzhong Zhang, Hongzhou Zhang, Houbin Zhang, Hu Zhang, Hua Zhang, Hua-Min Zhang, Hua-Xiong Zhang, Huabing Zhang, Huafeng Zhang, Huaiyong Zhang, Huajia Zhang, Huan Zhang, Huan-Tian Zhang, Huanmin Zhang, Huanqing Zhang, Huanxia Zhang, Huanyu Zhang, Huaqi Zhang, Huaqiu Zhang, Huawei Zhang, Huawen Zhang, Huayang Zhang, Huayong Zhang, Huayu Zhang, Hugang Zhang, Huhan Zhang, Hui Hua Zhang, Hui Z Zhang, Hui Zhang, Hui-Jun Zhang, Hui-Wen Zhang, Huibing Zhang, Huifang Zhang, Huihui Zhang, Huijie Zhang, Huijun Zhang, Huili Zhang, Huilin Zhang, Huimao Zhang, Huimin Zhang, Huiming Zhang, Huiping Zhang, Huiqing Zhang, Huiru Zhang, Huiting Zhang, Huixin Zhang, Huiying Zhang, Huiyu Zhang, Huiyuan Zhang, Huize Zhang, Huizhen Zhang, Igor Ying Zhang, J B Zhang, J R Zhang, J Y Zhang, J Zhang, J-Y Zhang, Jamie Zhang, Jason Z Zhang, Jennifer Y Zhang, Jerry Z Zhang, Ji Yao Zhang, Ji Zhang, Ji-Yuan Zhang, Jia Zhang, Jia-Bao Zhang, Jia-Si Zhang, Jia-Su Zhang, Jia-Xuan Zhang, Jiabi Zhang, Jiachao Zhang, Jiachen Zhang, Jiacheng Zhang, Jiahai Zhang, Jiahao Zhang, Jiahe Zhang, Jiajia Zhang, Jiajing Zhang, Jiaming Zhang, Jian Zhang, Jian-Guo Zhang, Jian-Ping Zhang, Jian-Xu Zhang, Jianan Zhang, Jianbin Zhang, Jianbo Zhang, Jianchao Zhang, Jianduan Zhang, Jianeng Zhang, Jianfa Zhang, Jiang Zhang, Jiangang Zhang, Jianghong Zhang, Jianglin Zhang, Jiangmei Zhang, Jiangtao Zhang, Jianguang Zhang, Jianguo Zhang, Jiangyan Zhang, Jianhai Zhang, Jianhong Zhang, Jianhua Zhang, Jianhui Zhang, Jianing Zhang, Jianjun Zhang, Jiankang Zhang, Jiankun Zhang, Jianliang Zhang, Jianling Zhang, Jianmei Zhang, Jianmin Zhang, Jianming Zhang, Jiannan Zhang, Jianping Zhang, Jianqiong Zhang, Jianshe Zhang, Jianting Zhang, Jianwei Zhang, Jianwen Zhang, Jianwu Zhang, Jianxia Zhang, Jianxiang Zhang, Jianxin Zhang, Jianying Zhang, Jianyong Zhang, Jianzhao Zhang, Jiao Zhang, Jiaqi Zhang, Jiasheng Zhang, Jiawei Zhang, Jiawen Zhang, Jiaxin Zhang, Jiaxing Zhang, Jiayan Zhang, Jiayi Zhang, Jiayin Zhang, Jiaying Zhang, Jiayu Zhang, Jiayuan Zhang, Jibin Zhang, Jicai Zhang, Jie Zhang, Jiecheng Zhang, Jiehao Zhang, Jiejie Zhang, Jieming Zhang, Jieping Zhang, Jieqiong Zhang, Jieying Zhang, Jifa Zhang, Jifeng Zhang, Jihang Zhang, Jimei Zhang, Jiming Zhang, Jimmy Zhang, Jin Zhang, Jin-Ge Zhang, Jin-Jing Zhang, Jin-Man Zhang, Jin-Ru Zhang, Jin-Rui Zhang, Jin-Yu Zhang, Jinbiao Zhang, Jinfan Zhang, Jinfang Zhang, Jinfeng Zhang, Jing Jing Zhang, Jing Zhang, Jing-Bo Zhang, Jing-Chang Zhang, Jing-Fa Zhang, Jing-Lve Zhang, Jing-Nan Zhang, Jing-Qiu Zhang, Jing-Zhan Zhang, JingZi Zhang, Jingchuan Zhang, Jingchun Zhang, Jingdan Zhang, Jingdong Zhang, Jingfa Zhang, Jinghui Zhang, Jingjing Zhang, Jinglan Zhang, Jingli Zhang, Jingliang Zhang, Jinglu Zhang, Jingmei Zhang, Jingmian Zhang, Jingning Zhang, Jingping Zhang, Jingqi Zhang, Jingrong Zhang, Jingru Zhang, Jingshuang Zhang, Jingsong Zhang, Jingtian Zhang, Jingting Zhang, Jingwei Zhang, Jingwen Zhang, Jingxi Zhang, Jingxiao Zhang, Jingxuan Zhang, Jingxue Zhang, Jingyao Zhang, Jingyi Zhang, Jingying Zhang, Jingyu Zhang, Jingyuan Zhang, Jingyue Zhang, Jingzhe Zhang, Jinhua Zhang, Jinhui Zhang, Jinjin Zhang, Jinjing Zhang, Jinliang Zhang, Jinlong Zhang, Jinming Zhang, Jinquan Zhang, Jinrui Zhang, Jinsong Zhang, Jinsu Zhang, Jintao Zhang, Jinwei Zhang, Jinxiu Zhang, Jinyi Zhang, Jinying Zhang, Jinyu Zhang, Jinze Zhang, Jinzhou Zhang, Jiqiang Zhang, Jiquan Zhang, Jishou Zhang, Jishui Zhang, Jitai Zhang, Jiuchun Zhang, Jiupan Zhang, Jiuwei Zhang, Jiuxuan Zhang, Jixia Zhang, Jixing Zhang, Jiyang Zhang, Joe Z Zhang, John H Zhang, John Z H Zhang, Joshua Zhang, Joyce Zhang, Juan Zhang, Juan-Juan Zhang, Jue Zhang, Juliang Zhang, Jun Zhang, Jun-Feng Zhang, Jun-Jie Zhang, Jun-Xiao Zhang, Jun-Xiu Zhang, Jun-ying Zhang, June Zhang, Junfeng Zhang, Junhan Zhang, Junhang Zhang, Junhua Zhang, Junhui Zhang, Junjie Zhang, Junjing Zhang, Junkai Zhang, Junli Zhang, Junling Zhang, Junlong Zhang, Junmei Zhang, Junmin Zhang, Junpei Zhang, Junpeng Zhang, Junping Zhang, Junqing Zhang, Junran Zhang, Junru Zhang, Junsheng Zhang, Juntai Zhang, Junwei Zhang, Junxia Zhang, Junxiao Zhang, Junxing Zhang, Junxiu Zhang, Junyan Zhang, Junyi Zhang, Junying Zhang, Junyu Zhang, Junzhi Zhang, Juqing Zhang, K Y Zhang, K Zhang, Kai Zhang, Kai-Jie Zhang, Kai-Qiang Zhang, Kaichuang Zhang, Kaige Zhang, Kaihua Zhang, Kaihui Zhang, Kailin Zhang, Kailing Zhang, Kaiming Zhang, Kainan Zhang, Kaitai Zhang, Kaituo Zhang, Kaiwen Zhang, Kaiyi Zhang, Kan Zhang, Kang Zhang, Kang-Ling Zhang, Kangjun Zhang, Kangning Zhang, Karen Zhang, Ke Zhang, Ke-Wen Zhang, Ke-lan Zhang, Kefen Zhang, Kejia Zhang, Kejian Zhang, Kejin Zhang, Kejun Zhang, Keke Zhang, Keshan Zhang, Kewen Zhang, Keyi Zhang, Keyong Zhang, Keyu Zhang, Kezhong Zhang, Kongyong Zhang, Kui Zhang, Kui-ming Zhang, Kun Zhang, Kunning Zhang, Kunshan Zhang, Kunyi Zhang, Kuo Zhang, L F Zhang, L Zhang, L-S Zhang, Laihong Zhang, Lan Zhang, Lanfang Zhang, Lanju Zhang, Lanjun Zhang, Lanlan Zhang, Lantian Zhang, Lanyue Zhang, Le Zhang, Le-Le Zhang, Lechi Zhang, Lei Zhang, Lei-Lei Zhang, Lei-Sheng Zhang, Leilei Zhang, Leili Zhang, Leitao Zhang, Leiying Zhang, Lele Zhang, Leli Zhang, Leo H Zhang, Li Zhang, Li-Fen Zhang, Li-Jie Zhang, Li-Ke Zhang, Li-ping Zhang, Lian Zhang, Lian-Lian Zhang, Lianbo Zhang, Lianfeng Zhang, Liang Zhang, Liang-Rong Zhang, Liangdong Zhang, Liangliang Zhang, Liangming Zhang, Lianjun Zhang, Lianmei Zhang, Lianqin Zhang, Lianxin Zhang, Libo Zhang, Lichao Zhang, Lichen Zhang, Licheng Zhang, Lichuan Zhang, Licui Zhang, Lida Zhang, Lie Zhang, Lifan Zhang, Lifang Zhang, Liguo Zhang, Lihong Zhang, Lihua Zhang, Lijian Zhang, Lijiao Zhang, Lijie Zhang, Lijuan Zhang, Lijun Zhang, Lilei Zhang, Lili Zhang, Limei Zhang, Limin Zhang, Liming Zhang, Lin Zhang, Lin-Jie Zhang, Lina Zhang, Linan Zhang, Linbo Zhang, Linda S Zhang, Ling Xia Zhang, Ling Zhang, Ling-Yu Zhang, Lingjie Zhang, Lingli Zhang, Lingling Zhang, Lingna Zhang, Lingqiang Zhang, Lingxiao Zhang, Lingyan Zhang, Lingyu Zhang, Lining Zhang, Linjing Zhang, Linli Zhang, Linlin Zhang, Lintao Zhang, Linyou Zhang, Linyuan Zhang, Liping Zhang, Liqian Zhang, Lirong Zhang, Lishuang Zhang, Litao Zhang, Liu Zhang, Liuming Zhang, Liuwei Zhang, Liwei Zhang, Liwen Zhang, Lixia Zhang, Lixing Zhang, Liyan Zhang, Liyi Zhang, Liyin Zhang, Liying Zhang, Liyu Zhang, Liyuan Zhang, Liyun Zhang, Lizhi Zhang, Long Zhang, Longlong Zhang, Longxin Zhang, Longzhen Zhang, Lu Zhang, Lu-Pei Zhang, Lu-Yang Zhang, Luanluan Zhang, Lucia Zhang, Lufei Zhang, Lukuan Zhang, Lulu Zhang, Lun Zhang, Lunan Zhang, Luning Zhang, Luo Zhang, Luo-Meng Zhang, Luoping Zhang, Lupei Zhang, Lusha Zhang, Luwen Zhang, Luyao Zhang, Luyun Zhang, Luzheng Zhang, Lv-Lang Zhang, M H Zhang, M J Zhang, M M Zhang, M Q Zhang, M X Zhang, M Zhang, Man Zhang, Manjin Zhang, Mao Zhang, Maomao Zhang, Mei-Fang Zhang, Mei-Ling Zhang, Mei-Qing Zhang, Mei-Ya Zhang, Mei-Zhen Zhang, MeiLu Zhang, Meidi Zhang, Meijia Zhang, Meiling Zhang, Meimei Zhang, Meishan Zhang, Meiwei Zhang, Meixia Zhang, Meixian Zhang, Meiyu Zhang, Melissa C Zhang, Melody Zhang, Meng Zhang, Meng-Jie Zhang, Meng-Wen Zhang, Meng-Ying Zhang, Mengdi Zhang, Mengguo Zhang, Menghao Zhang, Menghuan Zhang, Menghui Zhang, Mengjia Zhang, Mengjie Zhang, Mengliang Zhang, Menglu Zhang, Mengmeng Zhang, Mengmin Zhang, Mengna Zhang, Mengnan Zhang, Mengni Zhang, Mengqi Zhang, Mengqiu Zhang, Mengren Zhang, Mengshi Zhang, Mengxi Zhang, Mengxian Zhang, Mengxue Zhang, Mengying Zhang, Mengyuan Zhang, Mengyue Zhang, Mengzhao Zhang, Mengzhen Zhang, Mi Zhang, Mianzhi Zhang, Miao Zhang, Miao-Miao Zhang, Miaomiao Zhang, Miaoran Zhang, Michael Zhang, Min Zhang, Minfang Zhang, Ming Zhang, Ming-Jun Zhang, Ming-Liang Zhang, Ming-Ming Zhang, Ming-Rong Zhang, Ming-Yu Zhang, Ming-Zhu Zhang, Mingai Zhang, Mingchang Zhang, Mingdi Zhang, Mingfa Zhang, Mingfeng Zhang, Minghang Zhang, Minghao Zhang, Minghui Zhang, Mingjie Zhang, Mingjiong Zhang, Mingjun Zhang, Mingming Zhang, Mingqi Zhang, Mingtong Zhang, Mingxiang Zhang, Mingxiu Zhang, Mingxuan Zhang, Mingxue Zhang, Mingyang A Zhang, Mingyang Zhang, Mingyao Zhang, Mingyi Zhang, Mingying Zhang, Mingyu Zhang, Mingyuan Zhang, Mingyue Zhang, Mingzhao Zhang, Mingzhen Zhang, Minhong Zhang, Minying Zhang, Minyue Zhang, Minzhi Zhang, Minzhu Zhang, Mo Zhang, Mo-Ruo Zhang, Mu Zhang, Muqing Zhang, Muxin Zhang, Muzi Zhang, N Zhang, Na Zhang, Naijin Zhang, Naiqi Zhang, Naisheng Zhang, Naixia Zhang, Nan Yang Zhang, Nan Zhang, Nan-Nan Zhang, Nana Zhang, Nannan Zhang, Nasha Zhang, Ni Zhang, Niankai Zhang, Nianxiang Zhang, Nieke Zhang, Ning Zhang, Ning-Ping Zhang, Ninghan Zhang, Ningkun Zhang, Ningning Zhang, Ningzhen Zhang, Ningzhi Zhang, Nisi Zhang, Nong Zhang, Nu Zhang, P Zhang, Pan Zhang, Pan-Pan Zhang, Panpan Zhang, Pei Zhang, Pei-Weng Zhang, Pei-Zhuo Zhang, PeiFeng Zhang, Peichun Zhang, Peijing Zhang, Peijun Zhang, Peilin Zhang, Peiqin Zhang, Peiwen Zhang, Peiyi Zhang, Peizhen Zhang, Peng Zhang, Peng-Cheng Zhang, Peng-Fei Zhang, Pengbo Zhang, Pengcheng Zhang, Pengfei Zhang, Pengpeng Zhang, Pengwei Zhang, Pengyuan Zhang, Pili Zhang, Ping Zhang, Ping-Fan Zhang, Pingchuan Zhang, Pinggen Zhang, Pingmei Zhang, Pu-Hong Zhang, Pumin Zhang, Q L Zhang, Q Y Zhang, Q Zhang, Q-D Zhang, Qi Zhang, Qi-Ai Zhang, Qi-Lei Zhang, Qi-Min Zhang, QiYue Zhang, Qian Jun Zhang, Qian ZHANG, Qian-Qian Zhang, Qian-Wen Zhang, Qiang Zhang, Qiang-Sheng Zhang, Qiangsheng Zhang, Qiangyan Zhang, Qianhui Zhang, Qianjun Zhang, Qiannan Zhang, Qianqian Zhang, Qianru Zhang, Qiao-Xia Zhang, Qiaofang Zhang, Qiaojun Zhang, Qiaoxuan Zhang, Qifan Zhang, Qiguo Zhang, Qihao Zhang, Qihong Zhang, Qilong Zhang, Qilu Zhang, Qimin Zhang, Qin Zhang, Qing Zhang, Qing-Hui Zhang, Qing-Zhu Zhang, Qingchao Zhang, Qingcheng Zhang, Qingchuan Zhang, Qingfeng Zhang, Qinghong Zhang, Qinghua Zhang, Qingjiong Zhang, Qingjun Zhang, Qingling Zhang, Qingna Zhang, Qingqing Zhang, Qingquan Zhang, Qingrun Zhang, Qingshuang Zhang, Qingtian Zhang, Qingxiu Zhang, Qingxue Zhang, Qingyu Zhang, Qingyue Zhang, Qingyun Zhang, Qinjun Zhang, Qiong Zhang, Qishu Zhang, Qiu Zhang, Qiuting Zhang, Qiuxia Zhang, Qiuyang Zhang, Qiuyue Zhang, Qiwei Zhang, Qiyong Zhang, Quan Zhang, Quan-bin Zhang, Quanfu Zhang, Quanqi Zhang, Quanquan Zhang, Qun Zhang, Qun-Feng Zhang, Qunchen Zhang, Qunfeng Zhang, Qunyuan Zhang, R Zhang, Ran Zhang, Ranran Zhang, Ren Zhang, Renbo Zhang, Renhe Zhang, Renliang Zhang, Renshuai Zhang, Rey M Zhang, Richard Zhang, Rong Zhang, Rong-Kai Zhang, Rongcai Zhang, Rongchao Zhang, Rongguang Zhang, Rongrong Zhang, Rongxin Zhang, Rongxu Zhang, Rongying