1.Mechanistic study of mitochondrial dysfunction in renal injury induced by maternal bone lead mobilization during pregnancy in rats
Ling LI ; Lin ZHANG ; Li LI ; Yuting WEI ; Man LYU ; Zeshi ZHANG ; Li MA ; Anxin LU ; Yin LIN ; Shaohua WANG ; Chonghuai YAN
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2026;43(3):286-292
Background Lead is a typical persistent environmental pollutant that can accumulate in bones for decades. During pregnancy, alterations in calcium metabolism promote the mobilization of bone lead, resulting in secondary exposure; however, the mechanisms by which pregnancy-associated bone lead mobilization affects maternal renal function remain unclear. Objective To investigate the role of mitochondrial dysfunction in pregnancy-related bone lead mobilization-induced renal injury. Methods Newly weaned female Wistar rats were randomly assigned to a control or a lead-exposed group administered either 0.05% sodium acetate or 0.05% lead acetate in drinking water. Following a 4-week lead exposure and a 4-week washout period, the females were co-housed with healthy age-matched males for mating. Rats were sacrificed at early (gestational day 3) and late (gestational day 17) pregnancystages, respectively. Renal histopathology was assessed using hematoxylin and eosin staining staining. Mitochondria-related indicators, including oxidative stress, inflammatory responses, and energy metabolism, were measured. Differential metabolites were identified using serum metabolomics. Results Renal injury in the lead-exposed pregnant rats progressed in a time-dependent manner, characterized by degeneration of proximal tubular epithelial cells, glomerular hyaline changes, and interstitial inflammatory cell infiltration. Repeated measures ANOVA indicated a significant interaction between the treatment factor (lead exposure) and the temporal factor (gestational stage) on renal injury (P<0.001). Further analysis of mitochondrial function-related indicators in late-pregnancy renal tissue revealed that the lead exposure group exhibited significantly increased levels of malondialdehyde (MDA) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) (P<0.05), accompanied by a reduction in superoxide dismutase (SOD) and reduced glutathione (GSH) activities (P<0.05); regarding inflammatory markers, levels of interleukin-18 (IL-18) and interleukin-1β (IL-1β) were elevated (P<0.01), whereas interleukin-33 (IL-33) was decreased in the lead-exposed group (P<0.05); energy metabolism-related indicators, including adenosine triphosphate (ATP) level, Na+-K+-ATPase and Ca2+-Mg2+-ATPase activities, and mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes I, III, and V activities, were significantly reduced (P<0.05) in the lead-exposed gorup. The typical differential metabolite N-methylisoleucine, identified through serum metabolomics analysis, was negatively correlated with blood lead levels, kidney injury scores, and IL-1β, while positively correlated with catalase (CAT) activity and Ca2+-Mg2+-ATPase. Conclusions Mitochondrial dysfunction may play a critical role in renal injury induced by bone lead mobilization during late gestation.
