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Xin Ni
Researcher at Central South University
Publications - 119
Citations - 2311
Xin Ni is an academic researcher from Central South University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Chemistry & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 92 publications receiving 1836 citations. Previous affiliations of Xin Ni include Second Military Medical University & Shanghai University of Sport.
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NLRP3 inflammasome activation mediates estrogen deficiency-induced depression- and anxiety-like behavior and hippocampal inflammation in mice.
TL;DR: This study suggests that estrogen deficiency results in NLRP3 inflammasome activation, thereby leading to neuroinflammation in hippocampus and depression and anxiety.
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Swimming exercise ameliorates depression-like behavior in chronically stressed rats: Relevant to proinflammatory cytokines and IDO activation
TL;DR: Swimming exercise may inhibit activation of inflammation/IDO pathways induced by CUMS, thereby ameliorating depression and suggested that CUMS activate HPA axis and induce immune activation, which may stimulate IDO activity, leading to the reduction of 5-HT level in brain, thereby resulting in depression.
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Glucocorticoids suppress cystathionine gamma-lyase expression and H2S production in lipopolysaccharide-treated macrophages
TL;DR: Inhibition of H2S and NO production may be a mechanism by which glucocorticoids coordinate the balance between pro- and anti-inflammatory mediators during inflammation, besides the NO-dependent way.
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Upregulation of microRNA-22 contributes to myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury by interfering with the mitochondrial function.
Jiankui Du,Binhai Cong,Qing Yu,He Wang,Long Wang,Chang-Nan Wang,Xiao-Lu Tang,Jianqiang Lu,Xiaoyan Zhu,Xin Ni +9 more
TL;DR: It was found that silencing of Sirt1 abolished the protective effect of miR-22 inhibitor against H/R-induced mitochondrial dysfunction and cell injury in cardiomyocytes, and this discovery reveals a novel molecular mechanism for cardiac mitochondrial dysfunction during myocardial I/R injury at the miRNA level.
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Human GV oocytes generated by mitotically active germ cells obtained from follicular aspirates.
Xinbao Ding,Guishu Liu,Bo Xu,Changqing Wu,Ning Hui,Xin Ni,Jian Wang,Meirong Du,Xiaoming Teng,Ji Wu,Ji Wu +10 more
TL;DR: This study established FGSC lines from scarce ovarian cortical tissues that exist in follicular aspirates (faFGSCs), which are produced and discarded in in vitro fertilization centers worldwide and developed a strategy guiding FGSCs differentiated into germinal vesicle (GV) stage oocytes in vitro and revealed their developmental mechanisms.