👤 Jisen Li

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Also published as: Xiaofeng Li, Jiajia Li, Jingwen Li, Zhaolun Li, Litao Li, Ruyi Li, Xiaocun Li, Jianyu Li, Wanxin Li, Jinsong Li, Xinzhi Li, Guanqiao Li, Ying-Lan Li, Zequn Li, Yulin Li, Shaojian Li, Guang-Xi Li, Yubo Li, Bugao Li, Mohan Li, Yan-Xue Li, Qingchao Li, Xikun Li, Enhong Li, Guobin Li, Hong-Tao Li, Xiangnan Li, Yong-Jun Li, Hang Li, Rongqing Li, Ziming Li, Xihao Li, Jing-Ming Li, Chang-Da Li, Meng-Yue Li, Yuanchang Li, DaZhuang Li, Xiao-Lin Li, Yicun Li, Zhao-Yang Li, Shunqin Li, Jiajie Li, Xinjia Li, K-L Li, Yaqiong Li, Bin Li, Yuan-hao Li, Jianhai Li, Peiwu Li, Youran Li, Yongmei Li, Changyu Li, X Y Li, Ran Li, Peilin Li, Chunshan Li, Yixiang Li, Ming Zhou Li, Ye Li, Guanglve Li, Z Li, Zili Li, Xinmei Li, Yihao Li, Qing Run Li, Liling Li, Wulan Li, Meng-Yang Li, Ziyun Li, Haoxian Li, Xiaozhao Li, Jun-Ying Li, Da-Lei Li, Xinhai Li, Yongjiang Li, Wanru Li, Jinming Li, Huihui Li, Wenhao Li, Qiankun Li, Kailong Li, Shengxu Li, Shisheng Li, Sai Li, Guangwen Li, Hua Li, Xiuli Li, Yulong Li, Dongmei Li, Ru-Hao Li, Lanzhou Li, Zhi-Peng Li, Tingsong Li, Binjun Li, Chen Li, Yawei Li, Jiayang Li, Zunjiang Li, Chao Bo Li, Minglong Li, Donghua Li, Wenzhe Li, Siming Li, Fengli Li, Song Li, Zihan Li, Hsin-Hua Li, Jin-Long Li, Hongxin Li, You Li, Dongfeng Li, Fa-Hui Li, Zhen-Yuan Li, Xueyang Li, Xuelin Li, Caiyu Li, Guangpu Li, Teng Li, Wen-Jie Li, Ang Li, Hegen Li, Zhizong Li, Lu-Yun Li, Peng Li, Shiyu Li, Bao Li, Yin Li, Cai-Hong Li, Fang Li, Jiuke Li, Miyang Li, Chen-Xi Li, Mingxu Li, Panlong Li, Dejun Li, Changwei Li, Biyu Li, Yufeng Li, Miaoxin Li, San-Feng Li, Yaoqi Li, Hu Li, Bei Li, Sha Li, W H Li, Jiaming Li, Jiyuan Li, Ya-Qiang Li, Rongkai Li, Yani Li, Xiushen Li, Xiaoqing Li, Jinlin Li, Linke Li, C Y Li, Shuaicheng Li, Thomas Li, Siting Li, Xuebiao Li, Yingyi Li, Yongnan Li, Maolin Li, Jiyang Li, Jinchen Li, Jin-Ping Li, Zhongxuan Li, Xuewen Li, R Li, Xianlong Li, Aixin Li, Linting Li, Zhong-Xin Li, Xuening Li, Enhao Li, Guang Li, Xiaoming Li, Shengliang Li, Yongli Li, Z-H Li, Baohong Li, Hujie Li, Yue-Ming Li, Shuyuan Li, L Li, Zhaohan Li, Yuanmei Li, Alexander Li, Yanwu Li, Wen-juan Li, Hualing Li, Sibing Li, Xining Li, Qinghe Li, Pilong Li, Yun-Peng Li, C X Li, Zonghua Li, Jingya Li, Huanan Li, Liqin Li, Youjun Li, Zheng-Dao Li, Miao X Li, Zhenshu Li, KeZhong Li, Heng-Zhen Li, Linying Li, Chu-Qiao Li, Fa-Hong Li, Changzheng Li, Yuhui Li, Wei Li, Wen-Ying Li, Yaokun Li, Shuanglong Li, Zhi-Gang Li, Yufan Li, Liangqian Li, Guanghui Li, Xiongfeng Li, Fei-feng Li, Letai Li, Ming Li, Kangli Li, Runwen Li, Wenbo Li, Side Li, Yarong Li, Timmy Li, Weidong Li, S E Li, Xin-Tao Li, Ruotong Li, Xiuzhen Li, Shuguang Li, Chuan-Hai Li, Lingxi Li, Qiuya Li, Jiezhen Li, Haitao Li, Tingting Li, Guanghua Li, Yufen Li, Qin Li, Zhongyu Li, Deyu Li, Zhen-Yu Li, Hansen Li, Annie Li, Wenge Li, Jinzhi Li, Xueren Li, Chun-Mei Li, Yijing Li, Kaifeng Li, Wen-Xing Li, Meng-Yao Li, Chung-I Li, Zhi-Bin Li, Qintong Li, Xiao Li, Junping Li, PeiQi Li, Naishi Li, Xiaobing Li, Liangdong Li, Xin-Ping Li, Yan Li, Han-Ni Li, Pan Li, Shengchao A Li, Jiaying Li, Jun-Jie Li, Ruonan Li, Cui-lan Li, Shuhao Li, Ruitong Li, Huiqiong Li, Guigang Li, Lucia M Li, Chunzhu Li, Chengquan Li, Suyan Li, Zexu Li, Gen-Lin Li, Dianjie Li, Zhilei Li, Junhui Li, Tiantian Li, Xue Cheng Li, Ya-Jun Li, Wenyong Li, Ding-Biao Li, Tianjun Li, Desen Li, Yansong Li, Xiying Li, Weiyong Li, Zihao Li, Xinyang Li, Fadi Li, Huawei Li, Yu-quan Li, Cui Li, Xiaoyong Li, Y L Li, Xueyi Li, Jingxiang Li, Jihua Li, Wenxue Li, Jingping Li, Zhiquan Li, Zeyu Li, Yingpu Li, Jianglin Li, Jing-Yao Li, Yan-Hua Li, Zongdi Li, Ming V Li, Shawn Shun-Cheng Li, Aowen Li, Xiao-Min Li, L K Li, Ya-Ting Li, Wan Jie Li, Aimin Li, Dongbiao Li, Tiehua Li, Keguo Li, Yuanfei Li, Longhui Li, Jing-Yi Li, Zhonghua Li, Guohong Li, Chunyi Li, Botao Li, Peiyun Li, L-Y Li, Xiuqi Li, Qinglan Li, Zhenhua Li, Zhengda Li, Haotong Li, Yue-Ting Li, Luhan Li, Da Li, Yuancong Li, Yuxiu Li, Tian Li, YiPing Li, Beibei Li, Haipeng Li, Demin Li, Chuan Li, Ze-An Li, Changhong Li, Jianmin Li, Yu Li, Minhui Li, Yvonne Li, Yiwei Li, Jiayuan Li, Xiangzhe Li, Zhichao Li, Siguang Li, Yige Li, Minglun Li, Chengqian Li, Weiye Li, Xue-Min Li, Kenneth Kai Wang Li, Dong-fei Li, Xiangchun Li, Chunlan Li, Chiyang Li, Hulun Li, Juan-Juan Li, Hua-Zhong Li, Hailong Li, Kun-Peng Li, Jiaomei Li, Haijun Li, Jing Li, Si Li, Xiangyun Li, Ji-Feng Li, Yingshuo Li, Wanqian Li, Baixing Li, Zijing Li, Dengke Li, Yuchuan Li, Wentao Li, Qingling Li, Rui-Han Li, Xuhong Li, Hongyun Li, Dong Li, Zhonggen Li, Xiong Li, Penghui Li, Xiaoxia Li, Dezhi Li, Huiting Li, Xiaolong Li, Linqing Li, Jiawei Li, Sheng-Jie Li, Defa Li, Ying-Qing Li, X L Li, Yuyan Li, Kawah Li, Xin-Jian Li, Guangxi Li, Yanhui Li, Shupeng Li, Zhenfei Li, Sha-Sha Li, Panyuan Li, Gang Li, Mengxuan Li, Ziyu Li, Hong-Wen Li, Zhuo Li, Han-Wei Li, Xiaojuan Li, Weina Li, Xiao-Hui Li, Huaiyuan Li, Dongnan Li, Rui-Fang Li, Jianzhong Li, Huaping Li, Ji-Liang Li, C H Li, Bohua Li, Bing Li, Pei-Ying Li, Huihuang Li, Shaobin Li, Yunmin Li, Yanying Li, Ronald Li, Gui Lin Li, Chenrui Li, Shi-Hong Li, Shilun Li, Xinyu Li, John Zhong Li, Song-Chao Li, Lujiao Li, Chenghong Li, Dengfeng Li, Baohua Li, Nianfu Li, N Li, Xiaotong Li, Chensheng Li, Ming-Qing Li, Yongxue Li, Bao-Shan Li, Jiao Li, Zhimei Li, Jun-Cheng Li, Yimeng Li, Jingming Li, Jinxia Li, De-Tao Li, Chunting Li, Shu Li, Julia Li, Chien-Feng Li, Huilan Li, Mei-Zhen Li, Xin-Ya Li, Zhengjie Li, Chunsheng Li, Liwei Li, Yan-Yan Li, Huijun Li, Chengyun Li, Chengjian Li, Ying-na Li, Guihua Li, Zhiyuan Li, Lijun Li, Supeng Li, Hening Li, Yiju Li, Yuanhe Li, Fengxia Li, Guangxiao Li, Peixin Li, Xueqin Li, Feng-Feng Li, Zu-Ling Li, Jialing Li, Xin Li, Yunjiu Li, Zonghong Li, Dayong Li, Ningyan Li, Lingjiang Li, Yuhan Li, Zhenghui Li, Fuyuan Li, Ailing Li, H-F Li, Chaochen Li, Chunxia Li, Zhen-Li Li, Tengyan Li, Xianlu Li, Jiaqi Li, Jiabei Li, Zhengying Li, Zhaoshui Li, Yali Li, Wenjing Li, Yu-Hui Li, Jingshu Li, Chuang Li, Jiajun Li, Can Li, Zhe Li, Han-Bo Li, Stephen Li, Shuangding Li, Zengyang Li, Kaiyuan Li, Mangmang Li, Chunyan Li, Runzhen Li, Xiaopeng Li, Xi-Hai Li, MengGe Li, Xuezhong Li, Anan Li, Luying Li, Jiajv Li, Pei-Lin Li, Xiaoquan Li, Ning Li, Yanxi Li, Ruobing Li, Wan-Xin Li, Meitao Li, Xia Li, Yongjing Li, Huayao Li, Ziqiang Li, Wen-Xi Li, Shenghao Li, Boxuan Li, Huixue Li, Jiqing Li, Hehua Li, Yucheng Li, Yongqi Li, Qingyuan Li, Fengqi Li, Zhigang Li, Yuqing Li, Guiyang Li, Guo-Qiang Li, Dujuan Li, Yanbo Li, Yuying Li, Shaofei Li, Sanqiang Li, Shaoguang Li, Hongyu Li, Min-Rui Li, Guangping Li, Shuqiang Li, Dan C Li, Huashun Li, Jinxin Li, Ganggang Li, Xinrong Li, Haoqi Li, Yayu Li, Handong Li, Huaixing Li, Yan-Nan Li, Xianglong Li, Minyue Li, Hong-Mei Li, Jing-Jing Li, Songhan Li, Jutang Li, Mengxia Li, Conglin Li, Qingli Li, Yongxiang Li, Miao Li, Songlin Li, Qilong Li, Dijie Li, Chenyu Li, Yizhe Li, Ke Li, Yan Bing Li, Jiani Li, Lianjian Li, Zhen-Hua Li, Yiliang Li, Chuan-Yun Li, Xinpeng Li, Hongxing Li, Wanyi Li, Gaoyuan Li, Youming Li, Mi Li, Qingrun Li, Dong-Yun Li, Guo Li, Jingxia Li, Xiu-Ling Li, Fuhai Li, Ruijia Li, Shuangfei Li, Yumiao Li, Fengfeng Li, Qinggang Li, Jiexi Li, Huixia Li, Kecheng Li, Junxu Li, Xiangjun Li, Xingye Li, Junya Li, Jiang Li, Huiying Li, Shengxian Li, Yuxi Li, Qingyang Li, Xiao-Dong Li, Chenxuan Li, Xinghuan Li, Zhaoping Li, Xingyu Li, Xiaolei Li, Zhenlu Li, Wenying Li, Huilong Li, Xiao-Gang Li, Honghui Li, Zhenhui Li, Cheung Li, Xuelian Li, Zhenming Li, Shu-Fen Li, Chunjun Li, Changyan Li, Mulin Jun Li, Yinghua Li, Shangjia Li, Yanjie Li, Jingjing Li, Suhong Li, Xinping Li, Chaoying Li, Siyu Li, Juanjuan Li, Qiu Li, Xiangyan Li, Guangzhen Li, Kunlun Li, Shiyun Li, Xiaoyu Li, Yaobo Li, Shiquan Li, Mei Li, Xuewang Li, Xiangdong Li, Jifang Li, Zhenjia Li, Manjiang Li, Wan Li, Zhizhong Li, Ding Yang Li, Xiaoya Li, Xiao-Li Li, Shan Li, Shitao Li, Lijia Li, Zehan Li, Chunqiong Li, Huiliang Li, Junjun Li, Chenlong Li, Shujin Li, Hui-Long Li, Zhao-Cong Li, Zhi-Wei Li, Weining Li, Wenxi Li, Wu-Jun Li, Chang-hai Li, Bin-Kui Li, Yuqiu Li, Yumao Li, Honglian Li, Xue-Yan Li, Ya-Zhou Li, Yuan-Yuan Li, Xiang-Jun Li, Hongyi Li, Y X Li, Chia Li, Yunyun Li, Zhen-Jia Li, Fu-Rong Li, Honghua Li, Lanjuan Li, Qiuxuan Li, Xiancheng Li, Man-Zhi Li, Yanmei Li, De-Jun Li, Keqing Li, Junxian Li, Zhihua Li, Shuwen Li, Danxi Li, Saijuan Li, Minqi Li, Lingjun Li, Mimi Li, Deheng Li, Si-Xing Li, Yingjie Li, Yaodong Li, Shigang Li, Yuan-Hai Li, Lujie Li, Minghao Li, Gao-Fei Li, Minle Li, Meifen Li, Yifeng Li, Le-Le Li, Huanqing Li, Ziwen Li, Yuhang Li, Yongqiu Li, Pu-Yu Li, Jianhua Li, Chanjuan Li, Nan-Nan Li, Hongming Li, Lan-Lan Li, Shuang Li, Lingyi Li, Yanchuan Li, Wanting Li, Bai-Qiang Li, Gong-Hua Li, Zhengyu Li, Chunmiao Li, Jiong-Ming Li, Yongqiang Li, Linsheng Li, Weiguang Li, Mingyao Li, Guoqing Li, Ze Li, Xiaomeng Li, R H L Li, Yuanze Li, Yunqi Li, Yuandong Li, Guisen Li, Jinglin Li, Dongyang Li, Mingfang Li, Honglong Li, Hanmei Li, Chenmeng Li, Changcheng Li, Shiyang Li, Shiyue Li, Jianing Li, Hanbo Li, Dingshan Li, Yinggao Li, Linlin Li, Xinsheng Li, Jin-Wei Li, Cheng-Tian Li, Jin-Jiang Li, Zhi-Xing Li, Chang Li, Yaxi Li, Ming-Han Li, Wei-Ming Li, Wenchao Li, Guangyan Li, Xuesong Li, Zhaosha Li, Jiwei Li, Yongzhen Li, Chun-Quan Li, Weifeng Li, Tao Li, Wenhui Li, Sichen Li, Xiankai Li, Qingsheng Li, Yaxuan Li, Liangji Li, Yuchan Li, Lixiang Li, Tian-wang Li, Jiaxi Li, Yalin Li, Jin-Liang Li, Pei-Zhi Li, You Ran Li, Xiaoqiong Li, Guanyu Li, Jinlan Li, Yixiao Li, Huizi Li, Jianping Li, Kathy H Li, Yun-Lin Li, Yadong Li, Sujing Li, Yuhua Li, Xuri Li, Wenzhuo Li, Y Li, Deqiang Li, Caixia Li, Zipeng Li, Mingyue Li, Hongli Li, Yun Li, Mengqiu Li, Ling-Ling Li, Yaqin Li, Yanfeng Li, Yu-He Li, Shasha Li, Xi Li, S-C Li, Siyi Li, Minmin Li, Manna Li, Chengwen Li, Dawei Li, Shu-Feng Li, Haojing Li, Xun Li, Ming-Jiang Li, Zhiyu Li, Sitao Li, Ziyang Li, Qian Li, Yaochen Li, Tinghua Li, Zhenfen Li, Wenyang Li, Bohao Li, Shuo Li, Wenming Li, Mingxuan Li, Si-Ying Li, Xinyi Li, Jenny J Li, Xue-zhi Li, Shuai Li, Anqi Li, Bingsong Li, Xiaoju Li, Ting Li, Zhenyu Li, Xiaonan Li, Duan Li, Xiang-Yu Li, Lei Li, Hongde Li, Fengqing Li, Na Li, Xunjia Li, Yanchang Li, Huibo Li, Ruixia Li, Nanzhen Li, Chuanfang Li, Bingjie Li, Hongxue Li, Pengsong Li, Ruotian Li, Xiaojing Li, Xinlin Li, Chunya Li, Zong-Xue Li, En-Min Li, Yan Ning Li, Honglin Li, Yu-Ying Li, Min-jun Li, Jinhua Li, Qian-Qian Li, Yuanheng Li, Chunxiao Li, Wenli Li, Shijun Li, Mengze Li, Kuan Li, Baoguang Li, Jie-Shou Li, Kaiwei Li, Zimeng Li, Mengmeng Li, W-B Li, Huangyuan Li, Lili Li, Binkui Li, Junxin Li, Yu-Sheng Li, Wei-Jun Li, Guoyan Li, Fei-Lin Li, Junjie Li, Nuomin Li, Shulin Li, Shanglai Li, Yanyan Li, Yue Li, Taibo Li, Junqin Li, Xueying Li, Jun-Ru Li, JunBo Li, Zhongcai Li, Xiaoqi Li, Zhaobing Li, Xiucui Li, Linxin Li, Haihua Li, Yu-Lin Li, Jen-Ming Li, Tsai-Kun Li, Shujing Li, Chen-Chen Li, Hongquan Li, Chuan F