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"Ling Li"
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The relationship between autophagy and the immune system and its applications for tumor immunotherapy
2019
Autophagy is a genetically well-controlled cellular process that is tightly controlled by a set of core genes, including the family of autophagy-related genes (ATG). Autophagy is a “double-edged sword” in tumors. It can promote or suppress tumor development, which depends on the cell and tissue types and the stages of tumor. At present, tumor immunotherapy is a promising treatment strategy against tumors. Recent studies have shown that autophagy significantly controls immune responses by modulating the functions of immune cells and the production of cytokines. Conversely, some cytokines and immune cells have a great effect on the function of autophagy. Therapies aiming at autophagy to enhance the immune responses and anti-tumor effects of immunotherapy have become the prospective strategy, with enhanced antigen presentation and higher sensitivity to CTLs. However, the induction of autophagy may also benefit tumor cells escape from immune surveillance and result in intrinsic resistance against anti-tumor immunotherapy. Increasing studies have proven the optimal use of either ATG inducers or inhibitors can restrain tumor growth and progression by enhancing anti-tumor immune responses and overcoming the anti-tumor immune resistance in combination with several immunotherapeutic strategies, indicating that induction or inhibition of autophagy might show us a prospective therapeutic strategy when combined with immunotherapy. In this article, the possible mechanisms of autophagy regulating immune system, and the potential applications of autophagy in tumor immunotherapy will be discussed.
Journal Article
المتاحف الصينية /
by
Li, Xianyao مؤلف.
,
Li, Xianyao Zhongguo bo wu guan
,
Luo, Zhewen مؤلف.
in
المتاحف الصين
,
الصين آثار
2011
يتناول كتاب (المتاحف الصينية) والذي قام بتأليفه (لي شيا نياو، لوه تشهون) في حوالي (195) صفحة من القطع المتوسط موضوع (المتاحف) مستعرضا المحتويات التالية : قراءة حضارة الأمة الصينية من المتاحف-الكنوز في الوطن-المساهمات من الأقليات القومية في الصين-البحث عن أصل التاريخ-كنوز الكهوف الحجرية الصينية-القصورتحت الأرض-الحضارة الصينية-البلوارت الإنسانية-أم الحدائق-موطن الأسلاف-السماء السوداء والأرض الصفراء.
Association between serum vitamin A and bone mineral density in adolescents
2025
Vitamin A is essential for growth and development, immune function, vision, and gene expression. The association between adult bone mineral density (BMD) and vitamin A has been extensively studied, the findings are heterogeneous. Studies investigating the direct correlation between vitamin A and BMD in children are, nonetheless, few. The purpose of this study is to investigate the link between vitamin A and BMD in American teenagers. In this cross-sectional investigation, 6,002 adolescents between the ages of 12 and 19 participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), which was performed between 2001 and 2006. The relationship between serum Vitamin A and BMD was assessed using a weighted multivariate linear regression model and smooth-fitting curves. Increased serum Vitamin A is substantially positively linked with BMD of the thoracic spine, lumbar spine, pelvis, trunk bone, and total BMD after controlling for pertinent factors. According to the threshold effect curve, the impact of Vitamin A is significant (
P
< 0.05) when it is below the saturation threshold. Males exhibit a stronger positive association, according to subgroup analysis. According to our research, there is a strong positive connection and saturation effect between serum Vitamin A and BMD in American adolescents.
Journal Article
Evaluating the psychometric properties of the Chinese Depression Anxiety Stress Scale for Youth (DASS-Y) and DASS-21
2023
Background
In recognizing the need for a reliable and valid instrument to assess psychological distress among children and adolescents, the present study translated the newly developed Depression Anxiety Stress Scale for Youth (DASS-Y) into Chinese, while also comparing its psychometric properties with those of the well-established DASS-21 within a primary and middle school demographic.
Methods
Utilizing a combination of convenience sampling and purposive sampling, a cohort comprising 1,507 primary and 1,131 middle school students was recruited. Rasch analysis, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), and structural equation modeling (SEM) were used in the data analysis.
Results
Significant differences were observed between the DASS-Y and the DASS-21, notably within the anxiety subscale. The proportions of individuals with clinical mood disorders identified by the two scales demonstrated a significant disparity. Both scales, following an adjustment of responses, exhibited satisfactory internal consistency and convergent validity, with the acceptance of a three-factor structure. Furthermore, the DASS-Y showed superior discriminant validity relative to the DASS-21, providing more compelling evidence regarding concurrent validity.
Conclusion
Overall, the Chinese version of the DASS-Y demonstrated superior robustness to the DASS-21 in terms of psychometric properties. The findings provide initial evidence for the psychometric properties of the DASS-Y from another culture.