Zhang, Rongyu Zhang, Ru Zhang, Rugang Zhang, Rui Long Zhang, Rui Xue Zhang, Rui Yan Zhang, Rui Zhang, Rui-Nan Zhang, Rui-Ning Zhang, Rui-fang Zhang, Ruihao Zhang, Ruihong Zhang, Ruikun Zhang, Ruilin Zhang, Ruiling Zhang, Ruimin Zhang, Ruiqi Zhang, Ruiqian Zhang, Ruisan Zhang, Ruixia Zhang, Ruixin Zhang, Ruixue Zhang, Ruiyan Zhang, Ruiyang Zhang, Ruiying Zhang, Ruizhe Zhang, Ruizhi Zhang, Ruizhong Zhang, Rulin Zhang, Run Zhang, Runcheng Zhang, Runxiang Zhang, Runyun Zhang, Runze Zhang, Ruo-Xin Zhang, Ruohan Zhang, Ruoshi Zhang, Ruotian Zhang, Ruoxuan Zhang, Ruoying Zhang, Rusi Zhang, Ruth Zhang, Ruxiang Zhang, Ruxuan Zhang, Ruyi Zhang, S Y Zhang, S Z Zhang, S Zhang, Sai Zhang, Saidan Zhang, Saifei Zhang, Sainan Zhang, Sanbao Zhang, Sen Zhang, Sha Zhang, Shan Zhang, Shan-Shan Zhang, Shanchun Zhang, Shang Zhang, Shangxiong Zhang, Shanhong Zhang, Shanshan Zhang, Shanxiang Zhang, Shao Kang Zhang, Shao Zhang, Shao-Qi Zhang, Shaochuan Zhang, Shaochun Zhang, Shaofei Zhang, Shaofeng Zhang, Shaohua Zhang, Shaojun Zhang, Shaoyang Zhang, Shaozhao Zhang, Shaozhen Zhang, Shasha Zhang, Shen Zhang, Sheng Zhang, Sheng-Dao Zhang, Sheng-Hong Zhang, Sheng-Qiang Zhang, Sheng-Xiao Zhang, Shengchi Zhang, Shengding Zhang, Shengkun Zhang, Shenglai Zhang, Shenglan Zhang, Shenglei Zhang, Shengli Zhang, Shengming Zhang, Shengnan Zhang, Shengye Zhang, Shenqi Zhang, Shenqian Zhang, Shi Zhang, Shi-Han Zhang, Shi-Jie Zhang, Shi-Meng Zhang, Shi-Qian Zhang, Shi-Yao Zhang, ShiSong Zhang, Shichao Zhang, Shihan Zhang, Shijun Zhang, Shikai Zhang, Shilei Zhang, Shimao Zhang, Shining Zhang, Shiping Zhang, Shiqi Zhang, Shiquan Zhang, Shiti Zhang, Shitian Zhang, Shiwen Zhang, Shiwu Zhang, Shiyao Zhang, Shiyi Zhang, Shiyu Zhang, Shiyun Zhang, Shou-Mei Zhang, Shou-Peng Zhang, Shouyue Zhang, Shu Zhang, Shu-Dong Zhang, Shu-Fan Zhang, Shu-Fang Zhang, Shu-Min Zhang, Shu-Ming Zhang, Shu-Yang Zhang, Shu-Zhen Zhang, Shuai Zhang, Shuai-Nan Zhang, Shuaishuai Zhang, Shuang Zhang, Shuangjie Zhang, Shuanglu Zhang, Shuangxin Zhang, Shubing Zhang, Shuchen Zhang, Shucong Zhang, Shuer Zhang, Shuge Zhang, Shuhong Zhang, Shuijun Zhang, Shujun Zhang, Shuli Zhang, Shulong Zhang, Shun Zhang, Shun-Bo Zhang, Shunfen Zhang, Shunming Zhang, Shuo Zhang, Shupeng Zhang, Shuran Zhang, Shurui Zhang, Shushan Zhang, Shuwan Zhang, Shuwei Zhang, Shuxia Zhang, Shuya Zhang, Shuyan Zhang, Shuyang Zhang, Shuye Zhang, Shuyi Zhang, Shuyuan Zhang, Si Zhang, Si-Zhong Zhang, Sibin Zhang, Sifan Zhang, Sihe Zhang, Simeng Zhang, Simin Zhang, Siqi Zhang, Sisi Zhang, Sixue Zhang, Siyuan Zhang, Siyue Zhang, Sizhong Zhang, Song Zhang, Song-Yang Zhang, Songlin Zhang, Songying Zhang, Sophia L Zhang, Stanley Weihua Zhang, Stephen X Zhang, Su Zhang, Sujiang Zhang, Sulin Zhang, Sumei Zhang, Suming Zhang, Suping Zhang, Susie Zhang, Suya Zhang, Suyang Zhang, Suzhen Zhang, T Zhang, Tangjuan Zhang, Tao Zhang, Tao-Lan Zhang, Taojun Zhang, Taoyuan Zhang, Teng Zhang, Tengfang Zhang, Terry Jianguo Zhang, Ti Zhang, Tian Zhang, Tian-Guang Zhang, Tian-Yu Zhang, Tiane Zhang, Tianfeng Zhang, Tianliang Zhang, Tianlong Zhang, Tianpeng Zhang, Tianshu Zhang, Tiantian Zhang, Tianxi Zhang, Tianxiao Zhang, Tianxin Zhang, Tianyang Zhang, Tianye Zhang, Tianyi Zhang, Tianyu Zhang, Tie-mei Zhang, Tiefeng Zhang, Tiehua Zhang, Tiejun Zhang, Ting Ting Zhang, Ting Zhang, Ting-Ting Zhang, Tinghu Zhang, Tingting Zhang, Tingxue Zhang, Tingying Zhang, Tong Xuan Zhang, Tong Zhang, Tong-Cun Zhang, Tongcun Zhang, Tongfu Zhang, Tonghan Zhang, Tonghua Zhang, Tonghui Zhang, Tongran Zhang, Tongshuo Zhang, Tongtong Zhang, Tongwu Zhang, Tongxin Zhang, Tongxue Zhang, Tuo Zhang, Vita Zhang, W G Zhang, W X Zhang, W Zhang, Wancong Zhang, Wang-Dong Zhang, Wangang Zhang, Wangping Zhang, Wanjiang Zhang, Wanjun Zhang, Wannian Zhang, Wanqi Zhang, Wanting Zhang, Wanying Zhang, Wanyu Zhang, Wei Zhang, Wei-Jia Zhang, Wei-Na Zhang, Wei-Yi Zhang, Weibo Zhang, Weichen Zhang, Weifeng Zhang, Weiguo Zhang, Weihua Zhang, Weijian Zhang, Weikang Zhang, Weili Zhang, Weilin Zhang, Weiling Zhang, Weilong Zhang, Weimin Zhang, Weina Zhang, Weipeng Zhang, Weiping J Zhang, Weiqin Zhang, Weisen Zhang, Weiwei Zhang, Weixia Zhang, Weiyi Zhang, Weiyu Zhang, Weizheng Zhang, Weizhou Zhang, Wen Jun Zhang, Wen Zhang, Wen-Hong Zhang, Wen-Jie Zhang, Wen-Jing Zhang, Wen-Xin Zhang, Wen-Xuan Zhang, Wenbin Zhang, Wenbo Zhang, Wenchao Zhang, Wencheng Zhang, Wencong Zhang, Wendi Zhang, Wenguang Zhang, Wenhao Zhang, Wenhong Zhang, Wenhua Zhang, Wenhui Zhang, Wenji Zhang, Wenjia Zhang, Wenjing Zhang, Wenjuan Zhang, Wenjun Zhang, Wenkai Zhang, Wenkui Zhang, Wenli Zhang, Wenlong Zhang, Wenlu Zhang, Wenming Zhang, Wenqian Zhang, Wenru Zhang, Wentao Zhang, Wenting Zhang, Wenwen Zhang, Wenxi Zhang, Wenxiang Zhang, Wenxin Zhang, Wenxue Zhang, Wenya Zhang, Wenyang Zhang, Wenyi Zhang, Wenyuan Zhang, Wenzhong Zhang, Wuhu Zhang, X N Zhang, X X Zhang, X Y Zhang, X Zhang, X-T Zhang, X-Y Zhang, Xi Zhang, Xi'an Zhang, Xi-Feng Zhang, XiHe Zhang, Xia Zhang, Xian Zhang, Xian-Bo Zhang, Xian-Li Zhang, Xian-Man Zhang, Xiang Yang Zhang, Xiang Zhang, Xiangbin Zhang, Xiangfei Zhang, Xianglian Zhang, Xiangsong Zhang, Xiangwu Zhang, Xiangyang Zhang, Xiangyu Zhang, Xiangzheng Zhang, Xianhong Zhang, Xianhua Zhang, Xianjing Zhang, Xianpeng Zhang, Xianxian Zhang, Xiao Bin Zhang, Xiao Min Zhang, Xiao Yu Cindy Zhang, Xiao Zhang, Xiao-Chang Zhang, Xiao-Cheng Zhang, Xiao-Chong Zhang, Xiao-Feng Zhang, Xiao-Hong Zhang, Xiao-Hua Zhang, Xiao-Jun Zhang, Xiao-Lei Zhang, Xiao-Lin Zhang, Xiao-Ling Zhang, Xiao-Meng Zhang, Xiao-Ming Zhang, Xiao-Qi Zhang, Xiao-Qian Zhang, Xiao-Shuo Zhang, Xiao-Wei Zhang, Xiao-Xuan Zhang, Xiao-Yong Zhang, Xiao-Yu Zhang, Xiao-bo Zhang, Xiao-yan Zhang, XiaoLin Zhang, XiaoPing Zhang, XiaoYi Zhang, Xiaobao Zhang, Xiaobiao Zhang, Xiaobo Zhang, Xiaochang Zhang, Xiaochen Zhang, Xiaochun Zhang, Xiaocong Zhang, Xiaocui Zhang, Xiaodan Zhang, Xiaodong Zhang, Xiaofan Zhang, Xiaofang Zhang, Xiaofei Zhang, Xiaofeng Zhang, Xiaogang Zhang, Xiaohan Zhang, Xiaohong Zhang, Xiaohui Zhang, Xiaojia Zhang, Xiaojian Zhang, Xiaojie Zhang, Xiaojin Zhang, Xiaojing Zhang, Xiaojun Zhang, Xiaokui Zhang, Xiaolan Zhang, Xiaolei Zhang, Xiaoli Zhang, Xiaoling Zhang, Xiaolong Zhang, Xiaomei Zhang, Xiaomeng Zhang, Xiaomin Zhang, Xiaoming Zhang, Xiaoning Zhang, Xiaonyun Zhang, Xiaopei Zhang, Xiaopo Zhang, Xiaoqi Zhang, Xiaoqing Zhang, Xiaorong Zhang, Xiaosheng Zhang, Xiaotian Michelle Zhang, Xiaotian Zhang, Xiaotong Zhang, Xiaotun Zhang, Xiaowan Zhang, Xiaowei Zhang, Xiaoxi Zhang, Xiaoxia Zhang, Xiaoxian Zhang, Xiaoxiao Zhang, Xiaoxin Zhang, Xiaoxue Zhang, Xiaoyan Zhang, Xiaoying Zhang, Xiaoyu Zhang, Xiaoyuan Zhang, Xiaoyue Zhang, Xiaoyun Zhang, Xiaozhe Zhang, Xiayin Zhang, Xibo Zhang, Xieyi Zhang, Xijiang Zhang, Xilin Zhang, Xiling Zhang, Ximei Zhang, Xin Zhang, Xin-Hui Zhang, Xin-Xin Zhang, Xin-Yan Zhang, Xin-Ye Zhang, Xin-Yuan Zhang, Xinan Zhang, Xinbao Zhang, Xinbo Zhang, Xincheng Zhang, Xindang Zhang, Xindong Zhang, Xinfeng Zhang, Xinfu Zhang, Xing Yu Zhang, Xing Zhang, Xingan Zhang, Xingang Zhang, Xingcai Zhang, Xingen Zhang, Xinglai Zhang, Xingong Zhang, Xingwei Zhang, Xingxing Zhang, Xingxu Zhang, Xingyi Zhang, Xingyu Zhang, Xingyuan Zhang, Xinhai Zhang, Xinhan Zhang, Xinhe Zhang, Xinheng Zhang, Xinhong Zhang, Xinhua Zhang, Xinjiang Zhang, Xinjing Zhang, Xinjun Zhang, Xinke Zhang, Xinlei Zhang, Xinlian Zhang, Xinlin Zhang, Xinling Zhang, Xinlong Zhang, Xinlu Zhang, Xinmin Zhang, Xinping Zhang, Xinqiao Zhang, Xinquan Zhang, Xinran Zhang, Xinrui Zhang, Xinruo Zhang, Xintao Zhang, Xinwei Zhang, Xinwu Zhang, Xinxin Zhang, Xinyao Zhang, Xinye Zhang, Xinyi Zhang, Xinyu Zhang, Xinyue Zhang, Xiong Zhang, Xiongjun Zhang, Xiongze Zhang, Xipeng Zhang, Xiping Zhang, Xiu Qi Zhang, Xiu-Juan Zhang, Xiu-Li Zhang, Xiu-Peng Zhang, Xiujie Zhang, Xiujun Zhang, Xiulan Zhang, Xiuming Zhang, Xiupeng Zhang, Xiuping Zhang, Xiuqin Zhang, Xiuqing Zhang, Xiuse Zhang, Xiushan Zhang, Xiuwen Zhang, Xiuxing Zhang, Xiuxiu Zhang, Xiuyin Zhang, Xiuyue Zhang, Xiuyun Zhang, Xiuzhen Zhang, Xixi Zhang, Xixun Zhang, Xiyu Zhang, Xu Dong Zhang, Xu Zhang, Xu-Chao Zhang, Xu-Jun Zhang, Xu-Mei Zhang, Xuan Zhang, Xudan Zhang, Xudong Zhang, Xue Zhang, Xue-Ping Zhang, Xue-Qin Zhang, Xue-Qing Zhang, XueWu Zhang, Xuebao Zhang, Xuebin Zhang, Xuefei Zhang, Xueguang Zhang, Xuehai Zhang, Xuehong Zhang, Xuehui Zhang, Xuejiao Zhang, Xuejun C Zhang, Xueli Zhang, Xuelian Zhang, Xuelong Zhang, Xueluo Zhang, Xuemei Zhang, Xuemin Zhang, Xueming Zhang, Xuening Zhang, Xueping Zhang, Xueqia Zhang, Xueqian Zhang, Xueqin Zhang, Xueting Zhang, Xuewei Zhang, Xuewen Zhang, Xuexi Zhang, Xueya Zhang, Xueyan Zhang, Xueyi Zhang, Xueying Zhang, Xuezhi Zhang, Xufang Zhang, Xuhao Zhang, Xujun Zhang, Xunming Zhang, Xuting Zhang, Xutong Zhang, Xuxiang Zhang, Y H Zhang, Y L Zhang, Y Y Zhang, Y Zhang, Y-H Zhang, Ya Zhang, Ya-Juan Zhang, Ya-Li Zhang, Ya-Long Zhang, Ya-Meng Zhang, Yachen Zhang, Yadi Zhang, Yadong Zhang, Yafang Zhang, Yafei Zhang, Yafeng Zhang, Yaguang Zhang, Yahua Zhang, Yajie Zhang, Yajing Zhang, Yajun Zhang, Yakun Zhang, Yalan Zhang, Yali Zhang, Yaling Zhang, Yameng Zhang, Yamin Zhang, Yaming Zhang, Yan Zhang, Yan-Chun Zhang, Yan-Ling Zhang, Yan-Min Zhang, Yan-Qing Zhang, Yanan Zhang, Yanbin Zhang, Yanbing Zhang, Yanchao Zhang, Yandong Zhang, Yanfei Zhang, Yanfen Zhang, Yanfeng Zhang, Yang Zhang, Yang-Yang Zhang, Yangfan Zhang, Yanghui Zhang, Yangqianwen Zhang, Yangyang Zhang, Yangyu Zhang, Yanhong Zhang, Yanhua Zhang, Yani Zhang, Yanjiao Zhang, Yanju Zhang, Yanjun Zhang, Yanli Zhang, Yanlin Zhang, Yanling Zhang, Yanman Zhang, Yanmin Zhang, Yanming Zhang, Yanna Zhang, Yannan Zhang, Yanping Zhang, Yanqiao Zhang, Yanquan Zhang, Yanru Zhang, Yanting Zhang, Yanxia Zhang, Yanxiang Zhang, Yanyan Zhang, Yanyi Zhang, Yanyu Zhang, Yao Zhang, Yao-Hua Zhang, Yaodong Zhang, Yaoxin Zhang, Yaoyang Zhang, Yaoyao Zhang, Yaozhengtai Zhang, Yaping Zhang, Yaqi Zhang, Yaru Zhang, Yashuo Zhang, Yating Zhang, Yawei Zhang, Yaxin Zhang, Yaxuan Zhang, Yayong Zhang, Yazhuo Zhang, Ye Zhang, Yefan Zhang, Yeqian Zhang, Yerui Zhang, Yeting Zhang, Yexiang Zhang, Yi J Zhang, Yi Ping Zhang, Yi Zhang, Yi-Chi Zhang, Yi-Feng Zhang, Yi-Ge Zhang, Yi-Hang Zhang, Yi-Hua Zhang, Yi-Min Zhang, Yi-Ming Zhang, Yi-Qi Zhang, Yi-Wei Zhang, Yi-Wen Zhang, Yi-Xuan Zhang, Yi-Yue Zhang, Yi-yi Zhang, YiJie Zhang, YiPei Zhang, Yibin Zhang, Yibo Zhang, Yichen Zhang, Yichi Zhang, Yidan Zhang, Yidong Zhang, Yifan Zhang, Yifang Zhang, Yige Zhang, Yiguo Zhang, Yihan Zhang, Yihang Zhang, Yihao Zhang, Yiheng Zhang, Yihong Zhang, Yihui Zhang, Yijing Zhang, Yikai