👤 Xiao-Xia Wang

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Also published as: Junli Wang, Xindi Wang, Junpeng Wang, Tingyu Wang, Guoqiang Wang, Yuxuan Wang, Hanzhi Wang, Zhi-Long Wang, Shanshan Wang, Wenfei Wang, Dengbin Wang, Yen-Sheng Wang, Chuanxin Wang, Zeyu Wang, Beibei Wang, Taicheng Wang, Xingguo Wang, Z P Wang, Yue-Min Wang, Chenghua Wang, Xianqiang Wang, Congrong Wang, Yanhai Wang, Du Wang, Xianzhe Wang, Zuoheng Wang, Yongyi Wang, Zhihui Wang, Yanhua Wang, Limeng Wang, H J Wang, Pei-Jian Wang, Yana Wang, Congrui Wang, Larry Wang, Yu-Zhuo Wang, Sihua Wang, Wanchun Wang, Jialin Wang, Xinying Wang, Shuguang Wang, Yinhuai Wang, Xiaobin Wang, Yuying Wang, Hebo Wang, Leli Wang, Jiayu Wang, Zhaojun Wang, Hai Wang, Si Wang, Re-Hua Wang, Xuping Wang, Bo Wang, Shubao Wang, Songjiao Wang, Hongjia Wang, Victoria Wang, Ling Wang, Jianjie Wang, Haining Wang, Dali Wang, Ji-Yang Wang, Cheng Wang, Weifan Wang, Yuanqiang Wang, Zhixiao Wang, Yaxian Wang, Zhigang Wang, Haochen Wang, Jia-Ying Wang, Shichao Wang, Ruosu Wang, N Wang, Haixing Wang, Guiqun Wang, Zhiting Wang, Dan Wang, Wangxia Wang, Jing-Long Wang, Yaqian Wang, Yafang Wang, Xing-Jun Wang, Dapeng Wang, Zhongyuan Wang, Junsheng Wang, Zhaohai Wang, He-Ping Wang, Minmin Wang, Wenzhou Wang, Zhaohui Wang, Yanfang Wang, Pengtao Wang, Leran Wang, Qianwen Wang, Hongkun Wang, Sa Wang, Y Alan Wang, Liyan Wang, Jou-Kou Wang, Mingda Wang, Chenfei Wang, Yuehan Wang, Simeng Wang, Yuhua Wang, Ruibin Wang, Haibo Wang, Ni Wang, Guoxiu Wang, Zhuangzhuang Wang, Yajie Wang, Zhixiang Wang, Sangui Wang, Xiantao Wang, Yan-Yang Wang, Mengjun Wang, Ruling Wang, Peihe Wang, Miao Wang, Zaihua Wang, Jun-Jie Wang, Mengyao Wang, Zhiyu Wang, Changzhen Wang, Xijun Wang, Chengjian Wang, Yiyi Wang, Mo Wang, Xiaolun Wang, Danan Wang, Fanchang Wang, Zilin Wang, Fanhua Wang, Supeng Perry Wang, Gavin Wang, Yi-Ying Wang, Yani Wang, Zhuowei Wang, Weiwei Wang, Haifeng Wang, Yi-Shiuan Wang, Yan-Chao Wang, Xiaotong Wang, Jia-Qi Wang, Yongliang Wang, Yongming Wang, Fengchong Wang, Jianyong Wang, Zeping Wang, Huaquan Wang, Xiaojia Wang, Tao Wang, Tianjun Wang, Siying Wang, Zhenze Wang, Zhijian Wang, Li Wang, Heming Wang, Jingtong Wang, Xuefei Wang, Yingqiao Wang, Xiao Qun Wang, Chun-Chieh Wang, Shuang-Xi Wang, Laiyuan Wang, Zhaoming Wang, Yinggui Wang, Qi-Jia Wang, Wen-Yan Wang, Mingming Wang, Peipei Wang, Chien-Hsun Wang, Qiuhong Wang, Monica Wang, Lexin Wang, Xiufen Wang, Yuehua Wang, Pingfeng Wang, Caiyan Wang, Weijie Wang, Yigang Wang, Jieyan Wang, Huiquan Wang, Chunsheng Wang, Yunhe Wang, Changtu Wang, Qingliang Wang, Guanghua Wang, Yongbin Wang, Zhaobo Wang, Minghui Wang, Junshi Wang, Jingyu Wang, Longsheng Wang, Fen Wang, Xianshu Wang, Jianwu Wang, Jun-Zhuo Wang, Zhixing Wang, Lei Wang, Yiyan Wang, Jinglin Wang, Jinhe Wang, Enhua Wang, Yuecong Wang, Xueying Wang, Jennifer T Wang, Xin-Hua Wang, Shijie Wang, Chun-Xia Wang, Yuanjiang Wang, Xiaojun Wang, Shunjun Wang, Chun-Juan Wang, M Wang, Jinfei Wang, Jinghuan Wang, Xuru Wang, Xiao-Lan Wang, Yu-Chen Wang, Zhi-Guo Wang, Luya Wang, Shuwei Wang, Pingchuan Wang, Qifan Wang, Xing-Quan Wang, Weiding Wang, Xuebin Wang, Yaling Wang, Chenyin Wang, Allen Wang, Liyuan Wang, Rong-Rong Wang, Wusan Wang, Wayseen Wang, Qianru Wang, Yi-Xin Wang, Hailin Wang, Yu-Hang Wang, Xuesong Wang, Haojie Wang, Wanxia Wang, Mengwen Wang, Hanping Wang, Yuhang Wang, Lueli Wang, Xinchang Wang, Oliver Wang, Shuge Wang, Jianhao Wang, Chong Wang, Kui Wang, Litao Wang, Zining Wang, Ming-Yang Wang, Hongxia Wang, Mingyi Wang, Hai Bo Wang, Bingnan Wang, Hongqian Wang, Jisheng Wang, Jiakun Wang, Maoju Wang, Xiaoqiu Wang, Dongyi Wang, Hai Yang Wang, Pengju Wang, Xiaofeng Wang, Huming Wang, Jian'an Wang, Qianrong Wang, Xiaowei Wang, Xiangkun Wang, Da Wang, Hongying Wang, Changying Wang, Changyu Wang, Xiaoqin Wang, Zhenxi Wang, Qiaoqiao Wang, Yu Tian Wang, Yupeng Wang, Xinli Wang, YueJiao Wang, Jian-chun Wang, Pengchao Wang, Xiao-Juan Wang, Siqing Wang, C Z Wang, Pengbo Wang, Baoli Wang, Yu-Zhe Wang, Gui-Qi Wang, Dazhi Wang, Yanwen Wang, Xingqin Wang, Shijin Wang, Wenming Wang, Fanxiong Wang, Tiansong Wang, Shuzhe Wang, Jie Wang, Jinling Wang, Yunfang Wang, Luyao Wang, Cun-Yu Wang, Zikang Wang, Quan-Ming Wang, Yingying Wang, Chia-Chuan Wang, Xintong Wang, Jufeng Wang, Xuejun Wang, Xiao-Qian Wang, Yijin Wang, Meng Yu Wang, Tianyi Wang, Chia-Lin Wang, Zhuo-Jue Wang, Yaohe Wang, Rong Wang, Hao-Hua Wang, Yong-Jun Wang, Xubo Wang, Dalong Wang, Yan-Ge Wang, Erika Y Wang, Ruixian Wang, Jin-Liang Wang, Shicung Wang, Saifei Wang, Jintao Wang, Zhenzhen Wang, Jiawei Wang, Beilei Wang, Huabo Wang, Huiyu Wang, Hongtao Wang, Chengjun Wang, Guo-Du Wang, Taoxia Wang, Zitao Wang, Jingwen Wang, Yibin Wang, Long Wang, Xinjing Wang, Qunzhi Wang, Liangliang Wang, Bangchen Wang, Yu-Fen Wang, Shibin Wang, Congcong Wang, Xiong Wang, Zhiren Wang, Xiaozhu Wang, Hong-Xia Wang, Qingyong Wang, Tianying Wang, Tammy C Wang, Huijie Wang, Tiansheng Wang, Mengzhao Wang, Jianshu Wang, Xinlong Wang, Benzhong Wang, Zhipeng Wang, Kaijie Wang, Xiaomin Wang, Peijun Wang, Zhiqiang Wang, Jundong Wang, Zheng Wang, Yueze Wang, Sujuan Wang, Qing-Yun Wang, Xiaoqing Wang, Zongqi Wang, Zhicun Wang, Fudi Wang, Seok Mui Wang, Wanbing Wang, Kejun Wang, Nanping Wang, Mingyang Wang, Wenxia Wang, Yaru Wang, Zikun Wang, Shidong Wang, Bei Bei Wang, Yu-Hui Wang, Rui Wang, Yige Wang, Tongxin Wang, Xiaohua Wang, Changjing Wang, Xingjin Wang, Bingjie Wang, Shaoyu Wang, Hui-Hui Wang, Zhenyu Wang, Baoying Wang, Yang-Yang Wang, Shi-Yao Wang, Lifei Wang, Fangfang Wang, Zhimei Wang, Kunpeng Wang, Binglong Wang, Daijun Wang, Qinghang Wang, Zi Wang, Shushu Wang, QingDong Wang, Qing K Wang, Fuhua Wang, Yanni Wang, Jianle Wang, Wenyan Wang, Jinning Wang, Ziqi Wang, Wei-Qi Wang, Yaolou Wang, Haoming Wang, Jian-Wei Wang, Tian Wang, Peixi Wang, Iris X Wang, Tongxia Wang, Mei-Xia Wang, Haiying Wang, Tielin Wang, Hongze Wang, Chung-Hsi Wang, Peiyao Wang, Linli Wang, Guanru Wang, Yuzhong Wang, Yunhan Wang, Jianan Wang, Menglong Wang, Yingxue Wang, Jiayi Wang, Dingxiang Wang, Ting Wang, Fenglin Wang, Jianqun Wang, Ran Wang, Kuan Hong Wang, Liusong Wang, Wen-Der Wang, Yixuan Wang, Feng Wang, Kaicen Wang, Eryao Wang, Yulei Wang, Huaibing Wang, Zhongzhi Wang, Jinrong Wang, Sujie Wang, Xiaozhong Wang, Xiao-Pei Wang, Li-Na Wang, H X Wang, Linjie Wang, Zhaosong Wang, Yafen Wang, Chuan-Wen Wang, Xiaoning Wang, Li-Xin Wang, Silas L Wang, Baocheng Wang, Hongyi Wang, Zhi-Xiao Wang, Shengjie Wang, Zhi-Hao Wang, Yaokun Wang, Shao-Kang Wang, Qunxian Wang, Jianghui Wang, Zhao Wang, Di Wang, Jianzhi Wang, Ruijing Wang, Ling Jie Wang, Qingshi Wang, Jianye Wang, Yuqiang Wang, Kangling Wang, Anxin Wang, Shengli Wang, Zhulin Wang, Hua-Wei Wang, Yiwen Wang, Yang Wang, Hanqi Wang, Changwei Wang, Honglei Wang, Yi Lei Wang, Wenkang Wang, Junjie Wang, Yazhou Wang, Peng-Cheng Wang, Chenzi Wang, Anqi Wang, Yuemiao Wang, Xuelin Wang, Rujie Wang, Dongyan Wang, Yuxue Wang, Wengong Wang, Qigui Wang, Junqing Wang, Ruhan Wang, Xinye Wang, Huihui Wang, Gengsheng Wang, Mark Wang, Zhidong Wang, Mengmeng Wang, Yuwen Wang, Liang Wang, Huaxiang Wang, Fangjun Wang, Huixia Wang, Haijiao Wang, Hong-Hui Wang, Yi-Shan Wang, Yunchao Wang, Junjun Wang, Binghai Wang, Xinguo Wang, Jun-Sing Wang, Lingzhi Wang, Yuexiang Wang, Hong-Gang Wang, Yen-Feng Wang, Xidi Wang, Jiawen Wang, Liangfu Wang, Lifeng Wang, Shihan Wang, Wentian Wang, Sa A Wang, Lee-Kai Wang, Yu-Wei Wang, Zumin Wang, Shau-Chun Wang, Jianjiao Wang, Tian-Tian Wang, Jiantao Wang, Edward Wang, Jianbo Wang, Qingfeng Wang, Wenran Wang, Xiaolin Wang, Fenghua Wang, Rongjia Wang, Shiqiang Wang, Caixia Wang, Guihu Wang, Xindong Wang, Wenxiu Wang, Xueguo Wang, YiLi Wang, Aizhong Wang, Qiqi Wang, Chengcheng Wang, D Wang, L Wang, Jianhua Wang, Qiuling Wang, Shaolian Wang, Wen-Qing Wang, Wenqing Wang, Yuchuan Wang, Guangdi Wang, Yiquan Wang, Huimei Wang, Genghao Wang, Zun Wang, Miranda C Wang, Annette Wang, Chi-Ping Wang, Hanmin Wang, Zhaoxi Wang, Shifeng Wang, Runze Wang, Mangju Wang, Junjiang Wang, Dong D Wang, Xiu-Ping Wang, Haijiu Wang, Linghuan Wang, Yiying Wang, Renqian Wang, Nana Wang, Xiangdong Wang, Shiyin Wang, Chaoyi Wang, Menghan Wang, Shuyue Wang, Yongmei Wang, Nanbu Wang, Lihua Wang, Hongyue Wang, Jianli Wang, Chunli Wang, Minghua Wang, Junkai Wang, Chenguang Wang, Siyue Wang, Jun Wang, Shu-Song Wang, Bingyan Wang, Qingping Wang, Zhong-Yu Wang, Fei-Fei Wang, Jennifer E Wang, Z-Y Wang, Dongxia Wang, Dang Wang, Zi-Hao Wang, Rihua Wang, Jutao Wang, Yanzhe Wang, Guohao Wang, Liming Wang, Yishu Wang, Xuemin Wang, Xianfeng Wang, Zixu Wang, Jingfan Wang, Guang-Jie Wang, Guixue Wang, Jiaojiao Wang, Yaxin Wang, Haibing Wang, Weizhong Wang, Hairong Wang, Hai-Jun Wang, Mingji Wang, Yongrui Wang, Huizhi Wang, Longfei Wang, Chongmin Wang, Jingyang Wang, Zhong-Ping Wang, Huanhuan Wang, Baisong Wang, Xiaohui Wang, Fengyang Wang, Wanliang Wang, Ziqiang Wang, Chuan Wang, Jeffrey Wang, Ying-Zi Wang, Ziwei Wang, Xian Wang, Hanyu Wang, Qiming Wang, Dedong Wang, Fengying Wang, Xiaoya Wang, Zhenhua Wang, Yanchun Wang, Keming Wang, Zi-Yi Wang, Dezhong Wang, Jingying Wang, Shouli Wang, Lan-lan Wang, Weiyu Wang, Yuhuai Wang, Jun Yi Wang, Wenying Wang, Xue-Feng Wang, Xing-Lei Wang, Yuehong Wang, Pengyu Wang, Yihe Wang, Guodong Wang, Weijian Wang, Wu-Wei Wang, Y Wang, Ruonan Wang, Jianbing Wang, Mian Wang, Dennis Qing Wang, Nannan Wang, Zuo Wang, Christine Wang, Ruixin Wang, Yaxiong Wang, Siwei Wang, Yuanzhen Wang, Wen-Chang Wang, Haijing Wang, X Wang, Melissa T Wang, Haixia Wang, Qianghu Wang, Hongsheng Wang, Xiurong Wang, Shaowei Wang, Shuo Wang, Zengtao Wang, Yun-Xing Wang, Songtao Wang, Mei Wang, Mengyun Wang, Qingming Wang, Ke-Feng Wang, Zhihao Wang, Haoqi Wang, X E Wang, Xin-Shang Wang, Dongmei Wang, Lingli Wang, Huai-Zhou Wang, Hua Wang, Kunzheng Wang, Mao-Xin Wang, Jingzhou Wang, Jiaqi Wang, Xingbang Wang, Wence Wang, Yongdi Wang, Xin-Qun Wang, Guoyi Wang, Jian-Guo Wang, Jiafu Wang, Pin Wang, Libo Wang, Junling Wang, J Z Wang, Haozhou Wang, Jing Wang, Hezhi Wang, T Q Wang, Xi-Hong Wang, Yuanfan Wang, Endi Wang, Hua-Qin Wang, Jeremy Wang, Songping Wang, Suyun Wang, Jiqing Wang, Shu-Ling Wang, Jennifer X Wang, Lily Wang, Yin-Hu Wang, Jen-Chywan Wang, Qingqing Wang, Shuangyuan Wang, Haihong Wang, Luyun Wang, Yake Wang, Ya-Nan Wang, Weicheng Wang, Jianxiang Wang, Zihua Wang, Lin Wang, Fu-Sheng Wang, Zongbao Wang, Tong-Hong Wang, Xianze Wang, Ting-Ting Wang, Haibin Wang, Xin-Yue Wang, Zhi-Gang Wang, Ziying Wang, Shukang Wang, Wen-Jun Wang, Delin Wang, Yating Wang, Xuehao Wang, Yefu Wang, Yi-Ning Wang, Cheng-zhang Wang, Jing J Wang, Xinglong Wang, Yanqing Wang, Tongyao Wang, Dongyang Wang, Deqi Wang, Qiao Wang, Alice Wang, Yunzhi Wang, Dayong Wang, Renxi Wang, Yeh-Han Wang, Mingya Wang, Longxiang Wang, Hualin Wang, Hailei Wang, Ao Wang, Wanyu Wang, Jiale Wang, Qiangcheng Wang, Huishan Wang, Yunqiong Wang, Xudong Wang, Xifu Wang, Wen-Xuan Wang, Dao Wen Wang, Zhi-Wei Wang, Xingchen Wang, Yanyang Wang, Yutao Wang, Huizhen Wang, Hu WANG, Y P Wang, Wen Wang, Qingsong Wang, Baofeng Wang, Ruo-Ran Wang, Yaobin Wang, Changliang Wang, Pintian Wang, Dai Wang, Su-Guo Wang, Ruting Wang, Fengzhen Wang, Qinrong Wang, HuiYue Wang, Baosen Wang, Shuhe Wang, Yifei Wang, Jiun-Ling Wang, Junhui Wang, Guangzhi Wang, Qijia Wang, Yushe Wang, Jinlong Wang, Zhouguang Wang, Huiyao Wang, Shuxin Wang, Yingyi Wang, Jing-Yi Wang, Yongxiang Wang, Zhi Wang, Dehao Wang, Yi-sheng Wang, Jiazhi Wang, Yunfei Wang, Mingjin Wang, Yaozhi Wang, Jinyu Wang, Jinmeng Wang, LiLi Wang, Shuai Wang, Yan Wang, Jun Kit Wang, Cui Wang, Zhan Wang, Dong-Jie Wang, Yangyang Wang, Xiangguo Wang, Runuo Wang, Ruimin Wang, Pengpu Wang, Nuan Wang, Guangyan Wang, Xin-Liang Wang, Minxiu Wang, Ruifang Wang, Hui Wang, Hongda Wang, Xiyan Wang, Jinxia Wang, Xinchen Wang, Haihua Wang, Delong Wang, Yayu Wang, Xue-Hua Wang, Xin-Peng Wang, Changqian Wang, Bei Wang, Ya-Han Wang, Chih-Liang Wang, P N Wang, Xiaoqian Wang, Xianshi Wang, Zhiruo Wang, Xueding Wang, Renxiao Wang, Yi-Ming Wang, Tianqi Wang, Ledan Wang, Rongyun Wang, Gan Wang, Qinqin Wang, Yuxiang Wang, Feimiao Wang, Mengyuan Wang, Chaofan Wang, Linshuang Wang, Yanhui Wang, Zhenglong Wang, Zongkui Wang, Zhenwei Wang, Xiyue Wang, Yi Fan Wang, Xiao-Ai Wang, Po-Jen Wang, Xinyang Wang, Linying Wang, Fa-Kai Wang, Yimeng Wang, Dong-Mei Wang, Anli Wang, Hui-Li Wang, Jianqing Wang, Honglun Wang, Wei-Feng Wang, Kaihao Wang, Jialing Wang, Shuren Wang, Cui-Fang Wang, Wenqi Wang, Peilin