👤 Xiao-Xia Wang

🔍 Search 📋 Browse 🏷️ Tags ❤️ Favourites ➕ Add 🧪 BiometalDB 🧬 Extraction
4397
Articles
2763
Name variants
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
Le Yang, Ye Sun, Chuanning Li +9 more · 2026 · Frontiers in immunology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Damp-heat gout (DHG) is a highly certified type of disease integrated with syndrome in TCM. The ambiguity of its pathomechanism and the lack of quantifiable indicators limit its clinical accurate diag Show more
Damp-heat gout (DHG) is a highly certified type of disease integrated with syndrome in TCM. The ambiguity of its pathomechanism and the lack of quantifiable indicators limit its clinical accurate diagnosis and treatment. This study aimed to elucidate the pathological mechanism of DHG and establish a symptom-centered diagnostic and therapeutic model. We recruited 136 participants, comprising healthy controls (HCs) and DHG patients. Serum metabolomics and proteomics analyses were performed to screen common pathways. Based on the biological significance of these common pathways, a symptom-pathway correlation network was constructed to clarify the pathological mechanisms driving DHG occurrence and progression. Enrichment scores and correlations with key DHG symptoms were used to identify critical pathways. Differential metabolites and proteins associated with these critical pathways served to establish a multi-index diagnostic model and identify potential therapeutic protein targets. Integrated metabolomic and proteomic analyses revealed 21 common pathways associated with DHG. Four crucial pathways, such as Bile secretion, Cholesterol metabolism, Purine metabolism, Arachidonic acid metabolism, were exhibited significant correlations with core DHG symptoms. Furthermore, six pathway-related biomarkers were identified: Hypoxanthine, Prostaglandin E2, Uric acid, Deoxycholic acid, Taurochenodeoxycholic acid, and Bilirubin. The combined diagnostic efficacy of these biomarkers was optimal (discovery cohort: AUC = 0.987; validation cohort: AUC = 0.997). Six protein targets were identified from the crucial pathways, including ATP1A1, APRT, ANGPTL4, GLUT1, PTGES3 and LIPA. This study establishes a symptom-centered diagnostic and therapeutic model for DHG utilizing the identified biomarkers and clarifies the involvement of critical metabolic pathways in DHG pathogenesis, providing novel targets for improved clinical diagnosis and therapy. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2026.1677920
ANGPTL4
Yingping Ma, Hongyu Wang, Xinman Dou +1 more · 2026 · Frontiers in immunology · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Brain metastasis significantly worsens prognosis in late-stage cancer., with Its treatment hindered by the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Within this enviro Show more
Brain metastasis significantly worsens prognosis in late-stage cancer., with Its treatment hindered by the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. Within this environment, tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) represent the predominant immune population. Through their roles in immune modulation, angiogenesis, and tumor invasion, TAMs are critical drivers of disease progression. TAMs are highly heterogeneous. While traditionally categorized into M1 (anti-tumor) or M2 (pro-tumor) phenotypes, this dichotomy is an oversimplification. Recent single-cell studies have revealed a spectrum of functional subpopulations, such as lipid-associated, interferon-responsive, and pro-angiogenic TAMs, with M2-like states typically prevailing to mediate immunosuppression. This review explores the diversity and functions of TAMs in brain metastasis. We first detail their biological characteristics, including origins, heterogeneous subtype classifications (e.g., lipid-associated macrophages that extend beyond the simple M1/M2 dichotomy), and polarization states. We further discuss how polarization is regulated by signaling pathways (e.g., STAT, NF-κB) and microenvironmental factors (e.g., hypoxia, metabolic reprogramming). We examine TAM roles from pre-metastatic niche formation to tumor colonization, using breast and lung cancer brain metastases to illustrate how TAMs disrupt the BBB and facilitate immune evasion through molecules like ANGPTL4 (angiopoietin-like 4) and MMP9. Key pathways of TAM-tumor cell interactions, including neuro-cancer interactions, immune-metabolic regulation, and exosome-mediated communication, are also discussed. Targeting TAMs offers promising therapeutic avenues. These strategies include reprogramming TAMs (e.g., using CSF1R inhibitors), combining TAM-targeted therapy with immune checkpoint inhibitors, and developing novel approaches such as nanotechnology and CAR-macrophages. However, several challenges remain, including TAM heterogeneity, lack of targeting specificity, and the obstacle of BBB delivery. Future research should leverage technologies like single-cell sequencing and spatial transcriptomics to decode TAM heterogeneity, and develop personalized treatments based on biomarkers such as GPNMB and TRAIL, aiming to improve patient outcomes in brain metastasis. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2026.1756299
ANGPTL4
Yiren Zhang, Wei Zeng, Yuanfa Liu +1 more · 2026 · Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.) · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Pine nut oil (PNO) is a candidate alternative to corn oil (CO) owing to comparable unsaturated fatty-acid profiles and enrichment in pinolenic acid (Δ5-18:3) and lipid-soluble micronutrients. We syste Show more
Pine nut oil (PNO) is a candidate alternative to corn oil (CO) owing to comparable unsaturated fatty-acid profiles and enrichment in pinolenic acid (Δ5-18:3) and lipid-soluble micronutrients. We systematically compared extraction routes (solvent, supercritical CO₂, pressing), established solvent extraction as the optimal balance of yield and bioactive retention, and then characterized solvent-extracted oils from eight provenances using a weighted composite score to nominate Pinus tabuliformis for in vivo testing. In diet-induced obese mice (12-week Western diet, then 12-week intervention, n = 10 per group), replacing CO with PNO lowered body-mass gain and liver weight and improved serum lipids (triglycerides ↓ ∼ 28 %, total cholesterol ↓ ∼ 15 %, LDL-C ↓ ∼ 20 %) without affecting HDL-C or glucose; ALT and AST fell by ∼30 %, indicating hepatoprotection. Hepatic multi-omics revealed coherent remodeling toward PUFA-rich phospholipid species, activation of PPAR-centered peroxisomal/mitochondrial fatty-acid degradation and circadian pathways, and integrative correlations implicating Cyp4a10/14, Ehhadh, Slc27a2, Fgf21, Angptl4, and Plin5. Collectively, PNO reoriented hepatic lipid flux toward oxidation and membrane remodeling, supporting its development as a nutritionally advantaged culinary oil. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2025.118175
ANGPTL4
Linhui Zhai, Cui-Cui Liu, Lei Zhao +14 more · 2026 · Protein & cell · Oxford University Press · added 2026-04-24
Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer, with metastasis accounting for the majority of cancer-related deaths. The mechanisms of early-stage breast cancer metastasis to regional immune s Show more
Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer, with metastasis accounting for the majority of cancer-related deaths. The mechanisms of early-stage breast cancer metastasis to regional immune sites like lymph nodes remain elusive. Here, we performed an in-depth proteomic and phosphoproteomic analysis of a substantial series of breast cancer samples, alongside genomic and transcriptomic evaluations. This cohort encompasses 195 specimens: 65 primary breast tumors, their corresponding normal tissues, and metastatic axillary lymph nodes. We offer an overview of the molecular alterations at the transcriptomic, proteomic, and phosphoproteomic levels during lymph node metastasis. Notably, the findings indicate that regional lymph node metastasis is primarily influenced by proteomic and phosphoproteomic alterations, rather than genomic or transcriptomic changes. We found the ANGPTL4 and HMGB1 could serve as the biomarker of lymph node metastasis. Data analysis and cell experiments involving silencing of the alternative splicing factor HNRNPU demonstrated that alternative splicing plays a significant role in modulating protein expression, phosphorylation profiles and cell proliferation. The key phosphorylation sites, including MARCKSL1-S104 and FKBP15-S320, as well as the upstream kinase PRKCB, were identified as playing crucial roles in breast cancer lymph node metastasis. Targeted intervention of the kinase PRKCB resulted in effectively suppressing the proliferation and metastasis of breast cancer tumor cells. Immune profiling analysis and experimental validation of breast cancer cell cocultured with CD8+ T cell reveals correlations between phosphorylation of MARCKSL1-S104 and FKBP15-S320 with immune checkpoint PD-L1 expression, and their impact on tumor cell apoptosis, suggesting a potential mechanism of immune evasion in metastasis. This study systematically characterizes the molecular landscape and features of primary breast tumors and their matched metastatic lymph nodes. These insights enhance our understanding of early-stage breast cancer metastasis and may pave the way for improved diagnostic tools and targeted therapeutic strategies. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1093/procel/pwag002
ANGPTL4
Meifang Zhao, Yuanchao Xiao, Qunzhi Wang · 2026 · The Korean journal of physiology & pharmacology : official journal of the Korean Physiological Society and the Korean Society of Pharmacology · added 2026-04-24
Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) displays significant biological heterogeneity, with matrisome-related genes (MRGs) playing key roles in tumor progression and immune regulation. Understanding the interplay Show more
Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) displays significant biological heterogeneity, with matrisome-related genes (MRGs) playing key roles in tumor progression and immune regulation. Understanding the interplay between MRGs, the tumor microenvironment, and host immunity is critical for mechanistic insights. LUAD transcriptomic and clinical data were sourced from TCGA, GEO (GSE31210), and single-cell data (GSE189357). MRGs were analyzed Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.4196/kjpp.25.293
ANGPTL4
Qiong Lu, Qiyue Zheng, Zhaokai Zhou +7 more · 2026 · Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Bone angiogenesis is important for bone formation and regeneration after bone injury. Endothelial-derived angiogenic factors are key signal transducers in the bone microenvironment and maintain vascul Show more
Bone angiogenesis is important for bone formation and regeneration after bone injury. Endothelial-derived angiogenic factors are key signal transducers in the bone microenvironment and maintain vascular-osteogenic coupling during bone regeneration. CGRP, a bone sensory neuron-derived peptide, contributes to bone formation, but the potential mechanism by which it improves bone regeneration via angiogenesis is unclear. Here, we demonstrate that CGRP may contribute to bone repair in the elderly, as human CGRP levels are inversely proportional to age and proportional to bone mass in clinical data and bulk transcriptome data. Based on single-cell RNA sequencing data and experimental analyses, CGRP is found to promote the angiogenesis of human microvascular endothelial cell line-1 in vitro through the FAK-AKT-VEGF pathway. CGRP gene deletion in mice reduced bone vascular density and bone mass, and delayed angiogenesis and bone regeneration at the bone defect site. Recombinant CGRP restored bone repair after defect introduction. It also promoted Angptl4 secretion by bone vascular endothelial cells, thereby driving osteogenic differentiation of bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells and enhancing bone regeneration after bone injury. Treatment with recombinant Angptl4 enhanced bone healing in a mouse bone defect model. These integrated analysis reveal the important role and mechanism of CGRP in vascular-mediated osteogenesis, suggesting a novel therapeutic strategy for promoting bone regeneration. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/advs.202522295
ANGPTL4
Wensheng Chen, Qingshui Wang, Shuyuan Li · 2026 · Biochimica et biophysica acta. General subjects · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Lymph node metastasis is a critical prognostic factor in colorectal cancer (CRC). Identifying key genes associated with metastasis can improve risk stratification and treatment strategies. This study Show more
Lymph node metastasis is a critical prognostic factor in colorectal cancer (CRC). Identifying key genes associated with metastasis can improve risk stratification and treatment strategies. This study aimed to identify a gene signature related to lymph node metastasis and investigate the role of NPR3. We analyzed the GSE878211 dataset to identify differentially expressed genes in CRC tissues with and without lymph node metastasis. A lymph node metastasis-related gene signature (LNMRGS) was constructed using Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) regression. The correlation between LNMRGS and clinical indicators, immune microenvironment, and signaling pathways was analyzed. The role of NPR3 was further investigated through in vitro and in vivo experiments. We identified 110 upregulated and 58 downregulated genes in CRC tissues with lymph node metastasis. The LNMRGS, consisting of Integrin Subunit Beta 3 (ITGB3), IQ Motif Containing with AAA Domain 1 (IQCA1), Angiopoietin-Like 4 (ANGPTL4), and Natriuretic Peptide Receptor 3 (NPR3), predicted overall survival in multiple datasets. High LNMRGS was associated with female sex, tumor recurrence, lymph node metastasis, distant metastasis, and KRAS mutations. NPR3 knockdown inhibited proliferation, migration, and invasion of CRC cells in vitro and in vivo, and reduced chemoresistance to 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and oxaliplatin. The LNMRGS is a robust prognostic signature for CRC. NPR3 plays a key role in metastatic progression and chemoresistance, suggesting it as a potential therapeutic target. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2025.130895
ANGPTL4
Yutong Lin, Danan Wang, Duanbin Li +8 more · 2026 · Atherosclerosis · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Angiopoietin-like protein 8 (ANGPTL8), a member of the angiopoietin-like protein (ANGPTL) family, is a physiological inhibitor of lipoprotein lipase (LPL), and plays a critical role in lipoprotein and Show more