Zhang, Yikun Zhang, Yili Zhang, Yiliang Zhang, Yilin Zhang, Yimei Zhang, Yimeng Zhang, Yimin Zhang, Yiming Zhang, Yin Jiang Zhang, Yin Zhang, Yin-Hong Zhang, Yina Zhang, Yinci Zhang, Ying E Zhang, Ying Zhang, Ying-Jun Zhang, Ying-Lin Zhang, Ying-Qian Zhang, Yingang Zhang, Yingchao Zhang, Yinghui Zhang, Yingjie Zhang, Yingli Zhang, Yingmei Zhang, Yingna Zhang, Yingnan Zhang, Yingqi Zhang, Yingqian Zhang, Yingyi Zhang, Yingying Zhang, Yingze Zhang, Yingzi Zhang, Yinhao Zhang, Yinjiang Zhang, Yintang Zhang, Yinzhi Zhang, Yinzhuang Zhang, Yipeng Zhang, Yiping Zhang, Yiqian Zhang, Yiqing Zhang, Yiren Zhang, Yirong Zhang, Yitian Zhang, Yiting Zhang, Yiwan Zhang, Yiwei Zhang, Yiwen Zhang, Yixia Zhang, Yixin Zhang, Yiyao Zhang, Yiyi Zhang, Yiyuan Zhang, Yizhe Zhang, Yizhi Zhang, Yong Zhang, Yong-Guo Zhang, Yong-Liang Zhang, Yong-hong Zhang, Yongbao Zhang, Yongchang Zhang, Yongchao Zhang, Yongci Zhang, Yongfa Zhang, Yongfang Zhang, Yongfeng Zhang, Yonggang Zhang, Yonggen Zhang, Yongguang Zhang, Yongguo Zhang, Yongheng Zhang, Yonghong Zhang, Yonghui Zhang, Yongjie Zhang, Yongjiu Zhang, Yongjuan Zhang, Yonglian Zhang, Yongliang Zhang, Yonglong Zhang, Yongpeng Zhang, Yongping Zhang, Yongqiang Zhang, Yongsheng Zhang, Yongwei Zhang, Yongxiang Zhang, Yongxing Zhang, Yongyan Zhang, Yongyun Zhang, You-Zhi Zhang, Youjin Zhang, Youmin Zhang, Youti Zhang, Youwen Zhang, Youyi Zhang, Youying Zhang, Youzhong Zhang, Yu Chen Zhang, Yu Zhang, Yu-Bo Zhang, Yu-Chi Zhang, Yu-Fei Zhang, Yu-Hui Zhang, Yu-Jie Zhang, Yu-Jing Zhang, Yu-Qi Zhang, Yu-Qiu Zhang, Yu-Yu Zhang, Yu-Zhe Zhang, YuHang Zhang, YuHong Zhang, Yuan Zhang, Yuan-Wei Zhang, Yuan-Yuan Zhang, Yuanchao Zhang, Yuanhao Zhang, Yuanhui Zhang, Yuanping Zhang, Yuanqiang Zhang, Yuanqing Zhang, Yuansheng Zhang, Yuanxi Zhang, Yuanxiang Zhang, Yuanyi Zhang, Yuanyuan Zhang, Yuanzhen Zhang, Yuanzhuang Zhang, Yubin Zhang, Yucai Zhang, Yuchao Zhang, Yuchen Zhang, Yuchi Zhang, Yue Zhang, Yue-Bo Zhang, Yue-Ming Zhang, Yuebin Zhang, Yuebo Zhang, Yuehong Zhang, Yuehua Zhang, Yuejuan Zhang, Yuemei Zhang, Yueqi Zhang, Yueru Zhang, Yuetong Zhang, Yufang Zhang, Yufeng Zhang, Yuhan Zhang, Yuhao Zhang, Yuheng Zhang, Yuhua Zhang, Yuhui Zhang, Yujia Zhang, Yujiao Zhang, Yujie Zhang, Yujin Zhang, Yujing Zhang, Yujuan Zhang, Yuke Zhang, Yukun Zhang, Yulin Zhang, Yuling Zhang, Yulong Zhang, Yumei Zhang, Yumeng Zhang, Yumin Zhang, Yun Zhang, Yun-Feng Zhang, Yun-Lin Zhang, Yun-Mei Zhang, Yun-Sheng Zhang, Yun-Xiang Zhang, Yunfan Zhang, Yunfei Zhang, Yunfeng Zhang, Yunhai Zhang, Yunhang Zhang, Yunhe Zhang, Yunhui Zhang, Yuning Zhang, Yunjia Zhang, Yunli Zhang, Yunmei Zhang, Yunpeng Zhang, Yunqi Zhang, Yunqiang Zhang, Yunqing Zhang, Yunsheng Zhang, Yunxia Zhang, Yupei Zhang, Yupeng Zhang, Yuping Zhang, Yuqi Zhang, Yuqing Zhang, Yurou Zhang, Yuru Zhang, Yusen Zhang, Yushan Zhang, Yutian Zhang, Yuting Zhang, Yutong Zhang, Yuwei Zhang, Yuxi Zhang, Yuxia Zhang, Yuxin Zhang, Yuxuan Zhang, Yuyan Zhang, Yuyanan Zhang, Yuyang Zhang, Yuying Zhang, Yuyu Zhang, Yuyuan Zhang, Yuzhe Zhang, Yuzhi Zhang, Yuzhou Zhang, Yuzhu Zhang, Yvonne Zhang, Z Zhang, Z-K Zhang, Zai-Rong Zhang, Zaifeng Zhang, Zaijun Zhang, Zaiqi Zhang, Zebang Zhang, Zekun Zhang, Zemin Zhang, Zeming Zhang, Zeng Zhang, Zengdi Zhang, Zengfu Zhang, Zenglei Zhang, Zengli Zhang, Zengqiang Zhang, Zengrong Zhang, Zengtie Zhang, Zepeng Zhang, Zewei Zhang, Zewen Zhang, Zeyan Zhang, Zeyuan Zhang, Zhan-Xiong Zhang, Zhangjin Zhang, Zhanhao Zhang, Zhanjie Zhang, Zhanjun Zhang, Zhanming Zhang, Zhanyi Zhang, Zhao Zhang, Zhao-Huan Zhang, Zhao-Ming Zhang, Zhaobo Zhang, Zhaocong Zhang, Zhaofeng Zhang, Zhaohua Zhang, Zhaohuai Zhang, Zhaohuan Zhang, Zhaohui Zhang, Zhaomin Zhang, Zhaoping Zhang, Zhaoqi Zhang, Zhaotian Zhang, Zhaoxue Zhang, Zhe Zhang, Zhehua Zhang, Zhemei Zhang, Zhen Zhang, Zhen-Dong Zhang, Zhen-Jie Zhang, Zhen-Shan Zhang, Zhen-Tao Zhang, Zhen-lin Zhang, Zhenfeng Zhang, Zheng Zhang, Zhengbin Zhang, Zhengfen Zhang, Zhenglang Zhang, Zhengliang Zhang, Zhengxiang Zhang, Zhengxing Zhang, Zhengyu Zhang, Zhengyun Zhang, Zhenhao Zhang, Zhenhua Zhang, Zhenlin Zhang, Zhenqiang Zhang, Zhentao Zhang, Zhenyang Zhang, Zhenyu Zhang, Zhenzhen Zhang, Zhenzhu Zhang, Zhewei Zhang, Zhewen Zhang, Zheyuan Zhang, Zhezhe Zhang, Zhi Zhang, Zhi-Chang Zhang, Zhi-Jie Zhang, Zhi-Jun Zhang, Zhi-Peng Zhang, Zhi-Qing Zhang, Zhi-Shuai Zhang, Zhi-Shuo Zhang, Zhi-Xin Zhang, Zhibo Zhang, Zhicheng Zhang, Zhicong Zhang, Zhifei Zhang, Zhigang Zhang, Zhiguo Zhang, Zhihan Zhang, Zhihao Zhang, Zhihong Zhang, Zhihua Zhang, Zhihui Zhang, Zhijian Zhang, Zhijiao Zhang, Zhijing Zhang, Zhijun Zhang, Zhikun Zhang, Zhimin Zhang, Zhiming Zhang, Zhiping Zhang, Zhiqian Zhang, Zhiqiang Zhang, Zhiqiao Zhang, Zhiru Zhang, Zhishang Zhang, Zhishuai Zhang, Zhiwang Zhang, Zhiwen Zhang, Zhixia Zhang, Zhixin Zhang, Zhiyan Zhang, Zhiyao Zhang, Zhiye Zhang, Zhiyi Zhang, Zhiyong Zhang, Zhiyu Zhang, Zhiyuan Zhang, Zhiyun Zhang, Zhizhong Zhang, Zhong Zhang, Zhong-Bai Zhang, Zhong-Yi Zhang, Zhong-Yin Zhang, Zhong-Yuan Zhang, Zhongheng Zhang, Zhongjie Zhang, Zhonglin Zhang, Zhongqi Zhang, Zhongwei Zhang, Zhongxin Zhang, Zhongxu Zhang, Zhongyang Zhang, Zhongyi Zhang, Zhou Zhang, Zhu Zhang, Zhu-Qin Zhang, Zhuang Zhang, Zhuo Zhang, Zhuo-Ya Zhang, Zhuohua Zhang, Zhuojun Zhang, Zhuorong Zhang, Zhuoya Zhang, Zhuqin Zhang, Zhuqing Zhang, Zhuzhen Zhang, Zi-Feng Zhang, Zi-Jian Zhang, Zian Zhang, Zicheng Zhang, Ziding Zhang, Ziguo Zhang, Zihan Zhang, Ziheng Zhang, Zijian Zhang, Zijiao Zhang, Zijing Zhang, Zikai Zhang, Zilong Zhang, Zilu Zhang, Ziping Zhang, Ziqi Zhang, Zishuo Zhang, Zixiong Zhang, Zixu Zhang, Zixuan Zhang, Ziyang Zhang, Ziyi Zhang, Ziyin Zhang, Ziyu Zhang, Ziyue Zhang, Zizhen Zhang, Zongping Zhang, Zongquan Zhang, Zongwang Zhang, Zongxiang Zhang, Zu-Xuan Zhang, Zufa Zhang, Zuoyi Zhang
articles
Wei Wang, Jianrong Ren, Jing Li +11 more · 2026 · Science China. Life sciences · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Volatile fatty acids (VFAs) provide more than 70% of the energy source for the ruminants. Understanding the host-microbiota regulation of VFAs production and utilization is highly important for optimi Show more
Volatile fatty acids (VFAs) provide more than 70% of the energy source for the ruminants. Understanding the host-microbiota regulation of VFAs production and utilization is highly important for optimizing the feed energy utilization efficiency of ruminants. Here, we conducted whole-genome resequencing, rumen transcriptome sequencing, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, and VFA concentration determination in 530 Holstein bulls. We treated VFA concentrations as complex traits to perform multi-omics association analyses. The host genetics, rumen microbiota, and rumen expressed genes, on average, explained 23%, 58%, and 61% of the variations in VFAs with the same diet, respectively. We found that the rumen microbial composition and community structure differed significantly between the high and low VFA individuals. We further identified 11 microbes with potential causal relationships with rumen VFAs via the Mendelian randomization method, among which Bacteroidales_RF16_group, Prevotella, Clostridia_UCG-014, and [Eubacterium]_ventriosum_group were positively correlated with acetic acid, propionic acid, and butyric acid. Conversely, rumen epithelial genes involved in fatty acid β-oxidation (e.g., HSD17B4, ACADVL, ACADL, CPT1A, and ANGPTL4) were negatively correlated with the main VFAs and VFA-producing bacteria. These candidate microbes and genes suggest that the host-microbe coregulating mechanism facilitates the efficient production and utilization of rumen VFAs in ruminants. Our study provides a comprehensive perspective on the complex dynamic regulatory patterns of rumen VFAs, highlighting the crucial role of host-microbe interactions in optimizing the feed utilization of ruminants. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s11427-025-3206-7
ANGPTL4
Liwei Zhang, Guanyu Chen, Yuhai Bai +1 more · 2026 · Journal of liposome research · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
Atherosclerotic plaque instability is a direct cause of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events. In this study, a mitochondria-targeted liposome (LIP), modified with triphenylphosphonium (TPP) to en Show more
Atherosclerotic plaque instability is a direct cause of cardiovascular and cerebrovascular events. In this study, a mitochondria-targeted liposome (LIP), modified with triphenylphosphonium (TPP) to enable specific mitochondrial delivery, was innovatively constructed to encapsulate a PCSK9 inhibitor (TPP-LIP@PCSK9). The aim was to explore a novel strategy for stabilizing plaques by restoring mitochondrial function in endothelial cells. Characterization results showed that TPP-LIP@PCSK9 possesses favorable nano-characteristics, and its targeting capability was confirmed through mitochondrial co-localization experiments. In an Apoe Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/08982104.2026.2651190
APOE
Eryan Yang, Yindan Wang, Wenxin Mao +8 more · 2026 · Experimental cell research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Endometrial carcinoma (EC) is a common malignancy of the female reproductive system. Rab35 is widely recognized as an oncogenic driver and has been implicated in the progression of various malignant t Show more
Endometrial carcinoma (EC) is a common malignancy of the female reproductive system. Rab35 is widely recognized as an oncogenic driver and has been implicated in the progression of various malignant tumors. However, its regulatory mechanism and pathobiological roles in EC remain unclear. Rab35 expression in EC was systematically profiled via integrative analysis of clinical endometrial specimens and multi-omics databases (CPTAC and GEO). The association between clinical prognosis and Rab35 expression was examined using Kaplan-Meier analysis. Mechanistic investigations included transwell assays, western blotting, and immunofluorescence in Rab35-overexpressing and CRISPR/Cas9-mediated Rab35-knockout EC cells. A mouse xenograft tumor model was established to confirm the effects of Rab35 in vivo. The Rab35 content increased gradually from normal endometrium to atypical hyperplastic endometrium to EC. Moreover, the findings indicated that elevated Rab35 expression was significantly associated with advanced disease characteristics and poor overall survival in patients with EC. In addition, Rab35 enhanced the migratory and invasive nature of EC cells. The expression of Rab35 was inversely linked to that of the β-catenin destruction complex-related proteins Axin-1 and GSK3β, leading to the increased nuclear translocation of β-catenin in EC cells. Animal experiments further verified that Rab35 augmented EC progression by regulating the nuclear translocation of β-catenin. The study revealed that high expression of Rab35 was strongly correlated with EC progression and a poor clinical outcome. Furthermore, Rab35 promoted EC cell metastasis by accelerating the nuclear translocation of β-catenin. These findings suggest that Rab35 serves as a valuable biomarker and therapeutic target for EC. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2026.114950