Li, Mengyun Li, Mingna Li, Yanxiang Li, Lanlan Li, Moyi Li, Xiyun Li, Yi-Wen Li, Huifeng Li, Rulin Li, Shihong Li, Ya-Pei Li, Lijuan Li, Shengbin Li, Yuanhong Li, Zhongjie Li, Zhenbei Li, Jingyu Li, Xuewei Li, Shuangshuang Li, Long Li, Wenjia Li, Min-Dian Li, Xiatian Li, Ding-Jian Li, Hongwei Li, Danni Li, Yangxue Li, Xiao-Qiang Li, Chengnan Li, Chuanyin Li, Min Li, Yiqiang Li, Zhenzhou Li, Pengyang Li, Kun-Xin Li, Xiawei Li, Binglan Li, Zesong Li, Xiangpan Li, Yutong Li, Mingfei Li, Shuwei Li, Yingnan Li, Ge Li, Mingdan Li, Xihe Li, Xinzhong Li, Jianfeng Li, Chenyao Li, Jun-Yan Li, Dexiong Li, Rongsong Li, Yinxiong Li, Boru Li, Ruixue Li, Zemin Li, Jixi Li, Chris Li, Jicheng Li, Hong-Yu Li, Chuanning Li, Weijian Li, Changhui Li, Jiafei Li, Yingying Li, Gaizhi Li, Chien-Hsiu Li, Xiangcheng Li, Siqi Li, Dechao Li, Chunxing Li, Wenxia Li, Guoxiang Li, Ziru Li, Qiao-Xin Li, Shu-Fang Li, Huang Li, Qiusheng Li, Man Li, Juxue Li, Weiqin Li, Xinming Li, Huayin Li, Xiao-yu Li, Jianyi Li, Yongjun Li, Mengyang Li, Guo-Jian Li, Guowei Li, Chenglong Li, Xingya Li, Nan Li, Gongda Li, Wei-Ping Li, Yajun Li, Yipeng Li, Mingxing Li, Nanjun Li, Xin-Yu Li, Chunyu Li, P H Li, Jinwei Li, Xuhua Li, Yu-Xiang Li, Ranran Li, Suping Li, Long Shan Li, Yanze Li, Jason Li, Xiao-Feng Li, Monica M Li, Fengjuan Li, W Li, Xianlun Li, Qi Li, Hainan Li, Yutian Li, Xiaoli Li, Xiliang Li, Shuangmei Li, Ying-Bo Li, Fei Li, Xionghui Li, Duanbin Li, Maogui Li, Dan Li, Sumei Li, Kang Li, Peilong Li, Hongmei Li, Yinghao Li, Xu-Wei Li, Mengsen Li, Lirong Li, Wenhong Li, Quanpeng Li, Audrey Li, Yijian Li, Yajiao Li, Guang Y Li, Xianyong Li, Qilan Li, Shilan Li, Qiuhong Li, Zongyun Li, Xiao-Yun Li, Guang-Li Li, Cheng-Lin Li, Bang-Yan Li, Enxiao Li, Jianrui Li, Yousheng Li, Wen-Ting Li, Guohua Li, Kezhen Li, Xingxing Li, Guoping Li, Ellen Li, A Li, Simin Li, Xue-Nan Li, Weiguo Li, Yijie Li, Xiaoying Li, Suwei Li, Shengsheng Li, Shuyu D Li, Jiandong Li, Ruiwen Li, Fangyong Li, Hong Li, Binru Li, Yuqi Li, Zihua Li, Yuchao Li, Hanlu Li, Xue-Peng Li, Jianang Li, Qing Li, Jiaping Li, Sheng-Tien Li, Shihao Li, Yazhou Li, Jun-Ling Li, Caesar Z Li, Feng Li, Weiyang Li, Lang Li, Peihong Li, Jin-Mei Li, Lisha Li, Feifei Li, Kejuan Li, Qinghong Li, Qiqiong Li, Cuicui Li, Xinxiu Li, Kaibo Li, Chongyi Li, Yi-Ying Li, Hanbing Li, Shaodan Li, Meng-Hua Li, Yongzheng Li, J T Li, Da-Hong Li, Xiao-mei Li, Jiejie Li, Ruihuan Li, Xiangwei Li, Baiqiang Li, Ziliang Li, Yaoyao Li, Mo Li, Yueguo Li, Zheng Li, Ming-Hao Li, Donghe Li, Congfa Li, Wenrui Li, Hongsen Li, Yong Li, Xiuling Li, Menghua Li, Jingqi Li, Ka Li, Kaixin Li, Fuping Li, Zhiyong Li, Jianbo Li, Xing-Wang Li, Chong Li, Xiao-Kang Li, Hanqi Li, Fugen Li, Yangyang Li, Yuwei Li, Dongfang Li, Xiaochen Li, Zizhuo Li, Zhuorong Li, X-H Li, Xianrui Li, Lan-Juan Li, Dong Sheng Li, Zhigao Li, Chenlin Li, Zihui Li, Xiaoxiao Li, Guoli Li, Le-Ying Li, Pengcui Li, Bing-Heng Li, Xiaoman Li, Huanqiu Li, Zhan Li, Weisong Li, Xinglong Li, Xiaohong Li, Xiaozhen Li, Yuan Hao Li, Jianchun Li, Wenxiang Li, Zhaoliang Li, Guo-Ping Li, Zhiyang Li, Cunxi Li, Jinhui Li, Zhifei Li, Ying Li, Yanshu Li, Jianlin Li, Yuanyou Li, Chongyang Li, Yumin Li, Wanyan Li, Jinku Li, Longyu Li, Guiying Li, X B Li, Cuiling Li, Changgui Li, Zhisheng Li, Xuekun Li, Yuguang Li, Wenke Li, Jianguo Li, Jiayi Li, En Li, Ximei Li, Shaoyong Li, Kai-Wen Li, Suwen Li, Peihua Li, Chang-Ping Li, Guangda Li, Guandu Li, Yixue Li, Junfeng Li, Xin-Chang Li, Jieming Li, Kongdong Li, Yue-Ying Li, Chunhui Li, Peiyu Li, Tongyao Li, Lian Li, Linfeng Li, Yuzhe Li, Xinmiao Li, Chenyang Li, Jiacheng Li, Chang-Yan Li, Qifang Li, Xiaohua Li, Vivian Li, Duanxiang Li, Xiaolin Li, Meiting Li, Justin Li, Xue-Er Li, Zhuangzhuang Li, Xiaohui Li, Hongchang Li, Cang Li, Xuepeng Li, Mingjiang Li, Youwei Li, Ronggui Li, Xingwang Li, Tiange Li, Yongjia Li, Dacheng Li, Xinmin Li, Zongyu Li, Luquan Li, Jianyong Li, Guoxing Li, Shujie Li, Zongchao Li, Yanbin Li, Jia Li, Shiliang Li, Haimin Li, Qinrui Li, Sheng-Qing Li, Yiming Li, Lingjie Li, Xiao-Tong Li, Tie Li, Yiwen Li, Baoqi Li, Wei-Bo Li, Leyao Li, Xiaoyi Li, Liyan Li, Xiao-Qin Li, Xiaokun Li, Xinke Li, Ming-Wei Li, Minzhe Li, Wenfeng Li, Jiajing Li, Karen Li, Yanlin Li, Liao-Yuan Li, X Li, Meifang Li, Yanjing Li, Yongkai Li, Maosheng Li, Ju-Rong Li, Shibo Li, Jin Li, Hangwen Li, Li-Na Li, Hengguo Li, An-Qi Li, Xuehua Li, AnHai Li, Hui Li, Chenli Li, Rumei Li, Zhengrui Li, Fangqi Li, Xiaoguang Li, Xian Li, Danjie Li, Yan-Yu Li, Vivian S W Li, Qinghua Li, Qinqin Li, Lipeng Li, Leilei Li, Defu Li, Ranchang Li, Lianyong Li, Amy Li, Zhou Li, Q Li, Haoyu Li, Xiaoyao Li, M-J Li, Jiao-Jiao Li, Rongling Li, Zhu Li, Tong-Ruei Li, Bizhi Li, Cheng-Wei Li, Wenwen Li, Jian'an Li, Guangqiang Li, Ben Li, Sichong Li, Wenyi Li, Yingxia Li, Meiyan Li, Qing-Min Li, Yonghe Li, Yun-Da Li, Xinwei Li, Shunhua Li, Yu-I Li, Mingxi Li, Jian-Qiang Li, Yingrui Li, Chenfeng Li, Qionghua Li, Guo-Li Li, Xingchen Li, Shen Li, Tianjiao Li, Ziqi Li, Gui-Rong Li, Yunfeng Li, Shufen Li, Yueqi Li, Yunpeng Li, Qiong Li, Xiao-Guang Li, Jiali Li, Zhencheng Li, Qiufeng Li, Songyu Li, Pinghua Li, Xu Li, Shi-Fang Li, Shude Li, Yaxiong Li, Zhibin Li, Zhenli Li, Qing-Fang Li, Rosa J W Li, Yunxiao Li, Hsin-Yun Li, Shengwen Li, Gui-Bo Li, XiaoQiu Li, Xueer Li, Zhi Li, Zhankui Li, Zihai Li, Yue-Jia Li, Haihong Li, Peifen Li, Taixu Li, Mingzhou Li, Jiejing Li, Meng-Miao Li, Meiying Li, Chunlian Li, Zhijie Li, Meng Li, Cun Li, Huimin Li, T Li, Ruifang Li, Xiao-xu Li, Man-Xiang Li, Yinghui Li, Cong Li, Chengbin Li, Feilong Li, Yuping Li, Sin-Lun Li, Mengfan Li, Weiling Li, Jie Li, Shiyan Li, G Li, Lianbing Li, Yanchun Li, Xuze Li, Zhi-Yong Li, Yukun Li, Wenjian Li, Jialin Li, He Li, Bichun Li, Xiong Bing Li, Hanqin Li, Qingjie Li, Wen Lan Li, Guoge Li, Han Li, Wen-Wen Li, Keying Li, Yutang Li, Minze Li, Xingcheng Li, Wanshun Li, Congxin Li, Hankun Li, Hongling Li, Xiangrui Li, Chaojie Li, Michelle Li, Caolong Li, Zhifan Li, J Li, Zhi-Jian Li, Jianwei Li, Yan-Guang Li, Jiexin Li, Hongyan Li, Ji-Min Li, Zhen-Xi Li, Guangdi Li, Peipei Li, Tian-Yi Li, Xiaxia Li, Yuefeng Li, Nien Li, Zhihao Li, Peiyuan Li, Yao Li, Zheyun Li, Tiansen Li, Chi-Yuan Li, Xiangfei Li, Xue Li, Zhonglin Li, Fen Li, Jieshou Li, Lin Li, Chenjie Li, Jinfang Li, Roger Li, Yanming Li, Hong-Lan Li, Ben-Shang Li, Mengqing Li, S L Li, Ming-Kai Li, Shunqing Li, Xionghao Li, Lan Li, Menglu Li, Huiqing Li, Yanwei Li, Yantao Li, Chien-Te Li, Wenyan Li, Xiaoheng Li, Zeyuan Li, Yongle Li, Ruolin Li, Hongqin Li, Zhenhao Li, Jonathan Z Li, Haying Li, Shao-Dan Li, Yong-Liang Li, Muzi Li, Gen Li, M Li, Dong-Ling Li, Chenwen Li, Jiehan Li, Yong-Jian Li, Le Li, Hongguo Li, Chenxin Li, Yongsen Li, Qingyun Li, Pengyu Li, Ai-Qin Li, Si-Wei Li, Zichao Li, Manru Li, Yingxi Li, Caili Li, Yuqian Li, Guannan Li, Wei-Dong Li, Cien Li, Qingyu Li, Xijing Li, Jingshang Li, Xingyuan Li, Dehua Li, Wenlong Li, Ya-Feng Li, Yanjiao Li, Jia-Huan Li, Yuna Li, Xudong Li, Guoxi Li, Xingfang Li, Shugang Li, Shengli Li, Jisheng Li, Rongyao Li, Xuan Li, Yongze Li, Yongxin Li, Ru Li, Lu Li, Jiangya Li, Yiche Li, Yilang Li, Zhuo-Rong Li, Bingbing Li, Qinglin Li, Runzhi Li, Yunshen Li, Jingchun Li, Qi-Jing Li, Hexin Li, H J Li, Yanping Li, Zhenyan Li, Ji Xia Li, Meizi Li, Yu-Ye Li, Qing-Wei Li, Yuezheng Li, Qiang Li, Hsiao-Hui Li, L I Li, Zhengnan Li, Jianglong Li, Hongzheng Li, Laiqing Li, Zhongxia Li, Ningyang Li, Guangquan Li, Xiaozheng Li, Shun Li, Hui-Jun Li, Guojun Li, Xuefei Li, Senlin Li, Hung Li, Jinping Li, Huili Li, Sainan Li, Jinghui Li, Zulong Li, Chengsi Li, Hongzhe K Li, P Li, Fulun Li, Xiao-Qiu Li, Jiejia Li, Yonghao Li, Mingli Li, Yehong Li, Yi-Yang Li, Zhihui Li, Fujun Li, Pei Li, Quanshun Li, Yongping Li, Liguo Li, Ni Li, Weimin Li, Mingxia Li, Xue-Hua Li, M V Li, Luxuan Li, Qiang-Ming Li, Yakui Li, Huafu Li, Xinye Li, Shichao Li, Gan Li, Chunliang Li, Ruiyang Li, Dapei Li, Zejian Li, Chun Li, Lihong Li, Jianan Li, Wenfang Li, Haixia Li, Sung-Chou Li, Xiangling Li, Lianhong Li, Jingmei Li, Ao Li, Yitong Li, Siwen Li, Yanlong Li, Cheng Li, Kui Li, Zhao Li, Tiegang Li, Yunxu Li, Shuang-Ling Li, Zhong Li, Xiao-Long Li, Xiaofei Li, Hung-Yuan Li, Xuanfei Li, Zilin Li, Zhang Li, Jianxin Li, Mingqiang Li, H Li, Xiaojiao Li, Dongliang Li, Chenxiao Li, Yinzhen Li, Hongjia Li, Xiao-Jing Li, Yunsheng Li, Li-Min Li, Xiangqi Li, Y H Li, Jian Li, Jia-Peng Li, Baichuan Li, Daoyuan Li, Haibo Li, Wenqi Li, Zhenzhe Li, Xiao-Jun Li, Jian-Mei Li, Kaimi Li, Yan-Hong Li, Peiran Li, Shi Li, Xueling Li, Qiao Li, Yi-Yun Li, Xiao-Cheng Li, Conghui Li, Xiaoxiong Li, Wanni Li, Yike Li, Yihan Li, Chitao Li, Haiyang Li, Jiayu Li, Xiaobai Li, Junsheng Li, Pingping Li, Mingquan Li, Wen-Ya Li, Yunlun Li, Suran Li, Rongxia Li, Yuanfang Li, Yingqin Li, Guoqin Li, Qiner Li, Huiqin Li, Shanhang Li, Jiafang Li, Chunlin Li, Han-Bing Li, Zongzhe Li, Yikang Li, Si-Yuan Li, Caihong Li, Hongmin Li, Yajing Li, Peng Peng Li, Guanglu Li, Kenli Li, Benyi Li, Yuquan Li, Xiushi Li, Hongzhi Li, Jian-Jun Li, Dongmin Li, Fengyi Li, Yanling Li, Chengxin Li, Juanni Li, Xiaojiaoyang Li, C Li, Jian-Shuang Li, Xinxin Li, You-Mei Li, Chenglan Li, Dazhi Li, Yubin Li, Beixu Li, Yuhong Li, Di Li, Fengqiao Li, Guiyuan Li, Yanbing Li, Suk-Yee Li, Yuanyuan Li, Jufang Li, Shengjie Li, Xiaona Li, Shanyi Li, Hongbo Li, Chih-Chi Li, Xinhui Li, Zecai Li, Qipei Li, Xiaoning Li, Jun Li, Minghua Li, Xiyue Li, Zhuoran Li, Tianchang Li, Hongru Li, Shiqi Li, Mei-Ya Li, Wuyan Li, Mingzhe Li, Yi-Ling Li, Yingjian Li, Hongjuan Li, Zhirong Li, Wang Li, Mingyang Li, Weijun Li, Boyang Li, Senmao Li, Cai Li, Mingjie Li, Ling-Jie Li, Hong-Chun Li, Jingcheng Li, Ivan Li, Yaying Li, Mengshi Li, Liqun Li, Manxia Li, Ya Li, Changxian Li, Wen-Chao Li, Dan-Ni Li, Sunan Li, Zhencong Li, Chunqing Li, Lai K Li, Jiong Li, Yanni Li, Daiyue Li, Bingong Li, Huifang Li, Xiujuan Li, Yongsheng Li, Lingling Li, Chunxue Li, Yunlong Li, Xinhua Li, Jianshuang Li, Juanling Li, Minerva X Li, Xinbin Li, Alexander H Li, Xue-jing Li, Yuling Li, Ding Li, Wendeng Li, Xianlin Li, Yetian Li, Chuangpeng Li, Mingrui Li, Shengze Li, Linyan Li, Yanjun Li, Ming-Yang Li, Jiequn Li, Zhongding Li, Hewei Li, Da-Jin Li, Jiangui Li, Zhengyang Li, Cyril Li, Xinghui Li, Yuefei Li, Xiao-kun Li, Xinyan Li, Yuanhao Li, Xiaoyun Li, Congcong Li, Ji-Lin Li, Ping'an Li, Yushan Li, Juan Li, Huan Li, Weiping Li, Changjiang Li, Chengping Li, He-Zhen Li, G-P Li, Xiaobin Li, Shaoqi Li, Yuehua Li, Yinliang Li, Wen Li, Jinfeng Li, Shiheng Li, Jiangan Li, Yu-Kun Li, Weihai Li, Hsiao-Fen Li, Zhaojin Li, Mengjiao Li, Bingxin Li, Wenjuan Li, Wenyu Li, Chia-Yang Li, Tianxiang Li, Meng-Meng Li, Liangkui Li, Tian-chang Li, Hairong Li, Yahui Li, Su Li, Xi-Xi Li, Wenlei Li, Mei-Lan Li, Wenjun Li, Jiaxin Li, Haiyan Li, Ming D Li, Chenguang Li, Xujun Li, Ruyue Li, Chi-Ming Li, Xiaolian Li, Dandan Li, Yi-Ning Li, Yunan Li, Zhijun Li, Zechuan Li, Jiazhou Li, Sherly X Li, Ya-Ge Li, Wanling Li, Yinyan Li, Rujia Li, Guangli Li, Qijun Li, Lixia Li, Zhiwei Li, Xueshan Li, Yunrui Li, Yuhuang Li, Shanshan Li, Jiangbo