Angiopoietin-like protein 8 (ANGPTL8), a member of the angiopoietin-like protein (ANGPTL) family, is a physiological inhibitor of lipoprotein lipase (LPL), and plays a critical role in lipoprotein and triglyceride metabolism in response to nutritional cues. ANGPTL8 is implicated in a wide range of systemic and cellular processes and is closely associated with metabolic and cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Circulating ANGPTL8 is primarily secreted by the liver, with adipose tissue as a secondary source. Its expression is regulated by multiple transcription factors and microRNAs, and is responsive to fasting/refeeding states, hormonal signals, and stress conditions. In lipid metabolism, ANGPTL8 forms complexes with ANGPTL3 and ANGPTL4 to modulate LPL activity under fasting and feeding conditions. In glucose metabolism, ANGPTL8 plays a complex role. While some studies suggest it may improve glucose tolerance and insulin resistance, others indicate it could exacerbate glucose metabolism disorders and diabetes, or have no effect. Cardiovascular diseases are intricately linked to metabolic disorders and diseases. Increasing evidence also links ANGPTL8 to various cardiovascular pathologies, including atherosclerosis, hypertension, cardiomyopathy, cardiac hypertrophy, aortic aneurysm, and dissection. Given the strong interplay between metabolic dysregulation and CVDs, elucidating the role of ANGPTL8 in these processes is of significant interest. This review provides a balanced assessment of ANGPTL8's roles in key pathophysiological processes, highlighting its established functions in metabolism alongside its emerging involvement in CVDs. Understanding the diverse functions of ANGPTL8 in various tissues and metabolic states will lead to new opportunities for therapeutic intervention in cardiometabolic disorders. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2025.120556
ANGPTL4
Chunxiao Li, Qinyuan Zhu, Xinhang Cao +6 more · 2026 · Non-coding RNA research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Aberrant differentiation of keratinocytes has been implicated in various skin diseases. However, the impact of lncRNA on keratinocyte differentiation and RNA alternative splicing remains poorly unders Show more
Aberrant differentiation of keratinocytes has been implicated in various skin diseases. However, the impact of lncRNA on keratinocyte differentiation and RNA alternative splicing remains poorly understood. The primary aim of this study was to delineate the landscape of differentially expressed lncRNAs in keratinocytes undergoing differentiation and to elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms. Primary human keratinocytes (HKEn) were subjected to comprehensive microarray analysis to identify the differentially expressed lncRNAs upon calcium stimulation. Loss-of-function experiments were carried out to explore the role of NR037661 in keratinocyte differentiation. RNA sequencing analysis was performed to study the potential target genes of NR037761. RNA pull-down assay, SDS-PAGE, silver staining and mass spectrometry analysis were utilized to explore the potential proteins that interacted with NR037761 and participated in NR037761-mediated keratinocyte differentiation. The effects of NR037761 on the alternative splicing and expression of Angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) were analyzed by RT-PCR and Western blot. NR037661 specifically interacts with the splicing factor Serine/arginine repetitive matrix protein 2 (SRRM2), facilitating its nuclear localization. This interaction modulates the alternative splicing (AS) of ANGPTL4 mRNA, ultimately influencing keratinocyte differentiation. Our findings illuminate a novel regulatory mechanism underlying keratinocyte differentiation, potentially revealing new therapeutic targets for skin diseases. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ncrna.2025.10.003
ANGPTL4
Qiang Li, Zhiqi Liao, Xinyao Hu +26 more · 2026 · Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Clinical application of mesenchymal stem cells for endometrial repair has been hampered by variability in cell quality, large-scale production, and uncertainty regarding the optimal delivery route. In Show more
Clinical application of mesenchymal stem cells for endometrial repair has been hampered by variability in cell quality, large-scale production, and uncertainty regarding the optimal delivery route. In this study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of clinical-grade human embryonic stem cell-derived immunity-and-matrix-regulatory cells (IMRCs) for treating refractory moderate-to-severe intrauterine adhesion (IUA). In a rabbit IUA model, sub-endometrial injection of IMRCs significantly reduced fibrosis and enhanced endometrial angiogenesis, outperforming uterine perfusion. Transcriptomic analysis revealed distinct pro-angiogenic gene expression profiles between the two delivery routes. In vitro, IMRCs co-cultured with endometrial stromal cells (ESCs) markedly enhanced angiogenic potential compared to either cell type alone. Protein array analysis of the co-culture supernatant showed elevated levels of angiogenic factors, with functional assays confirming that inhibition of ANGPTL4, a non-canonical pro-angiogenic mediator, impaired angiogenesis. In a first-in-human, single-center, phase 1 dose-escalation trial involving 18 patients with refractory IUA, high-dose sub-endometrial IMRC injection promoted angiogenesis, reduced uterine scarring, and improved pregnancy outcomes, with no safety concerns observed over 3 years of follow-up. These findings highlight the translational promise of IMRCs as a novel therapeutic strategy for endometrial regeneration in severe IUA. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2025.09.035
ANGPTL4
Shiqian Liu, Ruiyang Ding, Linyuan Huang +4 more · 2026 · Journal of advanced research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Urban particulate matter (UPM) is a major air pollutant affecting public health, with maternal exposure potentially leading to cardiac developmental disorders in offspring. However, the exact mechanis Show more
Urban particulate matter (UPM) is a major air pollutant affecting public health, with maternal exposure potentially leading to cardiac developmental disorders in offspring. However, the exact mechanisms underlying the intergenerational effects of UPM remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate the molecular mechanisms involved in cardiac developmental defects caused by maternal UPM exposure in offspring zebrafish. Female zebrafish were exposed to UPM for 21 days to examine intergenerational effects. The results indicated that maternal zebrafish in the exposed group exhibited ovarian damage and a reduced number of embryos and fertilization rates. Zebrafish offspring exhibited abnormal cardiac development, including pericardial edema and pathological heart injury. Mechanistically, transcriptomic analysis of the offspring indicated that UPM exposure induced significant modifications in the mitochondrial biogenesis pathway, with altered expression of mitochondrial function-related genes. Maternal UPM exposure impaired respiration in zebrafish embryos and increased angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) expression in offspring hearts. In vitro, Angptl4 knockdown alleviated UPM-induced mitochondrial membrane potential reduction and mitochondrial reactive oxygen species overproduction in cardiomyocytes, whereas Angptl4 overexpression exacerbated UPM-induced mitochondrial toxicity. These findings show that maternal UPM exposure disrupts mitochondrial homeostasis by upregulating ANGPTL4 expression, leading to abnormal cardiac development in zebrafish offspring. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jare.2025.05.041
ANGPTL4
Yiyu Liang, Xianlu Li, Yichen Zhang +9 more · 2026 · ACS nano · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-24
Modifying nanomedicines with targeting ligands represents an encouraging strategy for active tumor targeting, but its clinical failure underscores ongoing challenges. Herein, a series of liposomes wit Show more
