1.LncRNA SFTA1P modulates the miR - 182 - 5p / FN1 pathway to promote the proliferation and migration of clear cell renal carcinoma cells
Wei Xiang ; Lei Lv ; Fuxin Zheng ; Jingdong Yuan
Acta Universitatis Medicinalis Anhui 2025;60(1):41-48
Abstract:
To explore the molecular mechanism by which long non-coding RNA Surfactant Associated 1 Pseudogene(SFTA1P) promotes the proliferation and migration of clear cell renal cell carcinoma(ccRCC) cells by regulating the microRNA-182-5p(miR-182-5p)/fibronectin 1(FN1) pathway.
Methods:
GEPIA2 software was utilized to analyze the expression ofSFTA1Pin ccRCC tissues from the TCGA database. Quantitative real-time PCR(qPCR) was employed to detect the expression ofSFTA1Pin ccRCC tissues, normal kidney tissues and ccRCC cell lines. A subcellular localization experiment was performed to explore the localization ofSFTA1Pwithin the human renal cell adenocarcinoma cell line(ACHN) derived from ccRCC. ACHN cells were then divided into the following groups: si-Con group, si-SFTA1P #2 group, mimic NC group, miR-182-5p mimic group, anti-miR-Con group, anti-miR-182-5p group, anti-miR-182-5p+si-FN1 group, si-Con+anti-miR-Con group, si-SFTA1P #2+anti-miR-Con group, and si-SFTA1P #2+anti-miR-182-5p group. CCK-8 and Transwell chamber experiments were conducted to assess cell proliferation and migration abilities. qPCR, Western blot, and dual-luciferase reporter assays were employed to elucidate the regulatory interactions amongSFTA1P,miR-182-5p, andFN1.
Results:
Analysis of The Cancer Genome Atlas(TCGA) database indicated thatSFTA1Pwas overexpressed in ccRCC tissues(P<0.05). When compared to normal kidney tissues,SFTA1Pexpression was markedly elevated in ccRCC tissues(P<0.01). Furthermore, the expression levels ofSFTA1Pin ccRCC cell lines 786-O, SN12-PM6, ACHN, and A498 were significantly higher than those in human renal proximal tubule cells(HK-2)(allP<0.01). Subcellular localization experiments revealed thatSFTA1Ppredominantly localized in the cytoplasm of ACHN cells. Compared to the si-Con group, the si-SFTA1P #2 group exhibited a significant reduction in proliferation and migration abilities of ACHN cells, accompanied by a decrease inFN1mRNA and protein expression(P<0.05). Compared to the mimic NC group, the expression ofFN1mRNA and protein in ACHN cells in the miR-182-5p mimic group reduced(P<0.01). In comparison to the anti-miR-Con group, the expression levels ofFN1mRNA and protein in ACHN cells were significantly elevated in the anti-miR-182-5p group. Additionally, there was a significant enhancement in both cell proliferation and migration capabilities(P<0.05). Conversely, the proliferation and migration abilities of ACHN cells in the anti-miR-182-5p+si-FN1 group were significantly reduced compared to the anti-miR-182-5p group(P<0.05). Furthermore, relative to the si-SFTA1P #2+anti-miR-Con group, the ACHN cells in the si-SFTA1P #2+anti-miR-182-5p group demonstrated increased proliferation and migration abilities, along with elevatedFN1mRNA and protein expression levels(P<0.05).
Conclusion
SFTA1Pexhibits elevated expression levels in ccRCC and facilitates the proliferation and migration of ccRCC cells through the modulation of themiR-182-5p/FN1signaling pathway.
2.Artificial mesenchymal stem cell extracellular vesicles enhanced ischemic stroke treatment through targeted remodeling brain microvascular endothelial cells.
