👤 Lebin Liu

🔍 Search 📋 Browse 🏷️ Tags ❤️ Favourites ➕ Add 🧬 Extraction
3182
Articles
1983
Name variants
Also published as: A Liu, Ai Liu, Ai-Guo Liu, Aidong Liu, Aiguo Liu, Aihua Liu, Aijun Liu, Ailing Liu, Aimin Liu, Allen P Liu, Aman Liu, An Liu, An-Qi Liu, Ang-Jun Liu, Anjing Liu, Anjun Liu, Ankang Liu, Anling Liu, Anmin Liu, Annuo Liu, Anshu Liu, Ao Liu, Aoxing Liu, B Liu, Baihui Liu, Baixue Liu, Baiyan Liu, Ban Liu, Bang Liu, Bang-Quan Liu, Bao Liu, Bao-Cheng Liu, Baogang Liu, Baohui Liu, Baolan Liu, Baoli Liu, Baoning Liu, Baoxin Liu, Baoyi Liu, Bei Liu, Beibei Liu, Ben Liu, Bi-Cheng Liu, Bi-Feng Liu, Bihao Liu, Bilin Liu, Bin Liu, Bing Liu, Bing-Wen Liu, Bingcheng Liu, Bingjie Liu, Bingwen Liu, Bingxiao Liu, Bingya Liu, Bingyu Liu, Binjie Liu, Bo Liu, Bo-Gong Liu, Bo-Han Liu, Boao Liu, Bolin Liu, Boling Liu, Boqun Liu, Bowen Liu, Boxiang Liu, Boxin Liu, Boya Liu, Boyang Liu, Brian Y Liu, C Liu, C M Liu, C Q Liu, C-T Liu, C-Y Liu, Caihong Liu, Cailing Liu, Caiyan Liu, Can Liu, Can-Zhao Liu, Catherine H Liu, Chan Liu, Chang Liu, Chang-Bin Liu, Chang-Hai Liu, Chang-Ming Liu, Chang-Pan Liu, Chang-Peng Liu, Changbin Liu, Changjiang Liu, Changliang Liu, Changming Liu, Changqing Liu, Changtie Liu, Changya Liu, Changyun Liu, Chao Liu, Chao-Ming Liu, Chaohong Liu, Chaoqi Liu, Chaoyi Liu, Chelsea Liu, Chen Liu, Chenchen Liu, Chendong Liu, Cheng Liu, Cheng-Li Liu, Cheng-Wu Liu, Cheng-Yong Liu, Cheng-Yun Liu, Chengbo Liu, Chenge Liu, Chengguo Liu, Chenghui Liu, Chengkun Liu, Chenglong Liu, Chengxiang Liu, Chengyao Liu, Chengyun Liu, Chenmiao Liu, Chenming Liu, Chenshu Liu, Chenxing Liu, Chenxu Liu, Chenxuan Liu, Chi Liu, Chia-Chen Liu, Chia-Hung Liu, Chia-Jen Liu, Chia-Yang Liu, Chia-Yu Liu, Chiang Liu, Chin-Chih Liu, Chin-Ching Liu, Chin-San Liu, Ching-Hsuan Liu, Ching-Ti Liu, Chong Liu, Christine S Liu, ChuHao Liu, Chuan Liu, Chuanfeng Liu, Chuanxin Liu, Chuanyang Liu, Chun Liu, Chun-Chi Liu, Chun-Feng Liu, Chun-Lei Liu, Chun-Ming Liu, Chun-Xiao Liu, Chun-Yu Liu, Chunchi Liu, Chundong Liu, Chunfeng Liu, Chung-Cheng Liu, Chung-Ji Liu, Chunhua Liu, Chunlei Liu, Chunliang Liu, Chunling Liu, Chunming Liu, Chunpeng Liu, Chunping Liu, Chunsheng Liu, Chunwei Liu, Chunxiao Liu, Chunyan Liu, Chunying Liu, Chunyu Liu, Cici Liu, Clarissa M Liu, Cong Cong Liu, Cong Liu, Congcong Liu, Cui Liu, Cui-Cui Liu, Cuicui Liu, Cuijie Liu, Cuilan Liu, Cun Liu, Cun-Fei Liu, D Liu, Da Liu, Da-Ren Liu, Daiyun Liu, Dajiang J Liu, Dan Liu, Dan-Ning Liu, Dandan Liu, Danhui Liu, Danping Liu, Dantong Liu, Danyang Liu, Danyong Liu, Daoshen Liu, David Liu, David R Liu, Dawei Liu, Daxu Liu, Dayong Liu, Dazhi Liu, De-Pei Liu, De-Shun Liu, Dechao Liu, Dehui Liu, Deliang Liu, Deng-Xiang Liu, Depei Liu, Deping Liu, Derek Liu, Deruo Liu, Desheng Liu, Dewu Liu, Dexi Liu, Deyao Liu, Deying Liu, Dezhen Liu, Di Liu, Didi Liu, Ding-Ming Liu, Dingding Liu, Dinglu Liu, Dingxiang Liu, Dong Liu, Dong-Yun Liu, Dongang Liu, Dongbo Liu, Dongfang Liu, Donghui Liu, Dongjuan Liu, Dongliang Liu, Dongmei Liu, Dongming Liu, Dongping Liu, Dongxian Liu, Dongxue Liu, Dongyan Liu, Dongyang Liu, Dongyao Liu, Dongzhou Liu, Dudu Liu, Dunjiang Liu, Edison Tak-Bun Liu, En-Qi Liu, Enbin Liu, Enlong Liu, Enqi Liu, Erdong Liu, Erfeng Liu, Erxiong Liu, F Liu, F Z Liu, Fan Liu, Fan-Jie Liu, Fang Liu, Fang-Zhou Liu, Fangli Liu, Fangmei Liu, Fangping Liu, Fangqi Liu, Fangzhou Liu, Fani Liu, Fayu Liu, Fei Liu, Feifan Liu, Feilong Liu, Feiyan Liu, Feiyang Liu, Feiye Liu, Fen Liu, Fendou Liu, Feng Liu, Feng-Ying Liu, Fengbin Liu, Fengchao Liu, Fengen Liu, Fengguo Liu, Fengjiao Liu, Fengjie Liu, Fengjuan Liu, Fengqiong Liu, Fengsong Liu, Fonda Liu, Foqiu Liu, Fu-Jun Liu, Fu-Tong Liu, Fubao Liu, Fuhao Liu, Fuhong Liu, Fujun Liu, Gan Liu, Gang Liu, Gangli Liu, Ganqiang Liu, Gaohua Liu, Ge Liu, Ge-Li Liu, Gen Sheng Liu, Geng Liu, Geng-Hao Liu, Geoffrey Liu, George E Liu, George Liu, Geroge Liu, Gexiu Liu, Gongguan Liu, Guang Liu, Guangbin Liu, Guangfan Liu, Guanghao Liu, Guangliang Liu, Guangqin Liu, Guangwei Liu, Guangxu Liu, Guannan Liu, Guantong Liu, Gui Yao Liu, Gui-Fen Liu, Gui-Jing Liu, Gui-Rong Liu, Guibo Liu, Guidong Liu, Guihong Liu, Guiju Liu, Guili Liu, Guiqiong Liu, Guiquan Liu, Guisheng Liu, Guiyou Liu, Guiyuan Liu, Guning Liu, Guo-Liang Liu, Guochang Liu, Guodong Liu, Guohao Liu, Guojun Liu, Guoke Liu, Guoliang Liu, Guopin Liu, Guoqiang Liu, Guoqing Liu, Guoquan Liu, Guowen Liu, Guoyong Liu, H Liu, Hai Feng Liu, Hai-Jing Liu, Hai-Xia Liu, Hai-Yan Liu, Haibin Liu, Haichao Liu, Haifei Liu, Haifeng Liu, Hailan Liu, Hailin Liu, Hailing Liu, Haitao Liu, Haiyan Liu, Haiyang Liu, Haiying Liu, Haizhao Liu, Han Liu, Han-Fu Liu, Han-Qi Liu, Hancong Liu, Hang Liu, Hanhan Liu, Hanjiao Liu, Hanjie Liu, Hanmin Liu, Hanqing Liu, Hanxiang Liu, Hanyuan Liu, Hao Liu, Haobin Liu, Haodong Liu, Haogang Liu, Haojie Liu, Haokun Liu, Haoling Liu, Haowei Liu, Haowen Liu, Haoyue Liu, He-Kun Liu, Hehe Liu, Hekun Liu, Heliang Liu, Heng Liu, Hengan Liu, Hengru Liu, Hengtong Liu, Heyi Liu, Hong Juan Liu, Hong Liu, Hong Wei Liu, Hong-Bin Liu, Hong-Li Liu, Hong-Liang Liu, Hong-Tao Liu, Hong-Xiang Liu, Hong-Ying Liu, Hongbin Liu, Hongbing Liu, Hongfa Liu, Honghan Liu, Honghe Liu, Hongjian Liu, Hongjie Liu, Hongjun Liu, Hongli Liu, Hongliang Liu, Hongmei Liu, Hongqun Liu, Hongtao Liu, Hongwei Liu, Hongxiang Liu, Hongxing Liu, Hongyan Liu, Hongyang Liu, Hongyao Liu, Hongyu Liu, Hongyuan Liu, Houbao Liu, Hsiao-Ching Liu, Hsiao-Sheng Liu, Hsiaowei Liu, Hsu-Hsiang Liu, Hu Liu, Hua Liu, Hua-Cheng Liu, Hua-Ge Liu, Huadong Liu, Huaizheng Liu, Huan Liu, Huan-Yu Liu, Huanhuan Liu, Huanliang Liu, Huanyi Liu, Huatao Liu, Huawei Liu, Huayang Liu, Huazhen Liu, Hui Liu, Hui-Chao Liu, Hui-Fang Liu, Hui-Guo Liu, Hui-Hui Liu, Hui-Xin Liu, Hui-Ying Liu, Huibin Liu, Huidi Liu, Huihua Liu, Huihui Liu, Huijuan Liu, Huijun Liu, Huikun Liu, Huiling Liu, Huimao Liu, Huimin Liu, Huiming Liu, Huina Liu, Huiping Liu, Huiqing Liu, Huisheng Liu, Huiying Liu, Huiyu Liu, Hulin Liu, J Liu, J R Liu, J W Liu, J X Liu, J Z Liu, James K C Liu, Jamie Liu, Jay Liu, Ji Liu, Ji-Kai Liu, Ji-Long Liu, Ji-Xing Liu, Ji-Xuan Liu, Ji-Yun Liu, Jia Liu, Jia-Cheng Liu, Jia-Jun Liu, Jia-Qian Liu, Jia-Yao Liu, JiaXi Liu, Jiabin Liu, Jiachen Liu, Jiahao Liu, Jiahua Liu, Jiahui Liu, Jiajie Liu, Jiajuan Liu, Jiakun Liu, Jiali Liu, Jialin Liu, Jiamin Liu, Jiaming Liu, Jian Liu, Jian-Jun Liu, Jian-Kun Liu, Jian-hong Liu, Jian-shu Liu, Jianan Liu, Jianbin Liu, Jianbo Liu, Jiandong Liu, Jianfang Liu, Jianfeng Liu, Jiang Liu, Jiangang Liu, Jiangbin Liu, Jianghong Liu, Jianghua Liu, Jiangjiang Liu, Jiangjin Liu, Jiangling Liu, Jiangxin Liu, Jiangyan Liu, Jianhua Liu, Jianhui Liu, Jiani Liu, Jianing Liu, Jianjiang Liu, Jianjun Liu, Jiankang Liu, Jiankun Liu, Jianlei Liu, Jianmei Liu, Jianmin Liu, Jiannan Liu, Jianping Liu, Jiantao Liu, Jianwei Liu, Jianxi Liu, Jianxin Liu, Jianyong Liu, Jianyu Liu, Jianyun Liu, Jiao Liu, Jiaojiao Liu, Jiaoyang Liu, Jiaqi Liu, Jiaqing Liu, Jiawen Liu, Jiaxian Liu, Jiaxiang Liu, Jiaxin Liu, Jiayan Liu, Jiayi Liu, Jiayin Liu, Jiaying Liu, Jiayu Liu, Jiayun Liu, Jiazhe Liu, Jiazheng Liu, Jiazhuo Liu, Jidan Liu, Jie Liu, Jie-Qing Liu, Jierong Liu, Jiewei Liu, Jiewen Liu, Jieying Liu, Jieyu Liu, Jihe Liu, Jiheng Liu, Jin Liu, Jin-Juan Liu, Jin-Qing Liu, Jinbao Liu, Jinbo Liu, Jincheng Liu, Jindi Liu, Jinfeng Liu, Jing Liu, Jing Min Liu, Jing-Crystal Liu, Jing-Hua Liu, Jing-Ying Liu, Jing-Yu Liu, Jingbo Liu, Jingchong Liu, Jingfang Liu, Jingfeng Liu, Jingfu Liu, Jinghui Liu, Jingjie Liu, Jingjing Liu, Jingmeng Liu, Jingmin Liu, Jingqi Liu, Jingquan Liu, Jingqun Liu, Jingsheng Liu, Jingwei Liu, Jingwen Liu, Jingxing Liu, Jingyi Liu, Jingying Liu, Jingyun Liu, Jingzhong Liu, Jinjie Liu, Jinlian Liu, Jinlong Liu, Jinman Liu, Jinpei Liu, Jinpeng Liu, Jinping Liu, Jinqin Liu, Jinrong Liu, Jinsheng Liu, Jinsong Liu, Jinsuo Liu, Jinxiang Liu, Jinxin Liu, Jinxing Liu, Jinyue Liu, Jinze Liu, Jinzhao Liu, Jinzhi Liu, Jiong Liu, Jishan Liu, Jitao Liu, Jiwei Liu, Jixin Liu, Jonathan Liu, Joyce F Liu, Joyce Liu, Ju Liu, Ju-Fang Liu, Juan Liu, Juanjuan Liu, Juanxi Liu, Jue Liu, Jui-Tung Liu, Jun Liu, Jun O Liu, Jun Ting Liu, Jun Yi Liu, Jun-Jen Liu, Jun-Yan Liu, Jun-Yi Liu, Junbao Liu, Junchao Liu, Junfen Liu, Junhui Liu, Junjiang Liu, Junjie Liu, Junjin Liu, Junjun Liu, Junlin Liu, Junling Liu, Junnian Liu, Junpeng Liu, Junqi Liu, Junrong Liu, Juntao Liu, Juntian Liu, Junwen Liu, Junwu Liu, Junxi Liu, Junyan Liu, Junye Liu, Junying Liu, Junyu Liu, Juyao Liu, Kai Liu, Kai-Zheng Liu, Kaidong Liu, Kaijing Liu, Kaikun Liu, Kaiqi Liu, Kaisheng Liu, Kaitai Liu, Kaiwen Liu, Kang Liu, Kang-le Liu, Kangdong Liu, Kangwei Liu, Kathleen D Liu, Ke Liu, Ke-Tong Liu, Kechun Liu, Kehui Liu, Kejia Liu, Keng-Hau Liu, Keqiang Liu, Kexin Liu, Kiang Liu, Kuangyi Liu, Kun Liu, Kun-Cheng Liu, Kwei-Yan Liu, L L Liu, L Liu, L W Liu, Lan Liu, Lan-Xiang Liu, Lang Liu, Lanhao Liu, Le Liu, Lei Liu, Lele Liu, Leping Liu, Li Liu, Li-Fang Liu, Li-Min Liu, Li-Rong Liu, Li-Wen Liu, Li-Xuan Liu, Li-Ying Liu, Li-ping Liu, Lian Liu, Lianfei Liu, Liang Liu, Liang-Chen Liu, Liang-Feng Liu, Liangguo Liu, Liangji Liu, Liangjia Liu, Liangliang Liu, Liangyu Liu, Lianxin Liu, Lianyong Liu, Libin Liu, Lichao Liu, Lichun Liu, Lidong Liu, Liegang Liu, Lifang Liu, Ligang Liu, Lihua Liu, Lijuan Liu, Lijun Liu, Lili Liu, Liling Liu, Limin Liu, Liming Liu, Lin Liu, Lina Liu, Ling Liu, Ling-Yun Liu, Ling-Zhi Liu, Lingfei Liu, Lingjiao Liu, Lingjuan Liu, Linglong Liu, Lingyan Liu, Lining Liu, Linlin Liu, Linqing Liu, Linwen Liu, Liping Liu, Liqing Liu, Liqiong Liu, Liqun Liu, Lirong Liu, Liru Liu, Liu Liu, Liumei Liu, Liusheng Liu, Liwen Liu, Lixia Liu, Lixian Liu, Lixiao Liu, Liying Liu, Liyue Liu, Lizhen Liu, Long Liu, Longfei Liu, Longjian Liu, Longqian Liu, Longyang Liu, Longzhou Liu, Lu Liu, Luhong Liu, Lulu Liu, Luming Liu, Lunxu Liu, Luping Liu, Lushan Liu, Lv Liu, M L Liu, M Liu, Man Liu, Man-Ru Liu, Manjiao Liu, Manqi Liu, Manran Liu, Maolin Liu, Mei Liu, Mei-mei Liu, Meicen