Modifying nanomedicines with targeting ligands represents an encouraging strategy for active tumor targeting, but its clinical failure underscores ongoing challenges. Herein, a series of liposomes with different targeting ligands (e.g., PEGylation, folic acid, mannose, RGD peptide, and melittin) were rationally designed to investigate the principles and mechanisms governing tumor targeting and penetration profiles. In primary and lung metastatic breast cancer models, these liposomes exhibited a systematic tendency of intratumor distribution, with melittin-modified liposomes showing optimal tumor targeting and therapeutic performance. Further studies revealed that the ligand modifications in liposomes could modulate the composition of their protein corona, particularly the level of Apolipoprotein A4 (ApoA4), which, in turn, influenced tumor targeting and intratumor distribution, ultimately affecting the therapeutic outcome of tumor inhibition and survival prolongation. This research provided a distinct correlation between ligand modification of liposomes and their Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5c19739
APOA4
Cunming Yang, Zhen Ma, Xiao Wang +6 more · 2026 · Frontiers in veterinary science · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Xinjiang Brown cattle are an important beef breed in Northwest China. Although multigenerational selective breeding has improved their growth performance, the accompanying molecular adaptations and po Show more
Xinjiang Brown cattle are an important beef breed in Northwest China. Although multigenerational selective breeding has improved their growth performance, the accompanying molecular adaptations and potential physiological trade- ofs remain insufficiently elucidated at the systemic level. This study aimed to decipher the dynamic serum proteomic profiles shaped by both ontogeny and generational selection in Xinjiang Brown cattle, and to identify the associated key proteins and pathways. Serum samples from 18 bulls across three genera- tions (A, B, C) at 3 and 9 months of age were analyzed using Tandem Mass Tag (TMT)-based quantitative proteomics. Under stringent quality control (FDR < 1%), 583 high-confidence proteins were identified. Diferentially expressed proteins (DEPs) were screened using thresholds of |fold change| ≥ 1.2 and This study reveals that the breeding strategy for Xinjiang Brown cattle prioritizes shaping a proteomic landscape that promotes growth and metabolism, potentially at the cost of atten- uated immune-vascular reactivity. The identified panel of candidate proteins pro- vides a molecular framework for evaluating breeding outcomes and designing balanced selection strategies. Follow-up research should further investigate the functions of these candidate proteins and validate their predictive value for health and production performance in independent herds. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2026.1723813
APOA4
Jie Cai, Aohuan Huang, Linghui You +10 more · 2026 · Food research international (Ottawa, Ont.) · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Diet-based modulation of the gut microbiota has emerged as a promising strategy to alleviate obesity and its related complications. Our previous study demonstrated that polysaccharide derived from Cor Show more
Diet-based modulation of the gut microbiota has emerged as a promising strategy to alleviate obesity and its related complications. Our previous study demonstrated that polysaccharide derived from Cordyceps militaris (CMP) exerts anti-obesity effects, yet the specific mechanism linking gut microbiota to its metabolic impact remains unclear. Herein, we utilized murine models with distinct gut microbial profiles created via antibiotic cocktails to investigate these mechanisms. The protective effects of CMP against high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity and associated metabolic disturbances were substantially impaired in mice depleted of neomycin-sensitive gut bacteria. Metagenomic analyses further established that CMP required these bacteria to restore gut microbial homeostasis. Notably, we observed that CMP elevated hepatic levels of brassicasterol in a manner dependent on neomycin-sensitive gut bacteria. Brassicasterol treatment alone replicated the anti-obesity effects of CMP, as indicated by reduced body weight gain, improved lipid and glucose metabolism, and decreased inflammation. Through transcriptomic and functional analyses, we identified hepatic Apoa4 as a key downstream effector of brassicasterol. Our results indicated that brassicasterol upregulated Apoa4, facilitating lipid transport and suppressing inflammation both in vitro and in vivo. Collectively, our findings indicate that CMP exerts its anti-obesity effects through a neomycin-sensitive gut bacteria-brassicasterol-Apoa4 pathway. This work expands the mechanistic understanding of CMP and highlights a novel microbiota-metabolite-host regulatory axis for dietary intervention in metabolic disorders. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2026.118574
APOA4
Hongrui Cao, Zhengcheng Zeng, Huangwei Shi +5 more · 2026 · Animals : an open access journal from MDPI · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
This study examined how different photoperiods affect net energy partitioning and explored the mechanisms via blood biochemistry, gut microbiota, and fecal metabolites. Twelve healthy crossbred pigs ( Show more
This study examined how different photoperiods affect net energy partitioning and explored the mechanisms via blood biochemistry, gut microbiota, and fecal metabolites. Twelve healthy crossbred pigs (47.7 ± 7.5 kg) were randomly allocated to two groups and subjected to a self-controlled crossover design. Following an 8-day baseline under a normal photoperiod (12L:12D, 12 h light:12 h dark), pigs were assigned to two photoperiod treatment groups: prolonged photoperiod (18L:6D, 18 h light:6 h dark; P group) and shortened photoperiod (6L:18D, 6 h light:18 h dark; S group). Measurements during the baseline (12L:12D) and treatment phases are designated as N1/P (for the P group) and N2/S (for the S group), respectively. The treatment periods were interspersed with the baseline 12L:12D photoperiod and repeated six times. It was observed that, compared to N2, shortened photoperiod (S) had significantly higher net energy deposition, net energy for protein deposition, and net energy for fat deposition ( Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/ani16040688
APOA4
Na Huang, Heming Wang, Xiao Li +8 more · 2026 · Lipids in health and disease · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Significant interindividual variability in radiosensitivity poses a major challenge to conventional radiation protection and radiotherapy. Current prediction strategies relying on DNA damage or genomi Show more
Significant interindividual variability in radiosensitivity poses a major challenge to conventional radiation protection and radiotherapy. Current prediction strategies relying on DNA damage or genomic analysis have inherent limitations, underscoring the need for minimally invasive serum biomarkers. While serum apolipoproteins are crucial regulators of lipid transport, metabolism, and cellular stress response, their role as biomarkers for radiosensitivity remains largely unexplored. A 7.3 Gy ⁶⁰Co γ-ray whole-body irradiation mouse model (with training and independent validation cohorts) was established to assess individual radiosensitivity. Pre-irradiation peripheral serum samples underwent high-throughput proteomics analysis to identify differential proteins (DEPs) linked to 30-day post-irradiation survival. KEGG and GO enrichment analyses were conducted to characterize DEP-associated pathways. An XGBoost machine learning model was built using candidate biomarkers, with SHAP analysis to define their predictive contributions; Cox proportional hazards and Pearson correlation analyses were applied to evaluate survival associations. DIA-based proteomics identified 580 DEPs in the training cohort and 449 in the validation cohort. KEGG and GO enrichment analyses confirmed that these DEPs were predominantly enriched in the cholesterol metabolism and reverse cholesterol transport pathways. The predictive model based on an apolipoprotein panel (ApoA1/ApoA2/ApoA4), established using the XGBoost algorithm, exhibited exceptional performance in the training cohort (AUC = 1) and maintained robust generalizability in an independent validation cohort (AUC = 0.833). Compared with non-survivors, survivors exhibited significantly elevated serum levels of ApoA1 and ApoA2 but markedly reduced levels of ApoA4. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis established ApoA1 and ApoA2 as independent protective factors, whereas high ApoA4 expression was an adverse prognostic indicator. Notably, ApoA4 levels also demonstrated a strong negative correlation with post-irradiation survival time. The serum apolipoprotein profile (ApoA1/ApoA2/ApoA4) serves not only as a promising minimally invasive biomarker for predicting individual radiosensitivity in mice but also reveals a critical link between the cholesterol metabolic pathway and radiation response. This finding lays a theoretical foundation for translating predictive, cholesterol metabolism-related biomarkers to support radiation response assessments. Given the limitations of animal models, subsequent studies are required to validate the clinical applicability of this panel in human cohorts, with the aim of offering an effective tool for personalized radiation protection and precise radiotherapy. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12944-026-02868-8. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12944-026-02868-8
APOA4
Ziyu Ge, Yang Yang, Pei Chen +12 more · 2026 · Biochemical pharmacology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Depression is a heterogeneous psychiatric disorder with limited treatment efficacy, as 30-50% of patients exhibit inadequate responses to conventional monoaminergic antidepressants. Rhein, a bioactive Show more
Depression is a heterogeneous psychiatric disorder with limited treatment efficacy, as 30-50% of patients exhibit inadequate responses to conventional monoaminergic antidepressants. Rhein, a bioactive anthraquinone derived from Rheum palmatum, exhibits rapid and sustained antidepressant effects in both acute and chronic social defeat stress (CSDS) mouse models. Using quantitative proteomics on prefrontal cortex (PFC) samples from control, CSDS, Rhein-treated, and imipramine-treated cohorts, we identified differentially expressed proteins that revealed Rhein's multi-target regulatory profile. Functional enrichment and clustering analyses indicated that Rhein predominantly restores dysregulated pathways related to lipid metabolism, ribosomal translation, mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) function, and synaptic plasticity, forming a coherent mechanistic axis underlying its therapeutic effects. Comparative analysis with imipramine-treated mice further highlighted Rhein's distinct capacity to modulate organelle homeostasis and synaptic remodeling with greater breadth. Parallel reaction monitoring (PRM) and Western Blotting validated key proteins involved in mitochondrial functions (BNIP1, PISD, MRPL42, MRPS30, LRBA, IGHM), ER homeostasis (ACBD5, APOA4, RPL14), and synaptic plasticity (HDAC1, FAM3C, SSU72). These molecular findings suggest that Rhein exerts its antidepressant effects by restoring the functional integrity of mitochondria and the ER, thereby reprogramming synaptic plasticity. We inferred that this organelle-centered regulation further reinforces its potent modulation through multiple mechanisms and signaling pathways of synaptic plasticity, enabling Rhein to exert antidepressant effects through a coordinated, multi-layered mechanism. Collectively, our findings provide a systems-level mechanistic framework for Rhein's antidepressant efficacy and support its potential as a multi-pathway natural therapeutic, particularly for metabolic subtypes of depression. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2025.117548
APOA4
Yuemiao Wang, Daren Wu, Dandan Sun +2 more · 2026 · Frontiers in pediatrics · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Wilson disease (WD) and familial hypertriglyceridemia (FHTG) are both genetic metabolic diseases, and their comorbidity is extremely rare. This article reports a case of WD with FHTG in a 12-year-old Show more
Wilson disease (WD) and familial hypertriglyceridemia (FHTG) are both genetic metabolic diseases, and their comorbidity is extremely rare. This article reports a case of WD with FHTG in a 12-year-old Chinese boy. The patient was diagnosed due to elevated transaminase levels, combined with clinical manifestations, copper metabolism indexes, lipid profile analysis, and genetic testing results (pathogenic mutations of Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fped.2026.1763338
APOA5
Yuwei Wang · 2026 · Nutrition & metabolism · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Emerging evidence links the plasma lipidome to venous thromboembolism, but its causal relationship with portal vein thrombosis (PVT) remains unexplored. This study aimed to systematically screen for p Show more
Emerging evidence links the plasma lipidome to venous thromboembolism, but its causal relationship with portal vein thrombosis (PVT) remains unexplored. This study aimed to systematically screen for potential causal associations between 179 plasma lipid species and PVT risk, aiming to identify candidate biomarkers and explore underlying biological pathways. Using publicly available genome-wide association study (GWAS) data, we performed a two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to assess the causal relationships between 179 plasma lipid species and PVT. Inverse-variance weighted (IVW) was the primary method, heterogeneity and pleiotropy were applied to evaluate potential pleiotropy and heterogeneity, and leave-one-out analysis verified result reliability. For lipid species showing nominally significant associations with PVT, lead SNPs were mapped to candidate genes to explore potential biological mechanisms. IVW analysis identified nominally significant associations ( Our study suggests potential links between specific plasma lipid species and PVT, although these associations did not survive rigorous multiple testing correction. It provides preliminary evidence that certain lipid species, notably phosphatidylcholine and sterol esters, may be implicated in PVT risk. The mapping of these lipids to candidate genes involved in lipid metabolism (FADS1, FADS2, APOE, APOA5, LIPC) offers mechanistic hypotheses for future research. Further studies are required to validate these preliminary associations and assess their translational potential. The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12986-026-01084-6. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12986-026-01084-6
APOA5
Haoyu Wang, Jinling Yu, Fei Liang +5 more · 2026 · Journal of the American Nutrition Association · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
Controversies exist regarding the effects of calcium supplementation on lipid metabolism, and the time-specific effects and underlying mechanisms remain unclear. This study aims to elucidate the diffe Show more