Wang, Wen-Fei Wang, Guang-Rui Wang, T Wang, Weiqing Wang, Ciyang Wang, Biao Wang, Kaihe Wang, Jieh-Neng Wang, Tony Wang, Yuehu Wang, Zhicheng Wang, Tongtong Wang, Zi Xuan Wang, Yingtai Wang, Xin-Xin Wang, Chu Wang, Tianhao Wang, Shukui Wang, Ching C Wang, Yulin Wang, Chunyang Wang, Yeqi Wang, Yinbo Wang, Kongyan Wang, Weiling Wang, Linxuan Wang, Shengya Wang, Yaqi Wang, Huating Wang, Aiting Wang, Ya Xing Wang, Daoping Wang, Shasha Wang, Wei-Lien Wang, Quanli Wang, Yanru Wang, L M Wang, Bijue Wang, H Wang, Jipeng Wang, Xiaoxia Wang, Shuu-Jiun Wang, Baitao Wang, Haimeng Wang, Chung-Hsing Wang, Weining Wang, M Y Wang, Wenwen Wang, Zhongsu Wang, Xiaochen Wang, Ligang Wang, Shaohsu Wang, Bing Qing Wang, Jiangbin Wang, Yajun Wang, Chunting Wang, Hemei Wang, En-hua Wang, H-Y Wang, Zixi Wang, Wenjing Wang, Haikun Wang, Ruxin Wang, Jianru Wang, Yongqiang Wang, Ouchen Wang, Jianyu Wang, Shen Wang, Yixi Wang, Zhi-Hong Wang, Li Dong Wang, Zhou-Ping Wang, Wen-Yong Wang, Meng-Lan Wang, Xiaojie Wang, Leying Wang, Yi-Zhen Wang, Y Y Wang, Jianlin Wang, Guoqing Wang, Jiani Wang, Guan-song Wang, You Wang, Xiangding Wang, Ke Wang, Wendong Wang, Yue Wang, Zhe Wang, K Wang, Zhuo Wang, Su'e Wang, Cangyu Wang, Erfei Wang, Xiaoming Wang, Aijun Wang, Xiaoye Wang, Jun-Sheng Wang, Wenxiang Wang, Yanjun Wang, Qiangqiang Wang, Yachun Wang, Haitao Wang, Tiancheng Wang, Gangyang Wang, Jianmin Wang, Jiabo Wang, Yijing Wang, Mengzhi Wang, Yinuo Wang, Zhou Wang, Guiying Wang, Xuezheng Wang, Shan Wang, Aoli Wang, Fuqiang Wang, Yawei Wang, Xianxing Wang, Ya-Long Wang, Yuyang Wang, Dong Hao Wang, Y-S Wang, Zelin Wang, Liqun Wang, Cunyi Wang, Qian-Zhu Wang, Yinan Wang, Panfeng Wang, Guangwen Wang, J Q Wang, Guang Wang, Yu-Ping Wang, John Wang, Jiaping Wang, Zhisheng Wang, Xuan-Ren Wang, Xiaowu Wang, Zhengyu Wang, Baowei Wang, Zhijun Wang, Zhong-Hao Wang, Fengzhong Wang, Jin-Da Wang, Zhaoqing Wang, Yuanbo Wang, Haixin Wang, Yaping Wang, Lixiu Wang, Mingxia Wang, Neng Wang, Guozheng Wang, Yan-Feng Wang, Huafei Wang, Yuhan Wang, Xingxing Wang, Wenhe Wang, Xing-Huan Wang, Xiansong Wang, Yishan Wang, Ruming Wang, Ya Qi Wang, Yueying Wang, Chunle Wang, Shihua Wang, W Wang, Hengjun Wang, Meihui Wang, Huanyu Wang, Ruinan Wang, Qiwei Wang, Zhong Wang, Shiyao Wang, Jian-Zhi Wang, Ruimeng Wang, Jinxiang Wang, Jinsong Wang, Bin-Xue Wang, Fuwen Wang, Yiou Wang, Shifa Wang, Yin Wang, Yanzhu Wang, Jia Bin Wang, Siyang Wang, Zhanggui Wang, Yueting Wang, Qingyu Wang, Qianqian Wang, Xiu-Lian Wang, Fengling Wang, Chenxi Wang, Cheng An Wang, Yipeng Wang, Weipeng Wang, Zechen Wang, Shuaiqin Wang, Xueqian Wang, Chan Wang, Guohang Wang, Cai-Yun Wang, Jiang Wang, Huei Wang, Yufeng Wang, Heng Wang, Qing-Liang Wang, Chuang Wang, Xiaofang Wang, Hao-Ching Wang, Junying Wang, Jianwei Wang, Jinhai Wang, Hanchao Wang, Penglai Wang, I-Ching Wang, S L Wang, Tianhu Wang, Sheng-Min Wang, Pan-Pan Wang, Duan Wang, Xuqiao Wang, Minghuan Wang, Wei-Wei Wang, Xiaojian Wang, Shuping Wang, Jinfu Wang, Biqi Wang, Zhenguo Wang, Fangyan Wang, Sainan Wang, Peijuan Wang, Pei-Yu Wang, Yuyan Wang, Fuxin Wang, Ji M Wang, Yange Wang, Yali Wang, Wenhui Wang, Leishen Wang, Lichan Wang, Xianna Wang, Wenbin Wang, Kenan Wang, Chih-Yuan Wang, Yanlei Wang, Ju Wang, Yanliang Wang, Keqing Wang, Bangshing Wang, Dayan Wang, Yongsheng Wang, Dinghui Wang, Zheyue Wang, Xinke Wang, Daqing Wang, Yan Ming Wang, He-Ling Wang, Shengyao Wang, Jiwen Wang, Xizhi Wang, Luxiang Wang, Dandan Wang, RongRong Wang, Heng-Cai Wang, Jindan Wang, Xiaoding Wang, Yumeng Wang, Heling Wang, Xiao-Yun Wang, Meiding Wang, Zhilun Wang, Guo-hong Wang, Na Wang, Yanli Wang, Fubing Wang, Feixiang Wang, Zhiyuan Wang, Yi-Cheng Wang, Zhengwei Wang, Wenyuan Wang, Yu-Ying Wang, Jianqin Wang, Sijia Wang, Chuansen Wang, Huawei Wang, Kaiyan Wang, Qingyuan Wang, Yujia Wang, Lian Wang, Junrui Wang, Chao-Yung Wang, Zehao Wang, Ruixue Wang, Minjun Wang, Jin Wang, Xiaoxiao Wang, Jun-Feng Wang, Binquan Wang, Shuxia Wang, Donggen Wang, Deming Wang, Chenggang Wang, Chuduan Wang, Haichuan Wang, Catherine Ruiyi Wang, Hai-Feng Wang, Anthony Z Wang, Guanghui Wang, Jiahao Wang, Xiaosong Wang, Zijue Wang, Wenbo Wang, M-J Wang, Yu Wang, Yingping Wang, Zhengbing Wang, G Q Wang, Mengjing Wang, Zhendong Wang, Kailu Wang, Jinfeng Wang, Zhiguo Wang, Yusha Wang, Jianmei Wang, Kun Wang, Lihong Wang, Haoxin Wang, Haowei Wang, Ziqing Wang, Aihua Wang, Yuanyong Wang, Sanwang Wang, Doudou Wang, Hao-Yu Wang, Peirong Wang, Wenting Wang, Yibing Wang, He Wang, Jia-Peng Wang, Shixin Wang, En-bo Wang, Dong-Dong Wang, Hualing Wang, Hongyan Wang, Shaoying Wang, Yingjie Wang, Tianqing Wang, Guo-Hua Wang, Yongfei Wang, Lijing Wang, Hongli Wang, Zixian Wang, Niansong Wang, Liangxu Wang, Xinrong Wang, X-T Wang, Zhenning Wang, Dake Wang, Yu-Ting Wang, Zonggui Wang, Daping Wang, Joy Wang, Chenji Wang, Jingmin Wang, Yuyin Wang, Jin-Cheng Wang, Jiangbo Wang, Huiyang Wang, Chi Chiu Wang, He-Cheng Wang, Zhongjing Wang, Weina Wang, Qiaohong Wang, Qintao Wang, Jenny Y Wang, Zheyi Wang, Robert Yl Wang, Zhaotong Wang, Ya Wang, Fangyu Wang, Haobin Wang, Tianyuan Wang, Xinrui Wang, Zhehao Wang, Yihan Wang, Chuan-Jiang Wang, Jianjun Wang, Yongfeng Wang, Gaofu Wang, Ying-Piao Wang, Jingwei Wang, Mengjiao Wang, Chuyao Wang, Yanping Wang, Xinchun Wang, Shu Wang, Guibin Wang, Hong-Ying Wang, Linping Wang, Yugang Wang, Xinru Wang, Fengyun Wang, Heyong Wang, Ziping Wang, Yuegang Wang, Xiangyu Wang, Haoran Wang, Xiaomei Wang, Fang Wang, Lina Wang, Guowen Wang, Liyun Wang, Qingshui Wang, Baoyun Wang, Li-Juan Wang, Tongsong Wang, Jingyun Wang, Huiguo Wang, Zhibo Wang, Lou-Pin Wang, Renjun Wang, Huiting Wang, Junfeng Wang, Zihan Wang, Linhua Wang, Zhiji Wang, Fubao Wang, Eunice S Wang, Xiaojuan Wang, Yuewei Wang, Shuang Wang, Ruey-Yun Wang, Xiaoling Wang, Weihua Wang, Yanggan Wang, Jia Wang, Chaoqun Wang, Xiao-liang Wang, Manli Wang, Yongkang Wang, Huiwen Wang, Ting Chen Wang, Yixian Wang, Xinlin Wang, Shuya Wang, Bochu Wang, Kehao Wang, Sasa Wang, Mengshi Wang, Qiu-Ling Wang, Chengshuo Wang, Mengru Wang, Yiwei Wang, Xueyun Wang, Yijun Wang, Haomin Wang, Meng C Wang, Mengxiao Wang, Huan-You Wang, Jingheng Wang, Carol A Wang, Benjamin H Wang, Penglong Wang, Pei-Wen Wang, Jian-Long Wang, Wang Wang, Jinhui Wang, Yuanqing Wang, Jacob E Wang, Jian-Xiong Wang, Wenyu Wang, Chengze Wang, Hongmei Wang, Fengqiang Wang, Zijun Wang, Shaochun Wang, Qinwen Wang, Ruicheng Wang, Aixian Wang, Yanling Wang, Lu-Lu Wang, Linyuan Wang, Yeming Wang, Ye Wang, Tian-Yi Wang, Zhichao Wang, Dangfeng Wang, Jiucun Wang, Guo-Liang Wang, Guandi Wang, Zhuo-Xin Wang, Aili Wang, Fengliang Wang, Yingzi Wang, Lirong Wang, Xuekai Wang, Wei-En Wang, Jing-Xian Wang, Hesuiyuan Wang, Yuexin Wang, Suzhen Wang, Luping Wang, Xiuyu Wang, Zicheng Wang, Jiliang Wang, Rikang Wang, Xue Wang, Shudan Wang, Chun Wang, Hongxin Wang, Chenglong Wang, Junxiao Wang, Zhiqing Wang, Shawn Wang, Shunran Wang, Tiantian Wang, Youhua Wang, Xiao-Hui Wang, Qing-Yan Wang, Hanying Wang, Qiuping Wang, Yongzhong Wang, Jin-Xia Wang, Xiao-Tong Wang, Shun Wang, Xiaoqun Wang, Ching-Jen Wang, Xin Wang, Hanbin Wang, Yingwen Wang, Jia Bei Wang, Xiaodan Wang, Wenhan Wang, Jia-Yu Wang, Xiaozhi Wang, Xinkun Wang, Jinhao Wang, KeShan Wang, Shengdong Wang, Jinzhu Wang, Lihui Wang, Bicheng Wang, Chao-Jun Wang, Shaoyi Wang, Yajing Wang, Qing-Bin Wang, Feiyan Wang, Geng Wang, Chen Wang, Zhimin Wang, Cenxuan Wang, Wenjun Wang, Chuan-Chao Wang, Zexin Wang, Shu-Huei Wang, Yonggang Wang, Zhaoyu Wang, Xiaochuan Wang, Chuan-Hui Wang, Junshuang Wang, X F Wang, Li-Ting Wang, Chenxin Wang, Qiao-Ping Wang, Jingqi Wang, Xiongjun Wang, Shuang-Shuang Wang, Xu Wang, Houchun Wang, Yaodong Wang, Lujuan Wang, Jilin Wang, Peichang Wang, Keyun Wang, Ruixuan Wang, Zhangying Wang, Lianyong Wang, Dongyu Wang, Xinghui Wang, Binghan Wang, Guanduo Wang, Xian-e Wang, Guimin Wang, Xiaomeng Wang, Yuh-Hwa Wang, Jinru Wang, Mingyu Wang, Binbin Wang, Chaokui Wang, Linhui Wang, Youzhi Wang, Zhenqian Wang, Jialiang Wang, Sufang Wang, Haiyan Wang, Yankun Wang, Yingbo Wang, Zilong Wang, Xiao-Qun Wang, Lin-Fa Wang, Wenhao Wang, P Wang, Rui-Hong Wang, Xiao-jian WANG, Pei Chang Wang, Zhengkun Wang, Vivian Wang, Ying Wang, Zihuan Wang, Peiwen Wang, Chao Wang, Da-Zhi Wang, He-Tong Wang, Mofei Wang, Zezhou Wang, Liyong Wang, Bruce Wang, Hao-Tian Wang, Jin-Juan Wang, Yucheng Wang, Yong-Gang Wang, Saili Wang, Xiuwen Wang, Ruiquan Wang, Xinmei Wang, Zhezhi Wang, Xiao-Jie Wang, H Y Wang, Li-Dong Wang, Duanyang Wang, Kaiting Wang, Yikang Wang, Yichen Wang, Ting-Chen Wang, Meixia Wang, ZhenXue Wang, Juan Wang, Shouling Wang, Lan Wang, Li Chun Wang, Xingxin Wang, Ruibing Wang, Xue-Ying Wang, Bi-Dar Wang, Jiayang Wang, Suxia Wang, Yumin Wang, Qing Jun Wang, Xinbo Wang, Youli Wang, Yi-Ni Wang, Xinran Wang, Lixian Wang, Kan Wang, Ruiming Wang, Qing-Yuan Wang, Kai-Kun Wang, Yaoxian Wang, Qing-Jin Wang, Junmei Wang, Xin Wei Wang, J P Wang, Xufei Wang, Yuqin Wang, Handong Wang, Li-San Wang, Guoling Wang, Wenrui Wang, Zhongwei Wang, Shi-Han Wang, Ruoxi Wang, Huiping Wang, Mu Wang, Weihong Wang, Minzhou Wang, Yakun Wang, Da-Cheng Wang, Pengjie Wang, Qihua Wang, Ji-Nuo Wang, Deshou Wang, Xiaowen Wang, Yaochun Wang, Qihao Wang, Ruiying Wang, Tiange Wang, Xi Wang, Yindan Wang, Lixin Wang, Zhaofeng Wang, Guixin Wang, Erming Wang, Haoyu Wang, Kexin Wang, Yiqiao Wang, Qi-Qi Wang, Shuiyun Wang, Xi-Rui Wang, Cai-Hong Wang, Zhizheng Wang, Mingxun Wang, Liangli Wang, Theodore Wang, Alexander Wang, Huayang Wang, Yinyin Wang, Shuzhong Wang, Tingting Wang, Jiao Wang, Wenxian Wang, Jianghua Wang, Furong Wang, Shijun Wang, Le Wang, Guihua Wang, Xiaokun Wang, Xia Wang, Jiabei Wang, Guoying Wang, Zeyuan Wang, Jue Wang, Jin-E Wang, Jingru Wang, Chun-Li Wang, Xiaole Wang, Ermao Wang, Lanlan Wang, Ye-Ran Wang, Hao Wang, Xv Wang, Shikang Wang, Yufei Wang, Siyi Wang, Xiujuan Wang, Qinyun Wang, Xiangwei Wang, Jian-Hong Wang, David Q-H Wang, Chunjuan Wang, Weiyan Wang, Jia-Liang Wang, Yanxing Wang, Sheri Wang, Chenwei Wang, Haoping Wang, Sheng-Quan Wang, Xiangrong Wang, Xiao-Yi Wang, Huan Wang, Zhitao Wang, Xinyan Wang, J Wang, Kaixi Wang, Huihua Wang, Renwei Wang, Xiaoliang Wang, Xiao-Lin Wang, Tian-Lu Wang, Jiou Wang, Weiqin Wang, Jiamin Wang, Dennis Wang, Ji-Yao Wang, Pingping Wang, Jinyang Wang, Chen-Cen Wang, Chien-Wei Wang, Daolong Wang, Rong-Tsorng Wang, Yuwei Wang, Guo-Ping Wang, Zhentang Wang, F Wang, Xueju Wang, Saisai Wang, Zhehai Wang, Y B Wang, Xiao Wang, Guobing Wang, Kangmei Wang, Chunguo Wang, Longcai Wang, Haina Wang, Chih-Hsien Wang, Yuli Wang, Ling-Ling Wang, Zhangshun Wang, Xue-Lian Wang, Jianxin Wang, Da-Yan Wang, Xianghua Wang, Peng Wang, Yu Qin Wang, Zhao-Jun Wang, Rui-Rui Wang, Xingyue Wang, Man Wang, Daozhong Wang, Tian-Li Wang, Luhui Wang, Gaopin Wang, Mengze Wang, Jizheng Wang, Hong-Yan Wang, Dongying Wang, Wenkai Wang, Stephani Wang, Dan-Dan Wang, Yicheng Wang, Yusheng Wang, Junwen Wang, Gao Wang, Ruo-Nan Wang, Yifan Wang, Jueqiong Wang, Xuewei Wang, Jianning Wang, Yonglun Wang, Shiwen Wang, Lifang Wang, Fuyan Wang, Jian-Bin Wang, Chonglong Wang, Haiwei Wang, Yike Wang, Chunxia Wang, Kaijuan Wang, Minglei Wang, Jingxiao Wang, Luting Wang, David Wang, Ben Wang, Ji-zheng Wang, Yuncong Wang, Lei P Wang, Tingye Wang, Wenke Wang, Ping Wang, Min Wang, Qiang-Sheng Wang, Xuejing Wang, Zhanju Wang, Xixi Wang, Xiaodong Wang, Chaomeng Wang, Yanong Wang, Xinghao Wang, Jiaming Wang, Siyuan Wang, Jiu Wang, Ruizhi Wang, Qing Mei Wang, Wenyi Wang, Yiqing Wang, Cai Ren Wang, Lianchun Wang, Xing-Ping Wang, Xiaoman Wang, Yanjin Wang, Xueqin Wang, Chenliang Wang, Zhenshan Wang, Junhong Wang, Guiping Wang, Xianrong Wang, Xumeng Wang, Dajia Wang, Huang Wang, Huie Wang, Weiwen Wang, Ruiwen Wang, Qing Wang, Haohao Wang, Bao-Long Wang, P Jeremy Wang, Chengqiang Wang, Suli Wang, Lingyan Wang, Chi Wang, Meng Wang, Luwen Wang, Quan Wang, Yan-Jun Wang, Sen Wang, Ruining Wang, Xiaozhen Wang, Zhiping Wang, Xue-Yao Wang, Yuming Wang, Jingjing Wang, Jiazheng Wang, Yunong Wang, Chongze Wang, Rufang Wang, Qiuning Wang, Tiannan Wang, Liqing Wang, Wencheng Wang, Xuefeng Wang, Yongli Wang, Xinwen Wang, Runzhi Wang, Chaojie Wang, Wentao Wang, Zhifeng Wang, Yanan Wang, Mengqi Wang, Limin Wang, Donglin Wang, Shujin Wang, Chengbin Wang, Qiu-Xia Wang, Zhengxuan Wang, Yancun Wang, Yuhuan Wang, Wei Wang, G-W Wang, Bangmao Wang, Kejia Wang, Jinjin Wang, Qifei Wang, Guobin Wang, Chun-Lin Wang, Jing-Shi Wang, Jiheng Wang, Huajing Wang, Yanlin Wang, Chuansheng Wang, Cailian Wang, Beilan Wang, Luofu