Li, Wan-Shan Li, Xiaohan Li, Zhongwen Li, Huijie Li, W W Li, Yalan Li, Jing-gao Li, Yiyang Li, Xuejun Li, Fengxiang Li, Nana Li, Shunwang Li, Chao Li, Yaqing Li, Jingui Li, Bingsheng Li, Yaqiao Li, Huamao Li, Xiankun Li, Jingke Li, Xiaowei Li, Tianyao Li, Junming Li, Jianfang Li, Shubo Li, Qi-Fu Li, Zi-Zhan Li, Hai-Yun Li, Haoran Li, Zhongxian Li, Xiaoliang Li, Xinyuan Li, Maoquan Li, H-J Li, Zhixiong Li, Chumei Li, Shijie Li, Lingyan Li, Zhanquan Li, Wenguo Li, Fangyuan Li, Xuhang Li, Xiaochun Li, Chen-Lu Li, Xinjian Li, Jialun Li, Rui Li, Zilu Li, Xuemin Li, Zezhi Li, Sheng-Fu Li, Xue-Fei Li, Yudong Li, Shanpeng Li, Hongjiang Li, Wei-Na Li, Dong-Run Li, Yunxi Li, Jingyun Li, Xuyi Li, Binghua Li, Hanjun Li, Yunchu Li, Zhengyao Li, Jin-Qiu Li, Qihua Li, Jiaxuan Li, Jinghao Li, Y-Y Li, Xiaofang Li, Tuoping Li, Pengyun Li, Guangjin Li, Xutong Li, Lin-Feng Li, Ranwei Li, Kai Li, Ziqing Li, Keanning Li, Wei-Li Li, Yongjin Li, Shuangxiu Li, Chenhao Li, Ling Li, Weizu Li, Deming Li, Peiqin Li, Xiaodong Li, Nanxing Li, Qihang Li, Jianrong Li, Baoguo Li, Zhehui Li, Chenghao Li, Jiuyi Li, Luyao Li, Chun-Xu Li, Weike Li, Desheng Li, Zhixuan Li, Chuanbao Li, Long-Yan Li, Fuyu Li, Chuzhong Li, M D Li, Lingzhi Li, Yuan-Tao Li, Kening Li, Guilan Li, Wanshi Li, Hengtong Li, Ling-Zhi Li, Yifan Li, Ya-Li Li, Xiao-Sa Li, Songyun Li, Xiaoran Li, Bolun Li, Kunlin Li, Linchuan Li, Jiachen Li, Shu-Qi Li, Haibin Li, Huangbao Li, Zehua Li, Guo-Chun Li, Xinli Li, S Li, Mengyuan Li, Wenqing Li, Wenhua Li, Caiyun Li, Congye Li, Xinrui Li, Dehai Li, Wensheng Li, Jiannan Li, Qingshang Li, Guanbin Li, Hanbin Li, Zhiyi Li, Xing Li, Wanwan Li, Jia Li Li, Zhaoyong Li, SuYun Li, Shiyi Li, Wan-Hong Li, Mingke Li, Suchun Li, Xiaoyuan Li, Huanhuan Li, Yanan Li, Zongfang Li, Yang Li, Jiayan Li, YueQiang Li, Xiangping Li, H-H Li, Jinman Li, BoWen Li, Duoyun Li, Dongdong Li, Yimei Li, Hao Li, Liliang Li, Mengxi Li, Keyuan Li, Zhi-qiang Li, Shaojing Li, S S Li, Yi-Ting Li, Jiangxia Li, Yujie Li, Tong Li, Lihua Li, Yilong Li, Xue-Lian Li, Yan-Li Li, Zhiping Li, Haiming Li, Yansen Li, Gaijie Li, Yuemei Li, Yanli Li, Jingfeng Li, Hai Li, Zhi-Yuan Li, Kaibin Li, Yuan-Jing Li, Xuefeng Li, Xiaohu Li, Wenjie Li, Ruikai Li, Mengjuan Li, Xiao-Hong Li, Yinglin Li, Yaofu Li, Ren-Ke Li, Qiyong Li, Ruixi Li, Yi Li, Baosheng Li, Zhonglian Li, Yujun Li, Mian Li, Dalin Li, Lixi Li, Jin-Xiu Li, Kun Li, Qizhai Li, Jiwen Li, Pengju Li, Peifeng Li, Zhouhua Li, Ai-Jun Li, Qingqin S Li, Honglei Li, Guojin Li, Yueting Li, Xin-Yue Li, YaJie Li, Dingchen Li, Xiaoling Li, Jixuan Li, Yanqing Li, Zijian Li, Zhandong Li, Xuejie Li, Congjiao Li, Peining Li, Meng-Jun Li, Gaizhen Li, Huilin Li, Liang Li, Songtao Li, Fusheng Li, Huafang Li, Dai Li, Meiyue Li, Chenlu Li, Keshen Li, Kechun Li, Nianyu Li, Yuxin Li, Shaoliang Li, X-L Li, Shawn S C Li, Shu-Xin Li, Hong-Zheng Li, Qun Li, Tianye Li, Dongye Li, Cuiguang Li, Zhen Li, Chunhong Li, F Li, Yuan Li, Mengling Li, Kunpeng Li, Jia-Da Li, Zhenghao Li, Chun-Bo Li, Zhantao Li, Baoqing Li, Pu Li, Xinle Li, Xingli Li, Bingkun Li, Nien-Chi Li, Wuguo Li, Tiewei Li, Bing-Hui Li, Rong-Bing Li, Daniel Tian Li, Honggang Li, Jingyong Li, Rong Li, Shikang Li, Wei-Yang Li, Mingkun Li, Binxing Li, Shi-Ying Li, Zixiao Li, Ming Xing Li, Guixin Li, Quanzhang Li, Ming-Xing Li, Marilyn Li, Da-wei Li, Hong-Lian Li, Shishi Li, Bei-Bei Li, Haitong Li, Xiumei Li, Ruibing Li, Melody M H Li, Yuli Li, Qingfang Li, Peibo Li, Qibing Li, Huanjun Li, Wende Li, Heng Li, Chung-Hao Li, Liuzheng Li, Zhanjun Li, Yifei Li, Tianming Li, Chang-Sheng Li, Xiao-Na Li, Tianyou Li, Jipeng Li, Xidan Li, Yixing Li, Chengcheng Li, Yu-Jin Li, Baoting Li, Longxuan Li, Huiyou Li, Ka Wan Li, Shi-Guang Li, Wenxiu Li, Binbin Li, Xinyao Li, Zhuang Li, Yu-Hao Li, Gui-xing Li, Shunle Li, Shilin Li, Niu Li, Siyue Li, Diyan Li, Mengyao Li, Shili Li, Yixuan Li, Shan-Shan Li, Meiqing Li, Zhuanjian Li, Gerard Li, Yuyun Li, Hengyu Li, Zhiqiong Li, Yinhao Li, Zonglin Li, Pik Yi Li, Junying Li, Jingxin Li, Mufan Li, Chun-Lai Li, Defeng Li, Shiya Li, Zu-guo Li, Xin-Zhu Li, Xiao-Jiao Li, Jia-Xin Li, Kuiliang Li, Pindong Li, Hualian Li, Youchen Li, Junhong Li, Li Li, W Y Li, Hanxue Li, Lulu Li, Yi-Heng Li, Xiaoqin Li, L P Li, Runbing Li, Chunmei Li, Mingjun Li, Yuanhua Li, Qiaolian Li, Yanmin Li, Jingyi Li, Ji-Cheng Li, Yuxiang Li, Haolong Li, Hao-Fei Li, Xuanzheng Li, Peng-li Li, Quan Li, Yining Li, Xue-Ying Li, Xiurong Li, Haiyu Li, Huijuan Li, Xu-Zhao Li, Yunze Li, Yanzhong Li, Guohui Li, Kainan Li, Yongzhe Li, Qingfeng Li, Xiaoyan Li, Tianyi Li, Nanlong Li, Ping Li, Xu-Bo Li, Fangzhou Li, Nien-Chen Li, Yue-Chun Li, Jiahui Li, Huiping Li, Kangyuan Li, Biao Li, Yuanchuang Li, Haiying Li, Yunting Li, Xiaoxuan Li, Anyao Li, Hongliang Li, Qing-Chang Li, Shengbiao Li, Hong-Yan Li, Yue-Rui Li, Ruidong Li, Dalei Li, Zongjun Li, Y M Li, Changqing Li, Hanting Li, Dong-Jie Li, Xiaomin Li, Sijie Li, Dengxiong Li, Meilan Li, D C Li, Andrew C Li, Jianye Li, Yi-Shuan J Li, Tinghao Li, Qiuyan Li, Zhouxiang Li, Tingguang Li, Yun-tian Li, Jianliang Li, Xiangyang Li, Guangzhao Li, Chunjie Li, Yixi Li, Shuyu Dan Li, S A Li, Tianfeng Li, Anna Fen-Yau Li, Minghui Li, Jiangfeng Li, Jinjie Li, Liming Li, Jie-Pin Li, Junyi Li, Kaiyi Li, Wenqun Li, Dongtao Li, Guixia Li, Fengyuan Li, Yinan Li, Aoxi Li, Zuo-Lin Li, Chenxi Li, Yuanjing Li, Zhengwei Li, Linqi Li, Bingjue Li, Xixi Li, Binghu Li, Yan-Chun Li, Suiyan Li, Yu-Hang Li, Qiaoqiao Li, Xiaotian Li, Zhenguang Li, Jia-Ru Li, Shuhui Li, Shu-Hong Li, Chun-Xiao Li, Pei-Qin Li, Shuyue Li, Mengying Li, Tongzheng Li, Fangyan Li, Quan-Zhong Li, Yihong Li, Duo Li, Dali Li, Yaxian Li, Zhiming Li, Xuemei Li, Hongxia Li, Yongting Li, Xueting Li, Danyang Li, Zhenjun Li, Ren Li, Tiandong Li, Lanfang Li, Hongye Li, Di-Jie Li, Mingwei Li, Bo Li, Jinliang Li, Wenxin Li, Qiji Li, W J Li, Zhipeng Li, Zhijia Li, Jingtong Li, Xiaoping Li, Linhong Li, Taoyingnan Li, Lucy Li, Lieyou Li, Zhengpeng Li, Xiayu Li, Huabin Li, Mao Li, Baolin Li, Cuilan Li, Yuting Li, Yongchao Li, Xiaobo Li, Xiaoting Li, Ruotai Li, Meijia Li, Shujiao Li, Yaojia Li, Xiao-Yao Li, Weirong Li, Kun-Ping Li, Weihua Li, Shangming Li, Yibo Li, Yaqi Li, Gui-Hua Li, Zhihong Li, Yandong Li, Runzhao Li, Chaowei Li, Xiang-Dong Li, Huiyuan Li, Yuchun Li, Xiufeng Li, Yingjun Li, Yanxin Li, Xiaohuan Li, Ying-Qin Li, Boya Li, Lamei Li, O Li, Fan Li, Jun Z Li, Suheng Li, Joyce Li, Yiheng Li, Taiwen Li, Hui-Ping Li, Xiaorong Li, Zhiqiang Li, Junru Li, Hecheng Li, Jiangchao Li, Haifeng Li, Yueping Li, Changkai Li, Liping Li, Rena Li, Jiangtao Li, Yu-Jui Li, Zhenglong Li, Yajuan Li, Xuanxuan Li, Rui-Jún Eveline Li, Bing-Mei Li, Yunman Li, Chaoqian Li, Shuhua Li, Yu-Cheng Li, Chunying Li, Yirun Li, Haomiao Li, Weiheng Li, Leipeng Li, Qianqian Li, Baizhou Li, YiQing Li, Zhengliang Li, Han-Ru Li, Sheng Li, Wei-Qin Li, Weijie Li, Guoyin Li, Yaqiang Li, Qingxian Li, Zongyi Li, Dan-Dan Li, Yeshan Li, Qiwei Li, Zirui Li, Chengjun Li, Keke Li, Yongpeng Li, Jianbin Li, Chanyuan Li, Shiying Li, Jianxiong Li, Huaying Li, Ji Li, Tuojian Li, Yixin Li, Ziyue Li, Zhongzhe Li, Juntong Li, Xiang Li, Yumei Li, Chaonan Li, Xiang-Ping Li, Wenqiang Li, Yu-Chia Li, Pei-Shan Li, Zaibo Li, Heying Li, Shaomin Li, Guangming Li, Xuan-Ling Li, Yuxuan Li, Bingshan Li, Xiaoqiang Li, Jiahao Li, Hanxiao Li, Jiansheng Li, Shuying Li, Shibao Li, Kunlong Li, Pengjie Li, Xiaomei Li, Ruijin Li
articles
Yali Yang, Zhenzhong Han, Guowei Li +7 more · 2026 · Bioscience trends · added 2026-04-24
Hereditary Multiple Osteochondromas (HMO) is a rare autosomal dominant skeletal disorder caused by heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in EXT1 or EXT2, which encode glycosyltransferases essential Show more
Hereditary Multiple Osteochondromas (HMO) is a rare autosomal dominant skeletal disorder caused by heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in EXT1 or EXT2, which encode glycosyltransferases essential for heparan sulfate (HS) biosynthesis. Whether haploinsufficiency alone suffices or biallelic inactivation is required for osteochondroma formation remains a central unresolved question. In this study, we employed CRISPR/Cas9 combined with PiggyBac transposon technology to introduce a second pathogenic mutation (c.1883+1G>T) into patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) carrying a heterozygous EXT1 c.1126C>T mutation. This approach enabled the generation of isogenic iPSC lines: wild-type (WT), single-mutant (SM), and double-mutant (DM). These iPSCs were differentiated through induced mesenchymal stem cells (iMSCs) into chondrocytes. Biallelic EXT1 mutation in DM cells led to significant upregulation of SOX9, COL2A1, and ACAN, elevated glycosaminoglycan (GAG) levels, and markedly reduced HS, whereas SM cells remained indistinguishable from WT. Three-dimensional (3D) chondrogenic organoid cultures revealed that DM organoids were enlarged and structurally disorganized, partially recapitulating key histopathological features of osteochondromas. Transcriptomic analysis identified the Wnt signaling pathway as the most significantly enriched pathway among differentially expressed genes following EXT1 loss. Collectively, these findings provide direct human cellular evidence that complete EXT1 inactivation-not haploinsufficiency-drives aberrant chondrogenesis, likely through impaired sequestration of morphogen ligands, thereby supporting the Two-hit pathogenic model. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.5582/bst.2026.01046
EXT1
Jiaqi Fan, Guimei Lin, Hongye Li +3 more · 2026 · Biomedical chromatography : BMC · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
The challenge of combating brain aging is significant due to its intricate pathogenesis. Polygalae radix (PT), a well-known herbal remedy derived from the dried root of Polygala tenuifolia Willd., ser Show more
The challenge of combating brain aging is significant due to its intricate pathogenesis. Polygalae radix (PT), a well-known herbal remedy derived from the dried root of Polygala tenuifolia Willd., serves as a traditional Chinese medicine and is also utilized in health foods. The primary processed products of PT are PT processed with licorice (PT + L) and PT processed with honey (PT + ER). Both PT and its processed products exhibit anti-brain aging properties, but their mechanisms remain unclear. This study investigated the brain-penetrating components and mechanisms of PT, PT + L, and PT + ER using UPLC-Q-TOF-MS, network pharmacology, molecular docking, and in vivo assays. Thirteen brain-penetrating components were identified, including tenuifolin, 3,4,5-trimethoxycinnamic acid, chlorogenic acid, liquiritigenin, and caffeic acid. Core targets (BDNF, Mfn1, Mfn2, Drp1, and Fis1) interacted with these components. In vivo, PT and its processed products improved memory, reduced hippocampal damage, regulated the HPA axis, and enhanced antioxidant capacity by modulating proteins involved in mitochondrial dynamics and BDNF. Processed products showed superior efficacy: PT + ER prominently regulated the HPA axis, while PT + L significantly upregulated BDNF. This study clarifies the material basis and multitarget mechanisms of PT and its processed variants, confirming traditional processing benefits and providing experimental evidence for clinical use in age-related neurodegenerative disorders. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/bmc.70458