Liu, Meifang Liu, Meijiao Liu, Meijing Liu, Meijuan Liu, Meijun Liu, Meiling Liu, Meimei Liu, Meixin Liu, Meiyan Liu, Meng Han Liu, Meng Liu, Meng-Hui Liu, Meng-Meng Liu, Meng-Yue Liu, Mengduan Liu, Mengfan Liu, Mengfei Liu, Menggang Liu, Menghan Liu, Menghua Liu, Menghui Liu, Mengjia Liu, Mengjiao Liu, Mengke Liu, Menglin Liu, Mengling Liu, Mengmei Liu, Mengqi Liu, Mengqian Liu, Mengxi Liu, Mengxue Liu, Mengyang Liu, Mengying Liu, Mengyu Liu, Mengyuan Liu, Mengzhen Liu, Mi Liu, Mi-Hua Liu, Mi-Min Liu, Miao Liu, Miaoliang Liu, Min Liu, Minda Liu, Minetta C Liu, Ming Liu, Ming-Jiang Liu, Ming-Qi Liu, Mingcheng Liu, Mingchun Liu, Mingfan Liu, Minghui Liu, Mingjiang Liu, Mingjing Liu, Mingjun Liu, Mingli Liu, Mingming Liu, Mingna Liu, Mingqin Liu, Mingrui Liu, Mingsen Liu, Mingsong Liu, Mingxiao Liu, Mingxing Liu, Mingxu Liu, Mingyang Liu, Mingyao Liu, Mingying Liu, Mingyu Liu, Minhao Liu, Minxia Liu, Mo-Nan Liu, Modan Liu, Mouze Liu, Muqiu Liu, Musang Liu, N A Liu, N Liu, Na Liu, Na-Nv Liu, Na-Wei Liu, Nai-feng Liu, Naihua Liu, Naili Liu, Nan Liu, Nan-Song Liu, Nana Liu, Nannan Liu, Nanxi Liu, Ni Liu, Nian Liu, Ning Liu, Ning'ang Liu, Ningning Liu, Niya Liu, Ou Liu, Ouxuan Liu, P C Liu, Pan Liu, Panhong Liu, Panting Liu, Paul Liu, Pei Liu, Pei-Ning Liu, Peijian Liu, Peijie Liu, Peijun Liu, Peilong Liu, Peiqi Liu, Peiqing Liu, Peiwei Liu, Peixi Liu, Peiyao Liu, Peizhong Liu, Peng Liu, Pengcheng Liu, Pengfei Liu, Penghong Liu, Pengli Liu, Pengtao Liu, Pengyu Liu, Pengyuan Liu, Pentao Liu, Peter S Liu, Piaopiao Liu, Pinduo Liu, Ping Liu, Ping-Yen Liu, Pinghuai Liu, Pingping Liu, Pingsheng Liu, Q Liu, Qi Liu, Qi-Xian Liu, Qian Liu, Qian-Wen Liu, Qiang Liu, Qiang-Yuan Liu, Qiangyun Liu, Qianjin Liu, Qianqi Liu, Qianshuo Liu, Qianwei Liu, Qiao-Hong Liu, Qiaofeng Liu, Qiaoyan Liu, Qiaozhen Liu, Qiji Liu, Qiming Liu, Qin Liu, Qinfang Liu, Qing Liu, Qing-Huai Liu, Qing-Rong Liu, Qingbin Liu, Qingbo Liu, Qingguang Liu, Qingguo Liu, Qinghao Liu, Qinghong Liu, Qinghua Liu, Qinghuai Liu, Qinghuan Liu, Qinglei Liu, Qingping Liu, Qingqing Liu, Qingquan Liu, Qingsong Liu, Qingxia Liu, Qingxiang Liu, Qingyang Liu, Qingyou Liu, Qingyun Liu, Qingzhuo Liu, Qinqin Liu, Qiong Liu, Qiu-Ping Liu, Qiulei Liu, Qiuli Liu, Qiulu Liu, Qiushi Liu, Qiuxu Liu, Qiuyu Liu, Qiuyue Liu, Qiwei Liu, Qiyao Liu, Qiye Liu, Qizhan Liu, Quan Liu, Quan-Jun Liu, Quanxin Liu, Quanying Liu, Quanzhong Liu, Quentin Liu, Qun Liu, Qunlong Liu, Qunpeng Liu, R F Liu, R Liu, R Y Liu, Ran Liu, Rangru Liu, Ranran Liu, Ren Liu, Renling Liu, Ri Liu, Rong Liu, Rong-Zong Liu, Rongfei Liu, Ronghua Liu, Rongxia Liu, Rongxun Liu, Rui Liu, Rui-Jie Liu, Rui-Tian Liu, Rui-Xuan Liu, Ruichen Liu, Ruihua Liu, Ruijie Liu, Ruijuan Liu, Ruilong Liu, Ruiping Liu, Ruiqi Liu, Ruitong Liu, Ruixia Liu, Ruiyi Liu, Ruizao Liu, Runjia Liu, Runjie Liu, Runni Liu, Runping Liu, Ruochen Liu, Ruotian Liu, Ruowen Liu, Ruoyang Liu, Ruyi Liu, Ruyue Liu, S Liu, Saiji Liu, Sasa Liu, Sen Liu, Senchen Liu, Senqi Liu, Sha Liu, Shan Liu, Shan-Shan Liu, Shandong Liu, Shang-Feng Liu, Shang-Xin Liu, Shangjing Liu, Shangxin Liu, Shangyu Liu, Shangyuan Liu, Shangyun Liu, Shanhui Liu, Shanling Liu, Shanshan Liu, Shao-Bin Liu, Shao-Jun Liu, Shao-Yuan Liu, Shaobo Liu, Shaocheng Liu, Shaohua Liu, Shaojun Liu, Shaoqing Liu, Shaowei Liu, Shaoying Liu, Shaoyou Liu, Shaoyu Liu, Shaozhen Liu, Shasha Liu, Sheng Liu, Shengbin Liu, Shengjun Liu, Shengnan Liu, Shengyang Liu, Shengzhi Liu, Shengzhuo Liu, Shenhai Liu, Shenping Liu, Shi Liu, Shi-Lian Liu, Shi-Wei Liu, Shi-Yong Liu, Shi-guo Liu, ShiWei Liu, Shih-Ping Liu, Shijia Liu, Shijian Liu, Shijie Liu, Shijun Liu, Shikai Liu, Shikun Liu, Shilin Liu, Shing-Hwa Liu, Shiping Liu, Shiqian Liu, Shiquan Liu, Shiru Liu, Shixi Liu, Shiyan Liu, Shiyang Liu, Shiying Liu, Shiyu Liu, Shiyuan Liu, Shou-Sheng Liu, Shouguo Liu, Shoupei Liu, Shouxin Liu, Shouyang Liu, Shu Liu, Shu-Chen Liu, Shu-Jing Liu, Shu-Lin Liu, Shu-Qiang Liu, Shu-Qin Liu, Shuai Liu, Shuaishuai Liu, Shuang Liu, Shuangli Liu, Shuangzhu Liu, Shuhong Liu, Shuhua Liu, Shui-Bing Liu, Shujie Liu, Shujing Liu, Shujun Liu, Shulin Liu, Shuling Liu, Shumin Liu, Shun-Mei Liu, Shunfang Liu, Shuning Liu, Shunming Liu, Shuqian Liu, Shuqing Liu, Shuwen Liu, Shuxi Liu, Shuxian Liu, Shuya Liu, Shuyan Liu, Shuyu Liu, Si-Jin Liu, Si-Xu Liu, Si-Yan Liu, Si-jun Liu, Sicheng Liu, Sidan Liu, Side Liu, Sihao Liu, Sijing Liu, Sijun Liu, Silvia Liu, Simin Liu, Sipu Liu, Siqi Liu, Siqin Liu, Siru Liu, Sirui Liu, Sisi Liu, Sitian Liu, Siwen Liu, Sixi Liu, Sixin Liu, Sixiu Liu, Sixu Liu, Siyao Liu, Siyi Liu, Siyu Liu, Siyuan Liu, Song Liu, Song-Fang Liu, Song-Mei Liu, Song-Ping Liu, Songfang Liu, Songhui Liu, Songqin Liu, Songsong Liu, Songyi Liu, Su Liu, Su-Yun Liu, Sudong Liu, Suhuan Liu, Sui-Feng Liu, Suling Liu, Suosi Liu, Sushuang Liu, Susu Liu, Szu-Heng Liu, T H Liu, T Liu, Ta-Chih Liu, Taihang Liu, Taixiang Liu, Tang Liu, Tao Liu, Taoli Liu, Taotao Liu, Te Liu, Teng Liu, Tengfei Liu, Tengli Liu, Teresa T Liu, Tian Liu, Tian Shu Liu, Tianhao Liu, Tianhu Liu, Tianjia Liu, Tianjiao Liu, Tianlai Liu, Tianlang Liu, Tianlong Liu, Tianqiang Liu, Tianrui Liu, Tianshu Liu, Tiantian Liu, Tianyao Liu, Tianyi Liu, Tianyu Liu, Tianze Liu, Tiemin Liu, Tina Liu, Ting Liu, Ting-Li Liu, Ting-Ting Liu, Ting-Yuan Liu, Tingjiao Liu, Tingting Liu, Tong Liu, Tonglin Liu, Tongtong Liu, Tongyan Liu, Tongyu Liu, Tongyun Liu, Tongzheng Liu, Tsang-Wu Liu, Tsung-Yun Liu, Vincent W S Liu, W Liu, W-Y Liu, Wan Liu, Wan-Chun Liu, Wan-Di Liu, Wan-Guo Liu, Wan-Ying Liu, Wang Liu, Wangrui Liu, Wanguo Liu, Wangyang Liu, Wanjun Liu, Wanli Liu, Wanlu Liu, Wanqi Liu, Wanqing Liu, Wanting Liu, Wei Liu, Wei-Chieh Liu, Wei-Hsuan Liu, Wei-Hua Liu, Weida Liu, Weifang Liu, Weifeng Liu, Weiguo Liu, Weihai Liu, Weihong Liu, Weijian Liu, Weijie Liu, Weijun Liu, Weilin Liu, Weimin Liu, Weiming Liu, Weina Liu, Weiqin Liu, Weiqing Liu, Weiren Liu, Weisheng Liu, Weishuo Liu, Weiwei Liu, Weiyang Liu, Wen Liu, Wen Yuan Liu, Wen-Chun Liu, Wen-Di Liu, Wen-Fang Liu, Wen-Jie Liu, Wen-Jing Liu, Wen-Qiang Liu, Wen-Tao Liu, Wen-ling Liu, Wenbang Liu, Wenbin Liu, Wenbo Liu, Wenchao Liu, Wenen Liu, Wenfeng Liu, Wenhan Liu, Wenhao Liu, Wenhua Liu, Wenjie Liu, Wenjing Liu, Wenlang Liu, Wenli Liu, Wenling Liu, Wenlong Liu, Wenna Liu, Wenping Liu, Wenqi Liu, Wenrui Liu, Wensheng Liu, Wentao Liu, Wenwu Liu, Wenxiang Liu, Wenxuan Liu, Wenya Liu, Wenyan Liu, Wenyi Liu, Wenzhong Liu, Wu Liu, Wuping Liu, Wuyang Liu, X C Liu, X Liu, X P Liu, X-D Liu, Xi Liu, Xi-Yu Liu, Xia Liu, Xia-Meng Liu, Xialin Liu, Xian Liu, Xianbao Liu, Xianchen Liu, Xianda Liu, Xiang Liu, Xiang-Qian Liu, Xiang-Yu Liu, Xiangchen Liu, Xiangfei Liu, Xianglan Liu, Xiangli Liu, Xiangliang Liu, Xianglu Liu, Xiangning Liu, Xiangping Liu, Xiangsheng Liu, Xiangtao Liu, Xiangting Liu, Xiangxiang Liu, Xiangxuan Liu, Xiangyong Liu, Xiangyu Liu, Xiangyun Liu, Xianli Liu, Xianling Liu, Xiansheng Liu, Xianyang Liu, Xiao Dong Liu, Xiao Liu, Xiao Yan Liu, Xiao-Cheng Liu, Xiao-Dan Liu, Xiao-Gang Liu, Xiao-Guang Liu, Xiao-Huan Liu, Xiao-Jiao Liu, Xiao-Li Liu, Xiao-Ling Liu, Xiao-Ning Liu, Xiao-Qiu Liu, Xiao-Qun Liu, Xiao-Rong Liu, Xiao-Song Liu, Xiao-Xiao Liu, Xiao-lan Liu, Xiaoan Liu, Xiaobai Liu, Xiaobei Liu, Xiaobing Liu, Xiaocen Liu, Xiaochuan Liu, Xiaocong Liu, Xiaodan Liu, Xiaoding Liu, Xiaodong Liu, Xiaofan Liu, Xiaofang Liu, Xiaofei Liu, Xiaogang Liu, Xiaoguang Liu, Xiaoguang Margaret Liu, Xiaohan Liu, Xiaoheng Liu, Xiaohong Liu, Xiaohua Liu, Xiaohuan Liu, Xiaohui Liu, Xiaojie Liu, Xiaojing Liu, Xiaoju Liu, Xiaojun Liu, Xiaole Shirley Liu, Xiaolei Liu, Xiaoli Liu, Xiaolin Liu, Xiaoling Liu, Xiaoman Liu, Xiaomei Liu, Xiaomeng Liu, Xiaomin Liu, Xiaoming Liu, Xiaona Liu, Xiaonan Liu, Xiaopeng Liu, Xiaoping Liu, Xiaoqian Liu, Xiaoqiang Liu, Xiaoqin Liu, Xiaoqing Liu, Xiaoran Liu, Xiaosong Liu, Xiaotian Liu, Xiaoting Liu, Xiaowei Liu, Xiaoxi Liu, Xiaoxia Liu, Xiaoxiao Liu, Xiaoxu Liu, Xiaoxue Liu, Xiaoya Liu, Xiaoyan Liu, Xiaoyang Liu, Xiaoye Liu, Xiaoying Liu, Xiaoyong Liu, Xiaoyu Liu, Xiawen Liu, Xibao Liu, Xibing Liu, Xie-hong Liu, Xiehe Liu, Xiguang Liu, Xijun Liu, Xili Liu, Xin Liu, Xin-Hua Liu, Xin-Yan Liu, Xinbo Liu, Xinchang Liu, Xing Liu, Xing-De Liu, Xing-Li Liu, Xing-Yang Liu, Xingbang Liu, Xingde Liu, Xinghua Liu, Xinghui Liu, Xingjing Liu, Xinglei Liu, Xingli Liu, Xinglong Liu, Xinguo Liu, Xingxiang Liu, Xingyi Liu, Xingyu Liu, Xinhua Liu, Xinjun Liu, Xinlei Liu, Xinli Liu, Xinmei Liu, Xinmin Liu, Xinran Liu, Xinru Liu, Xinrui Liu, Xintong Liu, Xinxin Liu, Xinyao Liu, Xinyi Liu, Xinying Liu, Xinyong Liu, Xinyu Liu, Xinyue Liu, Xiong Liu, Xiqiang Liu, Xiru Liu, Xishan Liu, Xiu Liu, Xiufen Liu, Xiufeng Liu, Xiuheng Liu, Xiuling Liu, Xiumei Liu, Xiuqin Liu, Xiyong Liu, Xu Liu, Xu-Dong Liu, Xu-Hui Liu, Xuan Liu, Xuanlin Liu, Xuanyu Liu, Xuanzhu Liu, Xue Liu, Xue-Lian Liu, Xue-Min Liu, Xue-Qing Liu, Xue-Zheng Liu, Xuefang Liu, Xuejing Liu, Xuekui Liu, Xuelan Liu, Xueling Liu, Xuemei Liu, Xuemeng Liu, Xuemin Liu, Xueping Liu, Xueqin Liu, Xueqing Liu, Xueru Liu, Xuesen Liu, Xueshibojie Liu, Xuesong Liu, Xueting Liu, Xuewei Liu, Xuewen Liu, Xuexiu Liu, Xueying Liu, Xueyuan Liu, Xuezhen Liu, Xuezheng Liu, Xuezhi Liu, Xufeng Liu, Xuguang Liu, Xujie Liu, Xulin Liu, Xuming Liu, Xunhua Liu, Xunyue Liu, Xuxia Liu, Xuxu Liu, Xuyi Liu, Xuying Liu, Y H Liu, Y L Liu, Y Liu, Y Y Liu, Ya Liu, Ya-Jin Liu, Ya-Kun Liu, Ya-Wei Liu, Yadong Liu, Yafei Liu, Yajing Liu, Yajuan Liu, Yaling Liu, Yalu Liu, Yan Liu, Yan-Li Liu, Yanan Liu, Yanchao Liu, Yanchen Liu, Yandong Liu, Yanfei Liu, Yanfen Liu, Yanfeng Liu, Yang Liu, Yange Liu, Yangfan Liu, Yangfan P Liu, Yangjun Liu, Yangkai Liu, Yangruiyu Liu, Yangyang Liu, Yanhong Liu, Yanhua Liu, Yanhui Liu, Yanjie Liu, Yanju Liu, Yanjun Liu, Yankuo Liu, Yanli Liu, Yanliang Liu, Yanling Liu, Yanman Liu, Yanmin Liu, Yanping Liu, Yanqing Liu, Yanqiu Liu, Yanquan Liu, Yanru Liu, Yansheng Liu, Yansong Liu, Yanting Liu, Yanwu Liu, Yanxiao Liu, Yanyan Liu, Yanyao Liu, Yanying Liu, Yanyun Liu, Yao