Controversies exist regarding the effects of calcium supplementation on lipid metabolism, and the time-specific effects and underlying mechanisms remain unclear. This study aims to elucidate the differential impacts of calcium intervention at different times (morning/evening) on hepatic lipid metabolism and the molecular mechanisms involved. Forty female CD-1 (ICR) mice were randomly divided into four groups: Morning Control Group (MCN), Morning Calcium Intervention Group (MCI, intragastric administration of calcium carbonate at 08:00), Evening Control Group (ECN), and Evening Calcium Intervention Group (ECI, intragastric administration of calcium carbonate at 20:00). Mice were fed a normal calcium or low-calcium diet for 10 wk. Morning calcium intervention (MCI) in mice significantly increased serum and hepatic total cholesterol (TC), triglyceride (TG), and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) levels, and induced lipid droplet deposition and swelling in hepatocytes. Transcriptome and validation experiments showed upregulated hepatic PER1 expression in the MCI group, while PPARα and its downstream lipid metabolism genes (CPT1A, APOA5) were downregulated. In HepG2 cells, nighttime calcium incubation (NC) significantly increased intracellular TG and LDL contents, upregulated PER1 expression, and inhibited PPARα, CPT1A, and APOA5 expressions. Knocking down PER1 reversed the abnormal gene expression and lipid-elevating effects in the NC group. Collectively, our findings demonstrate that the circadian timing of calcium intake critically regulates hepatic lipid homeostasis Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/27697061.2025.2557251
APOA5
Chang-Hao Sun, Xin-Yu Zhu, Zhi-Long Wang +5 more · 2026 · BMC cardiovascular disorders · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
The ratio of uric acid to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (UHR) is a novel comprehensive indicator related to dyslipidemia. However, the association between UHR and coronary artery disease (CAD) Show more
The ratio of uric acid to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (UHR) is a novel comprehensive indicator related to dyslipidemia. However, the association between UHR and coronary artery disease (CAD) risk in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) remains unclear. After matching based on age and gender propensity scores, 2124 subjects were included and divided into the CKD group (708 cases) and the non-CKD group (1416 cases). The predictive performance of UHR for CAD was evaluated by the area under the curve (AUC), and the independent association between UHR and the risk of CAD onset was analyzed using a multivariate logistic regression model. The correlation and dose-response relationship between the ratio of uric acid to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (UHR) and the risk of CAD were analyzed using LOESS fitting and restricted cubic spline (RCS) analysis. After matching, the multiple lipid-related indices (Triglycerides (TG), Remnant Cholesterol (RC), Atherogenic Index (AI), Atherogenic Index of Plasma (AIP), Triglyceride Glucose Index (TyG), Lipoprotein Composite Index (LCI), Triglyceride to High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Ratio (TG/HDL-C), Total Cholesterol to High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Ratio (TC/HDL-C), Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol to High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Ratio (LDL-C/HDL-C), UHR) in the CKD group were significantly higher than those in the non-CKD group. The AUC analysis showed that HDL-C, AIP, TG/HDL-C, and UHR had strong predictive performance in the overall cohort and the non-CKD group, while in the CKD group, HDL-C, AI, and TC/HDL-C are better predictive indicators. After adjusting for all confounding factors, multivariate regression analysis revealed that HDL-C, apolipoprotein A-1 (APOA-1), and the APOA-1/APOB ratio were independent protective factors for CAD in the entire cohort. Among them, the protective effect of HDL-C was the most stable (overall population aOR = 0.26, 95% CI: 0.17-0.39, p < 0.001), and it was significantly in both the CKD (aOR = 0.18, 95% CI: 0.09-0.40, p < 0.001) and non-CKD subgroups (aOR = 0.31, 95% CI: 0.18-0.52, p < 0.001). In CKD, UHR is significantly correlated with CAD (aOR = 6.23, 95% CI: 1.89-20.60, p = 0.003), and the association was more significant in the non-CKD group (aOR = 15.15, 95% CI: 4.20-54.72, p < 0.001). CKD status significantly modified the association between UHR and CAD (P for interaction = 0.015). LOESS fitting suggested that UHR was positively correlated with the probability of CAD occurrence (the correlation was more significant at low UHR, and it slowed down when UHR > 0.5, r = 0.2, p < 0.001), and negatively correlated with eGFR (r = -0.38, p < 0.001). RCS analysis confirmed a significant nonlinear association between UHR and CAD (overall P < 0.001, nonlinear P = 0.002), and the risk of CAD increased when UHR was > 0.41 in CKD patients. UHR is an independent risk factor for coronary heart disease, with higher adjusted OR values and more significant independent risk effects in non-CKD populations. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12872-026-05838-1
APOB
Yaqun Fang, Zhiye Zhang, Qiqi Cao +20 more · 2026 · Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology · added 2026-04-24
ApoB (apolipoprotein B)-containing lipoproteins are causal risk factors for atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (CAD). Since human cathelicidin LL-37 binds to ApoB-100 in this pathological context Show more
ApoB (apolipoprotein B)-containing lipoproteins are causal risk factors for atherosclerotic coronary artery disease (CAD). Since human cathelicidin LL-37 binds to ApoB-100 in this pathological context, we investigated whether the circulating LL-37-ApoB-100 complex could serve as a biomarker for CAD. We performed surface plasmon resonance and protein-protein docking to demonstrate the direct LL-37-ApoB-100 interaction. We developed a specific polyclonal antibody against the complex and measured its levels in human atherosclerotic plaques and plasma, as well as in We identified that LL-37 directly interacted with multiple distinct binding sites on ApoB-100. Plasma levels of LL-37-ApoB-100 complex were significantly elevated in human patients with atherosclerosis. Consistently, levels of this complex were positively correlated with atherosclerotic plaque area in Circulating LL-37-ApoB-100 levels are strongly associated with angiographically documented CAD, highlighting LL-37-ApoB-100 as an independent predictor for CAD. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1161/ATVBAHA.125.323486
APOB
Tianfeng Zhang, Chenghua Wang, Zhenghui Wang +4 more · 2026 · International journal of cardiology. Cardiovascular risk and prevention · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
This study aims to evaluate the association between multiple lipid indices and coronary collateral circulation (CCC) in patients diagnosed with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) Show more
This study aims to evaluate the association between multiple lipid indices and coronary collateral circulation (CCC) in patients diagnosed with acute ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). This was a cross-sectional retrospective study involving 421 patients with STEMI who underwent coronary angiography between January 2022 and December 2024. Participants were categorized into a poor CCC group (Rentrop grade 0-1) and a good CCC group (Rentrop grade 2-3) according to Rentrop grading criteria. The following lipid parameters were evaluated as both continuous and categorical variables: total cholesterol (TC), triglycerides (TG), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (non-HDL-C), lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)], apolipoprotein B (ApoB), apolipoprotein A-I (ApoA-I), non-HDL-C/HDL-C, ApoB/ApoA-I, atherogenic index of plasma (AIP), and lipoprotein composite index (LCI). The associations between these lipid indices and CCC status were assessed using multivariate logistic regression and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis. Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that higher HDL-C quartiles were significantly associated with reduced odds of poor CCC (odds ratio [OR]: 0.544, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.351-0.771, P < 0.05), whereas elevated LDL-C (OR: 29.299, 95% CI: 3.562-240.976, P < 0.05), non-HDL-C (OR: 50.140, 95% CI: 5.408-464.834, P < 0.01), and non-HDL-C/HDL-C (OR: 4.510, 95% CI: 1.186-25.368, P < 0.05) quartiles were significantly associated with increased odds of poor CCC. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis demonstrated that LDL-C (cutoff: 3.265, AUC: 0.647, 95% CI: 0.573-0.721, P < 0.001), non-HDL-C (cutoff: 2.735, AUC: 0.752, 95% CI: 0.688-0.816, P < 0.001), and non-HDL-C/HDL-C (cutoff: 2.393, AUC: 0.686, 95% CI: 0.611-0.761, P < 0.001) exhibited favorable predictive performance for poor CCC. Stratification analysis showed that the highest prevalence of poor CCC was observed in patients with concurrently elevated levels of LDL-C, non-HDL-C, and non-HDL-C/HDL-C. Several lipid indices-including LDL-C, non-HDL-C, and the non-HDL-C/HDL-C ratio-are significantly associated with impaired CCC in patients with STEMI. Notably, non-HDL-C exhibits the strongest association with CCC dyscrasia and therefore warrants early clinical attention. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcrp.2026.200615