BDNF bioinformatics brain aging chemical in vivo mechanistic polygalae radix processed products
Mingqiang Wang, Dan Yang, Yiming Ma +6 more · 2026 · Stem cell research & therapy · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Extracorporeal cardiac shock wave (ECSW) therapy enhances the function of endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs), but whether it can serve as a preconditioning strategy to enhance myocardial infarct Show more
Extracorporeal cardiac shock wave (ECSW) therapy enhances the function of endothelial colony-forming cells (ECFCs), but whether it can serve as a preconditioning strategy to enhance myocardial infarction (MI) therapy remains unclear. This study investigated the efficacy and mechanism of intravenously delivered ECSW-preconditioned ECFCs (SW-ECFCs) in a rat MI model. ECFCs were isolated from the bone marrow of ApoE Transcriptomic analysis revealed significant enrichment of the PI3K/AKT pathway in SW-ECFCs. Functionally, ECSW enhanced ECFCs migration, tube formation, proliferation, and VEGF-A secretion, while reducing apoptosis; these effects were largely abolished by PI3K inhibition. In vivo, serum levels of CK, CK-MB, and LDH were significantly elevated in all MI groups compared to the Sham group (P < 0.01), indicating comparable initial injury. However, no significant differences were observed among treatment groups (P > 0.05). SW-ECFCs transplantation significantly improved cardiac function, reduced infarct size, fibrosis, and apoptosis, and enhanced angiogenesis (P < 0.05). These benefits were associated with increased levels of p-AKT, p-eNOS, and BCL-2 protein as well as nitric oxide content, while suppressing the expression of cleaved caspase-3 (P < 0.05). Crucially, all these therapeutic benefits were largely abolished by PI3K inhibition. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that preconditioning ECFCs with ECSW significantly enhances their therapeutic efficacy for myocardial infarction, improving both cardiac function and structural repair. These benefits are mediated primarily through activation of the PI3K/AKT signaling pathway, which augments cell homing, paracrine activity, and survival, thereby providing a novel and promising strategy for cardiac regeneration. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s13287-026-04913-w
APOE
Zechuan Li, Jiankai Dong, Zhengkun Liu +13 more · 2026 · Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Precise identification of vulnerable plaque (VAP) is essential for the prevention of acute cardiovascular diseases, yet current molecular probes are hampered by poor VAP lesion penetration and high ba Show more
Precise identification of vulnerable plaque (VAP) is essential for the prevention of acute cardiovascular diseases, yet current molecular probes are hampered by poor VAP lesion penetration and high background. Here, the innate tropism of circulating inflammatory monocytes for VAP, and their differentiation-driven expression of legumain (Lgmn) in response to the VAP microenvironment is exploited. A monocyte differentiation-activated fluorescent (MDAF) probe is conceived that hitchhikes monocytes to precisely migrate to VAP and is activated by Lgmn during monocyte differentiation. This activation triggers in situ self-assembly, resulting in spatiotemporally controlled aggregation-induced emission (AIE) fluorescence signals, and turning the monocyte itself into an on-site "scout" that reports plaque instability. In Apoe Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/advs.202515289
APOE
Zhanyi Zhang, Jiaqi Lian, Zhiyun Zhang +6 more · 2026 · Burns : journal of the International Society for Burn Injuries · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Hypertrophic scar (HS) represents a skin fibroproliferative disease characterized by a high incidence, frequent recurrence, and limited treatment options. Thus, identifying new targets to optimize the Show more
Hypertrophic scar (HS) represents a skin fibroproliferative disease characterized by a high incidence, frequent recurrence, and limited treatment options. Thus, identifying new targets to optimize the treatment of HS is of critical importance. Using summary statistics from the eQTLGen Consortium, Decode database, and FinnGen cohort, we conducted transcriptome-wide and proteome-wide Mendelian randomization (MR) to discover potential pharmacological targets against HS, with subsequent validation via RNA sequencing. Upstream regulators and downstream mechanisms were further investigated to better understand the roles of the pathogenic gene. Drug prediction, molecular docking, and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation were employed to estimate the value of potential drugs for HS. A high level of fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) significantly increased the risk of HS according to transcriptome-wide (P = 0.011) and proteome-wide MR (P = 0.002) analyses. RNA-seq further validated the high expression of FGFR1 in HS. Gene-gene interaction network and enrichment analysis identified FGFR1 as the core gene driving the progression of HS, highlighting multiple biosynthetic processes. Pharmacological evaluation of candidate drugs predicted stable binding between Ro-4396686 and FGFR1. Our findings suggest that FGFR1 can serve as promising target for optimizing HS treatments, potentially reducing the costs of drug development. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.burns.2026.107919
FGFR1
Qiuya Li, Pengyan Zhai, Donghang Cong +2 more · 2026 · Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a prevalent metabolic disorder during pregnancy associated with adverse maternal and fetal outcomes, highlighting the urgent need for novel, genetically supporte Show more
Gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is a prevalent metabolic disorder during pregnancy associated with adverse maternal and fetal outcomes, highlighting the urgent need for novel, genetically supported drug targets due to suboptimal glycemic control and safety concerns with existing therapies. This study integrated cis-expression quantitative trait loci (cis-eQTL) of druggable genes with genome-wide association data to identify putative causal genes for GDM through two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR), with significant associations further validated using multi-tissue summary data-based Mendelian randomization (SMR), colocalization analysis, cis-protein quantitative trait loci (cis-pQTL) MR, and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to confirm tissue- and cell type specific expression. MR analysis identified 15 genes significantly associated with GDM risk after Bonferroni correction, with SMR and colocalization analyses confirming robust associations for five key genes: higher expression of NRBP1, LPL, and BTN3A2 was causally linked to reduced GDM risk, while elevated GSTM1 and GRINA levels were associated with increased risk. ScRNA-seq revealed distinct expression patterns in placental cell types, with NRBP1 and GRINA highly expressed in trophoblasts and certain immune cell populations. Phenome-wide association studies revealed no significant pleiotropic effects, and pharmacological drug-target databases identified several compounds with potential regulatory interactions. This multi-omics study successfully identifies several genetically supported, druggable targets for GDM, providing a robust foundation for developing mechanism-based therapeutics and precision prevention strategies in pregnancy metabolism. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00210-026-05053-x
LPL
Yangjun Gu, Zhitao Chen, Qingqing Fang +1 more · 2026 · Frontiers in oncology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Gallbladder adenosquamous carcinoma (GBASC) is an uncommon, highly aggressive neoplasm characterized by the coexistence of both glandular and squamous cells. Representing fewer than 5% of gallbladder Show more
Gallbladder adenosquamous carcinoma (GBASC) is an uncommon, highly aggressive neoplasm characterized by the coexistence of both glandular and squamous cells. Representing fewer than 5% of gallbladder malignancies, GBASC demonstrates a more aggressive behavior and has poorer prognosis, posing considerable challenges for early diagnosis and effective management. We present a case of GBASC in a 52-year-old woman who achieved long-term tumor-free survival by surgery, as well as targeted and immunotherapy after the operation. Targeted gene sequencing and bioinformatics analysis tools, including STRING, GeneMANIA, Metascape, TRRUST, Sangerbox, and cBioPortal, were used to analyze the biological functions and features of the mutated genes in GBASC. A total of 16 mutations ( Comparative analyses with other gallbladder carcinoma subtypes revealed GBASC to have distinct clinical phenotypes, molecular alterations, functional characteristics, and enriched signaling pathways. Moreover, there is an urgent need for standardized treatment protocols. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2026.1697015
EXT1
Senqi Liu, Yujuan Zhang, Kang Liu +13 more · 2026 · Schizophrenia bulletin · Oxford University Press · added 2026-04-24
Schizophrenia (SZ) is characterized by excitation-inhibition (E-I) imbalance as a core pathophysiological feature, but its molecular underpinnings remain elusive. Susceptibility gene Roundabout2 (Robo Show more
Schizophrenia (SZ) is characterized by excitation-inhibition (E-I) imbalance as a core pathophysiological feature, but its molecular underpinnings remain elusive. Susceptibility gene Roundabout2 (Robo2), which regulates E-I balance in the central nervous system, may play a critical role in the pathogenesis of SZ by contributing to this dysregulation. We conducted a transcriptomic analysis of Robo2 in postmortem brain tissues from patients with SZ and controls using the GEO/GSE datasets. The plasma levels of Robo2 were quantified in clinical cohorts via ELISA. We assessed the correlation between plasma Robo2 levels and clinical assessments (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale [PANSS] and MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery [MCCB]) or neurophysiological measures (functional near-infrared spectroscopy [fNIRS] and event-related potentials). Rats with hippocampal Robo2 knockdown underwent comprehensive behavioral, electrophysiological, and ultrastructural (Golgi staining) assessments. Proteomic sequencing with pathway enrichment analysis was conducted to identify downstream molecular mediators. Hippocampal and plasma Robo2 expression were significantly downregulated in patients with SZ. The plasma levels of Robo2 were inversely correlated with PANSS scores and positively associated with MCCB performance. Neurophysiological correlations revealed positive associations between Robo2 and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex activation (fNIRS and P300 peak amplitude). Robo2-deficient rats exhibited anxiety-like behaviors, cognitive impairments, social withdrawal, and sensory gating abnormalities, accompanied by decreased dendritic spine density and increased hippocampal field potential power. Proteomics identified disrupted GABAergic/glutamatergic synaptic pathways, with neurexin-3 (Nrxn3) downregulation emerging as a potential downstream candidate. Our findings established Robo2-Nrxn3 deficiency as a potential molecular hub linking E-I imbalance to SZ-associated behavioral and neurophysiological deficits, highlighting novel therapeutic targets for E-I modulation. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbag005