Liu, Yao-Hui Liu, Yaobo Liu, Yaoquan Liu, Yaou Liu, Yaowen Liu, Yaoyao Liu, Yaozhong Liu, Yaping Liu, Yaqiong Liu, Yarong Liu, Yaru Liu, Yating Liu, Yaxin Liu, Ye Liu, Ye-Dan Liu, Yehai Liu, Yen-Chen Liu, Yen-Chun Liu, Yen-Nien Liu, Yeqing Liu, Yi Liu, Yi-Chang Liu, Yi-Chien Liu, Yi-Han Liu, Yi-Hung Liu, Yi-Jia Liu, Yi-Ling Liu, Yi-Meng Liu, Yi-Ming Liu, Yi-Yun Liu, Yi-Zhang Liu, YiRan Liu, Yibin Liu, Yibing Liu, Yicun Liu, Yidan Liu, Yidong Liu, Yifan Liu, Yifu Liu, Yihao Liu, Yiheng Liu, Yihui Liu, Yijing Liu, Yilei Liu, Yili Liu, Yilin Liu, Yimei Liu, Yiming Liu, Yin Liu, Yin-Ping Liu, Yinchu Liu, Yinfang Liu, Ying Liu, Ying Poi Liu, Yingchun Liu, Yinghua Liu, Yinghuan Liu, Yinghui Liu, Yingjun Liu, Yingli Liu, Yingwei Liu, Yingxia Liu, Yingyan Liu, Yingyi Liu, Yingying Liu, Yingzi Liu, Yinhe Liu, Yinhui Liu, Yining Liu, Yinjiang Liu, Yinping Liu, Yinuo Liu, Yiping Liu, Yiqing Liu, Yitian Liu, Yiting Liu, Yitong Liu, Yiwei Liu, Yiwen Liu, Yixiang Liu, Yixiao Liu, Yixuan Liu, Yiyang Liu, Yiyi Liu, Yiyuan Liu, Yiyun Liu, Yizhi Liu, Yizhuo Liu, Yong Liu, Yong Mei Liu, Yong-Chao Liu, Yong-Hong Liu, Yong-Jian Liu, Yong-Jun Liu, Yong-Tai Liu, Yong-da Liu, Yongchao Liu, Yonggang Liu, Yonggao Liu, Yonghong Liu, Yonghua Liu, Yongjian Liu, Yongjie Liu, Yongjun Liu, Yongli Liu, Yongmei Liu, Yongming Liu, Yongqiang Liu, Yongshuo Liu, Yongtai Liu, Yongtao Liu, Yongtong Liu, Yongxiao Liu, Yongyue Liu, You Liu, You-ping Liu, Youan Liu, Youbin Liu, Youdong Liu, Youhan Liu, Youlian Liu, Youwen Liu, Yu Liu, Yu Xuan Liu, Yu-Chen Liu, Yu-Ching Liu, Yu-Hui Liu, Yu-Li Liu, Yu-Lin Liu, Yu-Peng Liu, Yu-Wei Liu, Yu-Zhang Liu, YuHeng Liu, Yuan Liu, Yuan-Bo Liu, Yuan-Jie Liu, Yuan-Tao Liu, YuanHua Liu, Yuanchu Liu, Yuanfa Liu, Yuanhang Liu, Yuanhui Liu, Yuanjia Liu, Yuanjiao Liu, Yuanjun Liu, Yuanliang Liu, Yuantao Liu, Yuantong Liu, Yuanxiang Liu, Yuanxin Liu, Yuanxing Liu, Yuanying Liu, Yuanyuan Liu, Yubin Liu, Yuchen Liu, Yue Liu, Yuecheng Liu, Yuefang Liu, Yuehong Liu, Yueli Liu, Yueping Liu, Yuetong Liu, Yuexi Liu, Yuexin Liu, Yuexing Liu, Yueyang Liu, Yueyun Liu, Yufan Liu, Yufei Liu, Yufeng Liu, Yuhao Liu, Yuhe Liu, Yujia Liu, Yujiang Liu, Yujie Liu, Yujun Liu, Yulan Liu, Yuling Liu, Yulong Liu, Yumei Liu, Yumiao Liu, Yun Liu, Yun-Cai Liu, Yun-Qiang Liu, Yun-Ru Liu, Yun-Zi Liu, Yunfen Liu, Yunfeng Liu, Yuning Liu, Yunjie Liu, Yunlong Liu, Yunqi Liu, Yunqiang Liu, Yuntao Liu, Yunuan Liu, Yunuo Liu, Yunxia Liu, Yunyun Liu, Yuping Liu, Yupu Liu, Yuqi Liu, Yuqiang Liu, Yuqing Liu, Yurong Liu, Yuru Liu, Yusen Liu, Yutao Liu, Yutian Liu, Yuting Liu, Yutong Liu, Yuwei Liu, Yuxi Liu, Yuxia Liu, Yuxiang Liu, Yuxin Liu, Yuxuan Liu, Yuyan Liu, Yuyi Liu, Yuyu Liu, Yuyuan Liu, Yuzhen Liu, Yv-Xuan Liu, Z H Liu, Z Q Liu, Z Z Liu, Zaiqiang Liu, Zan Liu, Zaoqu Liu, Ze Liu, Zefeng Liu, Zekun Liu, Zeming Liu, Zengfu Liu, Zeyu Liu, Zezhou Liu, Zhangyu Liu, Zhangyuan Liu, Zhansheng Liu, Zhao Liu, Zhaoguo Liu, Zhaoli Liu, Zhaorui Liu, Zhaotian Liu, Zhaoxiang Liu, Zhaoxun Liu, Zhaoyang Liu, Zhe Liu, Zhekai Liu, Zheliang Liu, Zhen Liu, Zhen-Lin Liu, Zhendong Liu, Zhenfang Liu, Zhenfeng Liu, Zheng Liu, Zheng-Hong Liu, Zheng-Yu Liu, ZhengYi Liu, Zhengbing Liu, Zhengchuang Liu, Zhengdong Liu, Zhenghao Liu, Zhengkun Liu, Zhengtang Liu, Zhengting Liu, Zhenguo Liu, Zhengxia Liu, Zhengye Liu, Zhenhai Liu, Zhenhao Liu, Zhenhua Liu, Zhenjiang Liu, Zhenjiao Liu, Zhenjie Liu, Zhenkui Liu, Zhenlei Liu, Zhenmi Liu, Zhenming Liu, Zhenna Liu, Zhenqian Liu, Zhenqiu Liu, Zhenwei Liu, Zhenxing Liu, Zhenxiu Liu, Zhenzhen Liu, Zhenzhu Liu, Zhi Liu, Zhi Y Liu, Zhi-Fen Liu, Zhi-Guo Liu, Zhi-Jie Liu, Zhi-Kai Liu, Zhi-Ping Liu, Zhi-Ren Liu, Zhi-Wen Liu, Zhi-Ying Liu, Zhicheng Liu, Zhifang Liu, Zhigang Liu, Zhiguo Liu, Zhihan Liu, Zhihao Liu, Zhihong Liu, Zhihua Liu, Zhihui Liu, Zhijia Liu, Zhijie Liu, Zhikui Liu, Zhili Liu, Zhiming Liu, Zhipeng Liu, Zhiping Liu, Zhiqian Liu, Zhiqiang Liu, Zhiru Liu, Zhirui Liu, Zhishuo Liu, Zhitao Liu, Zhiteng Liu, Zhiwei Liu, Zhixiang Liu, Zhixue Liu, Zhiyan Liu, Zhiying Liu, Zhiyong Liu, Zhiyuan Liu, Zhong Liu, Zhong Wu Liu, Zhong-Hua Liu, Zhong-Min Liu, Zhong-Qiu Liu, Zhong-Wu Liu, Zhong-Ying Liu, Zhongchun Liu, Zhongguo Liu, Zhonghua Liu, Zhongjian Liu, Zhongjuan Liu, Zhongmin Liu, Zhongqi Liu, Zhongqiu Liu, Zhongwei Liu, Zhongyu Liu, Zhongyue Liu, Zhongzhong Liu, Zhou Liu, Zhou-di Liu, Zhu Liu, Zhuangjun Liu, Zhuanhua Liu, Zhuo Liu, Zhuoyuan Liu, Zi Hao Liu, Zi-Hao Liu, Zi-Lun Liu, Zi-Ye Liu, Zi-wen Liu, Zichuan Liu, Zihang Liu, Zihao Liu, Zihe Liu, Ziheng Liu, Zijia Liu, Zijian Liu, Zijing J Liu, Zimeng Liu, Ziqian Liu, Ziqin Liu, Ziteng Liu, Zitian Liu, Ziwei Liu, Zixi Liu, Zixuan Liu, Ziyang Liu, Ziying Liu, Ziyou Liu, Ziyuan Liu, Ziyue Liu, Zong-Chao Liu, Zong-Yuan Liu, Zonghua Liu, Zongjun Liu, Zongtao Liu, Zongxiang Liu, Zu-Guo Liu, Zuguo Liu, Zuohua Liu, Zuojin Liu, Zuolu Liu, Zuyi Liu, Zuyun Liu
articles
Jingjing Jiang, Yingxian Pang, Rongkui Luo +24 more · 2025 · Journal of endocrinological investigation · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) exhibit the highest degree of heritability among all human tumors, yet the genetics of urinary bladder paragangliomas (UBPGLs) remains poorly understood. T Show more
Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) exhibit the highest degree of heritability among all human tumors, yet the genetics of urinary bladder paragangliomas (UBPGLs) remains poorly understood. The present study aims to examine the characteristics of a cohort of Chinese patients with UBPGLs, focusing particularly on genetics. The study included 70 Chinese patients with UBPGLs from 15 centers in China, 240 patients with non-head and neck PGLs (non-HNPGLs) outside the urine bladder, and 16 Caucasian patients with UBPGLs. Tumor DNA samples were sequenced by next generation sequencing. All identified pathogenic variants (PVs) were confirmed by Sanger sequencing. Among the 70 Chinese patients, PVs were identified in 38 cases: 23 in cluster 1 A (13 SDHB, 1 SDHD, 1 SDHA, 4 IDH1, 2 SLC25A11, and 2 FH), 4 in cluster 1B (3 EPAS1 and 1 EGLN1), and 11 in cluster 2 genes (7 HRAS, 1 FGFR1, 2 NF1, and 1 H3F3A). Compared with other non-HNPGLs, UBPGLs had more PVs in cluster 1 A genes (32.9% vs. 14.2%, p < 0.001), but fewer in cluster 1B (5.7% vs. 19.2%, p = 0.002) and cluster 2 genes (15.7% vs. 42.5%, p < 0.001). PVs in SDHB (18.6%) was the most common in Chinese patients with UBPGLs, followed by HRAS (10.0%). No PVs was found in 45.7% of all UBPGLs. PVs in HRAS, SLC25A11, EPAS1, and FH were also identified in Caucasians with UBPGLs. Chinese patients with UBPGLs have a diverse genetic profile. PVs in cluster 1 A genes underlie nearly 1/3 of patients, highlighting the importance of genetic testing. Diverse germline and somatic PVs are also present in Caucasian patients with UBPGLs. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s40618-024-02509-w
FGFR1
Mouqi Bai, Gege Liang, Ruijie Sun +5 more · 2025 · Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's archives of pharmacology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Radiation-induced lung injury (RILI), manifesting in its initial phase as radiation pneumonitis (RP) and progressing over time to radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis (RIPF), represents a significant Show more
Radiation-induced lung injury (RILI), manifesting in its initial phase as radiation pneumonitis (RP) and progressing over time to radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis (RIPF), represents a significant adverse consequence associated with thoracic radiation therapy. Currently, there are limited therapeutic options for RILI. Anlotinib was confirmed the efficacy of pulmonary fibrosis. Therefore, anlotinib has the potential to treat RILI. To investigate the therapeutic role of anlotinib in RILI. RILI model in mice was successfully developed for evaluating the therapeutic efficacy of anlotinib. We used network pharmacology to find six target genes and analysed the correlation between these genes and RILI-related cytokines. Molecular docking further validates the binding ability of these target genes and anlotinib. We found the importance of TGF-β in anlotinib treatment of RILI by the results of network pharmacology and correlation analysis. We then used immunohistochemistry to demonstrate that anlotinib treats RILI by lowering TGF-β. Through enrichment analysis, we obtained potential therapeutic pathways and validated them with WB. In vivo investigations demonstrated that anlotinib is able to treat RILI: Inflammation, fibrosis, and apoptosis are reduced. This result is likely to be related to the reduction of TGF-β: The therapeutic mechanism potentially involves six genes, namely, FLT1, AKT1, KDR, TGFB2, PDGFRB1, and FGFR1; these targets bind well to anlotinib; we found that the expression of most of cytokines affecting the particular processes of RILI was closely associated with the six genes, in particular TGF-β1-3; immunohistochemistry further demonstrates that anlotinib treats RILI by lowering TGF-β1-3. In addition, KEGG enrichment analysis reveals possible pathways involving in therapeutic effects, including the PI3K-Akt, MAPK, Rap1, and Ras pathway. WB showed that anlotinib treatment significantly inhibited the PI3K/Akt signalling pathway. Therefore, anlotinib has the potential for treating RILI. Our results indicated the potential targets and molecular mechanism of anlotinib against RILI. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s00210-025-04361-y
FGFR1
Weiqin Liu, Zhenyou Zou, Wenyang Li +4 more · 2025 · International journal of molecular medicine · added 2026-04-24
Stroke is a life‑threatening cerebrovascular disorder categorized into two major subtypes: Ischemic and hemorrhagic. Characterized by high morbidity and mortality rates, its clinical management remain Show more