2.Distribution characteristics, source apportionment, and health risk assessment of metals and metalloids in PM2.5 in a southern city in 2019
Yaxin QU ; Suli HUANG ; Chao WANG ; Jie JIANG ; Jiajia JI ; Daokui FANG ; Shaohua XIE ; Xiaoheng LI ; Ning LIU
Journal of Environmental and Occupational Medicine 2025;42(2):196-204
Background Metals and metalloids in fine particulate matter (PM2.5) may cause damage to the respiratory and circulatory systems of the human body, and long-term exposure is prone to causing chronic poisoning, cancer, and other adverse effects. Objective To assess the distribution characteristics of metals and metalloids in outdoor PM2.5 in a southern city of China, conduct source apportionment, and evaluate the associated health risks, thereby providing theoretical support for further pollution control measures. Methods PM2.5 samples were collected in districts A, B, and C of a southern China city, and the concentrations of 17 metals and metalloids were detected by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Pollution sources were assessed through enrichment factor and principal components analysis, and the main pollution sources were quantified using absolute principal component scores-multivariate linear regression (APCS-MLR). Health risks were evaluated based on the Technical guide for environmental health risk assessment of chemical exposure (WS/T777—2021). Results The ambient air PM2.5 concentrations in the city were higher in winter and spring, and lower in summer and autumn. The annual average concentrations of ambient PM2.5 in districts A, B, and C were 36.7, 31.9, and 24.4 μg·m−3, respectively. The ambient PM2.5 levels in districts B and C were below the second-grade limit set by the Ambient air quality standards (GB 3095—2012). The enrichment factors of cadmium (Cd), aluminum (Al), and antimony (Sb) were greater than 10, those of copper (Cu), lead (Pb), arsenic (As), nickel (Ni), mercury (Hg), and molybdenum (Mo) fell between 1 and 10, and those of manganese (Mn), vanadium (V), chromium (Cr), cobalt (Co), barium (Ba), beryllium (Be), and uranium (U) were below or equal to 1. The comprehensive evaluation of source analysis showed that the main pollution sources in districts A and C and the whole city were coal-burning. In district B, the main pollution source was also coal combustion, followed by industrial process sources and dust sources. The carcinogenic risks of As and Cr were between 1×10−6 and 1×10−4. However, the hazard quotients for 15 metals and metalloids in terms of non-carcinogenic risk were below 1. Conclusion Cr and As in the atmospheric PM2.5 of the city present a certain risk of cancer and should be paid attention to. In addition, preventive control measures should be taken against relevant pollution sources such as industrial emission, dust, and coal burning.
3.En Bloc Resection of Thoracic and Upper Lumbar Spinal Tumors Using a Novel Rotation-Reversion Technique through Posterior-Only Approach
Ming LU ; Changhe HOU ; Wei CHEN ; Zixiong LEI ; Shuangwu DAI ; Shaohua DU ; Qinglin JIN ; Dadi JIN ; Haomiao LI
Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2025;17(2):346-353
Background:
En bloc resection is recommended for the treatment of malignant and aggressive benign spinal tumors; however, it often requires a combined anterior-posterior approach, which is usually accompanied by longer surgical duration, increased blood loss, larger trauma, and surgical complexity. The present study describes a novel rotation-reversion technique for en bloc resection of the thoracic and upper lumbar spinal tumors using a posterior-only approach and evaluate its safety and efficacy.
Methods:
Thirteen patients with thoracic and upper lumbar (L1-L3) spinal tumors were treated with en bloc resection using the rotation-reversion technique through a posterior-only approach at our institution between 2015 and 2023. The clinical characteristics and surgical results of the patients were reviewed and analyzed.
Results:
Posterior-only en bloc resection was performed successfully in all 13 patients using the rotation-reversion technique, with a median follow-up of 30.4 months (range, 6–74 months). The average maximum size of these 13 tumors was 5.7 × 5.8 × 4.8 cm.The mean operation time and blood loss were 458.5 minutes (range, 220–880 minutes) and 3,146.2 mL (range, 1,000–6,000 mL), respectively, with 4 of the 13 patients (30.8%) experiencing perioperative complications. Negative margins were achieved in all the 13 patients (100%). One patient experienced local recurrence (7.7%) and 1 patient experienced instrumentation failures. Interbody fusion was confirmed in 11 of the 13 patients (84.6%), with a median fusion time of 6.9 months. All of the 13 patients experienced varying degrees of mild postoperative neurological deficits owing to resection of the nerve roots affected by tumor invasion of the vertebrae. No vessel injury or postoperative neurological paralysis occurred, except 1 patient who had been completely paralyzed before surgery.
Conclusions
The rotation-reversion technique is an effective procedure for en bloc resection of selected thoracic and upper lumbar spinal tumors through the posterior-only approach.
4.En Bloc Resection of Thoracic and Upper Lumbar Spinal Tumors Using a Novel Rotation-Reversion Technique through Posterior-Only Approach
Ming LU ; Changhe HOU ; Wei CHEN ; Zixiong LEI ; Shuangwu DAI ; Shaohua DU ; Qinglin JIN ; Dadi JIN ; Haomiao LI
Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2025;17(2):346-353
Background:
En bloc resection is recommended for the treatment of malignant and aggressive benign spinal tumors; however, it often requires a combined anterior-posterior approach, which is usually accompanied by longer surgical duration, increased blood loss, larger trauma, and surgical complexity. The present study describes a novel rotation-reversion technique for en bloc resection of the thoracic and upper lumbar spinal tumors using a posterior-only approach and evaluate its safety and efficacy.