APOB
An-Xin Wu, Xing-Jin Wang, Chen Zhao +5 more · 2026 · Pharmacological research · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Elevated lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] is a genetically determined and independent risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) that is largely resistant to conventional lipid-lowering ther Show more
Elevated lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] is a genetically determined and independent risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) that is largely resistant to conventional lipid-lowering therapies. Novel Lp(a)-targeted agents, including small interfering RNA (siRNA), antisense oligonucleotides (ASO), and the oral small-molecule inhibitor muvalaplin, have shown potent efficacy in early trials. We conducted a systematic review and network meta-analysis to comprehensively compare their efficacy and safety. A total of 25 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving 7715 participants were included, evaluating six siRNA agents, four ASO agents, and one small-molecule inhibitor. The primary outcome was percentage change from baseline in Lp(a). Secondary outcomes included absolute change in Lp(a), percentage changes in apolipoprotein B (apoB) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), and adverse events. SiRNA therapies achieved the greatest Lp(a) reductions (olpasiran: mean difference [MD] -92.1%, 95% CI -100.1 to -84.0%; zerlasiran: -80.6%, 95% CI -87.7 to -73.5%), followed by muvalaplin (-76.8%, 95% CI -90.3 to -63.2%) and ASO therapy (pelacarsen: -54.2%, 95% CI -72.2 to -36.2%; all P < 0.001). Most agents achieved absolute Lp(a) reductions exceeding 105 nmol/L, suggesting clinically meaningful benefit. Baseline Lp(a) levels significantly modified treatment response (P < 0.001), and concomitant proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitor use further enhanced LDL-C reduction (P = 0.024). All therapies were well tolerated, with injection-site reactions most frequent for injectables, while muvalaplin was well tolerated. These findings indicate that targeted Lp(a)-lowering therapies substantially reduce circulating Lp(a), with siRNA showing the greatest potency and muvalaplin offering a convenient oral alternative for personalized ASCVD risk reduction. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.phrs.2026.108178
APOB
Min Zuo, Haixia Xu, Yuying Yang +7 more · 2026 · Communications biology · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) is the most common form of spinal deformity among adolescents. To explore its etiology of progression and scoliosis-modifying drugs, chondrocytic senescence was c Show more
Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) is the most common form of spinal deformity among adolescents. To explore its etiology of progression and scoliosis-modifying drugs, chondrocytic senescence was confirmed in AIS facet joint cartilage by analyzing clinical specimen. Furthermore, through 4D/480 label-free proteomics analysis, we identified an exosome-mediated positive feedback loop during scoliosis progression, which driving the elevation of cholesterol flow between spinal cartilage and vertebra. To further investigate the pathological significance of the loop in vivo, high-cholesterol flow was reconstructed in C57BL/6 J mice by injecting with recombinant adeno-associated virus rAAV9-Runx2-HMGCR. Our results confirmed the important role of the positive feedback loop in the development of scoliosis. Meanwhile, Avasimibe or/and Corylin were used to delay the scoliosis progression by targeting the key exosomal proteins APOB (Apolipoprotein B-100) or/and HSP90β (Heat Shock Protein 90-beta). This research extends the etiology of scoliosis progression and provides an alternative perspective for scoliosis non-surgical treatment. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s42003-026-09960-w
APOB
Liting Pang, Chaoyi Wang, Wenjing Zhao +4 more · 2026 · Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Cardiovascular and renal diseases exhibit a close bidirectional interaction, which often leads to the development of cardio-renal syndrome (CRS)-a clinical condition in which cardiac dysfunction furth Show more
Cardiovascular and renal diseases exhibit a close bidirectional interaction, which often leads to the development of cardio-renal syndrome (CRS)-a clinical condition in which cardiac dysfunction further aggravates renal injury. Type I CRS is characterized by acute kidney injury secondary to acute heart failure, and this sub-type is closely related to elevated morbidity and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Despite the availability of traditional biomarkers, there is an unmet need for more sensitive indicators to identify high-risk patients for Type I CRS in CAD patients. The apolipoprotein B (ApoB)/apolipoprotein A1 (ApoA1) ratio has emerged as a promising predictor of cardiovascular risk, yet its role in CRS remains unclear. This study aimed to evaluate the association between the ApoB/ApoA1 ratio and Type I CRS in patients with CAD, and to assess its value as a biomarker for identifying high-risk patients. A retrospective cohort study was carried out on 269 CAD patients complicated with heart failure who were hospitalized in our hospital from 2022 to 2024. According to the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) results, the enrolled patients were divided into two subgroups: the simple heart failure (SHF) group and the type I CRS group. Data on demographics, clinical history, biochemical measurements, echocardiographic and coronary angiography assessments, and renal function were collected. A multivariable logistic regression model was used to assess the association between the ApoB/ApoA1 ratio and CRS, adjusting for potential confounders. Correlation analyses were performed to explore the relationships between key variables and the occurrence of type I CRS. A multivariable logistic regression model was used to assess the association between the ApoB/ApoA1 ratio and CRS. Furthermore, a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was constructed to evaluate the predictive accuracy of the ApoB/ApoA1 ratio for type I CRS. A total of 269 patients were enrolled. Significant differences were observed between the simple heart failure (SHF) group and the CRS group in terms of age, history of diabetes mellitus, levels of triglycerides (TG), apolipoprotein A1 (apo-A1), apolipoprotein B (apo-B), ApoB/ApoA1 ratio, and serum creatinine (Scr). Patients in the CRS group were older, had a higher proportion of diabetes mellitus, higher levels of TG, apo-B, and Scr, a higher ApoB/ApoA1 ratio, but lower levels of apo-A1 compared to the SHF group. Multivariable logistic regression analysis identified age and the ApoB/ApoA1 ratio as independent risk factors for CRS. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis showed that the ApoB/ApoA1 ratio had a moderate level of predictive accuracy for Type I CRS, with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.782. The ApoB/ApoA1 ratio is moderately associated with the risk of developing Type I CRS in patients with CAD. This ratio could serve as a clinically relevant biomarker for early identification of in-hospital Type I CRS risk in CAD patients with acute heart failure, potentially aiding in the implementation of early and targeted interventions to improve patient outcomes. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2026.1754713
