Sabah Elamraoui | Environmental chemistry | Editorial Board Member

Ms. Sabah Elamraoui | Environmental chemistry | Editorial Board Member

Ms. Sabah Elamraoui  | National School of Applied Sciences El Jadida Chouaib Doukkali University | Morocco

Ms. Sabah Elamraoui is an environmental chemist specializing in sustainable materials, biochar engineering, and pollutant remediation. Her research focuses on converting waste-derived biomass into high-performance adsorbents for water purification, emphasizing surface modification, adsorption optimization, and mechanistic modeling. Using advanced techniques such as response surface methodology and computational simulations, she investigates removal of dyes and contaminants from wastewater. Her work contributes to circular economy approaches, sustainable resource management, and scalable solutions for environmental pollution control, particularly in developing regions facing critical water treatment challenges.

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Scopus

Publications

Elamraoui, S., et al. (2025). Enhancing surface area of HNO₃-activated digestate-derived biochar for methylene blue adsorption: RSM-CCD optimization, DFT-MD calculations, and mechanistic study. Applied Surface Science.

Maciej Kwiatek | Immunology | Editorial Board Member

Dr. Maciej Kwiatek | Immunology | Editorial Board Member

Dr. Maciej Kwiatek | Medical University of Lublin | Poland

Dr. Maciej Kwiatek is a medical researcher affiliated with the Medical University of Lublin, Poland, whose work focuses on immunology, inflammation, and pregnancy-related disorders. His studies investigate immune regulation mechanisms, particularly Treg/Th17 balance and cytokine signaling, in conditions such as gestational hypertension. With notable citation impact and peer-reviewed publications, his research contributes to understanding pathophysiology, improving diagnostic approaches, and identifying therapeutic targets in maternal-fetal medicine and cardiovascular complications during pregnancy, advancing clinical immunology and translational healthcare outcomes.

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Scopus

Publications

Kwiatek, M., et al. (2025). Dysregulation of Treg/Th17 balance and intracellular expression of IL-21 and IL-22 in the pathogenesis of gestational hypertension. Journal of Clinical Medicine.

Ting Zhang | Biochemistry | Editorial Board Member

Prof. Dr. Ting Zhang | Biochemistry | Editorial Board Member

Associate Professor | Kashi University | China

Prof. Dr. Ting Zhang is a researcher in nutrition, metabolic diseases, and the gut–brain axis, focusing on how diet, bioactive compounds, and microbiota interactions influence health. Her studies integrate network pharmacology, animal models, and clinical data to investigate obesity, diabetes, neurodegeneration, and inflammation. She has examined fermented foods, plant extracts, and genetic factors affecting metabolic risk and cognitive function. Her work highlights microbiome-mediated mechanisms linking nutrition to chronic disease prevention and therapeutic development, contributing to precision nutrition and functional food research.

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ORCID

Publications

  • Zhang, T., & Park, S. (2025). Network pharmacology-guided discovery of traditional Chinese medicine extracts for Alzheimer’s disease: Targeting neuroinflammation and gut–brain axis dysfunction. International Journal of Molecular Sciences.

  • Lee, N., Zhang, T., Joe, H., & Park, S. (2025). Network pharmacology-guided evaluation of ginger and cornelian cherry extracts against depression and metabolic dysfunction in estrogen-deficient chronic stressed rats. International Journal of Molecular Sciences.

  • Zhang, T., & Park, S. (2025). Energy intake-dependent genetic associations with obesity risk: BDNF Val66Met polymorphism and interactions with dietary bioactive compounds. Antioxidants.

  • Wu, X., Zhang, T., Zhang, T., & Park, S. (2024). The impact of gut microbiome enterotypes on ulcerative colitis: Identifying key bacterial species and revealing species co-occurrence networks using machine learning. Gut Microbes.

  • Wu, X., Zhang, T., & Park, S. (2024). Dietary quality, perceived health, and psychological status as key risk factors for newly-developed metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease in a longitudinal study. Nutrition.