Methods:
Thirteen patients with thoracic and upper lumbar (L1-L3) spinal tumors were treated with en bloc resection using the rotation-reversion technique through a posterior-only approach at our institution between 2015 and 2023. The clinical characteristics and surgical results of the patients were reviewed and analyzed.
Results:
Posterior-only en bloc resection was performed successfully in all 13 patients using the rotation-reversion technique, with a median follow-up of 30.4 months (range, 6–74 months). The average maximum size of these 13 tumors was 5.7 × 5.8 × 4.8 cm.The mean operation time and blood loss were 458.5 minutes (range, 220–880 minutes) and 3,146.2 mL (range, 1,000–6,000 mL), respectively, with 4 of the 13 patients (30.8%) experiencing perioperative complications. Negative margins were achieved in all the 13 patients (100%). One patient experienced local recurrence (7.7%) and 1 patient experienced instrumentation failures. Interbody fusion was confirmed in 11 of the 13 patients (84.6%), with a median fusion time of 6.9 months. All of the 13 patients experienced varying degrees of mild postoperative neurological deficits owing to resection of the nerve roots affected by tumor invasion of the vertebrae. No vessel injury or postoperative neurological paralysis occurred, except 1 patient who had been completely paralyzed before surgery.
Conclusions
The rotation-reversion technique is an effective procedure for en bloc resection of selected thoracic and upper lumbar spinal tumors through the posterior-only approach.
5.En Bloc Resection of Thoracic and Upper Lumbar Spinal Tumors Using a Novel Rotation-Reversion Technique through Posterior-Only Approach
Ming LU ; Changhe HOU ; Wei CHEN ; Zixiong LEI ; Shuangwu DAI ; Shaohua DU ; Qinglin JIN ; Dadi JIN ; Haomiao LI
Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2025;17(2):346-353
Background:
En bloc resection is recommended for the treatment of malignant and aggressive benign spinal tumors; however, it often requires a combined anterior-posterior approach, which is usually accompanied by longer surgical duration, increased blood loss, larger trauma, and surgical complexity. The present study describes a novel rotation-reversion technique for en bloc resection of the thoracic and upper lumbar spinal tumors using a posterior-only approach and evaluate its safety and efficacy.
Methods:
Thirteen patients with thoracic and upper lumbar (L1-L3) spinal tumors were treated with en bloc resection using the rotation-reversion technique through a posterior-only approach at our institution between 2015 and 2023. The clinical characteristics and surgical results of the patients were reviewed and analyzed.
Results:
Posterior-only en bloc resection was performed successfully in all 13 patients using the rotation-reversion technique, with a median follow-up of 30.4 months (range, 6–74 months). The average maximum size of these 13 tumors was 5.7 × 5.8 × 4.8 cm.The mean operation time and blood loss were 458.5 minutes (range, 220–880 minutes) and 3,146.2 mL (range, 1,000–6,000 mL), respectively, with 4 of the 13 patients (30.8%) experiencing perioperative complications. Negative margins were achieved in all the 13 patients (100%). One patient experienced local recurrence (7.7%) and 1 patient experienced instrumentation failures. Interbody fusion was confirmed in 11 of the 13 patients (84.6%), with a median fusion time of 6.9 months. All of the 13 patients experienced varying degrees of mild postoperative neurological deficits owing to resection of the nerve roots affected by tumor invasion of the vertebrae. No vessel injury or postoperative neurological paralysis occurred, except 1 patient who had been completely paralyzed before surgery.
Conclusions
The rotation-reversion technique is an effective procedure for en bloc resection of selected thoracic and upper lumbar spinal tumors through the posterior-only approach.