NRXN3
Ruoyi Ishikawa, Yu Yamazaki, Nayuta Nakazawa +6 more · 2026 · Neurobiology of disease · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
APOE polymorphisms are major genetic risk factors of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Compared with APOE3/E3, the APOE4/E4 genotype is associated with a > 14-fold increased risk. Therefore, we hypothesized t Show more
APOE polymorphisms are major genetic risk factors of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Compared with APOE3/E3, the APOE4/E4 genotype is associated with a > 14-fold increased risk. Therefore, we hypothesized that conversion of APOE4 to APOE3 would ameliorate AD-related pathologies. Accordingly, we generated a knock-in mouse model harboring an APOE4-FLEx (Flip-Excision) 4-to-3 construct enabling postnatal Cre-mediated APOE4-to-APOE3 switching. This construct comprised an APOE3 exon inserted in a reverse orientation downstream of the APOE4 exon, flanked by alternating loxP and mutant loxP sites, allowing Cre-mediated FLEx switching from APOE4-to-APOE3. For in vitro validation, HEK293T cells were transfected with APOE4-FLEx 4-to-3 plasmid, followed by AAV8-mediated iCre delivery. For in vivo studies, endogenous Apoe was replaced with the APOE4-FLEx 4-to-3 construct to generate APOE4-FLEx 4-to-3 knock-in mice, which were crossed with tamoxifen-inducible Rosa26-CreERT2 mice to yield Cre: APOE4-FLEx 4-to-3 double-knock-in mice. Tamoxifen was administered to induce APOE switching. Cre expression successfully induced APOE4-to-APOE3 switching in vitro. Tamoxifen administration in Cre: APOE4-FLEx 4-to-3 mice triggered APOE4-to-APOE3 switching in the liver, demonstrating the feasibility of postnatal isoform switching. However, brain APOE protein levels were below the detection limit. Investigation of the underlying cause involving transcript analysis revealed aberrant retention of intron 3 (APOE-I3). This abnormal splicing probably contributed to the decreased expression of fully spliced, translation-competent (mature) APOE mRNA, driving the subsequent protein reduction. Although APOE expression across organs in APOE4-FLEx 4-to-3 mice requires further optimization, our findings demonstrate that Cre-mediated FLEx switching can serve as a potential strategy to induce APOE genotype switching in vivo. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.nbd.2025.107244
APOE
Guiguo Yan, Weihai Li, Baihai Guo +5 more · 2026 · Medicine · added 2026-04-24
Arterial thrombectomy (AT) is a cornerstone in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to large vessel occlusion. However, the optimal therapeutic time window and the best management strategy Show more
Arterial thrombectomy (AT) is a cornerstone in the treatment of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) due to large vessel occlusion. However, the optimal therapeutic time window and the best management strategy for patients presenting beyond the conventional 4.5-hour timeframe remain areas of active investigation and debate. This retrospective cohort study aimed to analyze the effect of timing of AT on recovery in AIS. We retrospectively analyzed 117 AIS patients admitted between January 2021 and January 2023. Participants were categorized into 3 groups: early AT (onset-to-AT < 4.5 hours), late AT (onset-to-AT ≥ 4.5 hours), and late AT + intravenous thrombolysis (IT). Outcomes compared included clinical efficacy, National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) scores, serum levels of neurotrophic factors, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, vascular endothelial growth factor, residual stenosis, vessel reocclusion, 3-month mortality, and 1-month complications. The total effective rate was higher in the early AT and late AT + IT groups than in the late AT group. Pretreatment NIHSS scores and serum neurological marker levels were comparable across all groups. After treatment, the early AT and late AT + IT groups showed significantly lower NIHSS scores, higher serum levels of neurological markers, and improved treatment efficiency compared to the late AT group. Prognosis-related markers also indicated better outcomes in these 2 groups. Additionally, complications such as mucocutaneous ecchymosis, gastrointestinal bleeding, and intracranial bleeding were significantly reduced in the early AT and late AT + IT groups. AT within 4.5 hours of stroke onset improves efficacy, reduces neurological injury, and decreases complications. For patients presenting beyond 4.5 hours, combining AT with IT achieves comparable therapeutic benefits. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000047634
BDNF
Qing Li, Shasha Zhu, Guanyu Chen +5 more · 2026 · Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Protocatechuic acid (PCA), a natural compound found in a variety of Chinese herbal medicines and plant foods, has been documented to inhibit atherosclerosis partially by reducing inflammation burden i Show more
Protocatechuic acid (PCA), a natural compound found in a variety of Chinese herbal medicines and plant foods, has been documented to inhibit atherosclerosis partially by reducing inflammation burden in arterial endothelial cells. Interestingly, in vitro studies showed that PCA at physiologically reachable concentrations does not affect inflammation burden in TNF-α-stimulated aortic endothelial cells, whereas it increases the content of exosomal miR-10b secreted by macrophages that have engulfed apoptotic cells (efferocytic macrophages). This study was aimed at investigating whether the in vivo anti-inflammatory effect of PCA in arterial endothelial cells was due to the uptake of efferocytic macrophage exosomal miR-10b. A transwell co-culture system of aortic endothelial cells with efferocytic macrophages was used to evaluate the effect of PCA on NF-κB-mediated inflammation in aortic endothelial cells. An inhibitor of exosome secretion, GW4869, was applied to confirm the role of exosomes played in the anti-inflammatory effect of PCA. The aortic endothelial cells were administrated with exosomes isolated from PCA-treated efferocytic macrophages or miR-10b mimic or antagomir to ascertain the role of miR-10b in downregulating inflammation effect of PCA. Bioinformatics analyses, loss-of- and gain-of-function assays and luciferase reporter gene assays were performed to identify targeting relationship between miR-10b and mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7 (MAP3K7)/β-transducin repeat-containing protein (β-TrCP). Besides, Apoe PCA at physiologically reachable concentrations inhibited NF-κB-mediated inflammation in TNF-α-stimulated aortic endothelial cells co-cultured with efferocytic macrophages, in which treatment of GW4869 reversed this effect. Exosomes isolated from PCA-treated efferocytic macrophages inhibited inflammation and increased miR-10b levels in aortic endothelial cells. Mechanistically, exosomal miR-10b post-transcriptionally repressed MAP3K7 and β-TrCP, both of which promote NF-κB activation. Knockdown of Map3k7 and Btrc with siRNA in aortic endothelial cells abolished the inhibitory effects of exosomes isolated from PCA-treated efferocytic macrophages on NF-κB-mediated inflammation. Consistently, oral administration of PCA increased miR-10b level and inhibited Map3k7 and Btrc mRNA expression as well as inflammation in aortic endothelial cells in Apoe Our current findings suggest that PCA could transfer exosomal miR-10b from efferocytic macrophages to endothelial cells and thus inhibit NF-κB-mediated inflammation in arterial endothelial cells through repressing MAP3K7 and β-TrCP, two new targets of miR-10b. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2026.157939
APOE
Jiantao Liu, Feiyuan Peng, Penghui Li +7 more · 2026 · Molecular psychiatry · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by progressive synaptic failure, neuroinflammation, amyloid and tau pathology, yet effective disease-modifying therapies remain limited. Cannabidiol (CBD) has Show more
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by progressive synaptic failure, neuroinflammation, amyloid and tau pathology, yet effective disease-modifying therapies remain limited. Cannabidiol (CBD) has shown neuroprotective potential in AD, but its direct molecular targets and signaling mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate that CBD ameliorates cognitive and emotional deficits in 3×Tg-AD mice by restoring synaptic integrity and plasticity. At the mechanistic level, CBD activated TrkB signaling independently of BDNF, leading to suppression of tau hyperphosphorylation via the PI3K/AKT/GSK3β pathway and attenuation of neuroinflammation and amyloid pathology through inhibition of the JAK2/STAT3/SOCS1 axis. Using isothermal shift assays combined with biophysical binding analyses, we identified FRS2, a core adaptor protein of TrkB, as a direct molecular target of CBD. Molecular dynamics simulations further revealed that CBD stabilizes the FRS2-TrkB interface, thereby facilitating TrkB activation. Importantly, genetic knockdown of FRS2 abolished CBD-induced TrkB signaling and its downstream neuroprotective effects in both cellular and in vivo AD models. Together, these findings identify FRS2 as a critical signaling node mediating BDNF-independent TrkB activation by CBD and establish a mechanistic framework linking CBD to disease-modifying pathways in AD. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41380-026-03525-3
BDNF
Xiang Xu, Yuanze Li, Siqi Xiang +3 more · 2026 · Human genomics · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Atherosclerosis (AS) is a chronic vascular disease and the principal cause leading to ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM). It involves complex metabolic dysregulation beyond the resolution of single-omics. Show more
