1.Antibody threshold and demographic characteristics of low-titer group O whole blood donors in Jiangsu
Tao FENG ; Rui ZHU ; Wenjia HU ; Ling MA ; Hong LIN ; Xi YU ; Chun ZHOU ; Nizhen JIANG
Chinese Journal of Blood Transfusion 2025;38(9):1225-1229
Objective: To investigate the distribution of IgM anti-A/B titers among group O whole blood donors in Jiangsu, establish a low-titer threshold, and analyze the demographic characteristics of low-titer donors, so as to provide data for recruiting low-titer group O whole blood (LTOWB) donors. Methods: Plasma samples from 1 009 group O whole blood donors were tested for IgM anti-A and anti-B titers using the microplate technique. The distribution of antibody titers was analyzed to establish a low-titer threshold. The distribution trends of titers across different demographic groups were also analyzed. Results: The peak titer for anti-A, anti-B were 64 (31.5%), 4 (23.8%), respectively, The proportion of donors with both anti-A and anti-B titers below 64 was 97.3% (982/1 009). The mean anti-A titer was higher than anti-B titer. Anti-A titers were higher in female donors than in male donors (P<0.05). The anti-A titers differed significantly among different age groups (P<0.05). However, no significant difference in titers was observed based on the number of donations (P>0.05). Conclusion: A titer of 64 can be used as the reference threshold of LTOWB in Jiangsu. Male donors of appropriate age are more suitable than female donors for establishing an emergency panel of LTOWB mobile donors.
2.Research progress on the pathogenic mechanisms of α-synuclein and related disease models
Yuandong LIN ; Yawen JIANG ; Xiangxing ZHU ; Chunling LU ; Tao WANG ; Yingshan CHEN ; Dongsheng TANG
Acta Laboratorium Animalis Scientia Sinica 2025;33(9):1340-1359
The core pathological feature of Parkinson's disease(PD)is the abnormal aggregation of α-synuclein and the result ing neuronal damage.α-Synuclein exhibits toxic effects when it forms oligomers or fibrils,leading to neuronal death via multiple pathways,including mitochondrial dysfunction,impaired vesicular trafficking,dopamine auto-oxidation,and neuroinflammation.In addition,α-synuclein can propagate between cells via exosomes,endocytosis/exocytosis,tunneling nanotubes,or vagal nerve axonal transport,creating a cascade of pathological effects.Animal models of PD that recapitulate the key pathological hallmark of α-synuclein accumulation are indispensable tools for elucidating disease mechanisms and developing novel therapeutic interventions.To date,various strategies,including transgenic techniques,bacterial artificial chromosome(BAC)-mediated expression,viral vector-mediated overexpression,and gene editing,have been employed to develop α-synuclein overexpression animal models.These models have significantly advanced our exploration of the relationship between PD and α-synuclein.This systematic review considers the structure and function of α-synuclein,its mechanisms of toxicity,intercellular propagation pathways,animal models of overexpression,and potential therapeutic targets based on its pathogenic mechanisms.
3.Research progress on the pathogenic mechanisms of α-synuclein and related disease models
Yuandong LIN ; Yawen JIANG ; Xiangxing ZHU ; Chunling LU ; Tao WANG ; Yingshan CHEN ; Dongsheng TANG
Acta Laboratorium Animalis Scientia Sinica 2025;33(9):1340-1359
The core pathological feature of Parkinson's disease(PD)is the abnormal aggregation of α-synuclein and the result ing neuronal damage.α-Synuclein exhibits toxic effects when it forms oligomers or fibrils,leading to neuronal death via multiple pathways,including mitochondrial dysfunction,impaired vesicular trafficking,dopamine auto-oxidation,and neuroinflammation.In addition,α-synuclein can propagate between cells via exosomes,endocytosis/exocytosis,tunneling nanotubes,or vagal nerve axonal transport,creating a cascade of pathological effects.Animal models of PD that recapitulate the key pathological hallmark of α-synuclein accumulation are indispensable tools for elucidating disease mechanisms and developing novel therapeutic interventions.To date,various strategies,including transgenic techniques,bacterial artificial chromosome(BAC)-mediated expression,viral vector-mediated overexpression,and gene editing,have been employed to develop α-synuclein overexpression animal models.These models have significantly advanced our exploration of the relationship between PD and α-synuclein.This systematic review considers the structure and function of α-synuclein,its mechanisms of toxicity,intercellular propagation pathways,animal models of overexpression,and potential therapeutic targets based on its pathogenic mechanisms.