6.Single-cell transcriptome sequencing and clinical significance analysis of cellular heterogeneity in chronic skin ulcers
Chuwang WANG ; Jianda ZHOU ; Yanlian XIANG ; Peiting LI ; Shaohua WANG ; Jia CHEN ; Shuyue CHEN ; Wu XIONG ; Yu LIU ; Xiao FU
Chinese Journal of General Surgery 2025;34(2):327-337
Background and Aims:Chronic skin ulcers are a significant disease affecting patients'daily lives and psychological well-being.Abnormalities in the cells and extracellular matrix within the tissue may disrupt the balance of the microenvironment,hindering the normal skin repair process and leading to delayed healing of the ulcer.There is currently a lack of research on the mechanisms underlying the development of chronic ulcers and their diagnostic biomarkers.Single-cell sequencing,a newly developed high-throughput sequencing method in recent years,uses gene sequencing at the single-cell resolution to precisely reveal disease mechanisms and has been applied in various diseases.This study used single-cell transcriptome sequencing(scRNA-Seq)to investigate the cellular heterogeneity in chronic skin ulcer tissue to elucidate the potential molecular mechanisms behind delayed healing and provide new insights for clinical treatment.Methods:The scRNA-Seq technology was used to compare the differences in cell subpopulations and gene expression between chronic ulcer tissue and normal skin tissue.Single cells were sorted using a microfluidic platform,and cDNA libraries were constructed for subsequent differential gene analysis and functional enrichment analysis.Results:scRNA-Seq analysis revealed significant immune-metabolic remodeling features in chronic ulcer tissue:the number of B cells,monocytes,and macrophages in ulcer tissue increased by 2.1 to 3.5 times compared to the normal tissue control.This was accompanied by widespread activation of collagen synthesis genes(COL1A1/COL3A1)and synergistic suppression of immune regulators(e.g.,granzyme family GZMA/GZMB/H).Cross-cell subpopulation functional network analysis showed that hypoxia response mediated by the HIF-1 signaling pathway and PI3K/Akt pathway abnormalities formed a positive feedback loop,exacerbating the imbalance in the secretion of inflammatory factors(CXCL3/8,TGFBI)and compensatory upregulation of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation.Conclusion:Chronic skin ulcers exhibit significant differences in cellular heterogeneity and gene expression,suggesting that chronic ulcers are not simply tissue defects but a complex pathological process dominated by chronic inflammation and immune dysregulation.The coordinated dysregulation of multiple cell subpopulations in the ulcer microenvironment,along with persistent inflammatory responses and metabolic abnormalities,is interconnected through the HIF-1/TNF/MAPK pathway network.Downregulation of granzyme gene family members and abnormal histone modifications may contribute to immune clearance defects,providing a theoretical basis for developing novel therapies targeting epigenetic regulation or mitochondrial function.
7.Expert consensus on the standard of practice for modified electro-convulsive therapy for mental disorders
Xiu ZHANG ; Guohui LAO ; Xiong HUANG ; Wei JIANG ; Qingmei KONG ; Wei LI ; Hu DENG ; Jijun WANG ; Qin XIE ; Wei DENG ; Shaohua HU ; Dongsheng ZHOU ; Xin WEI ; Zhanming SHI ; Cuixia AN ; Sha LIU ; Yanghua TIAN ; Decheng ZOU ; Lingyun ZENG ; Kun LI ; Xingbing HUANG ; Wei ZHENG ; Yuping NING
Chinese Journal of Psychiatry 2025;58(7):506-525
As a physical treatment technique, modified electro-convulsive therapy (MECT) is used to treat mental and certain neurological disorders by causing seizures with short, suitable electrical currents applied to the brain while the patient is under general anesthesia and muscle relaxants. MECT is recognized for its therapeutic efficacy and clinical safety, rendering it one of the most prevalent interventions in psychiatric care. To enhance clinical outcomes and minimize adverse effects, this consensus document delineates the indications, therapeutic parameters, therapeutic procedures, potential adverse effects, and associated management strategies for MECT. These guidelines are informed by the latest clinical research and expert consensus, integrating evidence-based medicine methodologies. The objective is to furnish clinicians with precise operational guidelines and to advance the standardization of MECT practices in clinical settings.