AXIN1
Ruoxuan Zhang, Xin Wang, Angela Y M Leung +8 more · 2026 · Journal of nursing management · added 2026-04-24
Given the globalization of the nursing workforce, psychological empowerment represents a critical intrinsic determinant of nurses' mobility intentions, specifically regarding cross-border work. To ide Show more
Given the globalization of the nursing workforce, psychological empowerment represents a critical intrinsic determinant of nurses' mobility intentions, specifically regarding cross-border work. To identify latent profiles of nurses' psychological empowerment, examine associated factors, and explore the relationship between these profiles and cross-border working intention. A cross-sectional multicenter study was conducted from March to September 2023. Using convenience sampling, clinical nurses were recruited through liaisons from nursing societies in nine cities of Guangdong Province. Data were collected through questionnaires covering sociodemographic questionnaire, psychological empowerment, and cross-border working intention, with analyses including chi-square tests, logistic regression, and latent profile analysis (LPA) performed using SPSS 23.0 and Mplus 8.3. A total of 3671 valid questionnaires were collected, and 39.5% of the respondents reported cross-border intentions. LPA identified three psychological empowerment profiles among nurses, ranked from high to low: the core-driven empowerment profile (16.94%), the adaptive empowerment profile (70.42%), and the constrained empowerment profile (12.64%). The nurses with lower salary, intermediate title, and without specialist nurse qualification were more likely to fall into the constrained empowerment profile. Psychological empowerment was positively correlated with nurses' cross-border work intention. The core-driven profile showed the highest cross-border work intention (50.6%), followed by the adaptive (38.2%) and constrained profiles (31.7%). For cross-border work, the constrained profile prioritized salary (87.1%) as the key concern, while the core-driven profile focused more on good promotion opportunities (70.3%). Psychological empowerment exerts a positive impact on clinical nurses' cross-border work intention, with the three identified empowerment profiles exhibiting divergent motivational priorities and decision logics. These findings highlight the need for subgroup-specific strategies to balance nursing workforce mobility and stability. The findings support a differentiated human resource strategy based on nurses' psychological empowerment profiles. For core-driven nurses, institutions should provide international career development channels to strengthen their domestic job embeddedness. For adaptive nurses, tailored skill training and decision-making autonomy should be offered to guide their mobility aspirations. For constrained nurses, competitive compensation and family support services should be prioritized to address their stability needs and rebuild professional confidence. These targeted measures balance talent mobility and domestic workforce stability. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1155/jonm/8714790
LPA
Yingying Yue, Qiu Gu, Chang Zhang +6 more · 2026 · Cellular signalling · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
It is known that insulin stimulates skeletal muscle glucose uptake via the InsR-IRS-PI3K pathway. The signaling downstream of PI3K is divided into the Akt-AS160-Rabs branch and the Rac1-actin cytoskel Show more
It is known that insulin stimulates skeletal muscle glucose uptake via the InsR-IRS-PI3K pathway. The signaling downstream of PI3K is divided into the Akt-AS160-Rabs branch and the Rac1-actin cytoskeleton branches. These two signaling branches jointly mediate the effect of insulin to promote GLUT4 transporters to transport glucose into the cell. The scaffolding protein Axin1 plays a crucial role in maintaining glucose homeostasis and TNKS, a member of the PARP family, is involved in insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation. However, the specific roles of Axin1 and TNKS and their relationship are elusive in insulin-stimulated skeletal muscle cell glucose uptake. Here, we showed that insulin up-regulated the protein levels of Axin1 and TNKS in an Akt-dependent manner in C2C12 skeletal muscle cells. Knockdown of Axin1 inhibited insulin-stimulated GLUT4myc translocation in C2C12-GLUT4myc myotubes. Both over-expression Axin1 and TNKS activity inhibitor XAV939 enhanced insulin-stimulated GLUT4myc translocation. XAV939 up-regulated Axin1 and TNKS protein levels. Knockdown or over-expression of Axin1 down- or up-regulated the protein level of TNKS, respectively. Axin1 interacted with TNKS which was enhanced by insulin. Knockdown of Axin1 inhibited insulin-induced the phosphorylation of the Rac1 target protein PAK. Over-expression of Axin1 and XAV939 increased insulin-phosphorylated PAK. Up- and down-regulation of Axin1 and XAV939 had no effects on the phosphorylation of Akt and AS160. Insulin increased the Rac1-GEF Tiam1 protein levels. Knockdown of Tiam1 diminished insulin-stimulated PAK phosphorylation and GLUT4myc translocation. Knockdown of Axin1 inhibited insulin-induced Tiam1 expression, while over-expression of Axin1 and XAV939 had the opposite effect. In summary, our results suggest that an Akt-Axin1/TNKS-Tiam1-Rac1 signaling pathway mediates insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle cells. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2025.112220
AXIN1
Shiyang Wei, Ting Qin, Ying Li +4 more · 2026 · Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
While active ingredients from compound Chinese herbal medicines (CCHMs) have demonstrated potential in alleviating symptoms of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), their mechanisms of action remain insuf Show more
While active ingredients from compound Chinese herbal medicines (CCHMs) have demonstrated potential in alleviating symptoms of polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), their mechanisms of action remain insufficiently understood. This study aimed to identify key active ingredients and gene targets in Xiaochaihu Decoction, Sijunzi Decoction, and Shensiwei that contribute to their efficacy against PCOS. Transcriptomic data of PCOS were obtained from public databases. Information on gut microbiota metabolite-related targets and active ingredients of CCHMs was retrieved from relevant databases. Key gene targets and active ingredients were identified using Graph-based Bioactive Network Analysis (GraphBAN) and toxicological assessments. Molecular docking and dynamic simulations were conducted to validate interactions. Functional enrichment and regulatory network analysis were performed. LCT, FADS1, and CYP11A1 were identified as key genes associated with α-β T cell activation, immune receptor signaling, and adaptive immune responses. LCT and FADS1 were targeted by linolenic acid, while CYP11A1 was regulated by mandenol, EIC, and linolenic acid. Three microRNAs (hsa-miR-320a-3p, hsa-miR-4487, hsa-miR-6090) co-regulated these genes. Molecular docking and dynamics simulations confirmed stable binding between key genes and active ingredients, with binding energies < -5.0 kcal/mol. The findings indicate that CCHMs exert therapeutic effects on PCOS by multi-target regulation of key genes involved in androgen synthesis, metabolic regulation, and immune-inflammatory activation. The observed strong binding affinities provide a structural basis for these interactions. This study identified three key genes and three core active ingredients in CCHMs for PCOS treatment, laying a theoretical foundation for developing multi-target therapeutics. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00210-025-04970-7
FADS1
Mengshi Li, Yang Li, Lei Jiang +7 more · 2026 · Chinese medical journal · added 2026-04-24
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1097/CM9.0000000000003978
APOE
Xiaoyan Zhang, Shi Jin, Xuantong Dai +4 more · 2026 · BMC nephrology · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Alport syndrome (AS) is the most common inherited glomerular disease among patients with chronic kidney disease. With exome sequencing now widely used in clinical practice, pathogenic variants in Alpo Show more
Alport syndrome (AS) is the most common inherited glomerular disease among patients with chronic kidney disease. With exome sequencing now widely used in clinical practice, pathogenic variants in Alport-related genes (COL4A3/COL4A4/COL4A5) are increasingly identified in patients with diverse phenotypes, including proteinuria‑predominant disease and kidney failure of unknown etiology. Diagnostic complexity further increases when COL4A3/COL4A4/COL4A5 variants are co‑inherited with pathogenic variants associated with other genetic kidney disorders. We reported a 31‑year‑old male presenting with kidney failure, significant proteinuria, familial hematuria and hyperlipidemia. Whole‑exome sequencing (WES) identified two pathogenic variants: a hemizygous COL4A5 variant (c.2105G > A; p.Gly702Asp) and a heterozygous APOE Kyoto variant (c.127C > T; p.Arg43Cys). Given the potential dual diagnosis of AS and lipoprotein glomerulopathy (LPG), a kidney biopsy was performed. Histologic examination revealed uneven thickness of the glomerular basement membrane consistent with the diagnosis of AS, but no LPG-related lesions were observed, indicating incomplete penetrance of APOE Kyoto variant. Cascade family screening detected APOE Kyoto variant in the patient's father and elder sister, both of whom lacked proteinuria until follow-up period. This case highlights the complementary role of kidney biopsy alongside WES in AS with complex genetic mechanisms. It also illustrates the incomplete penetrance of APOE Kyoto, common among Chinese carriers. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12882-026-04775-7