Stroke is a life‑threatening cerebrovascular disorder categorized into two major subtypes: Ischemic and hemorrhagic. Characterized by high morbidity and mortality rates, its clinical management remains challenging due to limited therapeutic options. Interleukin (IL)‑27, a pleiotropic cytokine with demonstrated neuroprotective potential, has emerged as a promising candidate for stroke intervention. IL‑27 exerts immunomodulatory effects within the central nervous system, including suppression of proinflammatory T‑cell proliferation and induction of regulatory T‑cell differentiation. These mechanisms collectively attenuate neuroinflammation, mitigate neuronal apoptosis and prevent neurodegenerative processes. The efficacy of IL‑27 in reducing cerebral damage in both ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke models has been validated, although clinical translation remains to be achieved. The present review summarizes: i) The epidemiology of stroke; ii) the immunoregulatory functions of IL‑27 and its neuroprotective mechanisms across stroke subtypes; iii) innovative brain‑targeted delivery approaches; iv) IL‑27 clinical applicability with supporting evidence; and v) possible risks and solutions in clinical applications. By collating the current knowledge, the present study provides a translational framework for advancing IL‑27‑based therapies in stroke management. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3892/ijmm.2025.5557
IL27
Kenneth Chi-Yin Wong, Perry Bok-Man Leung, Benedict Ka-Wa Lee +8 more · 2025 · Translational psychiatry · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) are widely used to treat schizophrenia (SCZ), but they often induce metabolic side effects like dyslipidemia and obesity. We conducted genome-wide association s Show more
Second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) are widely used to treat schizophrenia (SCZ), but they often induce metabolic side effects like dyslipidemia and obesity. We conducted genome-wide association studies (GWASs) to identify genetic variants associated with SGA-induced lipid and BMI changes in Chinese SCZ patients. A longitudinal cohort of Chinese SCZ receiving SGAs was followed for up to 18.7 years (mean = 5.7 years, SD = 3.3 years). We analysed the patients' genotypes (N = 669), lipid profiles, and BMI using 19 316 prescription records and 3 917 to 7 596 metabolic measurements per outcome. Linear mixed models were employed to evaluate seven SGAs' random effects on metabolic changes for each patient, followed by GWAS and gene set analyses with Bonferroni and FDR correction. Five SNPs achieved p-value < 5 × 10 Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41398-025-03499-w
APOA5
Xianbing Bai, Hongmei Du, Xiangxuan Liu +9 more · 2025 · Molecular neurobiology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
Sleep Deprivation (SD) severely disrupts emotional regulation, predisposing individuals to mood disturbances and anxiety. However, the precise mechanisms underlying anxiety triggered by sleep loss rem Show more
Sleep Deprivation (SD) severely disrupts emotional regulation, predisposing individuals to mood disturbances and anxiety. However, the precise mechanisms underlying anxiety triggered by sleep loss remain elusive. In this study, a mouse model of chronic SD was established using a continuously running treadmill paradigm for 28 days. SD induced anxiety-like behaviors and hippocampal ApoE downregulation. Furthermore, SD downregulated the expression of the autophagy-related protein ATG5 and upregulated p62. In addition, SD inhibited AMPK phosphorylation and induced mTOR phosphorylation. Levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, including TNF-α, IL-1β, and IL-18, were markedly increased. Immunofluorescence staining revealed a notable increase in the activation of microglia and astrocytes in the hippocampi of SD mice. Either hippocampal overexpression of ApoE via bilateral AAV injection or rapamycin treatment significantly alleviated anxiety-like behaviors, enhanced autophagy, and reduced neuroinflammation in SD mice. Thus, SD induces anxiety by suppressing autophagy level. This effect is mediated through the inhibition of ApoE-dependent AMPK phosphorylation and the concomitant promotion of mTOR phosphorylation, revealing a potential therapeutic target. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12035-025-05610-0
APOE
Xiaodong Song, Qilin Zhong, Rongxu Zhang +10 more · 2025 · Journal of affective disorders · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Cognitive impairments in major depressive disorder (MDD) affect patients' social functioning, with underlying mechanisms involving gut microbiota and inflammatory factors remaining unclear. The study Show more
Cognitive impairments in major depressive disorder (MDD) affect patients' social functioning, with underlying mechanisms involving gut microbiota and inflammatory factors remaining unclear. The study analyzed cognitive function, gut microbiota changes, and inflammatory factor levels in 39 unmedicated MDD patients and 41 healthy controls, employing correlation and moderation effect analysis. MDD patients scored lower than controls in cognitive functions like information processing speed, attention/vigilance, verbal learning, visual learning and social cognition. They showed reduced gut microbiota diversity and increased levels of inflammatory markers (TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6, IL-17, IL-27, IL-33). Sellimonas abundance correlated negatively with attention/vigilance, moderated by TNF-α, IL-27, and IL-33. This relationship was stronger at lower inflammation levels. MDD patients exhibit multi-domain cognitive dysfunction alongside pro-inflammatory states and disrupted gut microbiota. The abundance of Sellimonas significantly predicts attention/vigilance deficits. Inflammatory factors modulate the impact of gut microbiota on cognitive function, suggesting chronic low-grade inflammation as a key risk factor for cognitive impairment in MDD. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2025.119648
IL27
Xue Li, Luping Liu, Li Jiang +7 more · 2025 · Journal of molecular cell biology · Oxford University Press · added 2026-04-24
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1093/jmcb/mjae053
IL27
Terri A Pietka, Edward F Morris, Megan Basco +7 more · 2025 · bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology · Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory · added 2026-04-24
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) is critical for clearance of circulating triglycerides and for tissue fatty acid supply. LPL is primarily synthesized and secreted by adipocytes into the interstitium and must Show more
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) is critical for clearance of circulating triglycerides and for tissue fatty acid supply. LPL is primarily synthesized and secreted by adipocytes into the interstitium and must traffic from there to the abluminal/basolateral side of capillary endothelial cells. There, LPL binds glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein 1, GPIHBP1, which stabilizes the protein and facilitates its movement across the endothelial cells to the luminal side where it functions in hydrolysis of lipoprotein triglycerides. Importance of LPL traffic is supported by findings that rare mutations in GPIHBP1 cause hypertriglyceridemia. However our understanding of how LPL is secreted by adipocytes and traffics to endothelial cells is incomplete. Here we examined the possibility that secretion and traffic of adipocyte LPL might involve generation of small extracellular vesicles (sEVs/exosomes) which often mediate cell-cell communication. Proteomic analysis of sEVs secreted by adipocytes showed them enriched in LPL. To study LPL secretion and transfer we generated human derived pre-adipocytes (HPA) that stably express tagged LPL (FLAG and His epitopes). LPL pulldown and sEV isolation from HPA conditioned media documented that greater than 70% of secreted LPL is present in sEVs. The mechanism for LPL secretion in sEVs was found to involve the ESCRT-independent neutral sphingomyelinase 2 (nSMase2) pathway, as treatment with the nSMase2 inhibitor GW4869 reduced secretion by 80%. The above observations were reproduced using highly sensitive nanoparticle flow cytometry. The sEV associated LPL has lipolytic activity and it is released by heparin addition indicating it is on the sEV surface. In addition, using human derived microvascular endothelial cells with stable lentiviral expression of GPIHBP1 we show that LPL positive sEVs transfer LPL to these cells, but not to control cells without GPIHBP1. Our findings suggest that sEV formation by nSMase2 controls adipocyte LPL secretion and traffic, that sEVs protect LPL activity and facilitate LPL transfer to GPIHBP1 on endothelial cells. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1101/2025.07.31.665751
LPL
Qiting Fang, Zhonghua Liu, Kaixi Wang · 2025 · Journal of agricultural and food chemistry · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-24
Selenium (Se) foliar fertilizers enhance crop nutrition and address human selenium deficiency, while improper application may lead to excessive intake and residue accumulation. Our study comprehensive Show more
Selenium (Se) foliar fertilizers enhance crop nutrition and address human selenium deficiency, while improper application may lead to excessive intake and residue accumulation. Our study comprehensively assessed the toxicity and function of novel selenium nanoparticles and traditional sodium selenite fertilizers across cell, zebrafish, and murine models. Both fertilizers enhanced antioxidant pathways at low doses, but selenium nanoparticles exhibited stronger antioxidant and ferroptosis-modulating effects with lower toxicity at a high dose. Sodium selenite increased total and lipid ROS production, leading to decreased viability of cells and increased distortion and mortality of zebrafish. In mice, sodium selenite induced hepatic toxicity and decreased GPX4. Transcriptome analysis revealed that sodium selenite downregulated c-JUN and APOA4, weakening the antioxidant defense, whereas selenium nanoparticles promoted ferroptosis resistance through FGF21. These findings suggest selenium nanoparticles as a safer alternative for Se biofortification, mitigating health risks while supporting food security and environmental sustainability. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5c02034