Wang, Yangpeng Wang, Jieqi Wang, Weilin Wang, Xiaoxuan Wang, Yangyufan Wang, Xiao-Fei Wang, Chen-Ma Wang, Yun Yong Wang, Shizhi Wang, B Wang, Yuling Wang, Yi-Yi Wang, Fanwen Wang, Aiyun Wang, Jian Wang, Chengyu Wang, Jing-Huan Wang, Ning Wang, Yichuan Wang, L F Wang, Chau-Jong Wang, Xin-Yang Wang, Yunzhe Wang, Xuewen Wang, Sheng-Ping Wang, Bi Wang, Qiuting Wang, Yan-Jiang Wang, Dongshi Wang, Yingna Wang, Jingyue Wang, Hongshan Wang, Chunjiong Wang, Hong-Yang Wang, Yingmei Wang, Danfeng Wang, Zhongyi Wang, Teng Wang, Chih-Hao Wang, Mingchao Wang, Yi-Chuan Wang, Chuning Wang, Shihao Wang, Ming-Wei Wang, Menglu Wang, Zhulun Wang, Wuji Wang, Dao-Xin Wang, Han Wang, Jincheng Wang, Thomas T Y Wang, Qingyun Wang, Guoliang Wang, Jihong Wang, Hong-Qin Wang, G Wang, Hsei-Wei Wang, Linfang Wang, Xiao Ling Wang, Ganyu Wang, Zhengdong Wang, Cuizhe Wang, Hongyu Wang, Tieqiao Wang, Lijuan Wang, Jingchun Wang, Youzhao Wang, Zijian Wang, Ziheng Wang, Xingyu Wang, Shuning Wang, Shaokun Wang, Zhifu Wang, Xinqi Wang, Jinqiu Wang, ZhongXia Wang, Yanyun Wang, Dadong Wang, Xingjie Wang, Yiting Wang, Zhongli Wang, Junyu Wang, Jianding Wang, Meng-Wei Wang, Yingge Wang, Zhenchang Wang, Qun Wang, Jin-Xing Wang, Lijun Wang, Shuqing Wang, Fu-Yan Wang, Sheng-Nan Wang, Feijie Wang, Qiuyan Wang, Ying-Wei Wang, Shitao Wang, Meng-hong Wang, Zhengyang Wang, Jinghong Wang, Zhiying Wang, Pei Wang, Weixue Wang, Shiyue Wang, Xiaohong Wang, Daiwei Wang, Jinghua Wang, S X Wang, Jian-Yong Wang, Zeying Wang, Can Wang, Kehan Wang, Yunzhang Wang, Jinping Wang, Chenchen Wang, Chun-Ting Wang, Yujiao Wang, Xinxin Wang, Ji Wang, Sui Wang, Wenqiang Wang, Yingwei Wang, Shuzhen Wang, Daixi Wang, Yanming Wang, Lin-Yu Wang, Hongyin Wang, Zhongqun Wang, Er-Jin Wang, Yi Wang, Ziyi Wang, Lianghai Wang, Zhendan Wang, Xiao-Ming Wang, Chengyan Wang, Hui Miao Wang, Jingyi Wang, Ranran Wang, Banghui Wang, Huilun Wang, Ai-Ting Wang, Wenxuan Wang, Yuan-Hung Wang, Zixuan Wang, Hailing Wang, Xuan-Ying Wang, Jiqiu Wang, Yalong Wang, Xiaogang Wang, Shu-qiang Wang, Yun-Jin Wang, Zijie Wang, Tianlin Wang, Mingqiang Wang, Lufang Wang, Jin'e Wang, Xiru Wang, Cuili Wang, GuoYou Wang, Zhizhong Wang, Haifei Wang, Guorong Wang, Xinyue Wang, Pei-Juan Wang, Jiangong Wang, Yingte Wang, Huajin Wang, Ruibo Wang, Kejian Wang, Cheng-Cheng Wang, Xusheng Wang, Shu-Na Wang, Panliang Wang, Mingxi Wang, Shenqi Wang, Zifeng Wang, Chaozhan Wang, Xiuyuan Hugh Wang, Yuping Wang, Xujing Wang, Kai Wang, Hongbing Wang, Sheng-Yang Wang, Jianfei Wang, Hang Wang, Jing-Jing Wang, Weizhi Wang, Jixuan Wang, De-He Wang, P L Wang, Ningjian Wang, Chunyi Wang, Isabel Z Wang, Yong Wang, Yiming Wang, Mingzhi Wang, Jiying Wang, Qian-Wen Wang, Shusen Wang, Xiaoting Wang, Baogui Wang, Mingsong Wang, Zixia Wang, Demin Wang, Shiyuan Wang, Qiuli Wang, C Wang, Dongliang Wang, Weixiao Wang, Yinsheng Wang, Chunmei Wang, Huaili Wang, Xuelian Wang, Yongjun Wang, Zhi-Qin Wang, Jiaying Wang, Yulong Wang, Ren Wang, Jingnan Wang, Qishan Wang, Zeneng Wang, Guangsuo Wang, Chijia Wang, Huiqun Wang, Hongcai Wang, Donghao Wang, Xing-Jin Wang, Zongji Wang, Shenao Wang, Jiaqian Wang, Xiaoying Wang, Yilin Wang, Hangzhou Wang, Wenchao Wang, Jieyu Wang, Li-E Wang, Xuezhen Wang, Liuyang Wang, Zhiqian Wang, Fang-Tao Wang, Qiong Wang, Meng-Meng Wang, Youji Wang, Jiafeng Wang, Xiaojing Wang, William Wang, Junmin Wang, Laijian Wang, Xuexiang Wang, Huiyan Wang, T Y Wang, Zhaofu Wang, Wen-mei Wang, Yalin Wang, Xinshuai Wang, Daqi Wang, Zhen Wang, Shi-Cheng Wang, Anni Wang, Chunhong Wang, Hai-Long Wang, Pan Wang, Charles C N Wang, Pengxiang Wang, Xianzong Wang, Xike Wang, Qianliang Wang, Chunyan Wang, Xuan Wang, Xiaofen Wang, Zhi-Jian Wang, Feng-Sheng Wang, Xiangru Wang, R Wang, Yi-Shu Wang, Jia-Lin Wang, Yonghong Wang, Lintao Wang, Pai Wang, Yanfei Wang, Xuanwen Wang, Lei-Lei Wang, Chenxuan Wang, James Wang, Xinhui Wang, Shengqi Wang, Yueshen Wang, Shan-Shan Wang, Dingting Wang, Zhige Wang, Jingfeng Wang, Yongqing Wang, Chenyang Wang, Ziliang Wang, Bao Wang, Xueyan Wang, Liping Wang, Xingde Wang, Weijun Wang, Sibo Wang, Yaoling Wang, Donghong Wang, Chenyu Wang, Justin Wang, Baolong Wang, Yiqi Wang, Fengyong Wang, Lichao Wang, Yachen Wang, Quanren Wang, Shiyu Wang, Boyu Wang, Aimin Wang, Zhenghui Wang, Hengjiao Wang, Xiaoxin X Wang, Weimin Wang, Mutian Wang, Zhuo-Hui Wang, Xingye Wang, Zou Wang, Yu-Wen Wang, Shaoli Wang, Xin-Ming Wang, Weirong Wang, Kangli Wang, Yaoxing Wang, Xuejie Wang, Qifeng Wang, Xiaoxin Wang, Yinghui Wang, Jianzhang Wang, Tom J Wang, Yaqiong Wang, Zongwei Wang, Yun-Hui Wang, Haiyun Wang, Zhiyou Wang, Lijin Wang, Jifei Wang, Haiyong Wang, Shyi-Gang P Wang, Chih-Yang Wang, Zhixin Wang, Jun-Jun Wang, Tianjing Wang, Zhixia Wang, Chuanhai Wang, Zhijie Wang, Silu Wang, Jianguo Wang, Ming-Hsi Wang, Liling Wang, Yanting Wang, Haolong Wang, Xue-Lei Wang, Ru Wang, Qinglin Wang, Christina Wang, Mimi Wang, Menghui Wang, Wenju Wang, Junhua Wang, S S Wang, Fangyong Wang, Lifen Wang, Zhenbin Wang, Yapeng Wang, Shaoshen Wang, B R Wang, Sugai Wang, Hequn Wang, Songlin Wang, Wenjie Wang, Xiang-Dong Wang, Ting-Hua Wang, Mingliang Wang, Chengniu Wang, Guoxiang Wang, E Wang, Xiaochun Wang, Xueting Wang, Ming-Jie Wang, Zhaojing Wang, Dongxu Wang, Yirui Wang, Jiatao Wang, Jing-Min Wang, Shih-Wei Wang, Zhengchun Wang, Chaoxian Wang, Zehua Wang, Qiyu Wang, Shuye Wang, Baojun Wang, Qing Kenneth Wang, Xichun Wang, Jianliu Wang, Junping Wang, Yudong Wang, Mingzhu Wang, Kangning Wang, Wei-Ting Wang, Hongfang Wang, Chengwen Wang, Changduo Wang, Jinkang Wang, Junya Wang, Fengge Wang, Jianping Wang, Chang Wang, Zhifang Wang, Deli Wang, Linghua Wang, Shitian Wang, Lingling Wang, Zhihua Wang, Jun-Ling Wang, Keyi Wang, Lingbing Wang, Peijia Wang, Ruizhe Wang, X O Wang, Wanyi Wang, Ganggang Wang, Pei-Hua Wang, Kaiyue Wang, Xiaojiao Wang, Xun Wang, Shiyang Wang, Ya-Ping Wang, Yirong Wang, Lixing Wang, Danyang Wang, Xiaotang Wang, Taian Wang, Ming Wang, Xiangcheng Wang, Xuemei Wang, Zhixiong Wang, Mengying Wang, Li-Yong Wang, Xinchao Wang, Jianlong Wang, Jinjie Wang, Nan Wang, Weidong Wang, Mei-Gui Wang, L-S Wang, Wuqing Wang, Z Wang, Ya-Zhou Wang, Xincheng Wang, Jing-Wen Wang, Jinyue Wang, Hongyun Wang, Huaizhi Wang, Yan-Zi Wang, Danling Wang, Dongqin Wang, Hongzhuang Wang, Chung-Teng Wang, Yan-Chun Wang, Shi-Xin Wang, Muxuan Wang, Yujie Wang, Yunbing Wang, Yahui Wang, Zhihong Wang, Xiaoshan Wang, Tienju Wang, Chiou-Miin Wang, Yuqian Wang, Shengyuan Wang, Yumei Wang, Ningyuan Wang, Minjie Wang, Zhenda Wang, Qing-Dong Wang, Horng-Dar Wang, Siqi Wang, Kaihong Wang, Hong-Kai Wang, Meiling Wang, Jiaxing Wang, Xueyi Wang, Zhuozhong Wang, Anlai Wang, Julie Wang, Jin-Bao Wang, Keke Wang, Zhang Wang, Yintao Wang, Yong-Bo Wang, Bing Wang, Dalu Wang, Minxian Wang, Zulong Wang, Gao T Wang, Gang Wang, Sophie H Wang, Xinquan Wang, Yi-Ting Wang, Honglian Wang, Ruyue Wang, Jia-Qiang Wang, Seungwon Wang, Shusheng Wang, Yanbin Wang, Chang-Yun Wang, Le-Xin Wang, Juling Wang, Haohui Wang, Chuanyue Wang, Tianqin Wang, Danqing Wang, Keyan Wang, Yeou-Lih Wang, Qinglu Wang, Sun Wang, Rui-Min Wang, Yong-Tang Wang, Xianwei Wang, Lixia Wang, Tong Wang, Xiaonan Wang, Feida Wang, Jiaxuan Wang, Mingrui Wang, Zixiang Wang, Y Z Wang, Yuliang Wang, Ming-Chih Wang, J J Wang, Huina Wang, Jingang Wang, Jinyun Wang, Min-sheng Wang, Wanyao Wang, Ziqiu Wang, Guo-Quan Wang, Xueping Wang, Qixue Wang, Hechuan Wang, Shang Wang, Chaohan Wang, M H Wang, L Z Wang, Jianhui Wang, Xifeng Wang, Xiaorong Wang, Yinong Wang, Zhixiu Wang, Jiaxi Wang, Jiahui Wang, Xiaofei Wang, Feifei Wang, Kesheng Wang, Rong-Chun Wang, Zhi-Xin Wang, Chaoyu Wang, Yongkuan Wang, Zuoyan Wang, Hsueh-Chun Wang, Xixiang Wang, Guanrou Wang, Songsong Wang, Hongyuan Wang, Yubing Wang, Xuliang Wang, Wen-Ying Wang, Xinglei Wang, Dao-Wen Wang, Yun Wang, Ze Wang, Jiyan Wang, Zai Wang, Guan Wang, Chih-Chun Wang, Yiqin Wang, X S Wang, Hongzhan Wang, Exing Wang, Shu-Jin Wang, Shangyu Wang, Shouzhi Wang, Yunduan Wang, Jiyong Wang, Dongdong Wang, Qingzhong Wang, Zi-Qi Wang, Renyuan Wang, Siyu Wang, Donghui Wang, Ming-Yuan Wang, Juxiang Wang, Muxiao Wang, Fu Wang, Fei Wang, Qiuyu Wang, Ertao Wang, Zhi Xiao Wang, Zunxian Wang, Hui-Nan Wang, Rongping Wang, Won-Jing Wang, Leiming Wang, Pu Wang, Shen-Nien Wang, Xiaona Wang, Meng-Ying Wang, Wen-Jie Wang, Jiaxin Wang, RuNan Wang, Jiemei Wang, Ningli Wang, Zhong-Hui Wang, Hong Wang, Hui-Yu Wang, Ziqian Wang, Xinzhou Wang, Zhoufeng Wang, Weiguang Wang, Zusen Wang, Jiajia Wang, Bin Wang, Shu-Xia Wang, Yu'e Wang, Laidi Wang, Xiao-Li Wang, Lu Wang, Zhugang Wang, Maojie Wang, Ganglin Wang, Xinyu Wang, Junlin Wang, Dong Wang, Yao Wang, Ya-Jie Wang, Zhiwu Wang, DongWei Wang, Hongdan Wang, Yanxia Wang, Maiqiu Wang, Guansong Wang, Qingtong Wang, Yingcheng Wang, Wenjuan Wang, Liying Wang, Xiaolong Wang, Weihao Wang, Qiushi Wang, Yingfei Wang, Haoyang Wang, Li-Li Wang, Yanbing Wang, Yingchun Wang, Guangming Wang, Kaiyuan Wang, Shiqi Wang, Qi-En Wang, Song Wang, Jing-Hao Wang, Lynn Yuning Wang, Zekun Wang, Rui-Ping Wang, Yining E Wang, Yuzhou Wang, Liu Wang, Maochun Wang, Cindy Wang, Qian-Liang Wang, Duo-Ping Wang, Linlin Wang, Taishu Wang, Xiang Wang, Qirui Wang, Baoming Wang, Liting Wang, Jiapan Wang, Lingda Wang, Xietong Wang, Jia-Mei Wang, Liwei Wang, Shaozheng Wang, Q Wang, Timothy C Wang, Mengyue Wang, Xing Wang, Yahong Wang, Yuyong Wang, Yujiong Wang, Guangliang Wang, Ya-Qin Wang, Yezhou Wang, Hongjian Wang, Su-Hua Wang, Qian-fei Wang, Meng-Dan Wang, Yuchen Wang, Hongpin Wang, Pengfei Wang, Ge Wang, Meijun Wang, Yan-Ming Wang, Haichao Wang, Tzung-Dau Wang, Runci Wang, Yan-Yi Wang, Cheng-Jie Wang, Chen-Yu Wang, Cong Wang, Yaxuan Wang, Y H Wang, Yongjie Wang, Yuntai Wang, Ranjing Wang, Yiru Wang, Anxiang Wang, Q Z Wang, Shimiao Wang, Guoping Wang, Junke Wang, Xingyun Wang, Zhengyi Wang, Shi-Qi Wang, Yanfeng Wang, Danxin Wang, Chaodong Wang, Zhiqi Wang, Chunyu Wang, Lijia Wang, Chunlong Wang, Haiping Wang, Qingfa Wang, Yu-Fan Wang, Baihan Wang, Chunxue Wang, Liewei Wang, Xinyi Wang, Fu-Zhen Wang, Qing-Mei Wang, Sheng Wang, Yi-Tao Wang, Dawei Wang, Xiaoyu Wang, Ziling Wang, Zhonglin Wang, Rurong Wang, Qingchun Wang, Qiang Wang, Suiyan Wang, Xu-Hong Wang, Jie Jin Wang, Chenyao Wang, Fei-Yan Wang, Shi Wang, Zhiyong Wang, Jieda Wang, Xiaoqi Wang, Linshu Wang, Ruxuan Wang, Qian Wang, Qianxu Wang, Fangjie Wang, Zhaoxia Wang, Jeremy R Wang, Mingmei Wang, Jingkang Wang, Jen-Chun Wang, Changyuan Wang, Chenglin Wang, Meng-Ru Wang, Tianpeng Wang, Zhongfang Wang, Xuedong Wang, Zhuoying Wang, Bingyu Wang, Xuelai Wang, Weilong Wang, Mengge Wang, Qin Wang, Da-Li Wang, Xuanyi Wang, Hongjuan Wang, Zhi-Hua Wang, Hong-Wei Wang, Yulai Wang, Gongming Wang, Yongni Wang, Mengya Wang, Yadong Wang, Chenghao Wang, Hongbo Wang, Kaiming Wang, Haonan Wang, Guanyun Wang, Yilu Wang, Quanxi Wang, Weiyuan Wang, Xiujun Wang, Liang-Yan Wang, Jianshe Wang, Yingxiong Wang, Cunchuan Wang, Jing-Zhai Wang, Yuelong Wang, Yuqi Wang, Xiaorui Wang, Qianjin Wang, Huijun Wang, Xiaobo Wang, Guoqian Wang, Luhong Wang, Kaining Wang, Chaohui Wang, Yanhong Wang, J-Y Wang, Qi-Bing Wang, Xiaohu Wang, Jiayan Wang, Cui-Shan Wang, Lulu Wang, Yong-Jie Wang, Shixuan Wang, Yuanyuan Wang, Jianying Wang, Haizhen Wang, Shuiliang Wang, Qianbao Wang, Jung-Pan Wang, Rixiang Wang, A Wang, Hanbing Wang, Caiqin Wang, Peigeng Wang, Yuan Wang, Yuzhuo Wang, Yubo Wang, Xianding Wang, Qiaoqi Wang, Cuiling Wang, Ai-Ling Wang, Hailong Wang, Yihao Wang, Lan-Wan Wang, Haihe Wang, S Wang, Sha Wang, Xiaoli Wang, David Q H Wang, Jianfang Wang, Yuting Wang, Jinhuan Wang, Kaixu Wang, Hongwei Wang, Yi-Wen Wang, Yizhe Wang, Shengyu Wang, Yanmei Wang, Huimin Wang, Youjie Wang, Kunhua Wang, Chongjian Wang, Ziyun Wang, Tianhui Wang, Huiying Wang, Yue-Nan Wang, Peiyin Wang, Hongbin Wang, Hong Yi Wang, Xinjun Wang, Yian Wang, Liyi Wang, Yunce Wang, Yi-Xuan Wang, Yitao Wang, Jiali Wang, Junqin Wang, Yuebing Wang, Yiping Wang, Yunpeng Wang, Yuxing Wang, Shuqi Wang, Ziyu Wang, Hongjie Wang, Xiaoyan Wang, Lianshui Wang, Xiaolu Wang, Wenya Wang, Fan Wang, Jinhua Wang, Sidan Wang, Lixiang Wang, Y L Wang, Xue-Rui Wang, Kai-Wen Wang, Zhongyu Wang, Xiaoyang Wang, Hongyang Wang, Rencheng Wang, Yinxiong Wang, Yuanli Wang, Zhuqing Wang, Y-H Wang, Yuhui Wang, Xitian Wang, Weizhen Wang, Qi Wang, Qiyuan Wang, Changlong Wang, Yatao Wang, Tengfei Wang, Yehan Wang
articles