APOE
Can Jiang, Xiaoli Tang, Ziyang Xu +5 more · 2026 · International journal of biological macromolecules · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
DUSP6, a dual-specificity phosphatase, has become a focal point in understanding the pathogenesis of various liver disorders. This study aims to investigate the role of DUSP6 in liver fibrosis and exp Show more
DUSP6, a dual-specificity phosphatase, has become a focal point in understanding the pathogenesis of various liver disorders. This study aims to investigate the role of DUSP6 in liver fibrosis and explore the underlying mechanism. Using a CCL4-induced mouse model, the consistent upregulation of DUSP6 expression was observed. Notably, when Dusp6 was knocked down, liver fibrosis showed significant improvement, revealing a protective effect intricately linked to the ERK pathway. This was accompanied by an increase in ferroptosis-related proteins SLC7A11 and GPX4, underscoring the role of ferroptosis, an iron-dependent form of regulated cell death, in this process. Transcriptomic analysis further revealed a crucial downregulation of Cyp2e1 following Dusp6 knockdown. In vitro, DUSP6 knockdown not only promoted ERK phosphorylation but also suppressed CYP2E1 expression, enhancing cell proliferation, bolstering hepatocyte resistance to ferroptosis, and alleviating hepatocyte injury. Importantly, inhibiting CYP2E1 in mouse models of liver fibrosis effectively slowed the progression. These findings illuminate a critical regulatory mechanism that DUSP6 regulates liver fibrosis via targeting ferroptosis, offering new a direction for therapeutic strategies in liver disease. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2025.149856
DUSP6
Yu Fu, Yu-Xin Hua, Ya-Li Zhang +7 more · 2026 · Atherosclerosis · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
C-reactive protein (CRP) is a liver-derived soluble marker of inflammation whose levels can predict the risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and therapeutic efficacy of statins. Intriguingly Show more
C-reactive protein (CRP) is a liver-derived soluble marker of inflammation whose levels can predict the risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and therapeutic efficacy of statins. Intriguingly, however, CRP is not considered as a mediator of atherosclerosis based primarily on studies examining chow diet (CD)-fed mice. The aim of this study is to investigate the role of CRP in high-fat diet (HFD)-induced atherosclerosis, which models a more prevalent scenario in the real world, and to clarify its impact on Atorvastatin treatment. Apoe-sufficient or -deficient mice with or without Crp knockout were fed with CD, HFD, or methionine- and choline-deficient diet, or subjected to carotid artery ligation or Atorvastatin treatment. Hepatic, vascular, and metabolic indexes were then analyzed. The effects of CRP on lipid droplet formation were examined by cellular assays. Knockout of Crp in Apoe-deficient mice does not affect the progression of atherosclerosis under CD feeding, but significantly reduces plaque burden under HFD feeding. The pro-atherosclerotic effects of Crp are not due to direct modulation of vascular inflammation, but appear to be the result of enhanced lipid accumulation in the liver and the ensuing aggravation of hyperlipidemia. Mechanistically, Crp enhances hepatic lipid accumulation by upregulating Cidea to promote the formation of enlarged lipid droplets in hepatocytes. We further show that the therapeutic efficacy of Atorvastatin on HFD-induced atherosclerosis in Apoe-deficient mice is largely dependent on Crp. Our findings identify a previously unrecognized role of CRP in enhancing hepatic lipid accumulation under stresses induced by dietary or genetic factors, which underlies its secondary impact on atherosclerosis and determines the therapeutic efficacy of Atorvastatin. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2025.120594
APOE
Li Zhang, Yuting Wang, Wei Min Gao +8 more · 2026 · Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Coronary restenosis remains a major challenge following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), necessitating the development of effective stent-eluting drugs. Previous studies indicate that scutell Show more
Coronary restenosis remains a major challenge following percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), necessitating the development of effective stent-eluting drugs. Previous studies indicate that scutellarin protects vascular endothelial cells and exhibits anti-thrombotic and anti-platelet effects. Notably, our prior research demonstrated that scutellarin specifically counteracts oxidative stress-driven endothelial dysfunction, a key initiating event in restenosis. This combined evidence strongly suggests its potential against in-stent restenosis (ISR). Therefore, this study explores the efficacy of scutellarin in preventing ISR after PCI. We investigated scutellarin, derived from Erigeron breviscapus, for its potential to prevent ISR following PCI. The efficacy and mechanism of scutellarin were evaluated using both in vivo and in vitro models. An experimental atherosclerosis model was established in APOE In APOE This study establishes the efficacy of scutellarin in mitigating ISR using two complementary in vivo models. Scutellarin-eluting stents in atherosclerotic minipigs overcome translational barriers through full interventional simulation. Furthermore, scutellarin inhibits VSMCs proliferation, migration and promotes autophagy-coordinated apoptosis by the coordinated downregulation of both the Pl3K/AKT and lKKs/NF-κB cascades.These findings highlight scutellarin as a promising candidate for next-generation bioactive stent coatings, bridging phytopharmacology and precision interventional cardiology. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2026.157948
APOE
Xiaoqiang Jin, Juanjuan Chen, Xiaoqi Zhang · 2026 · Frontiers in neuroscience · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Neuroplasticity is the core process by which the brain responds to aging, learning, and injury. Reporting positive non-pharmacological intervention approaches to promote neural plasticity is a core fo Show more
Neuroplasticity is the core process by which the brain responds to aging, learning, and injury. Reporting positive non-pharmacological intervention approaches to promote neural plasticity is a core focus of contemporary neuroscience and rehabilitation medicine. Tai Chi (TC), as a traditional Chinese physical and mental practice that deeply combines soothing body movements, breathing regulation, and spiritual focus, is increasingly attracting attention from the scientific community for its role in facilitating brain health. Our review seeks to combine recent evidence, elucidate how TC promotes neural plasticity via multi-level mechanisms, discuss its advantages in promoting cognitive, motor, and emotional functions, and investigate its clinical utilization prospects and future research challenges in neurorehabilitation. According to reviewing recent literature, we combined evidence from cross-sectional studies, randomized controlled trials, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses, with a center on citing research findings utilizing multimodal neuroimaging techniques (such as fMRI, fNIRS, EEG) and molecular biology techniques to construct a complete chain of evidence from molecules to systems. TC drives multi-level neural plasticity modifications via its unique physical and mental combination properties. At the macro level, it can enhance the gray matter volume of the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex, and promote the organizational effectiveness of large-scale functional networks in the brain. At the micro molecular level, TC establishes a favorable microenvironment for neuronal survival, synaptic plasticity, and neural repair by upregulating BDNF, increasing endogenous antioxidant defense, modulating inflammatory balance, and improving mitochondrial energy metabolism. These structural, functional, and molecular level changes collectively form the neurobiological basis for TC to promote memory and executive function, increase balance and motor management, and promote emotional regulation ability. Our review further assesses the clinical effectiveness of TC in the rehabilitation of neurological diseases, such as Parkinson's disease (PD), stroke, and mild cognitive impairment, determining that it not only decreases symptoms, but may also have the possible role to decrease disease development. Ultimately, our review delve into the challenges and future perspectives experienced by this range in the context of standardization of research paradigms, causal reasoning of mechanisms, and individualized interventions. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2026.1769779
BDNF
Huarong Shen, Yatong Shi, Jiancheng Xu +7 more · 2026 · International immunopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
The formation and retrieval of reward memories within the hippocampus are critical mechanisms underlying the development of substance use disorder. Nitrous oxide (N
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.intimp.2026.116327
BDNF bdnf hippocampus nitrous oxide nlrp3 substance use disorder
Hongfang Gong, Yaping Song, Dongmei Yang +6 more · 2026 · Tissue & cell · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
The coordinated development of skeletal muscle and intramuscular adipose tissue in animals essentially determines meat yield and quality, a process co-regulated by multiple genes. Using a co-culture m Show more
The coordinated development of skeletal muscle and intramuscular adipose tissue in animals essentially determines meat yield and quality, a process co-regulated by multiple genes. Using a co-culture model of bovine skeletal muscle cells (SMCs) and intramuscular adipocytes (IMAs), integrated with transcriptomic sequencing and bioinformatic analyses, key candidate genes coregulating muscle development and fat deposition were identified. Three potential coregulators-WNT5A, APOE, and BDKRB2-were selected. Protein-protein interaction (PPI) network analysis, along with tissue and cellular expression profiling, indicates that WNT5A potentially interacts with key protein markers of adipogenesis and myogenesis. Furthermore, it is highly expressed in both adipose and muscle tissues. Pathway enrichment analysis revealed significant enrichment of WNT5A in the Wnt signaling pathway. These findings suggest that WNT5A plays a dual regulatory role in the development of both skeletal muscle and intramuscular fat (IMF). This finding lays a solid theoretical foundation for deciphering the molecular mechanisms of muscle-fat deposition in beef cattle and for improving meat quality. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.tice.2025.103245