4.Effect Analysis of Different Interventions to Improve Neuroinflammation in The Treatment of Alzheimer’s Disease
Jiang-Hui SHAN ; Chao-Yang CHU ; Shi-Yu CHEN ; Zhi-Cheng LIN ; Yu-Yu ZHOU ; Tian-Yuan FANG ; Chu-Xia ZHANG ; Biao XIAO ; Kai XIE ; Qing-Juan WANG ; Zhi-Tao LIU ; Li-Ping LI
Progress in Biochemistry and Biophysics 2025;52(2):310-333
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a central neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive cognitive decline and memory impairment in clinical. Currently, there are no effective treatments for AD. In recent years, a variety of therapeutic approaches from different perspectives have been explored to treat AD. Although the drug therapies targeted at the clearance of amyloid β-protein (Aβ) had made a breakthrough in clinical trials, there were associated with adverse events. Neuroinflammation plays a crucial role in the onset and progression of AD. Continuous neuroinflammatory was considered to be the third major pathological feature of AD, which could promote the formation of extracellular amyloid plaques and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles. At the same time, these toxic substances could accelerate the development of neuroinflammation, form a vicious cycle, and exacerbate disease progression. Reducing neuroinflammation could break the feedback loop pattern between neuroinflammation, Aβ plaque deposition and Tau tangles, which might be an effective therapeutic strategy for treating AD. Traditional Chinese herbs such as Polygonum multiflorum and Curcuma were utilized in the treatment of AD due to their ability to mitigate neuroinflammation. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen and indomethacin had been shown to reduce the level of inflammasomes in the body, and taking these drugs was associated with a low incidence of AD. Biosynthetic nanomaterials loaded with oxytocin were demonstrated to have the capability to anti-inflammatory and penetrate the blood-brain barrier effectively, and they played an anti-inflammatory role via sustained-releasing oxytocin in the brain. Transplantation of mesenchymal stem cells could reduce neuroinflammation and inhibit the activation of microglia. The secretion of mesenchymal stem cells could not only improve neuroinflammation, but also exert a multi-target comprehensive therapeutic effect, making it potentially more suitable for the treatment of AD. Enhancing the level of TREM2 in microglial cells using gene editing technologies, or application of TREM2 antibodies such as Ab-T1, hT2AB could improve microglial cell function and reduce the level of neuroinflammation, which might be a potential treatment for AD. Probiotic therapy, fecal flora transplantation, antibiotic therapy, and dietary intervention could reshape the composition of the gut microbiota and alleviate neuroinflammation through the gut-brain axis. However, the drugs of sodium oligomannose remain controversial. Both exercise intervention and electromagnetic intervention had the potential to attenuate neuroinflammation, thereby delaying AD process. This article focuses on the role of drug therapy, gene therapy, stem cell therapy, gut microbiota therapy, exercise intervention, and brain stimulation in improving neuroinflammation in recent years, aiming to provide a novel insight for the treatment of AD by intervening neuroinflammation in the future.
5.Tailoring a traditional Chinese medicine prescription for complex diseases: A novel multi-targets-directed gradient weighting strategy.
Zhe YU ; Teng LI ; Zhi ZHENG ; Xiya YANG ; Xin GUO ; Xindi ZHANG ; Haoying JIANG ; Lin ZHU ; Bo YANG ; Yang WANG ; Jiekun LUO ; Xueping YANG ; Tao TANG ; En HU
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(4):101199-101199
Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) exerts integrative effects on complex diseases owing to the characteristics of multiple components with multiple targets. However, the syndrome-based system of diagnosis and treatment in TCM can easily lead to bias because of varying medication preferences among physicians, which has been a major challenge in the global acceptance and application of TCM. Therefore, a standardized TCM prescription system needs to be explored to promote its clinical application. In this study, we first developed a gradient weighted disease-target-herbal ingredient-herb network to aid TCM formulation. We tested its efficacy against intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). First, the top 100 ICH targets in the GeneCards database were screened according to their relevance scores. Then, SymMap and Traditional Chinese Medicine Systems Pharmacology (TCMSP) databases were applied to find out the target-related ingredients and ingredient-containing herbs, respectively. The relevance of the resulting ingredients and herbs to ICH was determined by adding the relevance scores of the corresponding targets. The top five ICH therapeutic herbs were combined to form a tailored TCM prescriptions. The absorbed components in the serum were detected. In a mouse model of ICH, the new prescription exerted multifaceted effects, including improved neurological function, as well as attenuated neuronal damage, cell apoptosis, vascular leakage, and neuroinflammation. These effects matched well with the core pathological changes in ICH. The multi-targets-directed gradient-weighting strategy presents a promising avenue for tailoring precise, multipronged, unbiased, and standardized TCM prescriptions for complex diseases. This study provides a paradigm for advanced achievements-driven modern innovation in TCM concepts.