Journal Article
miR-145 Contributes to the Progression of Cervical Carcinoma by Directly Regulating FSCN1
2019
The purpose of our study was to investigate the underlying mechanism and functional role of microRNA-145 (miR-145) in cervical cancer. In this study, quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) was used to detect miR-145 and FSCN1 expression levels in tissues and HeLa cells. Western blotting was performed to determine the protein level of FSCN1. The luciferase assay was used to verify the direct target of miR-145. The CCK-8 assay and 2D colony formation assays were performed to determine the effects of miR-145 mimics or FSCN1 silencing on cell proliferation. miR-145 expression levels were significantly down-regulated, while FSCN1 expression levels were significantly up-regulated in the cervical carcinoma tissues compared with their matched non-cancerous tissues. In addition, FSCN1 expression levels were negatively correlated to miR-145 in tissues. Next, FSCN1 was verified as the direct target of miR-145 in HeLa cells. Moreover, overexpression of miR-145 dramatically inhibited the proliferation of HeLa cells. The silencing of FSCN1 exhibited the similar patterns on cell proliferation as miR-145 overexpression. The miR-145/ FSCN1 axis contributes to the progression of cervical cancer by inhibition of cervical cancer cell proliferation.
Journal Article
Factors influencing shared decision-making and decision regret in parents of children undergoing myopia control within one year
2025
Background
Childhood myopia is highly prevalent in East Asia, where treatment decisions are typically made by parents. Although effective interventions are available, little is known about how parental knowledge and involvement influence decision quality. This study examined the relationships among parental knowledge, shared decision-making (SDM), and decision regret in parents of children with myopia, and assessed how treatment type and follow-up behaviors affect decision-making experiences.
Methods
A cross-sectional survey was conducted with 314 parents of children newly diagnosed with myopia. Data were collected using an online questionnaire that captured demographic and clinical characteristics, treatments received by the children, parents’ knowledge of myopia control, SDM, and decision regret. Multiple regression analysis was performed to identify the predictors of decision regret.
Results
Shorter follow-up intervals (≤ 6 months), higher parental knowledge, and the use of orthokeratology were significantly associated with lower decision regret, whereas atropine therapy was associated with higher regret. However, when SDM was included in the final model, treatment type was no longer a significant predictor, and SDM emerged as the strongest negative predictor of regret (unstandardized regression coefficient [B] = -0.410, 95% confidence interval [CI] [-0.507, − 0.314],
p
< .001). This attenuation suggests that the observed relationship between treatment type and decision regret may be partly explained by differences in SDM, potentially reflecting more extensive consultation and engagement in certain modalities such as orthokeratology. The final model explained 27.4% of the variance in decision regret.
Conclusions
SDM plays a critical role in reducing parents’ decision regret, regardless of the treatment modality. Enhancing communication about treatment options, particularly atropine therapy and axial length monitoring, may support more informed and satisfactory decision-making. The development of longitudinal studies and SDM tools tailored for parents with lower literacy is recommended to strengthen treatment adherence and improve clinical outcomes.
Journal Article
Viral community-wide auxiliary metabolic genes differ by lifestyles, habitats, and hosts
by
Luo, Xiao-Qing
,
Fang, Bao-Zhu
,
Li, Jia-Ling
in
Auxiliary metabolic genes (AMGs)
,
Bacteriophages - genetics
,
Biogeochemical cycles
2022
Background
Viral-encoded auxiliary metabolic genes (AMGs) are important toolkits for modulating their hosts’ metabolisms and the microbial-driven biogeochemical cycles. Although the functions of AMGs have been extensively reported in numerous environments, we still know little about the drivers that shape the viral community-wide AMG compositions in natural ecosystems. Exploring the drivers of viral community-wide AMG compositions is critical for a deeper understanding of the complex interplays among viruses, hosts, and the environments.
Results
Here, we investigated the impact of viral lifestyles (i.e., lytic and lysogenic), habitats (i.e., water, particle, and sediment), and prokaryotic hosts on viral AMG profiles by utilizing metagenomic and metatranscriptomic techniques. We found that viral lifestyles were the most important drivers, followed by habitats and host identities. Specifically, irrespective of what habitats viruses came from, lytic viruses exhibited greater AMG diversity and tended to encode AMGs for chaperone biosynthesis, signaling proteins, and lipid metabolism, which could boost progeny reproduction, whereas temperate viruses were apt to encode AMGs for host survivability. Moreover, the lytic and temperate viral communities tended to mediate the microbial-driven biogeochemical cycles, especially nitrogen metabolism, in different manners via AMGs. When focusing on each lifestyle, we further found clear dissimilarity in AMG compositions between water and sediment, as well the divergent AMGs encoded by viruses infecting different host orders.