APOE
Chunyan Liu, Guangdong Hu, Haoyu Zhang +5 more · 2026 · Natural product research · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
Atherosclerosis (AS) is a prevalent typical chronic inflammation disease characterised by lipid deposition, immune cell infiltration and inflammatory response in the arterial intima. The long-term tre Show more
Atherosclerosis (AS) is a prevalent typical chronic inflammation disease characterised by lipid deposition, immune cell infiltration and inflammatory response in the arterial intima. The long-term treatments of the existing drugs suffered safety concerns. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/14786419.2026.2613756
APOE
Tianfeng Zhang, Chenghua Wang, Zhenghui Wang +4 more · 2026 · International journal of cardiology. Cardiovascular risk and prevention · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
This study aims to evaluate the association between multiple lipid indices and coronary collateral circulation (CCC) in patients diagnosed with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) Show more
This study aims to evaluate the association between multiple lipid indices and coronary collateral circulation (CCC) in patients diagnosed with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). This was a cross-sectional retrospective study involving 421 patients with STEMI who underwent coronary angiography between January 2022 and December 2024. Participants were categorized into a poor CCC group (Rentrop grade 0-1) and a good CCC group (Rentrop grade 2-3) according to Rentrop grading criteria. The following lipid parameters were evaluated as both continuous and categorical variables: total cholesterol (TC), triglycerides (TG), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (non-HDL-C), lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)], apolipoprotein B (ApoB), apolipoprotein A-I (ApoA-I), non-HDL-C/HDL-C, ApoB/ApoA-I, atherogenic index of plasma (AIP), and lipoprotein composite index (LCI). The associations between these lipid indices and CCC status were assessed using multivariate logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that higher HDL-C quartiles were significantly associated with reduced odds of poor CCC (odds ratio [OR]: 0.544, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.351-0.771, P < 0.05), whereas elevated LDL-C (OR: 29.299, 95% CI: 3.562-240.976, P < 0.05), non-HDL-C (OR: 50.140, 95% CI: 5.408-464.834, P < 0.01), and non-HDL-C/HDL-C (OR: 4.510, 95% CI: 1.186-25.368, P < 0.05) quartiles were significantly associated with increased odds of poor CCC. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis demonstrated that LDL-C (cutoff: 3.265, AUC: 0.647, 95% CI: 0.573-0.721, P < 0.001), non-HDL-C (cutoff: 2.735, AUC: 0.752, 95% CI: 0.688-0.816, P < 0.001), and non-HDL-C/HDL-C (cutoff: 2.393, AUC: 0.686, 95% CI: 0.611-0.761, P < 0.001) exhibited favorable predictive performance for poor CCC. Stratification analysis showed that the highest prevalence of poor CCC was observed in patients with concurrently elevated levels of LDL-C, non-HDL-C, and non-HDL-C/HDL-C. Several lipid indices-including LDL-C, non-HDL-C, and the non-HDL-C/HDL-C ratio-are significantly associated with impaired CCC in patients with STEMI. Notably, non-HDL-C exhibits the strongest association with CCC dyscrasia and therefore warrants early clinical attention. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcrp.2026.200615
APOB
Xiaohua Chen, Huan Liu, Yurong Liu +16 more · 2026 · Molecular psychiatry · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Although immune-mediated diseases (IMDs) and major depressive disorder (MDD) commonly co-occur, the bidirectional relationship between them remains to be fully elucidated. Using data from the prospect Show more
Although immune-mediated diseases (IMDs) and major depressive disorder (MDD) commonly co-occur, the bidirectional relationship between them remains to be fully elucidated. Using data from the prospective UK Biobank cohort, we evaluated the bidirectional associations by time-varying Cox proportional hazards regression models and assessed shared genetic architecture using genome-wide association study summary statistics. Additionally, we employed collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) and chronic social defeat stress (CSDS) mouse models to investigate the relationship between rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and depression. Over 5,226,841 person-years of follow-up, 23,534 incident MDD cases were identified. The presence of any IMD was associated with higher MDD risk (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.95; 95% CI: 1.89-2.01). Conversely, 59,742 incident cases of IMD were documented. MDD was associated with increased IMD risk (HR: 1.47; 95% CI: 1.40-1.54). We observed significant global genetic correlations between IMDs and MDD (r Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41380-026-03459-w
BDNF
Luomeng Qian, Zhiguang Fu, Ping Chen +11 more · 2026 · International journal of biological sciences · added 2026-04-24
📄 PDF DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.125483
LPA
Yongliang Wang, Jian Zhang, Jinsheng Liu +3 more · 2026 · International journal of general medicine · added 2026-04-24
Validate the clinical utility of exosome cargo (miRNAs/proteins) and NLRP3/BDNF as key regulatory molecules for acupuncture-mediated spinal cord injury (SCI) recovery. From the establishment of the da Show more
Validate the clinical utility of exosome cargo (miRNAs/proteins) and NLRP3/BDNF as key regulatory molecules for acupuncture-mediated spinal cord injury (SCI) recovery. From the establishment of the database to May 2025, a literature search was conducted on PubMed, and Embase, using keywords ["exosome cargo" or "exosome"], ["acupuncture" or "acupuncture and moxibustion" or "electroacupuncture" or "EA"], ["spinal cord injury" or "SCI"], ["immune regulation"], ["inflammatory reaction"], ["neuroregeneration" or "nerve"]. Including peer-reviewed studies on human/animal models, articles that do not meet the requirements are excluded. Preclinically, MSC-exosomal miR-145-5p suppressed TLR4/NF-κB signaling, reducing spinal IL-1β by 47% in SD rats. Schwann cell-exosomal MFG-E8 activated SOCS3/STAT3, increasing M2 macrophage CD206 by 63% and raising rat BBB scores by 3.8 points; Treg-exosomal miR-2861 upregulated tight junction proteins (occludin/ZO-1) to repair the blood-spinal cord barrier. Acupuncture (EA at GV14/GV4) upregulated spinal BDNF by 72% and NGF by 58% via Wnt/β-catenin, while EA at GV6/GV9 downregulated NLRP3 by 42-58% and TNF-α by 35-47%. Clinically, EA at EX-B2 increased ASIA scores by 3.2±1.1 points (Guo et al). Besides, 5x/week EA improved ASIA vs 3x/week (+6.4 points). EA+exercise reduced MAS by 1.6-2.9 points, with outcomes correlated to peripheral NLRP3 reduction, BDNF elevation, and MBI/WISCIII increases. Exosome cargo (miR-145-5p/MFG-E8) and NLRP3/BDNF are key regulatory molecules underlying acupuncture-mediated SCI recovery. However, limitations (small RCT samples, heterogeneous acupuncture protocols, unstandardized exosome isolation) hinder translation. Future work should focus on standardized biomarker detection, exosome engineering, and large-scale clinical trials. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S595567
BDNF
Kai Zhang, Sijia Zhu, Na Xing +16 more · 2026 · British journal of pharmacology · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-24
Chronic pain, marked by nociceptive sensitization and maladaptive neuroplasticity, affects 30% of the global population with escalating socioeconomic burdens. Epidemiological data show a 2-3-fold incr Show more
Chronic pain, marked by nociceptive sensitization and maladaptive neuroplasticity, affects 30% of the global population with escalating socioeconomic burdens. Epidemiological data show a 2-3-fold increase in neuropsychiatric co-morbidities among individuals with chronic pain, where epigenetic dysregulation serves as a key mechanism linking ongoing pain to emotional disorders. This review systematically explores epigenetic signatures in supraspinal integration hubs, notably the limbic-paralimbic networks and prefrontal regulatory circuits. The identified epigenetic signatures encompass dysregulation of DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs), RNA modifications, histone post-translational modifications and locus-specific alterations, including aberrant methylation at the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), opioid μ receptor and transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) gene loci. Additionally, they involve dysfunction of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR)/corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) axis via epigenetic modulation. Building on these findings, we evaluate therapeutic strategies addressing epigenetic dysregulation. While preclinical data demonstrate the efficacy of histone deacetylase (HDAC) and DNMT inhibitors, clinical translation faces significant barriers, including limited blood-brain barrier permeability. Notably, our analysis highlights the benefits of combining pharmacological interventions with non-invasive neuromodulation for enhanced co-morbidity management. Looking forward, this review proposes innovative approaches that leverage CRISPR-based chromatin editing platforms, biomimetic nanocarriers for neuron-specific delivery and closed-loop neuromodulation integrating real-time biomarker feedback, collectively establishing a precision medicine framework for pain or neuropsychiatric co-morbidities. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/bph.70302
BDNF chronic pain epigenetic dysregulation epigenetic mechanisms maladaptive neuroplasticity neuroplasticity neuropsychiatric nociceptive sensitization