6.Two new protoberberine alkaloids from Stephania hernandifolia.
Wei-Hua DAI ; Xin-Tao CUI ; Yu-Jiao TU ; Lei JIANG ; Lin YUAN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2025;50(5):1231-1235
The 95% ethanol extract of Stephania hernandifolia was isolated and purified by column chromatography on silica gel and Sephadex LH-20, RP-18 medium-pressure liquid chromatography, and semi-preparative high performance liquid chromatography. The chemical structures of the compounds were identified by NMR and high-resolution mass spectrometry. Four alkaloids were isolated and identified as(-)-8-oxo-2,3,4,10,11-pentamethoxyberberine(1),(-)-8-oxo-11-hydroxy-2,3,4,10-tetramethoxyberberine(2), N-trans-feruloyl tyramine(3), and N-cis-feruloyl tyramine(4). Compounds 1 and 2 were new protoberberine alkaloids, while compounds 3 and 4 were amide alkaloids. All the four compounds were separated from this plant for the first time. The inhibitory activities of compounds 1, 3, and 4 against α-glycosidase were measured by the enzymatic reaction in vitro with 4-nitrophenyl-α-D-glucopyranoside(PNPG) as the substrate. Compounds 3 and 4 showed inhibitory activities against α-glucosidase, with median inhibition concentration(IC_(50)) values of(7.09±0.42) and(31.25±1.14) μmol·L~(-1), respectively.
Berberine Alkaloids/isolation & purification*
;
Stephania/chemistry*
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal/isolation & purification*
;
Molecular Structure
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alpha-Glucosidases/metabolism*
;
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
;
Alkaloids/isolation & purification*
7.Scientific connotation of "blood stasis toxin" in hypoxic microenvironment: its "soil" function in tumor progression and micro-level treatment approaches.
Wei FAN ; Yuan-Lin LYU ; Xiao-Chen NI ; Kai-Yuan ZHANG ; Chu-Hang WANG ; Jia-Ning GUO ; Guang-Ji ZHANG ; Jian-Bo HUANG ; Tao JIANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2025;50(12):3483-3488
The tumor microenvironment is a crucial factor in tumor occurrence and progression. The hypoxic microenvironment is widely present in tumor tissue and is a key endogenous factor accelerating tumor deterioration. The "blood stasis toxin" theory, as an emerging perspective in tumor research, is regarded as the unique "soil" in tumor progression from the perspective of traditional Chinese medicine(TCM) due to its dynamic evolution mechanism, which closely resembles the formation of the hypoxic microenvironment. Scientifically integrating TCM theories with the biological characteristics of tumors and exploring precise syndrome differentiation and treatment strategies are key to achieving comprehensive tumor prevention and control. This article focused on the hypoxic microenvironment of the tumor, elucidating its formation mechanisms and evolutionary processes and carefully analyzing the internal relationship between the "blood stasis toxin" theory and the hypoxic microenvironment. Additionally, it explored the interaction among blood stasis, toxic pathogens, and hypoxic environment and proposed micro-level prevention and treatment strategies targeting the hypoxic microenvironment based on the "blood stasis toxin" theory, aiming to provide TCM-based theoretical support and therapeutic approaches for precise regulation of the hypoxic microenvironment.
Humans
;
Tumor Microenvironment/drug effects*
;
Neoplasms/therapy*
;
Animals
;
Medicine, Chinese Traditional
;
Disease Progression
;
Drugs, Chinese Herbal
8.Five-year outcomes of metabolic surgery in Chinese subjects with type 2 diabetes.