Shengnan LI ; Wei LV ; Jiangna XU ; Jiaqing YIN ; Yuqin CHEN ; Linfeng LIU ; Xiang CAO ; Wenjing LI ; Zhen LI ; Hua CHEN ; Hongliang XIN
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B 2025;15(8):4248-4264
Ischemic stroke is the leading cause of disability and mortality worldwide. The blood‒brain barrier (BBB) is the first line of defense after ischemic stroke. Disruption of the BBB induced by brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs) dysfunction is a key event that triggers secondary damage to the central nervous system, where blood-borne fluids and immune cells penetrate the brain parenchyma, causing cerebral edema and inflammatory response and further aggravating brain damage. Here, we develop a novel artificial mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) extracellular vesicles by integrating MSC membrane proteins into liposomal bilayers, which encapsulated miR-132-3p with protective effects on BMECs. The artificial extracellular vesicles (MSCo/miR-132-3p) had low immunogenicity to reduce non-specific clearance by the mononuclear phagocytosis system (MPS) and could target ischemia-injured BMECs. After internalization into the damaged BMECs, MSCo/miR-132-3p escaped the lysosomes via the HII phase transition of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphoethanolamine (DOPE) and decreased cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) and apoptosis levels by regulating the RASA1/RAS/PI3K/AKT signaling pathway. In the transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) models, MSCo/miR-132-3p targeted impaired brain regions (approximately 9 times the accumulation of plain liposomes at 12 h), reduced cerebral vascular disruption, protected BBB integrity, and decreased infarct volume (from 44.95% to 6.99%).
3.Electrophysiological Signatures of Visual Sensations Elicited by Direct Electrical Stimulation.
Yan-Yan LI ; Bo ZHANG ; Jing WANG ; Yuri B SAALMANN ; Mohsen AFRASIABI ; Peng-Cheng LV ; Hai-Xiang WANG ; Huan-Huan XIANG ; Meng-Yang WANG ; Guo-Ming LUAN ; Robert T KNIGHT ; Liang WANG
Neuroscience Bulletin 2025;41(9):1617-1629
Direct electrical stimulation of the human cortex can produce subjective visual sensations, yet these sensations are unstable. The underlying mechanisms may stem from differences in electrophysiological activity within the distributed network outside the stimulated site. To address this problem, we recruited 69 patients who experienced visual sensations during invasive electrical stimulation while intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG) data were recorded. We found significantly flattened power spectral slopes in distributed regions involving different brain networks and decreased integrated information during elicited visual sensations compared with the non-sensation condition. Further analysis based on minimum information partitions revealed that the reconfigured network interactions primarily involved the inferior frontal cortex, posterior superior temporal sulcus, and temporoparietal junction. The flattened power spectral slope in the inferior frontal gyrus was also correlated with integrated information. Taken together, this study indicates that the altered electrophysiological signatures provide insights into the neural mechanisms underlying subjective visual sensations.
Humans
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Male
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Female
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Adult
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Visual Perception/physiology*
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Electric Stimulation
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Middle Aged
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Young Adult
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Electrocorticography
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Electroencephalography
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Brain Mapping
4.ARID1A IDR targets EWS-FLI1 condensates and finetunes chromatin remodeling.
Jingdong XUE ; Siang LV ; Ming YU ; Yixuan PAN ; Ningzhe LI ; Xiang XU ; Qi ZHANG ; Mengyuan PENG ; Fang LIU ; Xuxu SUN ; Yimin LAO ; Yanhua YAO ; Juan SONG ; Jun WU ; Bing LI
Protein & Cell 2025;16(1):64-71
5.Photoaffinity probe-enabled discovery of sennoside A reductase in Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum.
Yang XU ; Shujing LV ; Xiang LI ; Chuanjia ZHAI ; Yulian SHI ; Xuejiao LI ; Zhiyang FENG ; Gan LUO ; Ying WANG ; Xiaoyan GAO
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(1):101108-101108
Sennoside A (SA), a typical prodrug, exerts its laxative effect only after its transformation into rheinanthrone catalyzed by gut microbial hydrolases and reductases. Hydrolases have been identified, but reductases remain unknown. By linking a photoreactive group to the SA scaffold, we synthesized a photoaffinity probe to covalently label SA reductases and identified SA reductases using activity-based protein profiling (ABPP). From lysates of an active strain, Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum (B. pseudocatenulatum), 397 proteins were enriched and subsequently identified using mass spectrometry (MS). Among these proteins, chromate reductase/nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) phosphate (NADPH)-dependent flavin mononucleotide (FMN) reductase/oxygen-insensitive NADPH nitroreductase (nfrA) was identified as a potent SA reductase through further bioinformatic analysis and The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt) database screening. We also determined that recombinant nfrA could reduce SA. Our study contributes to further illuminating mechanisms of SA transformation to rheinanthrone and simultaneously offers an effective method to identify gut bacterial reductases.
6.Discovery of toad-derived peptide analogue targeting ARF6 to induce immunogenic cell death for immunotherapy of hepatocellular carcinoma.
Dihui XU ; Xiang LV ; Meng YU ; Ao TAN ; Jiaojiao WANG ; Xinyi TANG ; Mengyuan LI ; Wenyuan WU ; Yuyu ZHU ; Jing ZHOU ; Hongyue MA
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(3):101038-101038
Image 1.