8.Correlations of brain functional connectivity and white matter microstructure alterations with cognitive impairment in patients with white matter hyperintensities of presumed vascular origin: a MRI study
Shaohua JIN ; Junjie YU ; Minyan LU ; Zihan LI ; Xinxin MIAO ; Peixian JI ; Yongfeng JIA ; Min WANG
Chinese Journal of Neuromedicine 2025;24(3):250-259
Objective:To investigate the alterations in voxel-mirrored homotopic connectivity (VMHC) of brain regions, association loop connectivity, and white matter microstructure in patients with white matter hyperintensities (WMH) of presumed vascular origin, and analyze the pathological basis of cognitive impairment in WMH patients.Methods:A prospective study was performed; 75 WMH patients (WMH group) admitted to Jiangsu Shengze Hospital Affiliated to Nanjing Medical University from January 2023 to September 2024 and 67 volunteers without obvious brain diseases (control group) recruited during the same period were enrolled. General data of these participants, and scores of neuropsychological scales such as mini-mental state examination (MMSE), frontal assessment battery (FAB), and trail making test (TMT) were compared between the two groups. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data of all participants were collected; rs-fMRI data were then analyzed using VMHC algorithm to calculate and conform the brain regions with significantly different VMHC between the two groups, and these regions were used as seed points to perform functional connectivity with the whole brain; Pearson correlation analyses of VMHC and functional connectivity in these brain regions with scores of neuropsychological scales were performed. DTI data were processed using tract-based spatial statistics (TBSS) method to calculate and conform the brain regions with significantly different diffusion parameters of fiber tracts between the two groups; Pearson correlation analyses of diffusion parameters of the fiber tracts in these brain regions with scores of neuropsychological scales were performed.Results:(1) Comparison of general data and neuropsychological scale scores: proportion of participants with hypertension history was significantly different between the two groups ( P<0.05); scores of TMT-A, TMT-B, and Stroop C scales in the WMH group were significantly higher than those in the control group ( P<0.05). (2) Comparison of VMHC and seed point functional connectivity: compared with that in the control group, the VMHC in bilateral middle occipital gyrus, visual cortex, medial occipitotemporal gyrus, insula, and postcentral gyrus of the WMH group were statistically lower ( P<0.05). Compared with that in the control group, functional connectivity of right visual cortex with right middle temporal gyrus, bilateral precuneus, and right dorsolateral superior frontal gyrus in the WMH group was significantly weakened, and functional connectivity of right postcentral gyrus with right medial occipitotemporal gyrus, left middle temporal gyrus, left visual cortex, and left postcentral gyrus was statistically weakened ( P<0.05). In the WMH group, the VMHC of bilateral insula was negatively correlated with TMT-B score ( r=-0.381, P<0.001), and functional connectivity between right visual cortex and right dorsolateral superior frontal gyrus was negatively correlated with Stroop C score ( r=-0.401, P<0.001). (3) TBSS results: the diffusion parameters of the anterior corona radiata, superior corona radiata, corpus callosum, superior longitudinal fasciculus, and posterior thalamic radiation were statistically significant between the two groups ( P<0.05). In the WMH group, the fractional anisotropy in the genu of the corpus callosum was positively correlated with Stroop C score ( r=0.426, P<0.001), radial diffusivity was negatively correlated with Stroop C score ( r=-0.376, P<0.001), and mean diffusivity of the left anterior corona radiata was negatively correlated with TMT-A score ( r=-0.443, P<0.001). Conclusion:WMH patients have decreased coordination in homotopic brain regions and weakened functional connectivity of association loops, with widely distributed white matter microstructure damages, which may be involved in the neuropathological process of cognitive impairment.