APOA4
Zihao Zhou, Yidan Zheng, Shiyan Hu +13 more · 2025 · Heart (British Cardiac Society) · added 2026-04-24
Calcific aortic stenosis (CAS) is frequently accompanied by systemic comorbidities, but their causal relationships and shared genetic architecture remain poorly defined. We aimed to map the multisyste Show more
Calcific aortic stenosis (CAS) is frequently accompanied by systemic comorbidities, but their causal relationships and shared genetic architecture remain poorly defined. We aimed to map the multisystem comorbidity network of CAS and clarify underlying genetic mechanisms. In 467 484 participants from the UK Biobank, observational and polygenic phenome-wide association studies evaluated associations between CAS and 1571 phenotypes, integrating disease-trajectory analyses to visualise temporal patterns. Associations replicated across observational and polygenic analyses were tested using two-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) based on 22 CAS-related variants from FinnGen. Polygenic risk score (PRS) analyses excluding specific genes assessed their contributions, particularly LPA and plasma lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) levels. CAS was associated with higher risks of 42 cardiovascular and non-cardiovascular conditions, most prominently metabolic, endocrine, haematological and respiratory disorders. Temporal analyses showed that circulatory and metabolic diseases typically precede other comorbidities in CAS trajectories. MR findings were consistent with causal effects of CAS on multiple cardiovascular diseases, iron-deficiency anaemia, mental disorders and pleural effusion. When LPA variants were removed from the CAS PRS or plasma Lp(a) concentration was adjusted for, most associations lost significance, indicating a shared LPA/Lp(a)-mediated genetic pathway. CAS is embedded within a broad multisystem comorbidity network, driven largely by genetic variation at LPA and elevated Lp(a). These findings highlight pleiotropic mechanisms linking valvular calcification with systemic disease and support LPA-targeted therapies as a promising avenue for reducing the multisystem burden of CAS. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2025-326058
LPA
Lu Liu, Lan Liu, Chenjing Yue +3 more · 2025 · Molecular medicine (Cambridge, Mass.) · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Endometriosis can lead to decreased endometrial receptivity, reduced rates of implantation, and diminished ovarian reserve. Currently, more than 50% of infertile women are found to suffer from endomet Show more
Endometriosis can lead to decreased endometrial receptivity, reduced rates of implantation, and diminished ovarian reserve. Currently, more than 50% of infertile women are found to suffer from endometriosis. However the etiology and pathogenesis of endometriosis are still poorly understood. Epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) has been confirmed to be involved in endometriosis. PYK2 is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase that affects cell proliferation, survival, and migration by regulating intracellular signaling pathways. PYK2 plays a regulatory role in the EMT process by affecting the expression of genes associated with EMT through the influence of transcription factors. Snail1 (Snail1) plays a key role in the EMT process and is highly expressed in endometriosis tissues. On the other hand, Snail1 affects the invasive and metastatic ability of endometriosis cells mainly by regulating the EMT process. However, the upstream mechanisms that regulate the process of Snail1 protein stability in endometriosis are not clear. We identified a non-receptor tyrosine kinase, proline-rich tyrosine kinase 2 (PYK2 or PTK2B), and examined the expression of PYK2 in endometriosis. The relevant plasmids were constructed. This study enrolled 20 patients with laparoscopically confirmed endometriosis meeting ASRM diagnostic criteria, collecting ectopic lesions (14 ovarian endometriotic cysts and 6 deep infiltrating nodules) along with matched eutopic endometrial tissues (15 proliferative phase, 5 secretory phase) as controls. All tissue specimens underwent immunohistochemical analysis. Human endometrial stromal cells (HESC) were isolated from normal endometrium of 3 control patients for in vitro meconium induction. Ectopic endometrial stromal cells (EESC) were obtained from 5 ectopic lesions. Protein extracts from both ectopic tissues and cells were subjected to Western blot and co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) interaction validation. Functional assays (proliferation/migration/invasion) were performed using EESC and 11Z cell lines with triplicate biological replicates. Co-IP experiments were performed to verify the interaction between PYK2 and Snail1, as well as to determine the specific location of this interaction. Additionally, we examined the effect of PYK2 on endometriosis cells in vitro and whether VS-6063 inhibits the biological functions of endometriosis cells. Endometriosis models were established in 20 five-week-old female C57BL/6 mice, randomly allocated into experimental (n = 10) and control (n = 10) groups. Statistical analyses were conducted using GraphPad Prism 7.0, employing parametric tests for normally distributed data and non-parametric methods otherwise, with Benjamini-Hochberg correction for multiple comparisons. PYK2 is highly expressed in endometriosis tissues. It acts as a new binding partner of Snail1 and enhances EMT in endometriosis by increasing the phosphorylation of Snail1. Additionally, PYK2 promotes the proliferation, migration, and invasion of endometriosis cells while inhibiting decidualization. We demonstrated that VS-6063 inhibited the proliferation, migration, and invasion of endometriosis cells in vitro, as well as the growth of endometriotic lesions in vivo. PYK2 is a novel binding partner of Snail1. PYK2 promotes the occurrence and development of endometriosis by up-regulating Snail1, which could be a promising therapeutic target for endometriosis. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1186/s10020-025-01218-1
SNAI1
Jinyue Liu, Yueping Jiang, Yueyi Xing +5 more · 2025 · BMC gastroenterology · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
This study aimed to assess the prognostic significance of serum lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] levels regarding overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) among patients diagnosed with pancreat Show more
This study aimed to assess the prognostic significance of serum lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] levels regarding overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) among patients diagnosed with pancreatic cancer (PC). A retrospective cohort of 364 pathologically confirmed PC patients treated at the Affiliated Hospital of Qingdao University between January 2019 and December 2022 was analyzed. The optimal cutoff for Lp(a) was identified using X-tile software, allowing categorization into high and low Lp(a) groups. To minimize selection bias, propensity score matching (PSM) was utilized. Survival outcomes were compared using Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests. Cox proportional hazards models were applied to identify independent prognostic variables affecting OS and PFS. Patients with high Lp(a) had significantly shorter OS and PFS both before and after PSM (post-PSM OS: 12.28 vs. 27.67 months, P = 0.003; PFS: 7.00 vs. 11.30 months, P = 0.002). Multivariate Cox analysis confirmed high Lp(a) as an independent predictor of poor OS [HR = 2.11 (1.17-3.81), P = 0.013] and PFS [HR = 2.14 (1.20-3.83), P = 0.010]. In the surgical subgroup (n = 215), high Lp(a) was also associated with worse OS (16.43 vs. 35.47 months, P = 0.02) and PFS (8.40 vs. 11.77 months, P = 0.036). Multivariate analysis in this subgroup showed that high Lp(a) remained an independent risk factor for OS [HR = 2.82 (1.36-5.87), P = 0.006] and PFS [HR = 2.01 (1.06-3.86), P = 0.034]. Elevated serum Lp(a) is an independent predictor of reduced OS and PFS in patients with pancreatic cancer. In contrast to conventional lipid profiles, the genetic stability of Lp(a) makes it a reliable baseline prognostic marker. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s12876-025-04573-9
LPA
Jing-Yi Wang, Yao-Hui Liu, Xiao Wang +7 more · 2025 · Arthritis research & therapy · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Meniscus degeneration contributes to knee arthritis progression, but the cellular and molecular mechanisms of meniscus aging remain poorly understood. We aimed to characterize age-related changes in t Show more