Na Li, Keying Chen, Bin Nie +14 more · 2026 · Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Depression has emerged as a concerning factor in colon cancer progression and treatment, yet its underlying mechanisms and therapeutic targets remain poorly defined. This study aimed to elucidate how Show more
Depression has emerged as a concerning factor in colon cancer progression and treatment, yet its underlying mechanisms and therapeutic targets remain poorly defined. This study aimed to elucidate how depression affects colon cancer progression and chemotherapeutic response, and to explore potential molecular targets and therapeutic interventions involving the traditional Chinese medicine formula Sinisan (SNS) and its bioactive component Quercetin. A mouse model combining depression and colon cancer was established to evaluate behavioral alterations, tumor progression, and pathological features. RNA sequencing was performed to screen the differentially expressed genes. The effects of corticosterone (CORT) on proliferation, colony formation, migration, and GSTM2 expression were examined in HCT116 cells, followed by functional validation through GSTM2 overexpression and inhibition assays. Molecular docking, molecular dynamics simulations, and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) were used to validate the binding of Quercetin to GSTM2. The therapeutic efficacy of SNS and Quercetin was assessed with respect to depressive symptoms, serum BDNF levels, NLRP3 inflammasome activity, and the potency of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) chemotherapy. Mice with depression and colon cancer exhibited aggravated depressive behaviors and accelerated tumor progression. RNA-sequencing and network pharmacology analyses identified GSTM2 as a promising candidate target in colon cancer treatment, which was markedly down-regulated in the DP-CC group. CORT enhanced proliferation, colony formation, and migration of HCT116 cells while simultaneously suppressing GSTM2 expression. Conversely, GSTM2 levels negatively correlated with cell proliferation, colony formation, and chemoresistance in HCT116 cells. Treatment with SNS alleviated depressive symptoms, elevated serum BDNF, reduced NLRP3 inflammasome activity, and potentiated the efficacy of 5-FU chemotherapy. Quercetin, a bioactive component of SNS, bound to GSTM2 through hydrogen-bond and van-der-Waals interactions, up-regulated GSTM2 expression, and mitigated CORT-induced proliferation, colony formation, and chemoresistance. Our findings suggest that depression promotes colon-cancer progression by down-regulating GSTM2, whereas SNS restores GSTM2 expression and enhances chemotherapeutic response. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2026.158113
BDNF cancer progression chemoresistance chemotherapy colon cancer depression gst
Xucong Huang, Shikai Yan, Fugen Li +7 more · 2026 · Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Anshen Bunao Syrup (ABS), a traditional Chinese medicinal formula, is widely used to treat neurological disorders such as insomnia, dizziness, and neurasthenia. However, its antidepressant effect and Show more
Anshen Bunao Syrup (ABS), a traditional Chinese medicinal formula, is widely used to treat neurological disorders such as insomnia, dizziness, and neurasthenia. However, its antidepressant effect and underlying mechanisms remain insufficiently characterized. This study aims to comprehensively evaluate the antidepressant effect of ABS in a rat model, and to elucidate the underlying mechanism. Chronic unpredictable mild stress (CUMS) induced depressive rats were used to evaluate the antidepressant effect of ABS. Histopathological alterations in the hippocampus and colonic mucosa were examined using Nissl and H&E staining. Microglial activation was evaluated by Iba-1 immunohistochemical staining. Gut microbiota composition and metabolic profiles were analyzed using 16S rRNA sequencing and untargeted metabolomics. Differential gene expression and pathway regulation were investigated by transcriptomics and confirmed by Western Blot (WB). ABS significantly ameliorated depressive-like behaviors and elevated dopamine and 5-Hydroxytryptamine levels in cortical regions. Furthermore, ABS mitigated hippocampal neuronal damage, suppressed microglial overactivation and reduced oxidative stress in the cortex. 16S rRNA sequencing analysis showed that ABS exerted antidepressant effects via modulation of the "microbiota-gut-brain" axis, particularly by altering intestinal microbiota composition, enhancing gut function, and suppressing HPA axis hyperactivity. Metabolomics revealed that ABS corrected metabolic disturbances, and alleviated inflammation-related metabolic disturbances, while transcriptomics indicated regulation of the Npas4-BDNF-PI3K/AKT signaling pathway, which was further confirmed by WB. ABS significantly ameliorated depression in a CUMS rat model, primarily through coordinated regulation of gut microbiota, metabolic homeostasis, and the Npas4-BDNF-PI3K/AKT signaling pathway, providing integrative mechanistic insights into its antidepressant effects. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2026.158167
BDNF antidepressant depression metabolomics microbiomics neuroinflammation neuroscience rat model
Fanchang Wang, Yuxin Ni, Xiaoming He · 2026 · Journal of pediatric urology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jpurol.2026.105907
BDNF bdnf biomarkers ngf overactive bladder urinary biomarkers voiding dysfunction
Huaibing Wang, Hongxia Tao, Minlan Yuan +1 more · 2026 · Frontiers in psychiatry · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Depression is increasingly recognized as a disorder involving immune brain interactions beyond classical monoaminergic dysfunction. Among immune components, T cells have emerged as key regulators link Show more
Depression is increasingly recognized as a disorder involving immune brain interactions beyond classical monoaminergic dysfunction. Among immune components, T cells have emerged as key regulators linking peripheral immune dysregulation to central neuroinflammation and impaired neuroplasticity. Accumulating clinical and preclinical evidence indicates that alterations in T cell subsets, including regulatory T cells, Th1 cells, and Th17 cells, contribute to depressive pathophysiology through coordinated effects on blood-brain barrier permeability, glial activation, cytokine signaling, and neurotrophic support. This review synthesizes current evidence on the mechanisms by which T cells migrate into the central nervous system and modulate depressive behaviors. Particular emphasis is placed on the T cell regulation of brain derived neurotrophic factor signaling, and a role for T cell derived extracellular vesicles as modulators of immune neural communication and neuroplasticity. Finally, we discuss the therapeutic implications of targeting T cells in depression, including modulation of T cell subset balance, cytokine-based interventions, microbiota immune regulation, and inhibition of pathogenic T cell trafficking into the brain. Together, these findings position T cells as central orchestrators of immune neural crosstalk and promising targets for mechanism informed immunotherapies in depression. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1780383
BDNF
Jilin Wang, Huamao Zhou · 2026 · Neuropeptides · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Diabetic neuropathic pain (DNP) is a common and debilitating complication of diabetes that profoundly reduces patient quality of life. Despite extensive research, current treatments remain largely sym Show more
Diabetic neuropathic pain (DNP) is a common and debilitating complication of diabetes that profoundly reduces patient quality of life. Despite extensive research, current treatments remain largely symptomatic, with limited efficacy and significant side effects. Microglia act as pivotal mediators of DNP through RAGE/TLR4/NLRP3-driven IL-1β and BDNF release that amplifies spinal pain signaling. Microglia respond directly to hyperglycemia-induced cues such as advanced glycation end-products, reactive oxygen species, ATP, and pro-inflammatory signals, becoming activated and releasing cytokines, chemokines, and neuromodulators including BDNF that amplify spinal pain signaling. This review synthesizes recent insights into the molecular triggers of microglial activation such as RAGE, TLRs, purinergic receptors, and inflammasomes and the downstream intracellular pathways including NF-κB, MAPK, PI3K/Akt, and BDNF-TrkB that drive neuroinflammation. We further examine neuroimmune crosstalk, including bidirectional microglia-neuron and microglia-astrocyte signaling, which sustains central sensitization. Translational studies linking these pathways to human DNP are evaluated, along with novel technologies that illuminate microglial phenotypes. Emerging therapeutic strategies focus on inhibition of these pathways, including RAGE antagonists and purinergic receptor blockers. However, a critical translational gap persists owing to insufficient human validation of microglial biomarkers and the limited fidelity of current animal models. By integrating basic and clinical findings, we underscore the promise of microglia-focused interventions to complement traditional analgesics and ultimately improve outcomes in DNP patients. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.npep.2026.102612
BDNF diabetes diabetic neuropathic pain hyperglycemia inflammation microglial activation neuroimmune crosstalk neuropathy
Xinyi Fang, Chi Liao, Jiamin Wan +6 more · 2026 · International journal of biological sciences · added 2026-04-24
Orthodontic tooth movement (OTM) is a biomechanically driven process governed by dynamic cellular and molecular signaling interactions between neural and skeletal systems. This review synthesizes curr Show more
Orthodontic tooth movement (OTM) is a biomechanically driven process governed by dynamic cellular and molecular signaling interactions between neural and skeletal systems. This review synthesizes current evidence on neuron-bone cell crosstalk and the coordinated involvement of immune and vascular components in regulating alveolar bone remodeling during OTM. Key neural contributors include sensory neurons (nociceptors), autonomic neurons, central nervous system (CNS) circuits, and Schwann cells, which communicate with osteoblasts, osteoclasts, and periodontal ligament cells to modulate their proliferation, differentiation, and functional activity. These interactions are mediated by defined signaling pathways, including neuropeptide signaling (CGRP-CLR, SP-NK1, NGF-TrkA, BDNF-TrkB), axon guidance signaling (Sema3A-PlexinA/Nrp1), adrenergic signaling (β2-AR-dependent pathways), and intracellular cascades such as Rac1-β-catenin, RhoA/ROCK2, and Notch3. Sensory nerves function as primary initiators by releasing neuropeptides that promote osteoclastogenesis in pressure zones and osteogenesis in tension zones, while simultaneously shaping local immune responses and vascular remodeling. The autonomic nervous system exerts context-dependent regulation, with sympathetic signaling favoring bone resorption and parasympathetic pathways emerging as modulators of osteogenesis and neurovascular homeostasis. CNS circuits integrate sensory and autonomic inputs to coordinate OTM kinetics and pain perception. Together, these neuro-osteogenic signaling networks define mechanistic targets for improving orthodontic outcomes and pain management via neuromodulation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.129449
BDNF
Leqi Gao, Jiazhao Song, Moze Zhao +7 more · 2026 · Frontiers in neurology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Post-stroke depression (PSD) is a common neuropsychiatric complication affecting 30-50% of stroke survivors, impairing rehabilitation, quality of life, and prognosis. This narrative review synthesizes Show more
Post-stroke depression (PSD) is a common neuropsychiatric complication affecting 30-50% of stroke survivors, impairing rehabilitation, quality of life, and prognosis. This narrative review synthesizes recent evidence on PSD pathogenesis (neurotransmitter dysregulation, neuroinflammation, impaired neuroplasticity; psychosocial factors such as stress and social support deficits; gene-environment interactions including 5-HTT and BDNF polymorphisms), clinical interventions (pharmacotherapy with SSRIs/SNRIs, psychotherapy including CBT, neuromodulation via rTMS/tDCS/ECT, novel agents such as ketamine, and multidisciplinary models), and prevention (risk stratification, early screening with PHQ-9/HAMD, personalized biological/psychosocial strategies, and digital monitoring). Despite gaps in long-term data and validated biomarkers, multidisciplinary integrated care and precision medicine approaches offer promising avenues to optimize screening, early intervention, prevention, and long-term outcomes for stroke survivors. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2026.1789695
