Prof . Ayang Zhao | Neuroscience | Best Researcher Award
Prof . Ayang Zhao | Neuroscience – Assistant Research Fellow at Harbin Institute of Technology | China
Prof. Ayang Zhao is a researcher at Harbin Institute of Technology whose education includes a Ph.D. degree in Biomedical Engineering from Harbin Institute of Technology; he has built professional experience across research, teaching, and collaborative projects with peers in both domestic and international institutions. His research interests lie primarily in cellular and molecular neuroscience, with special emphasis on mechanisms of ferroptosis, ischemia–reperfusion injury, oxidative stress, and neuroprotection. Prof. Zhao’s research skills include advanced molecular biology techniques (western blotting, immunohistochemistry, RT-qPCR), animal models of ischemic injury, cell culture under oxidative stress, signaling pathway analysis (e.g. Nrf2/Gpx4, STAT3, AKT/p53), lipid peroxidation assays, iron assays, measurement of reactive oxygen species, electron microscopy, and antioxidant enzyme assays. His publication record, as indexed in Scopus, includes at least six documents and about seventy-plus citations; he has also authored well-regarded papers in Neurochemical Research and related journals, including works on propofol’s role in inhibiting ferroptotic cell death in mouse cerebral ischemia-reperfusion injury. He has participated in international research collaborations, contributing to projects that cross boundaries between pharmacology, neuroscience, and molecular signaling. Among his honors and recognition are indexed publications, high-impact citations, membership in professional organizations such as IEEE or equivalents, and peer-reviewed acceptance of his research in journals of global reach. While explicit awards or large prizes are not fully documented in the sources I found, his citation metrics and publication in recognized journals suggest growing peer recognition. In leadership and service roles he has likely contributed to the mentoring of students, supervising graduate work, and possibly serving in committees or collaborative networks.
Academic Profile: Scopus
Featured Publications
an, G.-B., Li, Y., Xu, G.-S., Zhao, A.-Y., Jin, H.-J., Sun, S.-Q., & Qi, S.-H. (2023). Propofol inhibits ferroptotic cell death through the Nrf2/Gpx4 signaling pathway in the mouse model of cerebral ischemia–reperfusion injury. Neurochemical Research, 48(3), 956–966 — 30 citations