Shichuan Hu, Jian Xu, Zhiwu Wang +7 more · 2026 · Journal for immunotherapy of cancer · added 2026-04-24
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the most common type of lung cancer and the leading cause of cancer-related deaths. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) of programmed death-1 (PD-1)/programmed de Show more
Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is the most common type of lung cancer and the leading cause of cancer-related deaths. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) of programmed death-1 (PD-1)/programmed death ligand-1 signaling induce tumor regression in some patients with NSCLC, but most patients with NSCLC exhibit resistance to ICIs therapy. NSCLC shapes the potent tumor immunosuppressive microenvironment (TIME) that underlies tumor immune tolerance and acquired resistance. Therefore, elucidating the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which NSCLC establishes and sustains the TIME is essential for developing novel strategies to overcome immune resistance and enhance the clinical benefit of ICIs. The correlation between sterile alpha motif domain and histidine-aspartate domain-containing protein 1 (SAMHD1) expression and ICIs was analyzed via immunohistochemistry. Cell migration assay was performed to assess the effect of SAMHD1 on macrophage recruitment. Multicolor flow cytometry was performed to analyze the effect of SAMHD1 knockdown on the tumor microenvironment. SAMHD1 regulation of the dual specificity phosphatase 6-extracellular regulated protein kinases 1/2 (DUSP6-ERK1/2) pathway was verified by RNA sequencing and western blotting. Here, we identify the SAMHD1 as a potential therapeutic target and a major determinant of poor response to ICIs in patients with NSCLC. Tumors with high SAMHD1 expression show resistance to anti-PD-1 antibody (αPD-1) treatment, whereas tumors with low SAMHD1 expression are highly sensitive. SAMHD1-dependent resistance to αPD-1 is characterized by increased tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) infiltration and reduced CD8+T cell numbers. Mechanistically, SAMHD1 regulates the expression of macrophage-associated chemokines by influencing the activation of the DUSP6-ERK1/2 pathway, which contributes to TAMs aggregation within NSCLC tumors to shape an immunosuppressive microenvironment. The HIV accessory protein viral protein-x (VPX) specifically degrades SAMHD1 to promote HIV replication. Similarly, the vpx-engineered oncolytic adenovirus (oAd-vpx) targets SAMDH1 degradation to enhance oncolytic adenovirus replication and weaken the hostile immune microenvironment shaped by TAMs, thereby triggering a CD8+T-cell-dependent antitumor immune response. The combination of oAd-vpx and αPD-1 inhibits tumor growth and enhances sensitivity to ICIs in both mouse and human NSCLC. This research identifies a key mechanism of SAMHD1-driven immunosuppression and highlights its important role in oncolytic adenovirus therapy. This study provides a theoretical basis for targeting SAMHD1 as a drug therapy strategy in patients with NSCLC. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2025-013550
DUSP6
Yifan Wu, Chijia Wang, Yu Zhou +6 more · 2026 · Journal of biomedical materials research. Part B, Applied biomaterials · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Improving the patency rate of small-diameter vascular grafts in a pathological environment is the key to achieving their clinical translation and application. The current approach to in vivo implantat Show more
Improving the patency rate of small-diameter vascular grafts in a pathological environment is the key to achieving their clinical translation and application. The current approach to in vivo implantation evaluations of small-diameter vascular grafts is predominantly based on healthy animal models. However, the majority of patients who undergo vascular transplantation are afflicted with vascular diseases, such as hyperlipidaemia or atherosclerosis. In this study, we constructed an ApoE gene knockout atherosclerotic mouse model and investigated the patency and regenerative performance of small-diameter vascular grafts in a diseased environment. We prepared heparinized Poly (ε-caprolactone) (PCL) vascular grafts (PCL-Hep) using electrospinning technology. By taking advantage of the physical adsorption of heparin, rapamycin (RM) was loaded onto the surface of grafts to obtain PCL-Hep-RM vascular grafts, which exhibited exceptional mechanical properties and drug sustained-release characteristics. Subsequently, the PCL-Hep-RM vascular grafts were implanted into the carotid arteries of atherosclerotic mice. The results demonstrated that PCL-Hep-RM significantly enhanced the patency rate and suppressed intimal hyperplasia in comparison with the PCL control group. This study offers novel concepts and methodologies for addressing challenges such as the low long-term patency rate and luminal stenosis of vascular grafts in a diseased environment, thereby promoting the translational medicine research of small-diameter vascular grafts. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/jbm.b.70041
APOE
Ning Zhang, Yukun Song, Xitong Han +2 more · 2026 · Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland) · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
In vitro maturation (IVM) is highly susceptible to influences of the culture environment, which can lead to increased intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and thereby induce a stress res Show more
In vitro maturation (IVM) is highly susceptible to influences of the culture environment, which can lead to increased intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels and thereby induce a stress response in oocytes, ultimately reducing the developmental potential of early embryos. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is an ovarian endocrine factor that can enhance the function of follicular granulosa cells and promote oocyte maturation, but the specific pathways remain unclear. We supplemented IVM cultures of sheep oocytes with BDNF and examined aspects of oocyte nuclear and cytoplasmic maturation. The addition of 50 ng/mL BDNF promoted the expansion of cumulus cells and increased the rates of first polar body extrusion, cleavage, and blastocyst formation. Compared with untreated controls, BDNF-treated oocytes had improved Ca Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/antiox15020234
BDNF
Liyao Su, Fan Zhang, Yongmei Jin +1 more · 2026 · Journal of affective disorders · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Digital technology is frequently regarded as a tool to alleviate loneliness and enhance mental health among older adults, yet its effectiveness remains contested. This study explores whether digital e Show more
Digital technology is frequently regarded as a tool to alleviate loneliness and enhance mental health among older adults, yet its effectiveness remains contested. This study explores whether digital exclusion moderates the association between loneliness and depressive, and examines symptom structure and depressive subtypes. Drawing on data form the 2018 and 2020 waves of the CHARLS (N = 13,719), we employed fixed-effect and mixed-effect models to assess the effect of loneliness on depressive and the moderating role of digital exclusion. Latent profile analysis (LPA) was used to identify symptoms subtypes, while symptom network analysis assessed centrality and network stability. Loneliness significantly predicted depressive symptoms across multiple models, demonstrating robust effects. Digital exclusion was positively associated with depressive symptoms but did not exhibit a statistically significant moderating effect on the loneliness-depression relationship (p > 0.05, Δβ ≈ 0.011). LPA identified six psychologically meaningful subtypes of depression. Symptom network analysis revealed that emotional and motivational symptoms occupied central positions within the network structure, whereas loneliness, despite its strong connections, exhibited relatively low centrality. The overall network structure remained stable over two years, with the digital access group exhibiting stronger network connectivity. This study emphasizes that digital access alone is not a universal remedy for alleviating loneliness. The psychological benefits of digital technology depend on the alignment between individual motivations, usage patterns, and broader social contexts. Future research should focus on digital usage quality and contextual adaptability of interventions, promoting a shift from customization in digital mental health intervention strategies. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2025.120531
LPA
Liang Chen, Chaoqun Wang, Lixin Jiang +3 more · 2026 · Regenerative therapy · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Facial nerve injury (FNI) is a common peripheral neuropathy that severely impairs facial function and quality of life. Qianzheng Powder (QZP) is a traditional Chinese herbal formula used to treat faci Show more
Facial nerve injury (FNI) is a common peripheral neuropathy that severely impairs facial function and quality of life. Qianzheng Powder (QZP) is a traditional Chinese herbal formula used to treat facial paralysis clinically, yet its neuroprotective mechanisms remain unclear. This study aims to evaluate the therapeutic effects of QZP on FNI and potential underlying mechanisms. A FNI model was established in male C57BL/6 mice by performing facial nerve crush surgery. QZP (3.51 g/kg) was administered orally once daily for 14 days post-surgery. Facial function was assessed behaviorally. Tissue samples were collected on day 21 for histological evaluation, qPCR and Western blotting. Liver and kidney safety were also assessed via H&E staining and serum biochemical markers. QZP significantly improved facial motor function from day 7 post-injury. Additionally, QZP treatment mitigated neuronal loss in the facial motor nucleus, attenuated buccinator muscle atrophy, and enhanced myelin regeneration, as evidenced by increased MPZ and MBP expression. These were consistent with the increace of the BDNF, TrkB, and QZP promotes structural and functional recovery of facial nerve following injury, likely through activation of the BDNF/TrkB/CREB axis, and demonstrates a favorable safety profile. These findings support its potential as a therapeutic adjunct in peripheral nerve repair. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.reth.2025.101048