BDNF
Xue-Yan Li, Yun-Zhoug Cheng, Yue-Ming Zhang +4 more · 2026 · Brain and behavior · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Gestational intermittent hypoxia (GIH), which serves as a model for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), is associated with adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes, especially cognitive impairments in offspr Show more
Gestational intermittent hypoxia (GIH), which serves as a model for obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), is associated with adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes, especially cognitive impairments in offspring. Growing evidence supports that the anti-inflammatory actions of melatonin significantly influence the peripartum environment and contribute to the mitigation of neurodegeneration. However, the full impact of GIH on offspring cognition and the molecular mechanisms by which melatonin modulates these effects remain uncertain. Thus, in this study, we explored the neurobiological changes in GIH-exposed offspring and the mechanism underlying maternal melatonin supplementation in preventing these alterations using a murine model. C57BL/6J mice were exposed to GIH between gestational Days 15 and 21. Concurrently, dams received either vehicle or melatonin. The Morris water maze test was employed to evaluate offspring cognitive function, after which the offspring were euthanized at 2 months of age. The hippocampal levels of glial markers (ionized calcium-binding adapter molecule 1 [Iba-1], glial fibrillary acidic protein [GFAP]), NOD-like receptor thermal protein domain-associated protein 3 [NLRP3], nuclear factor-kappa B [NF-κB], tight-junction proteins (zonula occludens-1 [ZO-1], occludin), and synaptic plasticity-related proteins (brain-derived neurotrophic factor [BDNF], tropomyosin receptor kinase B [TrkB], postsynaptic density protein 95 [PSD-95], synaptophysin [SYN]) were quantified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and western blot. Maternal melatonin supplementation significantly attenuated learning and memory impairments, reduced the protein levels of Iba-1 and GFAP by suppressing NLRP3/NF-κB signaling, and elevated those of ZO-1, occludin, BDNF, TrkB, PSD-95, and SYN. Additionally, melatonin mitigated inflammatory responses, glial cell activation, blood-brain barrier (BBB) leakage, and synaptic dysfunction induced by GIH in mice. Our results demonstrated that GIH-exposed mice exhibit cognitive deficits, alongside neuroinflammatory responses, leading to inflammasome activation, glial reactivity, BBB breakdown, and synaptic deficits. However, melatonin exerted significant protective effects against these deleterious effects. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/brb3.71321
BDNF blood-brain barrier cognitive impairment gestational intermittent hypoxia melatonin neurodegeneration neuroinflammation obstructive sleep apnea
Yi Wei, Bo Ning, Shengjie Wang +5 more · 2026 · Journal of integrative neuroscience · added 2026-04-24
Premature ejaculation (PE) accompanied by anxiety or depression is a complex clinical condition at the intersection of male reproductive dysfunction and emotional disorders. Increasing evidence sugges Show more
Premature ejaculation (PE) accompanied by anxiety or depression is a complex clinical condition at the intersection of male reproductive dysfunction and emotional disorders. Increasing evidence suggests that serotonin (5-HT) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) play central and interrelated roles in its pathogenesis. In this review we examine the bidirectional functions of 5-HT and BDNF in both the reproductive and nervous systems, highlighting their importance in regulating ejaculation, emotional stability, and synaptic plasticity. A comprehensive literature search (2010-2025) was conducted across multiple databases using relevant Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) terms, including pertinent original research and review articles, to synthesize the roles and regulatory pathways of 5-HT and BDNF in PE with comorbid anxiety or depression. We summarize the shared and distinct roles of 5-HT and BDNF in maintaining physiological balance across these systems and focus on their involvement in the major pathological processes underlying PE with anxiety or depression, including neurotransmitter imbalance, neuroendocrine dysregulation, inflammation, and oxidative stress. Furthermore, we outline the related signaling pathways through which 5-HT and BDNF exert their effects and interact. We also evaluate current pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions targeting these molecules, demonstrating their potential to improve both ejaculatory control and emotional symptoms, and critically appraise selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI)-related risks and highlighted the need for individualized dosing and monitoring. Emerging evidence suggests that Traditional Chinese Medicine formulations can extend intravaginal ejaculatory latency and mitigate mood symptoms and may serve as stand-alone or adjunctive options to reduce reliance on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs). Overall, 5-HT and BDNF are not only deeply involved in the biological mechanisms of PE with comorbid psychological disorders, but also represent promising biomarkers and therapeutic targets, and their integrative neuro-reproductive regulatory functions provide new insights into the diagnosis and treatment of this multifaceted condition. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.31083/JIN45471
5-ht BDNF anxiety bdnf depression neurotrophic factor premature ejaculation serotonin
Tao Xu, Qiang Gan, Handong Wang +2 more · 2026 · Brain and behavior · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Researchers have postulated a link between higher levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and more favorable outcomes in patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). However, there is Show more
Researchers have postulated a link between higher levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and more favorable outcomes in patients with normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH). However, there is no clear evidence regarding the causal association between neurotrophins and NPH. To delve deeper into this potential connection, scientists employed a rigorous method known as bidirectional Mendelian randomization (MR). This technique was utilized to explore the causal impact of various neurotrophins-such as BDNF, nerve growth factor (NGF), neurotrophin-3 (NT-3), NT-4, ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF)-on the development or progression of NPH. To investigate the causal relationship between five neurotrophin subtypes and NPH, we designed a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) study using comprehensive genome-wide association study (GWAS) data. Our primary approach involved the inverse-variance weighted (IVW) method. We also conducted reverse causality analysis to ensure robustness. Furthermore, we implemented complementary methods like the weighted median (WM), weighted mode, and MR-Egger to strengthen our findings. Sensitivity analyses, including MR-Egger, MR-PRESSO, leave-one-out, and Cochran's Q tests, were employed to validate results, explore heterogeneity and pleiotropy, and pinpoint potential biases. MR analysis of genetic prediction showed no statistical association of neurotrophins on NPH. However, a reverse analysis indicated a causal association between NPH and two neurotrophins: CNTF and GDNF. Specifically, individuals with NPH had a lower risk of CNTF (odds ratio: 0.7963, with a 95% confidence interval of 0.6537 to 0.9701, p = 0.0237) and a slightly reduced risk of GDNF (odds ratio: 0.9576, with a 95% confidence interval of 0.9226 to 0.9940, p = 0.0230). MR-Egger regression showed that pleiotropy did not affect the analysis. In addition, MR-PRESSO detected no outliers, and a leave-one-out analysis verified the robustness of the results. NPH was negatively and causally associated with CNTF and GDNF. Additional research is crucial to uncover the underlying mechanisms and devise strategies, including nutritional guidelines, to prevent NPH. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/brb3.71309
BDNF bdnf causal relationship hydrocephalus mendelian randomization neurotrophic factor neurotrophins normal pressure hydrocephalus
Albert H C Wong, Le Wang, Yuan Shen +1 more · 2026 · Neuroscience bulletin · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) causes debilitating nightmares, flashbacks and anxiety stemming from a catastrophic, often life-threatening traumatic event. Originally described in soldiers expo Show more
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) causes debilitating nightmares, flashbacks and anxiety stemming from a catastrophic, often life-threatening traumatic event. Originally described in soldiers exposed to the horrors of battle, PTSD is now recognized in civilian victims of assault, natural disasters and mass casualty events. Most people experiencing trauma do not develop PTSD, so understanding neurobiological mechanisms is crucial to predicting risk and developing targeted treatments. There have been many studies seeking to find biomarkers for PTSD, and their results have converged on several brain regions, molecular pathways and neuropsychological functions. In this review, we focus on selected findings about the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), the chaperone protein FKBP51 (FK506 binding protein 51), BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor), fear memory reconsolidation and epigenetic regulation of gene expression in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, amygdala and hippocampus. Together, these disparate aspects of brain function provide an emerging model for understanding the etiology and pathophysiology of PTSD. Avoidance of lethal threats is fundamental for survival, and this stringent evolutionary requirement has conserved many components of fear memory storage and behavioural response to danger. PTSD research can therefore rely on non-human animal model systems with better face and construct validity than most other psychiatric disorders. With this advantage, advances in PTSD biomarker identification are likely closer to clinical translation than in other mental illnesses. We attempt to highlight the most promising biomarkers that could be targeted by novel treatments and propose a map for future research work. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12264-026-01617-2
BDNF anxiety biomarkers neurobiological mechanisms ptsd stress disorder traumatic event
Meijia Li, Ying Wang, Zixia Liang +8 more · 2026 · Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland) · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/ph19030390
BDNF
Xue Wang, Jun Zhang, Xiaoyu Wang +7 more · 2026 · Brain sciences · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
Exercise as a non-pharmacological measure is important to increase the brain plasticity hence improving cognitive performance as well as mental health. This narrative review describes in depth the hie Show more
Exercise as a non-pharmacological measure is important to increase the brain plasticity hence improving cognitive performance as well as mental health. This narrative review describes in depth the hierarchical multiscale processes of neuroplasticity to exercise, including the presence of neurotrophic factor regulation, cellular metabolic adaptations and neurotransmitter remodeling, up to the structure and functional reorganization of brain networks as seen through neuroimaging, and concluding with adaptive cognitive and behavioral outcomes. We further investigate the role of personal variations in genetic time and social environments in moderating the neuroplasticity of exercise. Furthermore, the review identifies the importance of combining multimodal visualization methods with computational models in generating accurate workout prescriptions and their potential of translation into clinical and educational practice. Lastly, the research problems and "grand challenges" are addressed, with a focus on the importance of exercise as a pleiotropic behavior-intervention and its general implications to the area of promoting brain health. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/brainsci16030294