Atherosclerosis (AS) is a chronic vascular disease and the principal cause leading to ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM). It involves complex metabolic dysregulation beyond the resolution of single-omics. Emerging evidence implicates arginine-proline metabolism (APM) in driving inflammation and impairing efferocytosis, yet the cellular basis of plaque instability remains elusive. We employed a five-stage analytical framework. First, metabolomic profiling revealed shared pathways between AS and ICM. Second, single-cell RNA sequencing identified APM-enriched macrophage subtypes in both diseases. Pseudotime analysis, Scissor algorithm, and cell-cell communication analyses linked these subtypes to APM signaling, stroke prognosis, and key ligand-receptor interactions. Third, cNMF and unsupervised clustering defined APM-related gene signatures in macrophages, validated by survival analysis. Fourth, spatial transcriptomics confirmed their spatial distribution and colocalization within unstable plaques. Finally, key biomarkers were validated in atherosclerotic lesions using ApoE Metabolomic profiling revealed APM as a shared dysregulated pathway in AS and ICM. We identified a macrophage subset (SPP1⁺ macrophages and mono-macrophages), termed APM_high macrophages, enriched in the fibrous cap and characterized by elevated collagenase activity, heightened inflammation, and disrupted cholesterol homeostasis. Spatial and cell-cell communication analyses revealed strong interactions with dendritic cells via the MIF-(CD74 + CXCR4) axis, potentially contributing to plaque destabilization. Transcriptomic clustering uncovered a high-APM plaque subtype associated with worse ischemic outcomes. Six diagnostic biomarkers were identified through machine learning and validated across multiple cohorts and in ApoE In summary, our study decodes the metabolic basis of inflammation shared between AS and ICM, suggesting an APM_high macrophage-centered regulatory axis across multiple omics layers. This work advances our understanding of the cardio-metabolic axis and suggests new avenues for targeted therapy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s40246-025-00869-9
APOE
Chong Liu, Nieran Lian, Kristin K Sznajder +3 more · 2026 · Journal of nursing management · added 2026-04-24
Nurses in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) departments face significant sleep challenges associated with occupational stressors. However, person-centered analyses classifying these sleep patterns re Show more
Nurses in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) departments face significant sleep challenges associated with occupational stressors. However, person-centered analyses classifying these sleep patterns remain scarce. This study aimed to identify heterogeneous sleep disturbance subgroups via latent profile analysis (LPA) and evaluate the performance of explainable machine learning models in discriminating these subgroups based on demographic and occupational features. A cross-sectional survey enrolled 7721 nurses from 130 TCM healthcare institutions in Liaoning Province (December 2024). Data encompassed demographic, occupational, and psychological variables obtained via self-administered questionnaires, including the Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Sleep Disturbance short form 8a. LPA was employed to categorize sleep disturbance patterns. Recursive feature elimination with random forest (RFE-RF) was used to select features associated with subgroup membership for five machine learning models. Models were trained on 70% of the data and evaluated on a 30% independent test set. The optimal classification model (XGBoost) underwent interpretability analysis using Shapley additive explanations (SHAP). LPA identified three subgroups: mild-stable (29.8%), moderate-fluctuating (60%), and severe-persistent (10.2%). Machine learning models achieved test AUCs of 0.71-0.84, with XGBoost demonstrating the highest discriminatory performance (AUC = 0.84, 95%CI: 0.83-0.85) in classifying subgroups. SHAP analysis indicated that monthly income, organizational support, hospital level, self-compassion, and resilience were the top five features contributing to the model's classification output. This study characterized three distinct sleep disturbance subgroups among TCM nurses, with the majority exhibiting moderate symptoms. The sequential application of LPA and explainable machine learning demonstrated robust performance in distinguishing sleep disturbance patterns. Identifying correlates-such as lower income and resilience-may assist nurse managers in stratifying risk and tailoring interventions for those most likely to fall into the severe subgroup. Future longitudinal studies are required to validate the stability of these subgroups and establish causal relationships. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1155/jonm/1269507
LPA
Yiming Li, Wenxin Zou, Yan Zhang +5 more · 2026 · Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Atherosclerosis (AS) is a chronic disease characterized by lipid deposition in the vascular intima. As the pathological basis of cardiovascular diseases, AS represents a major contributor to global mo Show more
Atherosclerosis (AS) is a chronic disease characterized by lipid deposition in the vascular intima. As the pathological basis of cardiovascular diseases, AS represents a major contributor to global morbidity and mortality. While Gualou Huoxue Jiedu Decoction (GHJD) has been widely used in clinical practice for the treatment of AS, the molecular mechanisms remain unclear. To investigate the anti-atherosclerotic effects and underlying mechanisms of GHJD. Apoe GHJD alleviated plaque formation, improved lipid metabolism, and suppressed inflammation in vivo. Multi-omics analysis revealed that DNA methylation of Mfap4 could be a pivotal target of GHJD efficacy. In vitro assays confirmed that GHJD suppressed Mfap4 transcription and translation, leading to downregulation of integrin receptor family expression and inhibition of VSMC phenotypic switching. GHJD exerts anti-atherosclerotic effects through epigenetic modulation of Mfap4 and downstream integrin/FAK signaling pathway, thereby inhibiting VSMC phenotypic switching. These findings provide pharmacological evidence supporting GHJD as a potential therapy for AS and, for the first time, validate MFAP4 as a pharmacological target, offering new insights into AS prevention and treatment. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2026.157881
APOE
Rui Bao, Wanying Shi, Hongbo Bao +3 more · 2026 · Research square · added 2026-04-24
Early detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology in cognitively unimpaired individuals is critical for preclinical intervention. Plasma biomarkers, especially phosphorylated tau217 (p-tau217), ar Show more
Early detection of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology in cognitively unimpaired individuals is critical for preclinical intervention. Plasma biomarkers, especially phosphorylated tau217 (p-tau217), are promising predictors of amyloid-β (Aβ) accumulation. In this cohort study, we analyzed data from cognitively unimpaired older adults in the A4 and LEARN studies (n=1,407), comprising 452 participants with Aβ positron emission tomography (PET)-negative status and 955 participants with Aβ PET-positive status. We evaluated the accuracy of plasma biomarkers (p-tau217, p-tau181, Aβ42/40 ratio, and others) in predicting Aβ PET positivity using receiver operating characteristic analysis, comparing models with biomarkers alone versus those combined with covariates (age, sex, apolipoprotein E [APOE] ε4 genotype). Plasma p-tau217 showed the strongest individual association with Aβ PET status (area under the curve [AUC] 0.85). A combined model integrating p-tau217, p-tau181, Aβ42, age, sex, and APOE ε4 achieved the highest diagnostic accuracy (AUC 0.87), significantly outperforming individual biomarkers. Plasma p-tau217, particularly when combined with other biomarkers and clinical covariates, provides a robust method for predicting Aβ PET positivity in cognitively unimpaired older adults. This biomarker profile could enhance preclinical trial screening by identifying individuals likely to harbor Aβ pathology, potentially reducing the need for confirmatory PET scans. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-8587114/v1
APOE
Jing Wang, Junbai Ma, Yiwei Li +6 more · 2026 · International immunopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Atherosclerosis (AS) is closely associated with gut microbiota that plays an important role in regulating intestinal mucosal barrier function, chronic inflammation, and immune homeostasis. Thus, targe Show more
Atherosclerosis (AS) is closely associated with gut microbiota that plays an important role in regulating intestinal mucosal barrier function, chronic inflammation, and immune homeostasis. Thus, targeting the modulation of gut microbitoa repesents a promising strategy for the control of AS. Clostridium butyricum (C. butyricum) serving as a kind of probiotics has shown a variety of biological benefits, but it's impact on atherosclerosis remains poorly understood. Sixty male ApoE C. butyricum ameliorated dyslipidemia and attenuated atherosclerotic plaque formation in ApoE C. butyricum intervention may exert anti-AS effects by reshaping gut homeostasis via the regulation of immune cells, providing a potential strategy for clinical treatment. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.intimp.2026.116315
APOE
Fei Gao, Kexin Ren, Bingbing Fan +2 more · 2026 · BMC geriatrics · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
To examine associations between the 24-h composition of movement behaviors (sedentary behavior [SB], light physical activity [LPA], moderate-to-vigorous physical activity [MVPA], and sleep) and physic Show more
To examine associations between the 24-h composition of movement behaviors (sedentary behavior [SB], light physical activity [LPA], moderate-to-vigorous physical activity [MVPA], and sleep) and physical and mental health in older adults using compositional data analysis. Data came from 4,150 adults aged ≥ 60 in the 2015 China Health and Nutrition Survey. Multiple‑balance isometric log‑ratio regression and compositional isotemporal substitution models were used to assess relative associations and the effect of time reallocation. The 24‑hour geometric mean composition was 43.1% sleep, 30.6% SB, 21.8% LPA, and 4.5% MVPA. LPA was positively associated with physical (β = 0.062, Replacing sedentary time or sleep with LPA, even in small amounts, is associated with better physical and mental health in older adults, supporting integrated 24‑hour activity guidelines that emphasize light‑intensity movement. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12877-026-07212-4
LPA
Feng Su, Shengnan Lu, Yaoyao Zhang +8 more · 2026 · Clinical and experimental pharmacology & physiology · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-24