Yuqian BAO ; Hui LIANG ; Pin ZHANG ; Cunchuan WANG ; Tao JIANG ; Nengwei ZHANG ; Jiangfan ZHU ; Haoyong YU ; Junfeng HAN ; Yinfang TU ; Shibo LIN ; Hongwei ZHANG ; Wah YANG ; Jingge YANG ; Shu CHEN ; Qing FAN ; Yingzhang MA ; Chiye MA ; Jason R WAGGONER ; Allison L TOKARSKI ; Linda LIN ; Natalie C EDWARDS ; Tengfei YANG ; Rongrong ZHANG ; Weiping JIA
Chinese Medical Journal 2025;138(4):493-495
9.Analysis of risk factors for postoperative re-fracture of the hip in elderly patients
Di WU ; Sen LIN ; Shicong TAO ; Jiaqing CAO ; Hui SUN ; Junjie GUAN ; Dajun JIANG ; Shizan HE ; Huipeng SHI
Chinese Journal of Geriatrics 2025;44(10):1357-1362
Objective:To explore the related risk factors contributing to re-fracture after hip surgery in elderly patients.Methods:This retrospective analysis was conducted on the clinical data of 2 415 elderly individuals who underwent surgical treatment for hip fractures and were discharged from Shanghai Sixth People's Hospital between January 2016 and December 2021.Patients were grouped into re-fracture and non-re-fracture cohorts based on whether a second fracture occurred within three years after surgery.Demographics, clinical data, and postoperative functional rehabilitation outcomes of the two groups were collected, and univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were applied to identify the independent risk factors for re-fractures after surgery.Results:A total of 2, 000 patients who completed follow-up were included in the final analysis, aged 60~91 years, with a mean age of (75.4±8.2) years.Among them, 855 were male(42.75%), and the postoperative re-fracture incidence was 28.25% (565/2 000). Univariate analysis indicated that advanced age, fracture type at first onset, lower Harris scores, insufficient rehabilitation training, osteoporosis, diabetes, cerebrovascular disorders, visual impairment, and syncope were all significantly associated with re-fracture (all P<0.05), while gender differences were not statistically significant ( P>0.05). Multivariate regression confirmed the following as independent risk factors: age ≥75 years, postoperative Harris score <80, non-standard rehabilitation training, combined osteoporosis, diabetes, cerebrovascular disease, visual impairment, and syncope ( OR、 RR>1). Conclusions:Elderly patients are prone to re-fracture after hip surgery, and its occurrence is closely related to advanced age, inadequate functional rehabilitation, osteoporosis, and multiple internal medical comorbidities.In clinical practice, attention should be paid to standardized postoperative rehabilitation, systematic anti-osteoporotic therapy, and active intervention of comorbidities to reduce the incidence of re-fracture and improve the long-term prognosis of patients.
10.Analysis of Tongue and Face Image Features of Anemic Women and Construction of Risk-Screening Model.
Hong Yuan FU ; Yi CHUN ; Ya Han ZHANG ; Yu WANG ; Yu Lin SHI ; Tao JIANG ; Xiao Juan HU ; Li Ping TU ; Yong Zhi LI ; Jia Tuo XU
Biomedical and Environmental Sciences 2025;38(8):935-951
OBJECTIVE:
To identify the key features of facial and tongue images associated with anemia in female populations, establish anemia risk-screening models, and evaluate their performance.
METHODS:
A total of 533 female participants (anemic and healthy) were recruited from Shuguang Hospital. Facial and tongue images were collected using the TFDA-1 tongue and face diagnosis instrument. Color and texture features from various parts of facial and tongue images were extracted using Face Diagnosis Analysis System (FDAS) and Tongue Diagnosis Analysis System version 2.0 (TDAS v2.0). Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) regression was used for feature selection. Ten machine learning models and one deep learning model (ResNet50V2 + Conv1D) were developed and evaluated.
RESULTS:
Anemic women showed lower a-values, higher L- and b-values across all age groups. Texture features analysis showed that women aged 30-39 with anemia had higher angular second moment (ASM)and lower entropy (ENT) values in facial images, while those aged 40-49 had lower contrast (CON), ENT, and MEAN values in tongue images but higher ASM. Anemic women exhibited age-related trends similar to healthy women, with decreasing L-values and increasing a-, b-, and ASM-values. LASSO identified 19 key features from 62. Among classifiers, the Artificial Neural Network (ANN) model achieved the best performance [area under the curve (AUC): 0.849, accuracy: 0.781]. The ResNet50V2 model achieved comparable results [AUC: 0.846, accuracy: 0.818].
CONCLUSION
Differences in facial and tongue images suggest that color and texture features can serve as potential TCM phenotype and auxiliary diagnostic indicators for female anemia.
Humans
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Female
;
Tongue/diagnostic imaging*
;
Adult
;
Anemia/diagnosis*
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Middle Aged
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Face/diagnostic imaging*
;
Young Adult
;
Machine Learning

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