Meniscus degeneration contributes to knee arthritis progression, but the cellular and molecular mechanisms of meniscus aging remain poorly understood. We aimed to characterize age-related changes in the rat meniscus using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) and identify key pathogenic cell populations and pathways. Meniscal tissues from young (12 weeks) and aged (24 months) rats were processed for histology, flow cytometry, and scRNA-seq. Bioinformatics tools, including Seurat, Monocle 2, and CellChat, were used to analyze cellular composition, pseudotime trajectories, and intercellular communication. Senescence-related features and signaling pathways were evaluated. Knee joint of aged rats exhibited higher Osteoarthritis Research Society International (OARSI) scores and synovial inflammation. scRNA-seq revealed three major chondrocyte subpopulations: Sox9 + stable chondrocytes, Fndc1 + fibrochondrocytes, and Atf3 + senescent chondrocytes. Aging caused a significant increase in Atf3 + senescent chondrocytes, characterized by the expression of senescence markers (Cdkn1a/Cdkn2a) and activation of inflammatory pathways such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB). These cells were predominantly located at the endpoint of differentiation trajectories. CellChat analysis identified the ANGPTL4-SDC4 axis as a key signaling pathway mediated by Atf3 + cells. Immunostaining confirmed elevated Angiopoietin-Like Protein 4 (ANGPTL4) expression in aged menisci. We identified Atf3 + senescent chondrocytes as a key pathogenic population in the aging meniscus, driving degeneration via the ANGPTL4 pathway. Targeting Atf3 + cells or ANGPTL4 signaling may offer new therapeutic strategies for age-related meniscus degeneration and arthritis. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1186/s13075-025-03566-z
ANGPTL4
Xiaowei Wang, Kenan Peng, Yudi Zhao +11 more · 2025 · The Journal of biological chemistry · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Cholesterol-loaded macrophage foam cells are a key feature of atherosclerotic plaques. Oxysterol-binding protein-related protein 2 (ORP2) facilitates the transport of cholesterol from lysosomes to the Show more
Cholesterol-loaded macrophage foam cells are a key feature of atherosclerotic plaques. Oxysterol-binding protein-related protein 2 (ORP2) facilitates the transport of cholesterol from lysosomes to the plasma membrane in cultured cell lines. However, the role of ORP2 in macrophages and its involvement in atherosclerosis remain unclear. In this study, we found ORP2 expression was reduced in atherosclerotic vessels and in macrophages exposed to oxidized LDL (ox-LDL). Myeloid-specific human ORP2 overexpression (hORP2 Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.jbc.2025.110228
NR1H3
Shuhong Liang, Yaxu Yu, Shuang Liu +2 more · 2025 · Journal of behavioral addictions · added 2026-04-24
The Interaction of Person-Affect-Cognition-Execution (I-PACE) model offers a framework for understanding the interplay between cognitive, affective, and behavioral factors in internet addiction (IA). Show more
The Interaction of Person-Affect-Cognition-Execution (I-PACE) model offers a framework for understanding the interplay between cognitive, affective, and behavioral factors in internet addiction (IA). Our study aims to explore the heterogeneity of IA, identify bridge connectors, and compare the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy combined with mindfulness-based intervention (CBT+MBI) versus CBT alone in reducing IA levels among Chinese college students. In study 1, 1,030 Chinese college students completed assessments of IA, automatic thoughts, self-control, and anxiety. Latent profile analysis (LPA) was employed to identify distinct symptom profiles of IA across individuals. Network analysis (NA) identified bridge connectors for targeted intervention. In study 2, 36 participants randomly selected from the high IA and low IA groups of study 1 were randomly assigned to CBT+MBI, CBT alone, or a control group. The CBT+MBI group received an 8-week dual-modality intervention and the CBT alone received an 8-week CBT intervention, both designed to target the bridge connectors identified via NA in Study 1, while the control group only completed basic questionnaires. In study 1, LPA identified four subgroups: regular, at-risk, low IA, and high IA groups. NA pinpointed automatic thoughts and anxiety as bridge connectors. In study 2, targeted interventions significantly reduced college students' levels of IA. CBT+MBI resulted in greater and more sustained improvements compared to CBT alone, with effects maintained for six-month post-intervention. Our study not only reinforces the I-PACE model but also provides actionable strategies for designing evidence-based, multidimensional interventions to reduce addictive behaviors among college students. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1556/2006.2025.00086
LPA
Q Zang, F Li, Y Ju +6 more · 2025 · Scandinavian journal of rheumatology · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
Recent studies suggest that dyslipidaemia may play a critical role in the progression of cardiovascular disease in Takayasu arteritis (TA), although the exact relationship between dyslipidaemia and TA Show more
Recent studies suggest that dyslipidaemia may play a critical role in the progression of cardiovascular disease in Takayasu arteritis (TA), although the exact relationship between dyslipidaemia and TA disease activity remains unclear, which is the focus of this study. We evaluated dyslipidaemia and atherosclerosis in a cohort of untreated female patients. Fifty untreated female patients with TA (median age 30 years) and 98 healthy controls matched for age and body mass index (median age 30 years) were assessed for lipid profiles [total cholesterol (TC), triglycerides (TG), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), apolipoprotein A1 (ApoA1), ApoB, ApoE, lipoprotein(a)], inflammatory markers [C-reactive protein (CRP), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR)], and atherosclerotic plaque frequency. TA patients exhibited significantly higher levels of TG and the non-HDL-C/HDL-C ratio than the control group, whereas TC, HDL-C, LDL-C, and ApoA1 levels were significantly lower. Pearson's correlation analysis indicated a positive correlation between CRP and ApoB, as well as the non-HDL-C/HDL-C ratio, and negative correlations with TG, HDL-C, and ApoA1. Atherosclerotic plaques were detected in 14.3% of the TA patients. Multivariate regression analysis revealed that the presence of atherosclerotic plaques was associated only with age, independent of inflammatory markers and lipoprotein levels. The results of this study indicate that untreated female TA patients exhibit a markedly dysregulated serum lipid profile. Atherosclerosis in early TA was not related to lipids or markers of inflammation. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/03009742.2025.2488096
APOB
Chao Wei, Jing Liu, Bing Wu +8 more · 2025 · Brain, behavior, and immunity · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Accumulating evidence indicates that neuroinflammation is involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). According to RNA sequencing and quantitative PCR (qPCR), we found that chemokine CCL Show more
Accumulating evidence indicates that neuroinflammation is involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD). According to RNA sequencing and quantitative PCR (qPCR), we found that chemokine CCL3 mRNA expression was abnormally upregulated in the brains of AD transgenic mice. Moreover, the levels of CCL3 in the serum of AD patients were significantly elevated and negatively correlated with their cognitive abilities. However, the role of CCL3 in AD neuroinflammation and pathological damages remains elusive. Using behavioral, histological, and biochemical methods, outcomes of CCL3 antibody treatment on neuropathology and cognitive deficits were studied in the APPswe/PS1dE9 mice. In the present study, we reported that CCL3 protein expression was increased in the APPswe/PS1dE9 mice, whereas blockage of CCL3 with neutralizing antibody potently inhibited CCL3 activation in the APPswe/PS1dE9 mice down to the levels of wild-type mice. Specifically, CCL3 antibody significantly improved the learning and memory abilities of APPswe/PS1dE9 mice. In addition, CCL3 antibody treatment decreased cerebral amyloid-β (Aβ) levels and plaque burden via inhibiting amyloid precursor protein (APP) processing by reducing beta-site APP cleaving enzyme 1 (BACE1) expression in the APPswe/PS1dE9 mice. We also found that CCL3 antibody treatment alleviated neuroinflammation and reduced synaptic defects in the APPswe/PS1dE9 mice. Furthermore, the activated NF-κB signaling pathway in APPswe/PS1dE9 mice was inhibited by CCL3 antibody treatment. Collectively, our findings provide evidence that CCL3 activation may contribute to the AD pathogenesis and may serve as a novel therapeutic target in the treatment of AD. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.bbi.2025.04.034
BACE1
Ruijia Xue, Jiali Liu, Haoyang Wang +5 more · 2025 · Circulation. Cardiovascular imaging · added 2026-04-24
Lp(a) (lipoprotein [a]) and coronary artery calcium score (CACS) are independently associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk. This study aimed to investigate sex-specific pro Show more
Lp(a) (lipoprotein [a]) and coronary artery calcium score (CACS) are independently associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk. This study aimed to investigate sex-specific prognostic differences between Lp(a) and CACS in ASCVD risk. We analyzed 4651 participants from the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis, grouped by sex. Multivariable Cox regression analysis was performed to evaluate the prognostic value of Lp(a) and CACS for ASCVD risk in both sexes. The predictive performance of these factors was compared in men and women. During a median follow-up of 13.84 years, 465 ASCVD events were recorded (272 in men and 193 in women). Multivariable Cox regression analysis revealed that both elevated Lp(a) and CACS were independent predictors of ASCVD risk in both sexes. The C-index analysis demonstrated that CACS provided incremental prognostic value over Lp(a) in men (C-index: 0.732 versus 0.714; Although both Lp(a) and CACS independently predict ASCVD risk in both sexes, the predictive value of Lp(a) varies significantly between men and women across different CACS categories. These findings may inform sex-specific strategies for primary prevention of ASCVD. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1161/CIRCIMAGING.125.018413