9.3D-printed metal augment or integrated acetabular prosthesis for reconstruction of bone defects in hip revision
Bo SUN ; Kewei LI ; Shaohua WANG ; Aiguo WANG ; Wei MEI ; Jinliang WANG
Chinese Journal of Orthopaedics 2025;45(2):94-101
Objective:To investigate the clinical efficacy of 3D-printed metal augment or integrated acetabular prostheses for reconstruction of bone defects in hip revision.Methods:A total of 11 patients who underwent total hip revision in Zhengzhou Orthopaedic Hospital from June 2021 to July 2023 were retrospectively analysed. There were 5 males and 6 females, age 64.8±10.7 years (range, 58-75 years), and body mass index 23.3±4.8 kg/m 2 (range, 21-27 kg/m 2). Paprosky classification of acetabular bone defects: 3 cases of type IIA, 4 cases of type IIB, 3 cases of type IIIA, 1 case of type IIIB. Reasons for revision: 8 cases of aseptic loosening, 3 cases after infection exclusion procedure. A 3D-printed metal augment was used in 9 cases (8 cases of aseptic loosening and 1 case of infected exclusion procedure) and a 3D-printed integrated acetabulum was used in 2 cases (infected exclusion procedure). The time from primary total hip arthroplasty to revision was 11.8±5.6 years (range, 5-17 years). Harris hip score and visual analogue scale (VAS) were used to evaluate the improvement of hip function and pain recovery. The leg length discrepancy, vertical height and horizontal position of the hip rotation center were measured on pelvic anteroposterior X-ray films. Results:All patients successfully completed the operation. The operation time was 145.9±35.5 min (range, 110-159 min), and the intraoperative blood loss was 950.5±310.8 ml (range, 680-1,450 ml). The postoperative Harris hip function score was significantly higher than that before operation ( F=554.085, P<0.001). One year after operation, the Harris hip function score was 74.36±5.16, which was higher than that before operation 32.18±4.07, and the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.05). The VAS scores of all patients decreased after operation, and the difference was statistically significant compared with that before operation ( F=177.717, P<0.001). The VAS score at 1 year after operation was 1.27±0.65, which was lower than that before operation 6.18±1.17, and the difference was statistically significant ( P<0.05). The preoperative leg length discrepancy was 1.97±0.71 cm, which was greater than 0.69±0.52 cm at the last follow-up, and the difference was statistically significant ( t=4.824, P<0.001). The vertical height of the hip rotation center was 1.88±0.46 cm on the affected side and 1.67±0.35 cm on the healthy side, showing no significant difference ( t=1.205, P=0.242). The postoperative horizontal position of the hip rotation center was 3.48±0.55 cm on the affected side and 3.54±0.32 cm on the healthy side, and the difference was no statistically significant ( t=-0.313, P=0.758). One case had an intraoperative greater trochanteric fracture that healed 3 months after reduction and internal fixation. All patients were followed up for 21.3±9.5 months (range, 15-31 months). All incisions healed in one stage, and all patients were fully weight-bearing at 3 months after operation. At the last follow-up, there was no case of loosening, dislocation or infection of the prosthesis; 4 cases had mild claudication, 1 case had heterotopic ossification, and the patients had good hip flexion and extension functions, which did not affect daily life without further treatment. Conclusion:The clinical efficacy of 3D-printed metal augment or integrated acetabular prosthesis for reconstruction of acetabular bone defects is satisfactory, which can restore the normal center of rotation of the hip joint and has a low incidence of postoperative complications.
