Tu, Tian
Wan, Lily
Zhang, Qi-Lei
Yang, Chen
Zhou, Hong-Shu
Sun, Zhong-Ping
Long, Hong-Yu
Tang, Bei-Sha
Pan, Aihua
Tu, Ewen
Wang, Jian
Yang, Zhi-Quan
Li, Zhen-Yan
Yan, Xiao-Xin
Funding for this research was provided by:
National Natural Science Foundation of China (#82201595)
National Natural Science Foundation of China (#82071223)
Ministry of Science and Technology of the People’s Republic of China (#2021ZD0201103)
Ministry of Science and Technology of the People’s Republic of China (#2021ZD0201103)
Science and Technology Program of Hunan Province (#2020SK2122)
Science and Technology Program of Hunan Province (#2023JJ30908)
Article History
Received: 9 June 2025
Accepted: 9 January 2026
First Online: 14 January 2026
Declarations
:
: The authors declare no competing interests.
: The surgical procedure and pathological examination of resected brain tissues were carried out with written consent from the patients and family members. All human brains were banked with written informed consent obtained prior to post-mortem donation from the donor and/or the next-of kin. The Ethics Committee for Research and Education at Xiangya School of Medicine approved the use of postmortem human materials.