LPA
Pengbo Zhang, Xiaofang Wang, Nanji Lu +3 more · 2025 · iScience · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) is characterized by inflammation and tissue remodeling, including fibrosis and adipogenesis. Here, we identify interleukin-27 (IL-27) as a negative feedback imm Show more
Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) is characterized by inflammation and tissue remodeling, including fibrosis and adipogenesis. Here, we identify interleukin-27 (IL-27) as a negative feedback immunomodulator in TAO. Serum IL-27α levels were significantly elevated in patients with TAO compared with healthy and inflammatory disease controls. In orbital fibroblasts (OFs), exogenous IL-27 suppressed IL-1β-induced proinflammatory cytokines and reduced hypoxia-induced NLRP3 inflammasome activation. IL-27 also attenuated TGF-β-driven fibrosis via p38 MAPK signaling in CD90 Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2025.113982
IL27
Ran Yan, Lu Liu, Ioanna Tzoulaki +4 more · 2025 · Liver international : official journal of the International Association for the Study of the Liver · Blackwell Publishing · added 2026-04-24
Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP1R) agonists and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide receptor (GIPR) agonists may help treat metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MAS Show more
Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP1R) agonists and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide receptor (GIPR) agonists may help treat metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). However, their definitive effects are still unclear. Our study aims to clarify this uncertainty. We utilised conventional Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis to explore potential causal links between plasma GLP-1/GIP concentrations and MASLD and its related traits. Next, we conducted drug-target MR analysis using highly expressed tissue data to assess the effects of corresponding drug perturbation on these traits. Finally, mediation analysis was performed to ascertain whether the potential causal effect is direct or mediated by other MASLD-related traits. Circulating 2-h GLP-1 and GIP concentrations measured during an oral glucose tolerance test showed hepatoprotective effects on MASLD risk (OR GLP-1/GIP receptor agonists offer promise in lowering MASLD/MASH risk. GIP receptor agonists can exert direct and indirect effects on MASLD mediated by weight reduction or glycemic control improvement. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1111/liv.16150
GIPR
Zhenwei Dai, Shu Jing, Haiyan Hu +8 more · 2025 · Brain and behavior · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is a global public health issue, and HPV-related stigma can affect cervical cancer prevention. But no validated tools exist to assess HPV stigma in Chinese adult w Show more
Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is a global public health issue, and HPV-related stigma can affect cervical cancer prevention. But no validated tools exist to assess HPV stigma in Chinese adult women infected with HPV. This study aimed to adapt and validate the HPVsStigma scale (HPV-SS) in the Chinese context. A cross-sectional study was conducted from December 2024 to February 2025 among 501 HPV-infected women in Shenzhen, China. The HPV-SS was adapted from a 12-item HIV stigma scale. Demographic characteristics, HPV-related variables, and data on mental health were collected. Factor analyses (FA) were used to assess the scale's factorial structure, reliability, and validity. The bi-factor model was used to determine the score-reporting method of the scale. Item response theory (IRT) was employed to assess the relationship between participants' stigma levels and scale scores. Latent profile analysis (LPA) was conducted to classify the participants with different HPV stigma characteristics and determine the optimal cut-off value for HPV-SS. FA showed that the 3-factor model (personalized stigma, public-disclosure concerns, and negative self-image) had the best fit among the nested models, with good reliability and validity. The bi-factor model analysis indicated that the total scale score was more meaningful than dimension scores. IRT analysis confirmed that higher HPV-SS scores represented higher stigma levels. LPA identified a 2-class model as optimal, and the optimal cut-off value of the scale for high HPV stigma was 35. This study validated the 12-item HPV-SS for Chinese women infected with HPV, with good reliability and validity. The scale can be used to evaluate HPV stigma levels, facilitating targeted interventions to improve cervical cancer prevention and the psychological well-being of affected women. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/brb3.71044
LPA
Wenxuan Liu, Li Liu, Tianrui Kuang +1 more · 2025 · Journal of Cancer · added 2026-04-24
📄 PDF DOI: 10.7150/jca.104389
APOC3
Xu Zhang, Fayu Liu, Qigen Fang +2 more · 2025 · Biology direct · BioMed Central · added 2026-04-24
Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is one of the leading causes of cancer-related mortality worldwide due to its high aggressive potential and drug resistance. Previous studies have revealed an impor Show more
Oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) is one of the leading causes of cancer-related mortality worldwide due to its high aggressive potential and drug resistance. Previous studies have revealed an important function of HECT And RLD Domain Containing E3 Ubiquitin Protein Ligase 5 (HERC5) in cancer. Six GEO gene microarrays identified HERC5 as a significant upregulated gene in OSCC tissues or cells (log2 Fold change > 1 and adj.p < 0.05). This study aimed to explore the role and underlying mechanisms of HERC5 in OSCC development. High HERC5 expression in OSCC tissues was confirmed by our hospital validation cohort and positively correlated with primary tumor stages. Subsequent functional studies demonstrated that knockdown of HERC5 inhibited the migratory and invasive capabilities with decrease of Vimentin and increase of E-cadherin in OSCC cells. In cisplatin treatment, cell survival rates were significantly reduced in HERC5-silencing OSCC cells, accompanied by the increase in cytotoxicity, DNA damage and apoptosis. OSCC cell-derived tumor xenograft displayed that HERC5 depletion inhibited pulmonary metastasis as well as restored the cisplatin-induced tumor burden. In line with this, overexpression of HERC5 yielded the opposite alterations both in vivo and in vitro. Mechanistically, UDP-glucose 6-dehydrogenase (UGDH) was identified as a HERC5-binding protein. Cysteine residue at position 994 in the HECT domain of HERC5 catalyzed the conjugation of ubiquitin-like protein Interferon-induced 15 kDa protein (ISG15) to UGDH (ISGylation of UGDH) and facilitated its phosphorylation, therefore enhancing SNAI1 mRNA stability. SNAI1 depletion inhibited HERC5 overexpression-triggered invasion and cisplatin resistance of OSCC cells. Our study indicates that HERC5 may be a promising therapeutic target for OSCC. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1186/s13062-025-00622-1
SNAI1
Danyang Zhang, Xiaoshi He, Yinbo Wang +8 more · 2025 · International journal of molecular sciences · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
Diabetes constitutes a risk factor for cognitive impairment, whereas insulin resistance serves as the shared pathogenesis underlying both diabetes and cognitive decline. The use of metformin for treat Show more
Diabetes constitutes a risk factor for cognitive impairment, whereas insulin resistance serves as the shared pathogenesis underlying both diabetes and cognitive decline. The use of metformin for treating cognitive impairment remains controversial. The present study found that hesperetin, a flavanone derived from citrus peel, enhanced metformin's efficacy in reducing blood sugar levels, improving insulin sensitivity, and ameliorating cognitive impairment in diabetic rats. Additionally, it reduced the required dosage of metformin to one-third of its conventional dose. Transcriptome analysis and 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that the activation of insulin and cyclic-adenosine monophosphate response element binding protein (CREB)/brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) pathways benefited from the regulation of gut microbiota and the promotion of short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) producers such as Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/ijms26051923
BACE1
Xu Cao, Mingfan Liu, Dongmei Zou +3 more · 2025 · Discover oncology · Springer · added 2026-04-24
The intrinsic heterogeneity and invasiveness of diffuse gliomas complicate accurate prognosis. Existing approaches are largely constrained by subtype specificity or limited analytical dimensions. To a Show more
The intrinsic heterogeneity and invasiveness of diffuse gliomas complicate accurate prognosis. Existing approaches are largely constrained by subtype specificity or limited analytical dimensions. To address this gap, a multi- dimension-based prognostic framework encompassing the full glioma spectrum was developed, accompanied by an analysis of the associated immune microenvironment. A total of 3,323 glioma samples from the SEER (n = 2181), CGGA (n = 807), and TCGA (n = 335) datasets were integrated. Differentially expressed genes were screened using the limma package, and a Lasso-Cox-based prognostic signature (Glioma-GDPM) was established. Clinical variables such as age, grade, and IDH mutation status were harmonized through propensity score matching to construct a multi-omics prognostic model (Glioma-GCDPM). GSEA, CIBERSORT-based immune infiltration analysis, and TIDE scoring were used to investigate the biological characteristics of different risk subgroups. Eleven key prognostic genes (such as PRAMEF2 and FADS1) and four clinical factors (age, tumor grade, IDH mutation, and 1p/19q codeletion) were identified. Glioma-GCDPM demonstrated favorable predictive ability in both the internal test cohort (AUC 0.81-0.86) and external validation sets (AUC 0.59-0.83). High-risk tumors exhibited greater invasiveness, with significant enrichment in cell cycle and proliferation-associated pathways. Additionally, a suppressed immune microenvironment was observed, reflected by elevated M2 macrophage infiltration and increased T cell dysfunction scores. The multi-omics model established in this study enables precise stratification of prognostic risk in diffuse glioma patients and reveals immunosuppressive features in high-risk individuals, providing a new basis for personalized treatment strategies. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1007/s12672-025-03551-7