Conclusions
Overall, our study provides a first systematic characterization of the drivers of viral community-wide AMG compositions and further expands our knowledge of the distinct interactions of lytic and temperate viruses with their prokaryotic hosts from an AMG perspective, which is critical for understanding virus-host-environment interactions in natural conditions.
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Video Abstract
Journal Article
Research trends on nanomaterials in gastric cancer: a bibliometric analysis from 2004 to 2023
2023
Background
Gastric cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related deaths worldwide. In recent years, an increasing number of studies aimed at designing and developing nanomaterials for use in diagnosing and treating gastric cancer have been conducted. In this study, we aimed to comprehensively assess the current status and trends of the research on the application of nanomaterials in gastric cancer through a bibliometric analysis.
Methods
Studies focusing on nanomaterials and gastric cancer were retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection database and relevant articles were selected for inclusion in the study according to the inclusion criteria. Bibliometric and visual analysis of the included publications was performed using VOSviewer and CiteSpace.
Results
A total of 793 studies were included. An increase in annual publications was observed from 2004 to 2023. China, Iran and the USA were the dominant countries in this field, accounting for 66.1%, 11.5% and 7.2% of publications, respectively. Shanghai Jiao Tong University and Cui DX were the most influential institution and author, respectively. The International Journal of Nanomedicine was the most prolific journal; Biomaterials was the most cited and most cocited journal. Nanomaterial-related drug delivery and anticancer mechanisms were found to be the most widely researched aspects, and green synthesis and anticancer mechanisms are recent research hotspots.
Conclusion
In this study, we summarized the characteristics of publications and identified the most influential countries, institutions, authors, journals, hot topics and trends regarding the application of nanomaterials in gastric cancer.
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Post-infection cognitive impairments in a cohort of elderly patients with COVID-19
by
Wang, Qing-Hua
,
Liu, Xu-Dong
,
Li, Si-Jing
in
Aged patients
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2021
Background
Understanding the long-term effects of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) on cognitive function is essential for monitoring the cognitive decline in the elderly population. This study aims to assess the current cognitive status and the longitudinal cognitive decline in elderly patients recovered from COVID-19.
Methods
This cross-sectional study recruited 1539 COVID-19 inpatients aged over 60 years who were discharged from three COVID-19-designated hospitals in Wuhan, China, from February 10 to April 10, 2020. In total, 466 uninfected spouses of COVID-19 patients were selected as controls. The current cognitive status was assessed using a Chinese version of the Telephone Interview of Cognitive Status-40 (TICS-40) and the longitudinal cognitive decline was assessed using an Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE). Cognitive assessments were performed 6 months after patient discharge.
Results
Compared with controls, COVID-19 patients had lower TICS-40 scores and higher IQCODE scores [TICS-40 median (IQR): 29 (25 to 32) vs. 30 (26 to 33),
p
< 0.001; IQCODE median (IQR): 3.19 (3.00 to 3.63) vs. 3.06 (3.00 to 3.38),
p
< 0.001]. Severe COVID-19 patients had lower TICS-40 scores and higher IQCODE scores than non-severe COVID-19 patients [TICS-40 median (IQR): 24 (18 to 28) vs. 30 (26 to 33),
p
< 0.001; IQCODE median (IQR): 3.63 (3.13 to 4.31) vs. 3.13 (3.00 to 3.56),
p
< 0.001] and controls [TICS-40 median (IQR): 24 (18 to 28) vs. 30 (26 to 33),
p
< 0.001; IQCODE median (IQR) 3.63 (3.13 to 4.31) vs. 3.06 (3.00 to 3.38),
p
< 0.001]. Severe COVID-19 patients had a higher proportion of cases with current cognitive impairment and longitudinal cognitive decline than non-severe COVID-19 patients [dementia: 25 (10.50 %) vs. 9 (0.69 %),
p
< 0.001; Mild cognitive impairment (MCI): 60 (25.21 %) vs. 63 (4.84 %),
p
< 0.001] and controls [dementia: 25 (10.50 %) vs. 0 (0 %),
p
< 0.001; MCI: 60 (25.21 %) vs. 20 (4.29 %),
p
< 0.001)]. COVID-19 severity, delirium and COPD were risk factors of current cognitive impairment. Low education level, severe COVID-19, delirium, hypertension and COPD were risk factors of longitudinal cognitive decline.
Conclusions
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection is associated with an increased risk of long-term cognitive decline in elderly population. COVID-19 patients, especially severe patients, should be intensively monitored for post-infection cognitive decline.
Journal Article