BDNF
Peng Wang, Tong Wang, Yanling Wang +4 more · 2026 · Psychiatry research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
There is a significant association between depressive episodes of bipolar disorder and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI). Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) represents an evolution of cognitive Show more
There is a significant association between depressive episodes of bipolar disorder and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI). Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) represents an evolution of cognitive behavioural therapy and serves as a comprehensive psychological intervention. Preliminary research suggests that MBCT may enhance cognitive flexibility and attentional adjustment in patients with depressive episodes of bipolar disorder by modulating brain activity. The aim of this study was to explore the effects of MBCT on behaviour, cognitive function, and serum precursor of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (proBDNF) levels in adolescents with depressive episodes of bipolar disorder. A total of 149 adolescent patients with bipolar disorder and depression with NSSI were randomly assigned. The Chinese version of the Adolescent Non-suicidal Self-Injury Assessment Questionnaire (ANSAQ) was used to measure NSSI symptoms. One group received MBCT in addition to treatment as usual (TAU) (n = 75), while the other group received TAU alone (n = 74). At baseline and at weeks 4 and 8 after treatment initiation, participants were assessed using the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS), the Hamilton Anxiety Scale (HAMA), the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status, and the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD). In addition, serum precursor Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (proBDNF) levels were determined using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. After 4 and 8 weeks of treatment, the MBCT group showed significantly greater improvement than the control group across the three BIS dimensions (motor impulsiveness, cognitive impulsiveness, and non-planning impulsiveness) (P < 0.001). HAMD scores in the MBCT group were significantly lower than those in the TAU group (4 weeks: MBCT:16.89 ± 1.45 vs TAU:17.27 ± 1.47, P < 0.05; 8 weeks: MBCT:9.24 ± 1.43 vs TAU:11.01 ± 1.84, P < 0.001). Similarly, HAMA scores were lower in the MBCT group (4 weeks: MBCT:13.14 ± 1.30 vs TAU:14.13 ± 1.65, P < 0.05; 8 weeks: MBCT:7.16 ± 1.68 vs TAU:8.17 ± 1.40, P < 0.001). Regarding cognitive function, the MBCT group demonstrated significantly higher scores in immediate memory (4 weeks: MBCT:72.31 ± 11.08 vs TAU:68.31 ± 9.36 P < 0.05; 8 weeks:MBCT:74.80 ± 13.06 vs TAU:71.87 ± 13.64, P < 0.05), delayed memory (4 weeks: MBCT:74.46 ± 11.50 vs TAU:70.20 ± 11.76, P < 0.05; 8 weeks: MBCT:76.54 ± 13.07 vs TAU:71.90 ± 12.60, P < 0.001), attention (4 weeks: MBCT:77.53 ± 11.41 vs TAU: 73.01 ± 13.21, P<0.05; 8 weeks: MBCT:84.56 ± 12.77 vs TAU:76.87 ± 11.38, P < 0.001), language ability (4weeks: MBCT:76.47 ± 12.17 vs TAU:72.13 ± 13.25 P < 0.05;8 weeks: MBCT:79.89 ± 15.02 vs TAU:74.83 ± 12.97, P < 0.05) and visuospatial ability (4 weeks:MBCT:89.04 ± 10.92 vs TAU:84.01 ± 12.67 P < 0.05;8 weeks:MBCT:90.23 ± 13.62 vs TAU:87.67 ± 12.74 P < 0.05) . In addition, serum proBDNF levels in the MBCT group were significantly lower than those in the TAU group at both 4 weeks (MBCT:1.34 ± 0.09 ng/mL vs TAU:1.40 ± 0.06 ng/mL, P < 0.05) and 8 weeks (MBCT:1.27 ± 0.07 ng/mL vs TAU:1.31 ± 0.04 ng/mL, P < 0.05). MBCT can effectively reduce impulsive behaviour, alleviate depressive and anxiety symptoms related to self-injurious behaviour in adolescents with bipolar depression, and decrease serum proBDNF levels. Additionally, immediate memory, delayed memory, attention, language, and visuospatial ability were significantly improved following treatment. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2026.117109
BDNF bipolar disorder cognitive therapy depressive disorder mindfulness neuroscience nssi probdnf
Yue Wang, Zuyi Liu, Jiayi Wu +12 more · 2026 · Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Early-life stress (ELS) is a key risk factor for adolescent depression. Si-Ni-San (SNS), a classic traditional Chinese medicine formula, has shown antidepressant potential, yet its effects on the dors Show more
Early-life stress (ELS) is a key risk factor for adolescent depression. Si-Ni-San (SNS), a classic traditional Chinese medicine formula, has shown antidepressant potential, yet its effects on the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN)-nucleus accumbens (NAc) serotonergic circuit remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate whether SNS alleviates adolescent depression by restoring DRN-NAc serotonergic circuit function and to identify the serotonin receptor mediating its synaptic effects in the NAc. Firstly, the antidepressant efficacy of SNS was evaluated in a mouse model of ELS. Subsequently, its underlying mechanism was explored through integrated neurophysiological, molecular, and pharmacological analyses. Depressive- and anxiety-like behaviors were assessed using behavioral tests (sucrose preference, tail suspension, forced swim, open field, and elevated plus maze). In vivo electrophysiolog was employed to monitor DRN neuronal activity. Chemogenetic manipulation was employed to regulate the DRN-NAc serotonergic circuit, while 5-HT4R function was assessed through pharmacological intervention and viral knockdown. Synaptic and molecular mechanisms were examined using Western blotting, qPCR, ELISA, and immunofluorescence. SNS alleviated depressive-like behaviors, enhanced neural activity and low-frequency oscillations in the DRN, and restored 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) levels in the NAc. Mechanistically, SNS upregulated tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TPH2) while downregulating indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1), thus promoting 5-HT synthesis. Critically, the antidepressant effects of SNS were blocked by either chemogenetic inhibition of the DRN-NAc serotonergic circuit or pharmacological blockade of 5-HT4R in the NAc. Meanwhile, the knockdown of 5-HT4R abolished the ameliorative effects of SNS on depressive-like behaviors and associated synaptic remodeling, including the upregulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor, postsynaptic density protein 95, and mushroom spine density. These results demonstrate that SNS alleviates depressive-like behaviors in adolescent male mice by restoring DRN-NAc serotonergic circuit function, enhancing 5-HT bioavailability, and promoting 5-HT4R-dependent synaptic plasticity in the NAc, revealing a circuit- and receptor-specific therapeutic mechanism. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2026.158088
BDNF adolescent depression depression neuroscience serotonergic circuit serotonin synaptic plasticity traditional chinese medicine
Liping Wang, Liying Dong, Xue Xia +5 more · 2026 · The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Aging is a progressive process of multisystem physiological function decline driven by multiple factors, NAD
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jpet.2026.104314
BDNF aging decline function multisystem nad physiological progressive
Xuhui Huang, Xiaona Tang, Xiaoli Yang +3 more · 2026 · Frontiers in public health · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Persistent functional impairment and psychological distress are common after stroke, highlighting the need for effective post-discharge nursing strategies. We performed a retrospective cohort study ev Show more
Persistent functional impairment and psychological distress are common after stroke, highlighting the need for effective post-discharge nursing strategies. We performed a retrospective cohort study evaluating the associations of a family-centered, new-media continuous nursing intervention on stroke recovery outcomes. The study included 107 patients with first-ever ischemic stroke who received either routine post-discharge care or a family-centered new-media continuous nursing intervention. Functional status, depressive symptoms, and quality of life were assessed at baseline and 6 months. Rehabilitation adherence, platform engagement indicators, and selected serum biomarkers related to neuroplasticity and inflammation were analyzed. Multivariable models were used to adjust for baseline clinical factors. At 6 months, the intervention group showed significantly greater improvements in Barthel Index scores, larger reductions in Patient Health Questionnaire-9 scores, and greater gains in quality of life compared with routine care. Rehabilitation compliance and medication adherence were higher in the intervention group. Within this group, greater platform engagement was associated with larger improvements in depressive symptoms and quality of life. In addition, patients receiving the intervention exhibited greater increases in serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor and endothelial progenitor cell counts, along with more pronounced reductions in IL-6 and TNF-α. Participation in the intervention remained independently associated with functional and psychological improvement after adjustment. Family-centered new-media continuous nursing is associated with improved functional independence, psychological recovery, adherence behaviors, and favorable biological changes in patients with ischemic stroke. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2026.1775705
BDNF
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
Jun-Wei Xiong, Meng-Yao Dou, Ying Wang +11 more · 2026 · Molecular psychiatry · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Cellular and synaptic plasticity in ventral tegmental area (VTA) play a key role in alcohol use disorder (AUD). Here, we first delineated the in vivo dynamics of dopamine (DA) neuron activity in VTA d Show more
Cellular and synaptic plasticity in ventral tegmental area (VTA) play a key role in alcohol use disorder (AUD). Here, we first delineated the in vivo dynamics of dopamine (DA) neuron activity in VTA during chronic intermittent ethanol exposure: initial sensitization was followed by a phase of attenuated and dysregulated response upon the first high-concentration exposure, culminating in stable hyper-responsiveness. Chronic ethanol exposure impaired long-term potentiation of GABAergic synapses (LTP Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41380-026-03532-4
BDNF
Yuqian Wang, Yajun Zhang, Yifan Cui +5 more · 2026 · Frontiers in microbiology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
The objective of our investigation was to explore the features of gut microbiota dysbiosis and the concentrations of gut metabolites in relation to white matter injury (WMI). Furthermore, we sought to Show more