FADS1
Ni Wang, Yanan Xu, Jiahui Li +7 more · 2025 · Journal of microbiology and biotechnology · added 2026-04-24
As a chronic lipid driven arterial disease, dyslipidemia is one of the most critical risk factors for atherosclerosis (AS). The gut microbiota plays an important role in regulating host lipid metaboli Show more
As a chronic lipid driven arterial disease, dyslipidemia is one of the most critical risk factors for atherosclerosis (AS). The gut microbiota plays an important role in regulating host lipid metabolism disorders. Studies have shown that the herb "Gualou-Xiebai" (GLXB) can effectively regulate the blood lipid levels of ApoE Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.4014/jmb.2510.10023
APOE
Yuling Yang, Yingyan Liu, Limei Zhong +5 more · 2025 · Scientific reports · Nature · added 2026-04-24
Neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a life-threatening gastrointestinal disease of premature infants, characterized by immune dysregulation and compromised intestinal barrier integrity. Interl Show more
Neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is a life-threatening gastrointestinal disease of premature infants, characterized by immune dysregulation and compromised intestinal barrier integrity. Interleukin-27 receptor α (IL-27Ra), a critical component of the JAK-STAT signaling pathway, exhibits dual pro- and anti-inflammatory roles in various inflammatory conditions. However, its role in NEC pathogenesis remains unclear. To elucidate the functional role of IL-27Ra in NEC development and assess its potential as a therapeutic target. A multi-tiered approach was employed, including integrative analysis of clinical NEC specimens by single-cell and bulk RNA sequencing, and a neonatal mouse NEC model. NEC was induced in mice via hyperosmolar formula feeding combined with LPS gavage, intermittent hypoxia, and cold stress. Additional experiments included immunofluorescence staining for IL-27Ra, cytokine profiling (ELISA, quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR)), use of IL-27Ra knockout (IL-27Ra Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-26899-w
IL27
Baoqi Li, Mingcong Xu, Bang An +8 more · 2025 · Materials horizons · Royal Society of Chemistry · added 2026-04-24
Dynamic responsive structural colored materials have drawn increased consideration in a wide range of applications, such as colorimetric sensors and high-safety tags. However, the sophisticated intera Show more
Dynamic responsive structural colored materials have drawn increased consideration in a wide range of applications, such as colorimetric sensors and high-safety tags. However, the sophisticated interactions among the individual responsive parts restrict the advanced design of multimodal responsive photonic materials. Inspired by stimuli-responsive color change in chameleon skin, a simple and effective photo-crosslinking strategy is proposed to construct hydroxypropyl cellulose (HPC) based hydrogels with multiple responsive structured colors. By controlling UV exposure time, the structural color of HPC hydrogels can be effectively controlled in a full-color spectrum. At the same time, HPC hydrogels showcase temperature and mechanical dual-responsive structural colors. In particular, the microstructure of HPC hydrogels undergoes a transition from the chiral nematic phase to the nematic phase under the action of external stretching, leading to a significant reflection of circularly polarized light (CPL) to linearly polarized light (LPL). Given the diverse responsiveness exhibited by HPC hydrogels and their unique structural transition properties under external forces, we have explored their potential applications as dynamic anti-counterfeiting labels and optical skins. This work reveals the great possibility of using structural colored cellulose hydrogels in multi-sensing and optical displays, opening up a new path for the exploration of next-generation flexible photonic devices. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1039/d4mh01646g
LPL
Kaijie Yu, Fang Liu, Tianrui Yu +3 more · 2025 · Neurological research · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
To investigate the role of lncRNA BACE1-AS in neuronal injury and neurological deficits after ischemic stroke and explore its underlying molecular mechanism. MCAO rat model and OGD/R cell model were e Show more
To investigate the role of lncRNA BACE1-AS in neuronal injury and neurological deficits after ischemic stroke and explore its underlying molecular mechanism. MCAO rat model and OGD/R cell model were established. BACE1-AS expression was detected by RT-qPCR. Neurological function was evaluated by mNSS and MWM test. Inflammatory factors (TNF-α, IL-6, IL-10), neuronal injury markers (NSE, GFAP), and apoptosis-related markers (Bcl-2, Bax, Caspase-3) were detected by ELISA and RT-qPCR. Bioinformatics analysis, dual-luciferase reporter assay, and RIP assay were used to validate the targeting relationship between BACE1-AS and miR-103a-3p. BACE1-AS was significantly upregulated in both MCAO rats and OGD/R-treated SH-SY5Y cells. Silencing BACE1-AS alleviated neurological deficits, reduced pro-inflammatory cytokine levels, and inhibited neuronal apoptosis. Mechanistically, BACE1-AS targeted miR-103a-3p, and inhibiting miR-103a-3p reversed the neuroprotective effects of BACE1-AS silencing in vivo and in vitro. Silencing BACE1-AS mitigates neuronal injury and neurological deficits after ischemic stroke by targeting miR-103a-3p, providing a novel therapeutic target for ischemic stroke. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/01616412.2025.2568025
BACE1
Xuesen Liu, Yaoyu Song, Jing Zhang +3 more · 2025 · Zhonghua yi xue yi chuan xue za zhi = Zhonghua yixue yichuanxue zazhi = Chinese journal of medical genetics · added 2026-04-24
To investigate the genetic etiology of six adult patients with Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), and analyze the structure of the identified variants, for providing reference for the diagnosis of DCM. Six Show more
To investigate the genetic etiology of six adult patients with Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), and analyze the structure of the identified variants, for providing reference for the diagnosis of DCM. Six adult patients with DCM (patients 1-6) admitted to the Department of Cardiology of Zhumadian Central Hospital from January 2023 to December 2023 were recruited. Clinical data of the patients were retrospectively collected. And 5 mL of peripheral blood was collected from each patient. Pathogenic variants of the patients were detected by whole exome sequencing (WES), and candidate variants were verified by Sanger sequencing. The possible functional significance of the identified missense variants was evaluated using software including SIFT, PolyPhen-2 and Mutation Taster. Specific regions of the MYBPC protein encoded by the MYBPC3 gene from different species were aligned using Mutation Taster. The wild-type and mutant MYBPC proteins were constructed using homologous modeling software MODELLER v10.4 and three-dimensional structures were visualized using PyMOL software. The molecular interaction between MYBPC-C5 domain and myosin with or without the mutation was further analyzed using ZDOCK module in Discovery Studio 2019 software. Pathogenicity ratings for the detected variant sites were performed in accordance with the Standards and Guidelines for the Interpretation of Sequence variants by the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) (hereafter referred to as the ACMG Guidelines). This study was reviewed and approved by the Ethics Committee of Zhumadian Central Hospital (Approval No. 2022092007). The six DCM patients had typical symptoms of heart failure, and echocardiography showed whole-heart dilation and decreased ventricular wall motion, left ventricular end-diastolic dimension (LVEDD) was 59-74 mm, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was 35%-43%, and left ventricular fractional shortening (LVFS) was 17%-28%. Variations of the DCM related genes, including a c.98473A>T (p.Lys32825*) variation of the TTN gene and a c.1976T>C (p.Ile659Thr) variation of the MYBPC3 gene, were identified in two patients. Multiple software predicted that both mutations were deleterious. MYBPC3-Ile659Thr mutation affected the highly conserved residue within the C5 domain of MYBPC. Three-dimensional structural analysis of homologous modeling revealed the alterations in amino acid properties and interactions with surrounding amino acids caused by the MYBPC3-Ile659Thr mutation. Further molecular docking analysis showed that the Ile659Thr mutation altered both the hydrogen bond and salt-bridge interactions between the MYBPC-C5 domain and the ligand myosin. Two mutations associated with DCM were identified in this study. The abnormal conformation of the mutant protein further affected its interaction with the ligand myosin, resulting in the phenotype of DCM. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.3760/cma.j.cn511374-20241001-00518
MYBPC3