The presence of a blood-brain barrier (BBB) prevents the delivery of most drugs to the brain. This characteristic limitation poses a major challenge to effective pharmacological treatment for numerous Show more
The presence of a blood-brain barrier (BBB) prevents the delivery of most drugs to the brain. This characteristic limitation poses a major challenge to effective pharmacological treatment for numerous neurodegenerative diseases, particularly Alzheimer's disease. Delivering small interfering RNA (siRNA) via nanoparticles represents a highly promising approach for treating Alzheimer's disease. Nevertheless, developing a safe and efficient siRNA delivery system remains challenging. To enhance brain targeting and therapeutic efficacy, we developed an siRNA nanocarrier system based on PAH-AM-PEG-ApoE (PAPA) nanoparticles (PAPA/siRNA NPs), which facilitates BBB penetration. In this study, an siRNA nanocarrier delivery system modified with ApoE peptide (PAPA/siRNA NPs) developed by our research team was employed to simultaneously encapsulate BACE1-siRNA and GSK3β-siRNA. The PAPA/siRNA NPs were prepared through self-assembly and electrostatic binding. The particle size distribution profile and zeta potential of the PAPA/siRNA NPs were analysed with dynamic light scattering, while its morphology was examined with transmission electron microscopy. For in vitro assessments, flow cytometry, confocal laser scanning microscopy, PCR, and Western blotting were employed to evaluate the cellular uptake, gene silencing capacity, and endosomal escape. The biodistribution was investigated by in vivo imaging technology, and the therapeutic effect on AD was verified in AD model mice. The prepared PAPA/siRNA NPs exhibited a regular spherical appearance with a uniform particle size distribution profile. In in vitro cell experiments, the PAPA/siRNA NPs demonstrated excellent cellular uptake ability and efficient endosomal escape. Meanwhile, the dual-loaded siRNA nanocarrier delivery system effectively inhibited the expression of GSK3β and BACE1 genes. In vivo experimental results showed that the siRNA could successfully cross the BBB and deliver to the brain. It not only significantly prolonged the half-life of siRNA but also greatly reduced the generation of pathological β-amyloid and phosphorylated microtubule-associated protein tau, showing excellent therapeutic effects in the treatment of AD. In this study, we successfully constructed a brain-targeted siRNA nanocarrier delivery system for double-gene knockdown. This system can efficiently overcome the obstacle of the BBB, markedly alleviating cognitive and memory deficits in AD mice. It paves the way for novel strategies in the clinical treatment of AD and is expected to bring new breakthroughs and changes to the conquest of this disease. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/1440-1681.70108
APOE
Dan Pan, Mingchen Jiang, Ying Wang +6 more · 2026 · Neurobiology of stress · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Major depressive disorder is a severe mental health condition characterized by persistent depressed mood and loss of interest. Current first-line pharmacotherapies often exhibit limited therapeutic pe Show more
Major depressive disorder is a severe mental health condition characterized by persistent depressed mood and loss of interest. Current first-line pharmacotherapies often exhibit limited therapeutic performance and adverse side effects. Transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS) is a promising, safe, and noninvasive alternative intervention with demonstrated neuromodulatory efficacy. Nevertheless, its mechanisms remain unclear. This study investigated whether the antidepressant properties of taVNS are associated with the microbiota-gut-brain axis, focusing on the potential crosstalk between differentially expressed hippocampal proteins and the gut microbiota. A chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) rat model of depression was established, and taVNS was administered for 14 days. Hippocampal proteomic profiling was performed using data-independent acquisition. Fecal metagenomic sequencing was conducted to characterize alterations in gut microbial communities. Key signaling pathways were validated using Western blot, qRT-PCR, HE staining, and transmission electron microscopy, all of which were employed to systematically assess behavioral, proteomic, microbial, and molecular changes. Proteomics and molecular analyses revealed that taVNS upregulated hippocampal expression of glutamate ionotropic receptor N-methyl-D-aspartate type subunit 1 (GluN1) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), while simultaneously restoring mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling activity. Metagenomic profiling demonstrated that taVNS increased the abundance of TaVNS significantly alleviated depression-like behaviors in CUMS-exposed rats. The underlying mechanism may involve the restoration of synaptic function of glutamatergic neurons by regulating the GluN1/MAPK/BDNF signaling pathway. In addition, taVNS reshaped the gut microbiota, markedly increasing the abundance of Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ynstr.2025.100777
BDNF
MengGe Li, HuiYue Wang, ZhenYan Tang +2 more · 2026 · Aging and disease · added 2026-04-24
The neurovascular unit (NVU) represents a multicellular functional ensemble pivotal to the preservation of cerebral homeostasis, encompassing endothelial cells, pericytes, glial cells (astrocytes, mic Show more
The neurovascular unit (NVU) represents a multicellular functional ensemble pivotal to the preservation of cerebral homeostasis, encompassing endothelial cells, pericytes, glial cells (astrocytes, microglia, oligodendrocytes), and neurons. This complex orchestrates the regulation of blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity, cerebral blood flow (CBF), and the metabolic microenvironment requisite for neuronal viability and functional competence. Accumulating lines of evidence have underscored that NVU dysfunction constitutes a critical early pathological event in neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer's disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD). The present review summarizes the structural composition and core physiological functionalities of the NVU, with particular emphasis on the emerging role of lipid metabolism dysregulation in mediating NVU impairment-an aberrant process encompassing lipid droplets, apolipoprotein E (APOE), ATPase phospholipid transporting 11B (ATP11B), triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2), and ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporters. We further delineate the mechanisms by which disrupted lipid homeostasis elicits neuroinflammation, amplifies oxidative stress, impairs amyloid-β (Aβ) clearance, and precipitates BBB breakdown, ultimately culminating in cognitive decline. Simultaneously, this review examines controversies within the field, such as the specific role of apolipoprotein E ε4 allele (APOE4) in disease and highlights the significant pathophysiological differences between preclinical animal models and human diseases. Therapeutic strategies targeting lipid metabolism or the blood-brain barrier still face considerable challenges in clinical translation. Meanwhile, emerging tools such as lipidomics contribute to systematically analyzing the associated dysregulated lipid networks, thereby aiding in the identification of novel therapeutic targets. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.14336/AD.2025.1464
APOE
Guogang Xin, Jiaqian Xu, Ling Jiang +5 more · 2026 · BMC psychology · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Improved internet access has exposed rural adolescents in China to a greater risk of internet addiction. However, existing studies seldom examine the relationship between dynamic changes in internet a Show more
Improved internet access has exposed rural adolescents in China to a greater risk of internet addiction. However, existing studies seldom examine the relationship between dynamic changes in internet addiction and psychosocial maladjustment. This study aims to explore the transition patterns of internet addiction and its associations with emotional and interpersonal problems over time. A one-year longitudinal survey was conducted among 782 middle school students in rural China. Latent Profile Analysis (LPA) was conducted to identify internet addiction profiles at two time points. Latent Profile Transition Analysis (LPTA) was then used to examine the transition patterns between profiles over time. Subsequently, statistical analyses were conducted to explore how these transitions were associated with emotional and interpersonal problems. Three profiles of internet addiction were identified: minimal-internet addiction, low-internet addiction, and high-internet addiction. Based on LPTA, most adolescents with higher internet addiction at T1 shifted to lower-severity profiles over time (high → minimal: 35.3%; low → minimal: 39.8%; high → low: 33.3%), while some with initially lower levels transitioned to more severe profiles (minimal → high: 6.9%; low → high: 12.2%; minimal → low: 25.7%). Transition into higher addiction profiles predicted increased depression, anxiety, and poorer relationships with parents, peers, and teachers. Conversely, reductions in addiction were linked to improved depressive symptoms. Changes in internet addiction have an impact on adolescent psychosocial maladjustment. Early detection and flexible interventions are essential in rural settings. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s40359-026-03992-x
LPA
Bowen Tan, Hewanmeng Geng, Zeyu Hao +9 more · 2026 · The journal of nutrition, health & aging · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Accelerometer-derived physical activity is associated with reduced stroke risk. The biological pathways underpinning this relationship, however, are not yet understood. Herein, we aim to identify meta Show more
Accelerometer-derived physical activity is associated with reduced stroke risk. The biological pathways underpinning this relationship, however, are not yet understood. Herein, we aim to identify metabolic signatures associated with accelerometer-measured PA and investigate their relationships with reduced stroke incidence. Utilizing UK Biobank accelerometer data, we derived physical activity into total physical activity (TPA), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), and light physical activity (LPA) and linked them to 249 NMR-quantified plasma metabolites. The metabolomic signatures (TPA-/MVPA-/LPA-metabolomic signatures) were developed through internal validation followed by elastic-net regression modeling. Cox proportional hazards models evaluated activity-stroke associations (adjusted for sociodemographic/genetic factors), followed by mediation analysis to quantify metabolomic signature effects. Through UK Biobank study (N = 29445; 14.1-year follow-up with 513 stroke events), we identified 195 TPA, 173 MVPA, and 164 LPA metabolite associations (FDR < 0.05), with 107, 92, and 15 validated, respectively. Elastic net-derived physical activity-metabolomic signatures (TPA-/MVPA-metabolomic signatures) correlated with physical activity intensities (r = 0.20-0.30, P < 0.001) and were associated with reduced stroke risk: TPA-metabolomic signatures (HR = 0.61, 95% CI: 0.44-0.87); MVPA-metabolomic signatures (HR = 0.50, 95%CI: 0.29-0.88). Mediation analyses showed TPA-metabolomic signatures and MVPA-metabolomic signatures explained 12.2% and 8.5% of physical activity-stroke associations (P < 0.001), implicating specific lipoprotein subclasses and lipids as key mediators. TPA-metabolomic signatures and MVPA-metabolomic signatures, particularly the 11 key metabolites included, significantly mediate the association between accelerometer-derived physical activity and stroke risk. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jnha.2025.100715