7.ToxBERT: an explainable AI framework for enhancing prediction of adverse drug reactions and structural insights.
Yujie HE ; Xiang LV ; Wulin LONG ; Shengqiu ZHAI ; Menglong LI ; Zhining WEN
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(8):101387-101387
Accurate prediction of drug-induced adverse drug reactions (ADRs) is crucial for drug safety evaluation, as it directly impacts public health and safety. While various models have shown promising results in predicting ADRs, their accuracy still needs improvement. Additionally, many existing models often lack interpretability when linking molecular structures to specific ADRs and frequently rely on manually selected molecular fingerprints, which can introduce bias. To address these challenges, we propose ToxBERT, an efficient transformer encoder model that leverages attention and masking mechanisms for simplified molecular input line entry system (SMILES) representations. Our results demonstrate that ToxBERT achieved area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) scores of 0.839, 0.759, and 0.664 for predicting drug-induced QT prolongation (DIQT), rhabdomyolysis, and liver injury, respectively, outperforming previous studies. Furthermore, ToxBERT can identify drug substructures that are closely associated with specific ADRs. These findings indicate that ToxBERT is not only a valuable tool for understanding the mechanisms underlying specific drug-induced ADRs but also for mitigating potential ADRs in the drug discovery pipeline.
8.Fast-adapting graph neural network with prior knowledge for drug response prediction across preclinical and clinical data.
Hui GUO ; Xiang LV ; Shenghao LI ; Daichuan MA ; Yizhou LI ; Menglong LI
Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis 2025;15(10):101386-101386
Efficient drug response prediction is crucial for reducing drug development costs and time, but current computational models struggle with limited experimental data and out-of-distribution issues between in vitro and in vivo settings. To address this, we introduced drug response prediction meta-learner (metaDRP), a novel few-shot learning model designed to enhance predictive accuracy with limited sample sizes across diverse drug-tissue tasks. metaDRP achieves performance comparable to state-of-the-art models in both genomics of drug sensitivity in cancer (GDSC) drug screening and in vivo datasets, while effectively mitigating out-of-distribution problems, making it reliable for translating findings from controlled environments to clinical applications. Additionally, metaDRP's inherent interpretability offers reliable insights into drug mechanisms of action, such as elucidating the pathways and molecular targets of drugs like epothilone B and pemetrexed. This work provides a promising approach to overcoming data scarcity and out-of-distribution challenges in drug response prediction, while promoting the integration of few-shot learning in this field.
9.Progress of biomacromolecule drug nanodelivery systems in the treatment of rare diseases
Shu-jie WEI ; Han-xing HE ; Jin-tao HAO ; Qian-qian LV ; Ding-yang LIU ; Shao-kun YANG ; Hui-feng ZHANG ; Chao-xing HE ; Bai XIANG
Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica 2024;59(7):1952-1961
Rare diseases still lack effective treatments, and the development of drugs for rare diseases (known as orphan drugs) is an urgent medical problem. As natural active ingredients in living organisms, some biomacromolecule drugs have good biocompatibility, low immunogenicity, and high targeting. They have become one of the most promising fields in drug research and development in the 21st century. However, there are still many obstacles in terms of
10.Current research status of perioperative pain management for patients receiving adrenal artery embolization
Fengjie LV ; Ping TANG ; Ming MAO ; Jing CHANG ; Rui XIANG ; Suxin LUO
Journal of Interventional Radiology 2024;33(6):679-683
Transcatheter adrenal artery embolization(TAAE)is a minimally-invasive interventional treatment for adrenal diseases.Perioperative pain occurs mainly during and after operation.The standardized management of perioperative pain can reduce the occurrence of intraoperative adverse reactions,improve the degree of intraoperative cooperation,better the postoperative quality of life,thus,to improve patient satisfaction with interventional surgery.However,current researches among the healthcare staff mainly focus on the safety and efficacy of TAAE while neglect the standardized pain management during the perioperative period.Therefore,in order to improve the surgical efficacy of TAAE and optimize the perioperative surgical experience of patients,it is necessary to formulate a standardized pain management strategy and to apply this strategy in clinical practice.This paper aims to make a comprehensive review about the current situation of perioperative pain occurrence and pain management strategies in TAAE therapy,so as to provide reference for standardizing the perioperative pain management of interventional surgery,and improving the success rate of interventional surgery as well as the patient satisfaction with the treatment.(J Intervent Radiol,2024,33:679-683)


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