BDNF
Ying Zhang, Zhouting Tuo, Yuan Lin +10 more · 2026 · Cancer research · added 2026-04-24
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF) are abundant stromal cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) that play a vital role in promoting tumor progression and drug resistance. The mechanisms regulating Show more
Cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAF) are abundant stromal cells in the tumor microenvironment (TME) that play a vital role in promoting tumor progression and drug resistance. The mechanisms regulating heterogeneity of CAFs in renal cell carcinoma (RCC) could represent potential targets for reprogramming the TME. In this study, we conducted single-cell RNA sequence and flow cytometry analyses that identified a CAF subset overexpressing apolipoprotein E (ApoE), which was correlated with poor survival in patients with RCC. Mechanistically, NRF1 activation in CAFs induced formation of ApoEhigh CAFs and secretion of NRG1. ApoEhigh CAFs potentiated stemness properties in the surrounding RCC cells by secreting NRG1 and subsequently activating the HER2/NF-κB pathway. Interfering with NRG1 expression or inhibiting NF-κB signaling reduced ApoEhigh CAF-induced stemness of RCC cells. Furthermore, neutralizing NRG1 enhanced the efficacy of sunitinib in RCC models in vivo. Together, these findings highlight targeting the tumor-promoting functions of ApoEhigh CAFs as a promising approach for treating advanced RCC. NRF1 drives formation of ApoEhigh cancer-associated fibroblasts that secrete NRG1 to stimulate stemness of renal cell carcinoma, revealing a stromal-mediated mechanism that can be inhibited to improve treatment of advanced kidney cancer. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-25-0959
APOE
Tao Ding, Jing Zhang, Xue Jiang +1 more · 2026 · International journal of psychiatry in medicine · SAGE Publications · added 2026-04-24
ObjectiveTo evaluate the effects of a combined psychological and functional exercise intervention on emotion, quality of life, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels in patients with Park Show more
ObjectiveTo evaluate the effects of a combined psychological and functional exercise intervention on emotion, quality of life, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD).MethodsIn this randomized controlled trial, 172 patients with PD were randomly assigned into 2 groups with 86 patients in each group. The control group received routine care, while the intervention group received a 12-week intervention combining psychological support with functional exercise in addition to routine care. Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAMA), Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD), Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire-39 (PDQ-39), Barthel Index, Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS), and serum BDNF levels were assessed before and after the intervention. Adherence rates were also determined for each group. Spearman correlation analysis was used to examine associations between changes in BDNF (ΔBDNF) and changes in HAMA (ΔHAMA) and HAMD (ΔHAMD) scores.ResultsAt the end of the 12-week clinical trial, the intervention group demonstrated significantly lower HAMA, HAMD, PDQ-39, and MDS-UPDRS scores ( Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1177/00912174261422307
BDNF brain-derived neurotrophic factor exercise neurology neuroscience parkinson's disease psychology rehabilitation
Wenjuan Zhao, Jie Zhong, Xiaobin Lai +3 more · 2026 · Journal of nursing management · added 2026-04-24
Identifying high-performing advanced practice nursing roles and understanding the factors that contribute to their effectiveness are critical for advancing professional development, optimizing workfor Show more
Identifying high-performing advanced practice nursing roles and understanding the factors that contribute to their effectiveness are critical for advancing professional development, optimizing workforce deployment, and ensuring long-term sustainability in nursing. This study aimed to (1) identify distinct latent profiles of advanced practice nursing among specialist nurses in mainland China, (2) quantitatively examine the individual and contextual factors associated with high performance, as characterized by these profiles, and (3) qualitatively confirm the significant factors using explanatory semistructured interviews in the high-performance groups. A mixed-methods sequential explanatory design was used, in which quantitative data were collected first and subsequently explained through qualitative interviews. Certified specialist nurses from 16 hospitals across urban and rural areas of Shanghai were included. Latent profile analysis (LPA) was conducted using the five domains from the Advanced Practice Role Delineation tool as manifest indicators to classify nurses into distinct performance profiles. Multinomial logistic regression was used to examine potential determinants (e.g., job position) of group membership. Additionally, a backpropagation neural network (BPNN) was developed to rank the importance of contributing factors. Specialist nurses identified as high performers in the quantitative phase were purposively sampled for explanatory semistructured qualitative interviews. Three latent profiles emerged: high performance (26.1%), moderate performance (46.3%), and low performance (27.6%). Compared to APNs, staff nurses had significantly lower odds of belonging to the high-performance group ( Identifying the profiles of advanced practice nursing roles provides valuable insights for optimizing APN performance and informing targeted management and policy strategies. High-performing specialist nurses are positioned at the nexus of individual capability, interdisciplinary collaboration, and institutional support. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1155/jonm/3528145
LPA
Qiang Li, Zhiqi Liao, Xinyao Hu +26 more · 2026 · Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Clinical application of mesenchymal stem cells for endometrial repair has been hampered by variability in cell quality, large-scale production, and uncertainty regarding the optimal delivery route. In Show more
Clinical application of mesenchymal stem cells for endometrial repair has been hampered by variability in cell quality, large-scale production, and uncertainty regarding the optimal delivery route. In this study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of clinical-grade human embryonic stem cell-derived immunity-and-matrix-regulatory cells (IMRCs) for treating refractory moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesion (IUA). In a rabbit IUA model, sub-endometrial injection of IMRCs significantly reduced fibrosis and enhanced endometrial angiogenesis, outperforming uterine perfusion. Transcriptomic analysis revealed distinct pro-angiogenic gene expression profiles between the two delivery routes. In vitro, IMRCs co-cultured with endometrial stromal cells (ESCs) markedly enhanced angiogenic potential compared to either cell type alone. Protein array analysis of the co-culture supernatant showed elevated levels of angiogenic factors, with functional assays confirming that inhibition of ANGPTL4, a non-canonical pro-angiogenic mediator, impaired angiogenesis. In a first-in-human, single-center, phase 1 dose-escalation trial involving 18 patients with refractory IUA, high-dose sub-endometrial IMRC injection promoted angiogenesis, reduced uterine scarring, and improved pregnancy outcomes, with no safety concerns observed over 3 years of follow-up. These findings highlight the translational promise of IMRCs as a novel therapeutic strategy for endometrial regeneration in severe IUA. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2025.09.035
ANGPTL4
Rifat Nowshin Raka, Zhongwei Zhang, Junsong Xiao +1 more · 2026 · Computers in biology and medicine · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders share overlapping molecular mechanisms, including neuroinflammation, oxidative stress, and neurotransmitter dysregulation. Essential oils from Lavandula ang Show more
Neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders share overlapping molecular mechanisms, including neuroinflammation, oxidative stress, and neurotransmitter dysregulation. Essential oils from Lavandula angustifolia (TLEO) and Rosa rugosa (PREO) contain neuroactive compounds with therapeutic potential, but their mechanisms remain poorly defined. This study aimed to elucidate the shared and distinct molecular targets and pathways of TLEO and PREO using a multi-scale computational strategy. Compounds identified by GC-MS were evaluated through ADMET profiling, target prediction, and disease-target intersection analysis. Enrichment, network, docking, and dynamics analyses were performed on shared protein-coding targets between essential oils and twelve brain disorders, including seven neurodegenerative conditions (Alzheimer's disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Friedreich ataxia, Huntington's disease, Lewy body disease, Parkinson's disease, spinal muscular atrophy) and five psychiatric disorders (autism spectrum disorder, attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, and schizophrenia). A total of 110 compounds yielded 252 common targets, with CHRM2 (GPCR) and NR1H3 (non-GPCR) identified as key hubs. Docking suggested strong binding affinities for caryophyllene oxide at CHRM2 (-7.3 kcal/mol) and α-himachalene at NR1H3 (-8.5 kcal/mol). Molecular dynamics simulations confirmed stable, compact complexes with low RMSD and SASA values. MM/PBSA free energy calculations quantitatively validated these interactions, revealing favorable binding energetics driven predominantly by van der Waals and hydrophobic contributions, consistent with the terpenoid chemical profiles. Functional enrichment highlighted involvement in cholinergic signaling, lipid metabolism, and inflammatory regulation. This study demonstrates that PREO and TLEO can modulate multiple targets relevant to brain disorders through both GPCR and non-GPCR mechanisms. These findings provide a computationally inferred mechanistic framework for the potential neuroprotective synergy of these oils and highlight essential oil-derived compounds as promising leads for further experimental investigation. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2026.111681
NR1H3