The objective of our investigation was to explore the features of gut microbiota dysbiosis and the concentrations of gut metabolites in relation to white matter injury (WMI). Furthermore, we sought to evaluate the influence of gut dysbiosis on neuroinflammation in WMI via intestinal metabolites, and its contribution to pathogenesis. A cerebral hypoxia-ischemia-induced WMI model was established in 3-day-old Sprague-Dawley rats. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry/gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses and 16S rRNA gene sequencing were undertaken to ascertain WMI biomarkers. Mechanistic experiments were used to analyse activation of the H3K9ac/BDNF/TrkB pathway and neuroinflammation. The analysis of 16S rRNA sequencing disclosed gut microbiota dysbiosis in WMI rats, quantified using linear discriminant analysis effect size. Overall, 341 differentially expressed metabolic markers between the WMI and Sham groups were discovered. The Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes network enhancement evaluation revealed significant downregulation of 20 metabolic processes in the WMI group, which is strongly related to changes in fecal microbial metabolites, and the synthesis process of unsaturated fatty acids was the most significant. Gut microbiota dysbiosis may influence WMI by downregulating metabolites such as eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA). Fecal microbiota transplantation increased EPA concentration in the brain tissue of WMI rats. Gut microbiota-derived EPA promoted H3K9ac and BDNF/TrkB expression and inhibited the transcription of pro-inflammatory TNF- WMI induces gut dysbiosis involving down-regulation of unsaturated fatty acid synthesis. Fecal microbiota transplantation leads to increased levels of EPA. Gut microbiota-derived EPA increases levels of acetylated histone H3K9ac, causes activation of the BDNF/TrkB pathway, reduces neuroinflammation, and improves WMI-associated myelination disorders. It provides a basis for targeted treatment of white matter injury in the future. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2026.1711114
BDNF
Xiaohui Zhai, Dongshi Wang · 2026 · Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Substance Use Disorders (SUD) have escalated into a global public health crisis, with their core pathology encompassing not only physiological dependence and a heightened risk of relapse, but also pro Show more
Substance Use Disorders (SUD) have escalated into a global public health crisis, with their core pathology encompassing not only physiological dependence and a heightened risk of relapse, but also profound social cognitive impairments caused by chronic substance abuse. These impairments constitute a major barrier to rehabilitation yet remain largely overlooked in current treatment frameworks. This review develops and substantiates an innovative theoretical framework centered on the "Exercise-Irisin-Social Brain" axis. We propose a core pathway hypothesis: regular exercise can induce the release of the myokine irisin from skeletal muscle, which then enters the bloodstream and crosses the blood-brain barrier to act on the prefrontal cortex, which is the central hub of social cognition and executive function. Through potential mechanisms including the upregulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor and the suppression of neuroinflammation, irisin may contribute to the repair of the executive function network that underlies higher-order social cognition, thereby improving social cognitive abilities and ultimately providing a supportive foundation for the reconstruction of social functioning in individuals with SUD. This new paradigm not only provides a testable biological pathway for understanding how exercise may repair the addicted brain, but also transcends the limitations of traditional models that focus primarily on withdrawal and relapse, by elevating rehabilitation goals to emphasize the restoration of social functioning. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2026.106653
BDNF exercise neuroscience pathology prefrontal cortex rehabilitation social cognition substance use disorders
Xinran Wu, Zhuoying Gu, Chenxi Kong +5 more · 2026 · Molecular neurobiology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Serum extracellular vesicle (EV) microRNAs (miRNAs) are promising biomarkers for ischemic stroke (IS), but their role in transient ischemic attack (TIA) remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate E Show more
Serum extracellular vesicle (EV) microRNAs (miRNAs) are promising biomarkers for ischemic stroke (IS), but their role in transient ischemic attack (TIA) remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate EV miRNAs as non-invasive diagnostic tools for IS and TIA. Using single-molecule sequencing, miRNAs were profiled in pooled sera from 50 IS patients and 50 controls. Altered miRNAs were validated via individual qRT‑PCR in the same cohort and tested in expanded internal (100 IS, 40 TIA, 100 controls) and external validation cohorts (32 IS, 8 TIA, 32 controls). Diagnostic performance was assessed via ROC and logistic regression analyses. Bioinformatics and in vitro oxygen-glucose deprivation/reperfusion (OGD/R) models were employed to explore mechanisms. Initial screening identified 134 differentially expressed EV miRNAs (36 upregulated, 98 downregulated) in IS. Validation confirmed significantly decreased let-7f-5p in IS and TIA, and elevated miR-486-5p and let-7b-5p in IS, with let-7b-5p higher in IS than TIA. A combined EV miRNA panel may effectively distinguish IS and TIA from controls, and stratify IS severity and TIA subsequent stroke risk. Multivariable logistic regression showed increased EV let-7b-5p independently associated with IS, and reduced let-7f-5p with IS/TIA. Bioinformatic analysis predicted FOXO1 and BDNF as key targets; decreased FOXO1 and increased BDNF were observed in IS serum and serum EVs, and FOXO1 downregulation was replicated in an OGD/R cellular model. A serum EV miRNA signature (downregulated let-7f-5p, upregulated miR-486-5p and let-7b-5p) may serve as a non-invasive biomarker panel for assessing IS severity and TIA stroke risk. Dysregulation of these miRNAs and their targets may contribute to ischemic injury pathology. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12035-026-05796-x
BDNF
Bo Ning, Yi Wei, Cheng Luo +16 more · 2026 · Phytomedicine : international journal of phytotherapy and phytopharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Post-cardiac surgery anxiety or depression (PCPAD) is a common neuropsychiatric complication following cardiovascular interventional procedures, which significantly increases the risk of adverse cardi Show more
Post-cardiac surgery anxiety or depression (PCPAD) is a common neuropsychiatric complication following cardiovascular interventional procedures, which significantly increases the risk of adverse cardiovascular events and long-term mortality. Existing treatment strategies have limitations, and clinical needs remain unmet. The gut-brain axis (GBA) serves as a core network regulating neuroimmune and endocrine responses, and its imbalance involves key links such as intestinal flora dysbiosis and neuroimmune crosstalk disorders. It is closely related to the pathogenesis of this complication, providing a novel perspective for targeted interventions. This review aims to systematically clarify the mechanism of GBA in PCPAD, comprehensively explore therapeutic strategies targeting this axis, and focus on the intervention value and application potential of natural products. The study was designed and conducted in strict accordance with the PRISMA 2020 guidelines. Relevant literatures were searched from PubMed, Web of Science Core Collection, ScienceDirect, Embase, Cochrane Library, and CNKI databases from their inception to December 2025. Literatures focusing on GBA-related mechanisms of PCPAD or investigating the mechanisms and clinical applications of natural products targeting GBA for PCPAD treatment were included. Conference abstracts, case reports, duplicate publications, and other ineligible literatures were excluded. Through quality control strategies including double independent screening and verification, priority inclusion of high-credibility evidence, and data cross-validation, 168 eligible literatures were finally included. The composition and functions of GBA, its imbalance mechanisms, and the basic and clinical evidence of natural product-based interventions were systematically analyzed. Studies have shown that GBA imbalance is the core pathogenesis of PCPAD, among which the inflammatory cascade initiated by intestinal flora dysbiosis, abnormal activation of the neuroendocrine axis, disorder of immune-nerve crosstalk, and abnormal gene and epigenetic regulation are key pathological links. In summary, GBA imbalance, especially gut microbiota dysbiosis and neuroimmune interactions, plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of PCPAD. Natural products (including traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) monomers, TCM compound prescriptions, patented TCM drugs, and natural products from other plant sources worldwide) can exert therapeutic effects by synergistically regulating GBA homeostasis through multiple targets. Specifically, they include increasing the abundance of beneficial bacteria such as Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, promoting the production of anti-inflammatory metabolites such as short-chain fatty acids, repairing intestinal barrier function, inhibiting pro-inflammatory pathways such as NF-κB and NLRP3 inflammasome, and regulating the levels of neurotransmitters and neurotrophic factors such as 5-HT and BDNF. Basic and clinical studies have confirmed that these natural products have high biocompatibility and low toxic side effects, and are compatible with the safe medication needs of patients during the organ function recovery period after cardiac surgery. Several natural products have been proven to modulate GBA dysfunction, with potential for clinical therapeutic application. This review systematically elucidates a new paradigm of precise intervention for PCPAD via natural products that regulate GBA through multiple targets, addressing the limitation of traditional single-target therapies and providing a low-cost, easily promotable solution for clinical translation. Additionally, natural product-based interventions offer a novel approach for treating post-cardiac surgery complications. In the future, it is necessary to further conduct large-sample, multicenter clinical trials to clarify their mechanisms of action and standardized dosage regimens, strengthen toxicological research, facilitate the translation from basic research to clinical practice, and provide more precise therapeutic strategies for patients. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phymed.2026.158061
BDNF anxiety cardiovascular depression endocrine gut-brain axis intestinal flora neuroimmune
Dan Liu, Meilin Weng, Rui Wang +9 more · 2026 · Journal of inflammation research · added 2026-04-24
Early vascular regeneration is important for the speedy recovery of neurological function following ischemic stroke. M2-like microglia polarization decreases and vascular regeneration weakens with agi Show more
Early vascular regeneration is important for the speedy recovery of neurological function following ischemic stroke. M2-like microglia polarization decreases and vascular regeneration weakens with aging. The function of mitochondrial respiratory chain is dependent on M2-like polarization in microglia. A murine model of middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) was used to perform animal behavioral assessments, immunoblotting, tube formation and chick embryo chorioallantoic membrane assays. A D-galactose-induced cellular senescence model was established in BV2 cells. Aging significantly exacerbates acute brain injury 24 hours post-cerebral ischemia-reperfusion, with increased expression of M1-like microglial markers and a concomitant decrease in M2-like microglial markers. Additionally, aging can inhibit DARS2 protein expression, adversely affect angiogenesis and reduce brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGFA) expression. In vitro, oxygen-glucose deprivation/reoxygenation and re-glucose (OGD/R) demonstrated that This study suggests that aging impedes M2-like microglial polarization by downregulating DARS2 expression in microglia, thereby impairing emergency angiogenesis during acute ischemic stroke and exacerbating neuronal damage. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.2147/JIR.S527147
BDNF
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
Yu Wang, Lu Fang, Chenyuan Zhai +14 more · 2026 · CNS neuroscience & therapeutics · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) induces neuronal apoptosis and neuroinflammation, which exacerbate secondary damage and hinder functional recovery. Efficient clearance of apoptotic cells and modula Show more
Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) induces neuronal apoptosis and neuroinflammation, which exacerbate secondary damage and hinder functional recovery. Efficient clearance of apoptotic cells and modulation of the inflammatory microenvironment of spinal cord are essential for promoting tissue repair. This study aimed to investigate whether Midkine (MDK), a heparin-binding growth factor, facilitates functional recovery after SCI and explores the underlying mechanisms. A rat model of moderate SCI was established using Allen's impact method. Lentiviral vectors were used to overexpress MDK in the spinal cord. Behavioral assessments, including BBB score and gait analysis, were performed to evaluate motor function recovery. Motor evoked potentials (MEPs) serve as a neurophysiological tool for evaluating the functional integrity of the corticospinal tract. In vivo and in vitro experiments were conducted to assess microglial efferocytosis and elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms. Transcriptomic bioinformatic analysis suggests that SCI is characterized by pronounced accumulation of apoptotic cells and robust neuroinflammatory responses, whereas single-cell analysis implicates MDK as a key contributor to neurorepair after SCI. MDK expression is dynamically regulated following SCI, with an early upregulation followed by a gradual decline over time, its location predominantly observed around microglial cells. Functionally, MDK overexpression significantly enhances motor recovery after SCI, accompanied by reduced neuroinflammation, decreased neuronal apoptosis, and improved neuroprotection. Mechanistically, MDK promotes microglial efferocytosis both in vivo and in vitro, activates the AKT/mTOR signaling pathway, upregulates BDNF and LRP-1 expression, and facilitates microglial polarization toward an anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype. Notably, inhibition of LRP-1 with receptor-associated protein (RAP) abolished the efferocytic and neuroprotective effects of recombinant MDK, highlighting LRP-1 as a key mediator of MDK's actions in microglia. Our study unveils the MDK/LRP-1/efferocytosis axis as a previously unrecognized therapeutic target for SCI. By orchestrating apoptotic cell clearance, dampening neuroinflammation, and fostering neuroprotection, this axis critically shapes the post-injury microenvironment to facilitate recovery. These findings suggest that MDK-centered therapy may represent a strategy for spinal cord repair, with LRP-1 modulation offering precise control over microglial responses. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/cns.70841
BDNF
Qiying Wei, Liuyang Bai, Liangying Yan +5 more · 2026 · Cancer biology & therapy · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
Perineural invasion (PNI) represents a uniquely distinctive pathway for tumor metastasis, but its underlying molecular mechanisms and therapy remain unclear. Bioinformatics analysis and transcriptomic Show more
Perineural invasion (PNI) represents a uniquely distinctive pathway for tumor metastasis, but its underlying molecular mechanisms and therapy remain unclear. Bioinformatics analysis and transcriptomic sequencing were first employed to investigate the involvement of the BDNF/TrkB axis in the ESCC PNI, which was validated with ESCC cells co-cultured with a dorsal root ganglia system (ESCC/DRG model), a mouse PNI model, and ESCC tissues, mainly using microscopic imaging, IVIS Spectrum The BDNF/TrkB axis is closely associated with the PNI in ESCC. This pathway plays a pivotal role in driving PNI progression via Akt signaling. Deguelin was identified as an effective inhibitor of PNI in ESCC. Mechanistically, BDNF was revealed to be a key binding target of Deguelin, which disrupts PNI development by modulating the BDNF/TrkB/Akt axis. Notably, overexpression of BDNF can counteract Deguelin's inhibitory effects on ESCC growth and PNI progression. The BDNF/TrkB axis promotes the progression of ESCC PNI, and Deguelin inhibits ESCC PNI by targeting this axis, enhancing the understanding of PNI's molecular mechanisms and offering new therapeutic options. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1080/15384047.2026.2644788
BDNF
Yan Jin, Boya Tian, Hongze Wang +3 more · 2026 · Journal of food science · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-24
This study aimed to investigate the effect of different preferences of food-derived odors (common food flavors/spices) on the appetite, immune system, and CNS of mice through 15 days of olfactory expo Show more
This study aimed to investigate the effect of different preferences of food-derived odors (common food flavors/spices) on the appetite, immune system, and CNS of mice through 15 days of olfactory exposure. According to the ranking of sniffing duration, beef essence was chosen as a pleasant odor, while garlic essence was chosen as an unpleasant odor. Results showed that food intake and body weight gradually increased in all groups, with the lowest values observed in the garlic odor group. Unpleasant garlic odor suppressed the mRNA transcription levels of agouti-related protein (AgRP) and neuropeptide Y (NPY) in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus, along with elevated leptin levels, thereby inhibiting food intake and causing body weight loss. In addition, the serum TNF-α, IL-2, and IL-6 levels in the garlic odor group were significantly higher than those in the beef and control groups, which indicated that the immune system may be impaired by the exposure to unpleasant garlic odor. Furthermore, pleasant beef odors could promote the differentiation of hippocampal neurons and the levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factors and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor, which may have great potential in improving neurological disorders. Conclusively, unpleasant odors may suppress immune function or modulate the CNS by establishing an odor-CNS-immune pathway, while pleasant food odors affect only the CNS. The present study preliminarily provides novel insights that different preferences for food odors could affect the body weight, immune system, and CNS. It may serve as a reference for further research and development of aromatherapy as an adjuvant medicine and therapeutic method. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/1750-3841.70942
BDNF appetite body weight cns food intake immune system olfaction olfactory exposure
Wanyi Li, Shiyu Chen, Zhitao Liu +9 more · 2026 · Experimental neurology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is one of the most common forms of neurodegenerative disorder characterized by extracellular Aβ accumulation and intracellular tau hyperphosphorylation. Currently, there are n Show more
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is one of the most common forms of neurodegenerative disorder characterized by extracellular Aβ accumulation and intracellular tau hyperphosphorylation. Currently, there are no effective therapeutic drugs available for AD. Regular exercise training has emerged as a promising physical intervention strategy for mitigating both the risk and progression of AD, but different types of exercise interventions show varied and conflicting results in AD treatment, with their differential effects and mechanisms still unelucidated. Using an Aβ oligomer-induced AD mouse model, we investigated therapeutic effects of voluntary wheel running, forced treadmill running, and combined exercise (voluntary combined with forced running) on AD pathologies. For depressive-like behavior, we conducted forced swimming test and tail suspension test; for cognition, Novel object recognition test (object recognition ability) and Morris water maze test (spatial learning and memory) was used respectively. We applied BrdU-DCX/NeuN/GFAP immunofluorescence co-staining to measure neurogenesis, Western blot to examine proteins associated with synapses, neurons, astrocytes, apoptosis, and BDNF signaling key components, serum metabolomics to identify exercise-induced metabolites. Furthermore, a clinical trial involving healthy subjects and patients with AD implemented an acute exercise intervention and utilized portable functional near-infrared spectroscopy to assess cortical activation and functional connectivity under conditions of both voluntary and forced exercise. Voluntary, forced, and combined exercise alleviated depressive-like phenotypes and short-term cognitive deficits in AD mice, while only forced exercise conferred sustained long-term memory benefit. All exercises boosted hippocampal neurogenesis by enhancing newborn cell (BrdU Our findings reveal distinct neuroprotective profiles of long-term voluntary, forced, and combined exercise interventions against Aβ oligomer neurotoxicity in an AD mouse model, and different acute exercise modalities also demonstrate distinct effects on cortical activation and functional connectivity in patients with AD. Our study provides novel insights into exercise modalities' therapeutic effects in ameliorating AD neuropathology. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2026.115731
BDNF alzheimer's disease amyloid beta exercise neurodegeneration neurodegenerative disorder neuroscience pathophenotypes
Yange Wei, Zengyuan Shen, Peng Luo +9 more · 2026 · Frontiers in psychiatry · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
The primary treatment for schizophrenia currently relies on medication. Nevertheless, the efficacy of medication for Cognitive Impairment Associated with Schizophrenia (CIAS) is constrained, and it is Show more
The primary treatment for schizophrenia currently relies on medication. Nevertheless, the efficacy of medication for Cognitive Impairment Associated with Schizophrenia (CIAS) is constrained, and it is also accompanied by side effects. Consequently, the investigation of novel non-pharmacological strategies is essential. High-definition transcranial direct current stimulation (HD-tDCS) and aerobic exercise (AE) have emerged as promising approaches for cognitive enhancement in individuals with schizophrenia. This study aims to evaluate the efficacy of integrating HD-tDCS with AE for CIAS and to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of this synergistic intervention. A randomized, double-blind, controlled trial will be conducted. The CIAS will be randomly allocated to one of four groups: MRI-guided HD-tDCS + AE, MRI-guided HD-tDCS alone, AE alone, and a control group. Structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data will be obtained to determine the optimal electrode placement. The central electrode will be positioned over the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Both HD-tDCS and AE will be administered five times per week over a four-week period, resulting in a total of 20 sessions. The primary outcome measure will be the change in cognitive function, evaluated using the MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery. Secondary outcomes will include changes assessed by the Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status and the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test which are designed to evaluate global and executive functions. The Facial Emotion Perception Test and the Voice Emotion Perception Test will be utilized to assess social cognition. The severity of clinical symptoms will be quantified through the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale and the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. This study will incorporate functional near-infrared spectroscopy, MRI, electroencephalography, P300 event-related potential, eye movement examination and plasma brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels to investigate the underlying mechanisms. Assessments will be evaluated at baseline (T0), after 2 weeks (T1), after 4 weeks (T2), and after 6 months (T3). The integration of MRI-guided HD-tDCS targeting the mPFC and AE presents an efficacious and individualized treatment strategy for CIAS. This proof-of-concept study may provide a multi-dimensional view of biological mechanisms underlying HD-tDCS combined with AE in precision psychiatry. The study is registered with https://www.chictr.org.cn/ protocol registration number ChiCTR2500106980 (date of registration: 1. August. 2025). It was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Xinxiang Medical University (Approval Code: XYEFYLL-2025-16, Approval Date: 17 February 2025). Recruitment began in December 2025. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1742634
BDNF