10.Expression of ZNF711 gene in ovarian cancer and its prognostic value
Li ZHANG ; Yixuan WANG ; Shaohua ZHANG ; Zanhong WANG
Cancer Research and Clinic 2025;37(3):211-217
Objective:To investigate the expression of ZNF711 in ovarian cancer and its relationship with prognosis and its possible role.Methods:A retrospective cohort study was conducted. The GEPIA database (data updated in October 2020) was used to analyze the expression of ZNF711 mRNA in 426 ovarian cancer samples and 88 normal ovarian tissue samples; 424 ovarian cancer patients were screened from the GEPIA database, and 373 ovarian cancer patients were screened from the Kaplan-Meier Plotter database. The patients were grouped according to the median relative expression levels of ZNF711 mRNA in ovarian cancer samples from the two databases, and the overall survival of the two groups in the same database was compared. The cBioPortal database (data updated in September 2023) was used to screen for the top 30 genes co-expressed with ZNF711 in ovarian cancer tissues from 489 ovarian serous cystadenoma samples in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) database; these 30 co-expressed genes were imported into the David database (data updated in October 2023) for Gene Ontology (GO) and Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes (KEGG) enrichment analyses. The correlation between ZNF711 expression and 6 types of immune cell infiltration in ovarian cancer was analyzed based on the TIMER database gene module. The ovarian cancer tissues from 178 ovarian cancer patients who underwent surgical treatment at Shanxi Bethune Hospital from January 2012 to December 2017, as well as the normal ovarian tissues from 53 patients who underwent total hysterectomy and bilateral adnexectomy for uterine fibroids during the same period were collected. Immunohistochemistry was used to detect the expression of ZNF711 protein in ovarian tissues. The immunohistochemical score was calculated by multiplying the positive cell ratio score and the staining intensity score, ranging from 0 to 12 points, and low or high expression of ZNF711 protein was determined by whether it was ≤ 8 points. The overall survival of patients with high and low expression of ZNF711 protein, as well as the distribution of patients with high and low expression of ZNF711 protein in different clinicopathological stratifications were compared; univariate and multivariate Cox proportional hazards models were used to analyze the influencing factors of overall survival in ovarian cancer patients.Results:Among 426 ovarian cancer tissue samples and 88 normal ovarian tissue samples in the GEPIA database, the relative expression level of ZNF711 mRNA in ovarian cancer tissues was lower than that in normal ovarian tissues, and the difference was statistically significant ( P < 0.05). The median relative expression levels of ZNF711 mRNA in ovarian cancer tissues were 8.46 and 8.57 in the GEPIA database and Kaplan-Meier Plotter database, respectively. The overall survival of the ZNF711 high expression group (212 cases) was better than that of the ZNF711 low expression group (212 cases) in the GEPIA database ( P = 0.010), and the overall survival of the ZNF711 high expression group (242 cases) was better than that of the ZNF711 low expression group (131 cases) in the Kaplan-Meier Plotter database ( P = 0.002). GO enrichment analysis of the top 30 ZNF711 co-expressed genes screened from ovarian cancer tissues in the cBioPortal database showed that these genes were mainly enriched in biological processes such as DNA-templated regulation of transcription, synapse assembly, regulation of transcription from RNA polymerase Ⅱ promoter, cell adhesion of calcium channels, etc. The involved cellular compositions were mainly enriched in the nucleus, ribonucleoprotein complex, etc. The involved molecular functions were mainly enriched in RNA polymerase Ⅱ core promoter proximal region sequence-specific DNA binding, protein binding, mRNA 3'UTR AU-rich region binding, etc. KEGG pathway analysis showed that the ZNF711 co-expressed genes were mainly enriched in processes such as herpes simplex virus type Ⅰ infection, osteoclast differentiation, antigen processing and presentation, Fc γ R-mediated phagocytosis, etc. Analysis using TIMER database found that the expression level of ZNF711 was negatively correlated with B cells, CD8 + T cells, neutrophils, and dendritic cells (all P < 0.05), but it was not correlated with CD4 + T cells or macrophages (both P > 0.05). The immunohistochemistry results of clinical specimens showed that the immunohistochemical scores of ZNF711 in 178 cases of ovarian cancer tissue and 53 cases of normal ovarian tissue were (3.0±1.6) points and (6.9±1.8) points, respectively, and the difference was statistically significant ( t = 14.42, P < 0.001); the overall survival of the ZNF711 low expression group (63 cases) was worse than that of the ZNF711 high expression group (115 cases) ( P = 0.008); there were statistically significant differences in the distribution of high and low expression of ZNF711 protein among ovarian cancer patients of different ages, International Federation of Obstetrics and Gynecology staging, R0 resection, differentiation degree, and ascites (all P = 0.001). The results of multivariate Cox regression analysis showed that non-R0 resection (non-R0 resection vs. R0 resection, HR = 15.862,95% CI: 4.440-56.661) and low expression of ZNF711 protein (high expression vs. low expression, HR = 0.421, 95% CI: 0.089-1.987) were independent risk factors for poor overall survival in ovarian cancer patients (both P < 0.05). Conclusions:ZNF711 is lowly expressed in ovarian cancer and is associated with poor prognosis of patients. It may be an important molecule involved in the progression of ovarian cancer.

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