APOB
Jiaqiang Hu, Jun Wang, Haixia Zhang +4 more · 2026 · Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Lipoprotein(a)-targeted therapies are emerging approaches for lowering lipoprotein(a) [lp(a)]. We conducted a systematic review and network meta-analysis to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lipopro Show more
Lipoprotein(a)-targeted therapies are emerging approaches for lowering lipoprotein(a) [lp(a)]. We conducted a systematic review and network meta-analysis to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lipoprotein(a)-targeted therapies in patients. We searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) up to May 6, 2025, for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) with intervention duration of at least 12 weeks. The primary outcomes were percentage and absolute changes in Lp(a). Secondary outcomes included changes in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) and apolipoprotein B (apoB), and safety outcomes including adverse events (AEs), serious adverse events (SAEs), and injection-site reactions. A frequentist framework network meta- analysis was performed. Nine studies involving 1,432 participants were included. All six Lp(a)-targeted therapies significantly reduced Lp(a) levels. Compared with placebo, Olpasiran was the most effective therapy for both percentage [mean difference: -92.06, 95% (-109.80; -74.32), Lp(a)-targeted therapies achieved substantial reductions in Lp(a). Olpasiran was the most effective agent in lowering Lp(a) levels. These therapies also improved LDL-C and apoB. The majority of Lp(a)-targeted therapies demonstrate generally favorable safety profiles; However, injection-site reactions, particularly with Zerlasiran, warrant careful consideration. https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/view/CRD420251069288, PROSPERO CRD420251069288. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2026.1758366
APOB
Hechuan Wang, Yunuo Liu, Ke Jiang +6 more · 2026 · Poultry science · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Clutch length is a key determinant of reproductive efficiency in geese and strongly positively correlates with egg production. We recorded daily egg production in 280 individually housed Zi geese, cal Show more
Clutch length is a key determinant of reproductive efficiency in geese and strongly positively correlates with egg production. We recorded daily egg production in 280 individually housed Zi geese, calculated clutch-related indices, and selected 12 geese to form long-clutch (LC) and short-clutch (SC) groups for ovarian transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic analyses. The results showed that egg number, large clutch length, large clutch number, average clutch length, and average clutch number were significantly higher in LC than in SC groups (P < 0.0001). Transcriptomic analysis identified 885 differentially expressed genes enriched in oocyte development and ovarian steroidogenesis, with APOB, PLA2G4C, MMP2, MMP9, and NOBOX as key genes; proteomic analysis identified 437 differentially abundant proteins enriched in arachidonic acid metabolism and mitophagy, with CXCL12, RARB, and MAD2L1 as key proteins; and metabolomic analysis identified 35 differentially abundant metabolites enriched in glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, with lactic acid, guanidinoacetic acid, and 3-hydroxybutyrylcarnitine as key metabolites. Integration of multi-omics datasets highlighted a lactate-associated cross-omics signature supported by YWHAZ at the protein level and by the lactate transporter SLC16A3. Collectively, these findings deepen our understanding of the molecular basis underlying clutch-length variation in goose ovaries and highlight candidate genes, proteins, and metabolites for future functional validation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2026.106731
APOB
Yu Wang, Li Chen, Yingze Ma +8 more · 2026 · Nature communications · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Dietary fat absorption is among the most energy-demanding processes of nutrient uptake. Fatty acid activation, triglyceride synthesis, and the trafficking of chylomicrons through the secretory pathway Show more
Dietary fat absorption is among the most energy-demanding processes of nutrient uptake. Fatty acid activation, triglyceride synthesis, and the trafficking of chylomicrons through the secretory pathway - all require ATP. How enterocytes accommodate the surge in ATP consumption following fat uptake is unclear. We show that the purine biosynthesis/salvage pathway supplies necessary ATP and that Ankyrin Repeat Domain 9 (ANKRD9) couples ATP synthesis and lipoprotein trafficking. Ankrd9 regulates enzymes within the purine biosynthesis pathway to increase ATP synthesis and facilitate Golgi dynamics. Intracellular localization of ANKRD9 is lipid and ATP-dependent. Inactivation of Ankrd9 in mice reduces intestinal ATP despite intact mitochondrial and glycolytic function, alters Golgi morphology, delays ApoB/chylomicron trafficking, and causes lipid accumulation in enterocytes, along with a lean body phenotype. Taken together, the results reveal a previously unrecognized mechanism that regulates lipid absorption in enterocytes and identify ANKRD9 as a central component of this mechanism. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-70332-3
APOB
Weijian Wang, Jiangping Ye, Xinyi Hu +3 more · 2026 · Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine · Frontiers · added 2026-04-24
Coronary artery calcification (CAC), a hallmark of coronary atherosclerosis, links closely to dysregulated lipid metabolism and chronic inflammation. Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCS Show more
Coronary artery calcification (CAC), a hallmark of coronary atherosclerosis, links closely to dysregulated lipid metabolism and chronic inflammation. Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibitors exert potent lipid-lowering and anti-inflammatory effects, holding translational potential for vascular calcification intervention. However, evidence on PCSK9 inhibition's impact on vascular calcification remains inconsistent. Here, we combined genetic causal analysis with First, we used two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) and multivariable Mendelian randomization to identify lipid profiles genetically associated with coronary artery calcification. Subsequently, we investigated the value of the PCSK9 gene as a potential therapeutic target for CAC through drug target MR and colocalization analysis, and screened for potential inflammatory mediators via Mediation MR analyses. Following the completion of the aforementioned analyses, we verified the beneficial effect of PCSK9 inhibitors on delaying vascular calcification through animal experiments and cell experiments. MR analysis revealed that genetic proxies for apolipoprotein B (ApoB) (OR=1.64; 95%CI: 1.42-1.90; Inhibition of PCSK9 may effectively slow the progression of coronary artery calcification, with inflammatory mediators such as FGF23 playing key regulatory roles in this process. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2026.1767013
APOB