LPA
Huawen Yu, Jie Yu, Xiao Yang +7 more · 2026 · Ecotoxicology and environmental safety · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
To investigate the role of PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy in regulating synaptic remodeling of neuronal cells in depression-like behaviors induced by nonylphenol (NP). In vitro experiments: HT-22 neu Show more
To investigate the role of PINK1/Parkin-mediated mitophagy in regulating synaptic remodeling of neuronal cells in depression-like behaviors induced by nonylphenol (NP). In vitro experiments: HT-22 neuronal cells were exposed to NP, and mitophagy and Parkin expression were inhibited using specific inhibitors. The cells were categorized into the following groups: (1) control (C) and low-dose NP group (L: 2.5 µM), medium-dose NP group (M: 50 µM), and high-dose NP groups (H: 100 µM); (2) control (C), NP (100 µM), Mdivi-1 (5 µM), and Mdivi-1 + NP (5 µM Mdivi-1 +100 µM NP) groups; (3) control (C), NP (100 µM), AC220 (2 nM), and AC220 + NP (2 nM AC220 +100 µM NP) groups. In vivo experiments: a total of 48 mice, including 24 C57BL/6 wild-type mice and 24 PKRK2 gene-knockout mice, were randomly assigned to the following four groups: control (C), NP (100 mg/kg/day), PKRK2-knockout (KO), and PKRK2-knockout + NP (100 mg/kg/day, KH) groups, with 12 mice in each group. In vitro: With increasing NP concentration, the ATP content reduced and the expressions of synaptic remodeling-related proteins (i.e., PSD-95, BDNF, SYN) decreased. In contrast, the expressions of mitophagy-related proteins and those involved in the PINK1/Parkin-signaling pathway (such as p62, Beclin1, PINK1, Parkin) increased (P < 0.05). Inhibition of mitophagy with Mdivi-1 alleviated the NP-induced changes in synaptic, mitophagy-related, and PINK1/Parkin pathway-related proteins. Similarly, the inhibition of Parkin with AC220 mitigated NP-induced effects on synaptic, mitophagy-related, and PINK1/Parkin-signaling pathway-related proteins and mRNA expression. In vivo: PKRK2 gene-knockout mice exhibited improved NP-induced depression-like behaviors and decreased NP-induced synaptic morphology and mitochondrial ultrastructure changes. Moreover, the gene knockout alleviated the downregulation of synaptic remodeling-related proteins and inhibited the PINK1/Parkin-signaling pathway-mediated mitophagy activated by NP. Mitophagy inhibition or PKRK2 knockout can alleviate NP-induced downregulation of synaptic remodeling-related proteins, protect synaptic morphology and ultrastructure, and improve NP-induced depression-like behaviors. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoenv.2026.120149
BDNF depression mitophagy neuronal cells neuroscience parkin pink1 synaptic remodeling
Yihao Li, Emmie Then, Salwa Rahman +8 more · 2026 · Advances in lipoprotein(a) research · added 2026-04-24
Atherosclerosis, affecting the aorta, cervical, or intracranial arteries, is a common cause of stroke. Previous studies have shown a strong link between high Lp(a) levels and atherosclerotic stroke du Show more
Atherosclerosis, affecting the aorta, cervical, or intracranial arteries, is a common cause of stroke. Previous studies have shown a strong link between high Lp(a) levels and atherosclerotic stroke due to intracranial atherosclerotic disease, implicating Lp(a) in disease development and progression. The precise role of Lp(a) in stroke subtypes remains unclear, although smaller isoform sizes and oxidized phospholipids on Lp(a) are associated with the disease presence. To clarify Lp(a)'s connection with ischemic stroke subtypes, we evaluated various plasma biomarkers previously linked to Lp(a) and disease. We used stored plasma samples and data from 244 participants enrolled in an acute ischemic stroke registry at Columbia University Medical Center in New York. Plasma Lp(a) concentrations, apolipoprotein B100 (APOB), and oxidized phospholipids were measured via enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. APO(a) isoform size was measured via gel electrophoresis. Stroke subtypes were classified based on etiologies using clinical and imaging data. Adjusted multivariate logistic regression models were built to assess associations between Lp(a)-related biomarkers and stroke subtype. In participants with acute ischemic stroke, high Lp(a) concentrations, percentage of APOB in Lp(a), and OxPL-APO(a) concentrations were significantly associated with the presence of atherosclerotic stroke compared to those with non-atherosclerotic strokes [OR = 1.30 ( In addition to Lp(a) concentrations, the percentage of APOB in Lp(a), and OxPL-APO(a) concentrations are positively associated with acute atherosclerotic ischemic stroke, specifically ECAD. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.70401/alr.2026.0005
APOB
Chaowei Fang, Bolin Fu, De Cheng +2 more · 2026 · IEEE transactions on image processing : a publication of the IEEE Signal Processing Society · IEEE · added 2026-04-24
Continual image super-resolution (CISR) aims to efficiently adapt a pre-trained model to a variety of tasks while retaining knowledge from previously learned tasks, minimizing the need for intensive i Show more
Continual image super-resolution (CISR) aims to efficiently adapt a pre-trained model to a variety of tasks while retaining knowledge from previously learned tasks, minimizing the need for intensive independent training. The primary challenges include catastrophic forgetting due to varying data distributions and degradation types, along with the necessity for high adaptability. While prompt-based continual learning has proven effective in image classification, its direct application to super-resolution (SR) often fails to meet the demands for detailed pixel-level restoration and domain discrimination in low-level characteristics. To address these challenges, we propose Learning Prompt Adapters (LPA), which dynamically generates pixel-wise prompts through a combination of multi-granularity prompt bases and identities. By adaptively integrating these prompts into the Transformer architecture, we effectively improve the model's performance on fine-grained details in super-resolution tasks, as well as enhancing the model's adaptability to new tasks and preserving knowledge from previous ones. Through organizing the low-rank prompt bases with specific identities, we set up an effective solution to managing cross-task differences and enhancing prompt richness. Extensive experiments on benchmarks comprising the NYU, RealSR, DIV2K, REDS, and MANGA109 datasets with diverse degradation types demonstrate that LPA significantly outperforms existing continual learning methods. Codes of this paper are available at: https://github.com/dummerchen/LPA. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1109/TIP.2026.3671688
LPA

Human FGF1

Yingjian Li, Xiaodan Hui, Chunjie Gu +11 more · 2026 · Cells · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
The prevalence of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) is rising worldwide. hFGF1
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/cells15050387
APOE
Weiji Deng, Xinyu Li, Min HU +2 more · 2026 · Nutrients · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/nu18050746
APOE
Youhai Jiang, Jianan Chen, Zhengyuan Meng +10 more · 2026 · Cancer letters · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
The response rate to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains unsatisfactory, and the mechanisms of resistance are not fully understood. Here, we investigated the rol Show more
The response rate to immune checkpoint blockade (ICB) in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains unsatisfactory, and the mechanisms of resistance are not fully understood. Here, we investigated the role of fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 (FGFR1) in shaping the tumor microenvironment (TME) and mediating ICB resistance. An anti-PD-1-resistant HCC model was established in mice, followed by single-cell RNA sequencing to profile TME alterations. We observed that ICB resistance was associated with FGFR1 upregulation, which activated MAPK signaling and induced SPP1 expression. This cascade promotes macrophage infiltration and M2-type polarization, while simultaneously suppressing T cell recruitment and cytotoxic function, thereby fostering an immunosuppressive microenvironment. SPP1 knockdown or neutralization significantly reduced macrophage accumulation and restored intratumoral T cell infiltration. Importantly, pharmacological inhibition of FGFR1 using BGJ398 synergized with anti-PD-1 therapy, resulting in enhanced antitumor efficacy in preclinical models. Analysis of clinical datasets further revealed that high FGFR1 expression correlated with poor responses to ICB of HCC patients. Collectively, these findings identify FGFR1 as a key mediator of ICB resistance in HCC. Targeting FGFR1 represents a promising strategy to reprogram the immunosuppressive TME and enhance response to immunotherapy, with potential additional value as a predictive biomarker. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2026.218361
FGFR1
Chao Peng, Gui-Jing Liu, Jian Li +8 more · 2026 · European journal of pharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Atherosclerosis, a chronic inflammatory disease, is the most relevant cause of ischaemic stroke or myocardial infarction. Vascular endothelial cells (ECs) play a significant role in the development of Show more
Atherosclerosis, a chronic inflammatory disease, is the most relevant cause of ischaemic stroke or myocardial infarction. Vascular endothelial cells (ECs) play a significant role in the development of atherosclerosis. In this chronic inflammatory environment, we aimed to investigate whether a Evolocumab (Evb) could mitigate atherosclerosis progression by inhibiting EC activation via in vivo and in vitro assays. In vivo, we investigated the ability of Evb to prevent atherosclerotic lesion formation in ApoE Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2026.178777
APOE