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Nanjing Agricultural University published the first Cell, which systematically studied the viral transcriptome, and found for the first time that 65 viruses exist in mammals
Time of Update: 2022-05-01
Figure 2: Genomic recombination and evolutionary analysis of raccoon dog CCoV Although these wild animals are not necessarily the reservoir hosts for these high-risk viruses (Figure 3), they may act as intermediate hosts through cross-species transmission to spread the pathogen to humans and livestock .
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Microbiology Spectrum Professor Nian Hai's team from South China Agricultural University reveals the effects of different sequencing methods on the microbial mechanism of soybean waterlogging tolerance
Time of Update: 2022-05-01
This study used three-generation full-length sequencing of Illumina Miseq, LoopSeq, and PacBio to investigate the effect of waterlogging on the structure of soybean rhizosphere bacterial communities in neutral and acidic soils .
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[Nature Sub-Journal] Health Threats - Study Reveals Devastating Drug-resistant Bacteria: Mycobacterium abscessus
Time of Update: 2022-05-01
" The researchers found that infection with the rough variant caused the zebrafish under study to develop An overactive immune response, which drives increased inflammation and tissue destruction .
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"Nature Genetics" back-to-back: Scientists once again confirm that ABO blood type can affect gut microbes
Time of Update: 2022-05-01
On February 3 this year, "Nature Genetics" published two back-to-back association studies between the host and gut microbes based on large populations, and at the same time verified the effect of the interaction of ABO and FUT2 genes on the composition of gut microbes .
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The first in school history!
Time of Update: 2022-05-01
This is the first time that Nanjing Agricultural University has published research results in Cell as the first corresponding author unit, and it is also a breakthrough research progress in the field of animal infectious disease prevention and control in China .
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Cell Sushuo/Shi Mang collaborative team published major research progress on virus diversity and potential risk of virus transmission, expanding the understanding of the diversity of viruses carried by a variety of wild animals
Time of Update: 2022-05-01
On February 16, 2022, Cell published online the research paper "Virome characterization of game animals in China reveals a spectrum of emerging pathogens" completed by Nanjing Agricultural University in cooperation with Sun Yat-sen University and other domestic and foreign institutions, and published the diversity of viruses and potential transmission risks of viruses Major research progress has expanded the understanding of the diversity of viruses carried by a variety of wild animals .
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Study finds that green tide in the Yellow Sea may promote the growth of phagocytic algae
Time of Update: 2022-05-01
Focusing on the impact of the Yellow Sea green tide on the marine ecological environment, the team of Yu Rencheng, a researcher at the Institute of Oceanography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, identified the subsidence area of a large number of floating green algae in the late green tide in the South Yellow Sea, revealing the unique ecological environment of the subsidence area before and after the occurrence of the green tide.
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Screening of quorum-sensing inhibitors of intestinal probiotic Lactobacillus reuteri in natural products
Time of Update: 2022-04-30
Mangiferin, an active ingredient widely distributed in natural medicines such as mango, Anemarrhena, Dian gentian, swedia, and myrobalan, is a quorum-sensing protein LuxS inhibitor in the probiotic Lactobacillus reuteri, and in vitro experiments show that mangiferin can It can effectively promote the growth, proliferation and biofilm formation of the probiotic L.
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【Nature】Superpower?
Time of Update: 2022-04-30
A bacterial natural product of particular relevance to human health, colibactin, is a chemically unstable small-molecule genotoxin produced by several different bacteria, including members of the human gut microbiome .
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Peng Xuya/Li Lei's team WR of Chongqing University: Integrating meta-omics methods to reveal key functional bacteria that affect anaerobic digestion performance under ammonia stress
Time of Update: 2022-04-30
Image Summary Recently, Peng Xuya/Li Lei's team from the School of Environment and Ecology, Chongqing University published a paper entitled "Integrated multi-omics analyses revealing the key microbial phylotypes affecting anaerobic digestion performance under ammonia stress" in Water Research (IF=11.
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Cell is something to watch out for!
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
Gilmore of Harvard Medical School jointly published a research paper entitled "Emerging enterococcus pore-forming toxins with MHC/HLA-I as receptors" in Cell Online.
faecalis damages human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and intestinal organoids, and this toxicity is neutralized by Epx2 antibodies, demonstrating toxin-mediated virulence of Epx-carrying E.
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WHO confirms the existence of a new variant of the new crown Deltacron, which is recombined from Delta and Omicron
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
" At present, the new mutant strain has been found in countries such as France, the Netherlands and Denmark, and the World Health Organization (WHO) has also confirmed the existence of this new coronavirus mutant strain recombined from Delta and Omicron .
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What is the experience of growing up in a "honeypot"?
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
A yeast-mediated pollination in Clematis glabrata (Image credit: Reference 3), although we know that nectar microbes can coexist harmoniously with plants .
C is the pollen germinated in Acinetobacter culture, D is the sterile control group (Image source: Reference 4) Did the nectar microorganisms get nutrients from the burst pollen?
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Are you going to revise your textbook again?
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
Like the microbes found in Namibia, this newly discovered bacterium in the mangroves also has a giant water sac that accounts for about 73 percent of its total volume .
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JHM Column Chongqing University Li Hong's team: Microplastics promote bacterial colonization and induce algal toxin degradation
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
First author: He Yixin Corresponding author: Li Hong, Mao Yufeng Li Hong's research team and Associate Professor Mao Yufeng from the Hohai College of Chongqing Jiaotong University published a research paper entitled "Microplastics benefit bacteria colonization and induce microcystin degradation" in the Journal of Hazardous Materials, a well-known academic journal in the environmental field .
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Experts comment on NBT Wang Jun/Chen Yihua group using AI to enable high-throughput mining of microbiome functional macromolecules
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
Comments | Wang Xiaowo (Tsinghua University), Liu Chenli (Shenzhen Advanced Research Institute) editors | People, animals and plants have a large number of complex symbiotic microbiomes, and their me
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Study finds deep-sea non-photosynthetic bacteria sense blue light through blue light receptors
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
Recently, Sun Chaomin's research group from the Institute of Oceanography, Chinese Academy of Sciences discovered that non-photosynthetic bacteria in deep-sea cold springs sense blue light through blue-light sensing proteins and stimulate energy synthesis, providing another example for deep-sea microorganisms to sense and utilize light energy .
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Scientists propose a high-resolution, high-sensitivity microbiome sequencing technique
Time of Update: 2022-04-29
In view of the current pain points and difficulties in the field of bacterial sequencing methodology, the Single Cell Center of the Qingdao Institute of Bioenergy and Processes, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Ocean University of China proposed a high-species resolution, high-sensitivity, and simultaneous identification of all prokaryotic and 2bRAD-M, a low-cost microbiome sequencing technology for eukaryotic microorganisms that is not afraid of sample degradation or contamination .
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[Nature sub-issue] Marine bacteria make "anti-cancer molecules", and scientists understand the mystery for the first time!
Time of Update: 2022-04-28
Co-author Bradley Moore, Distinguished Professor of Scripps Oceanography and Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, said: "Now that scientists understand how this enzyme makes the salinosporamide A 'warhead', this discovery could be used in the future to harness the enzyme to Produce other types of salinosporamides that attack not only cancer but also diseases of the immune system and infections caused by parasites .
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Science: Turning methane into fuel, the secrets of this amazing bacteria are being revealed
Time of Update: 2022-04-28
▲The 2019 study revealed the site where the pMMO enzyme catalyzes the methane conversion reaction (Image source: Northwestern University) pMMO enzymes are extremely difficult to study because the protein is embedded in the cell membrane of bacteria .