1.STUDY ON THE NUTRITIONAL VALUE OF MORTIERELLA ISABELINA AND ITS EFFECT ON REGULATION OF BLOOD LIPIDS IN RATS
Yuexin LIN ; Jianzhong HUANG ; Bifeng XIE ; Xiaolan ZHOU ; Qiaoqin SHI ; Songgang WU ;
Acta Nutrimenta Sinica 1956;0(02):-
Objective: 1.To analyze the nutritional composition and evaluation of the nutritional value of Mortierella isabelina powder. 2.To investigate the effects of Mortierella isabelina powder on prevention and regulation of hyperlipidemia in rats. Methods: 1. Mycelium powder was analyzed for proteins, lipids polysaccharides, fibre, ash, vitamin E, amino acids, fatty acids and minerals. 2. Mycelium powder was used to feed rats in different dosages together with high lipid diet for 10 days. 3. Mycelium powder was used to feed hyperlipidemic rats in different dosages for 30 days. Results: (1) There were about 20% of proteins and more than 50% of lipids in the mycelium. Further examination found that the mycelium contained rich essential amino acids and unsaturated fatty acids. The mycelium also contained vitamin E and useful minerals such as K, Ca, P, Fe, Zn and Mn. (2) 0.6 or 1.2 g/(kg?d) dosage of mycelium powder could prevent the rise of serum lipids. (3) When the mycelium powder was used to feed hyperlipidemic rats, the serum cholesterol, triglyceride, LDL C and VLDL C of the rats could be reduced, meanwhile HDL C could be increased. Conclusion: The results indicated that Mortierella isabelina powder has potential nutritional value and can be used to regulate the blood lipids in hyperlipidemic rats.
2. Combined effect of noise and hydrogen cyanide on noise-induced hearing loss in a metal electroplating enterprise
Sheng ZHANG ; Jianguo HUANG ; Jianguo WU ; Jincai CHEN ; Zipeng LAN ; Lilin WEN ; Zhenxi ZHENG ; Hanqin WANG
China Occupational Medicine 2018;45(04):480-484
OBJECTIVE: To study the combined effect of noise and hydrogen cyanide on noise-induced hearing loss( NIHL)in a metal electroplating enterprise. METHODS: The judgment sampling method was used to select 663 workers in a largescale metal electroplating enterprise as the study subjects. Among them,186 workers exposed to noise alone were designated as noise group; 138 workers exposed to hydrogen cyanide alone were designated as hydrogen cyanide group; and161 workers exposed to noise and hydrogen cyanide were designated as combined effect group,and 178 workers without exposure from occupational disease risk factors were designated as control group. Questionnaires survey and pure tone audiometry were used for analyzing the effects of combined noise and hydrogen cyanide exposure on NIHL. RESULTS: The hearing loss detection rate of the study subjects was 40. 4%. The hearing loss detection rates in the control group,noise group,hydrogen cyanide group,and combined effect group were 17. 4%,47. 8%,32. 6% and 64. 0%,respectively. The detection rate of hearing loss in the control group was lower than that in the other three groups( P < 0. 008). The NIHL detection rates in the combined effect group and the noise group were higher than that in the hydrogen cyanide group( P <0. 008). The hearing loss detection rate of the combined effect group was higher than that of the noise group and the hydrogen cyanide group( P < 0. 008). Ordinal multi-categorical logistic regression model results showed that after adjusting confounding factors such as age,length of service,gender,marital status,smoking,alcohol drinking,we found hydrogen cyanide exposure,noise exposure,and combined exposure to hydrogen cyanide and noise had effects on workers' hearing(P < 0. 05). The risk of hearing loss in workers exposed to noise and hydrogen cyanide was higher than that of workers exposed to noise alone or hydrogen cyanide alone. CONCLUSION: There is a combined effect of noise and hydrogen cyanide in this metal electroplating enterprise,which can increase the risk of NIHL in workers.
3.Pattern of electrogastrogram in healthy neonates.
Yu JIANG ; Jian-Wei WU ; Yun-Sheng WU
Chinese Journal of Contemporary Pediatrics 2007;9(4):364-366
OBJECTIVETo investigate the electrogastrogram (EGG) characteristics of healthy neonates.
METHODSTwenty healthy neonates born at 37-39 weeks of gestation (11 males and 9 females, Apagar's score 9.3 +/- 0.4) were enrolled in this study. EGG recordings were performed for half an hour pre- and postprandially at an interval of a week from birth until age 4 weeks. The EEG variables measured included the percentage of normal gastric rhythm, the percentage of tachygastria and bradygastria, the fed-to-fasting ratio of the EEG dominant power, as well as the EEG dominant frequency and its instability coefficient. The paired sample t test (95% CI) was used to compare the recordings.
RESULTSBetween birth and age 28 days, the percentage of normal gastric rhythm ranged from 38.2 +/- 4.9% to 39.7 +/- 3.5% of recorded time, tachygastria was observed in the range of 23.7 +/- 5.4% to 23.5 +/- 4.3% of recorded time, and bradygastria was shown to be in the range of 38.1 +/- 5.5% to 36.8 +/- 3.9% of recorded time in the 20 neonates before meal. Statistically significant differences were not seen in neonates with different ages as well as during pre- and postprandial periods. The EEG dominant frequency of neonates before meal was 2.38 +/- 0.5, 2.43 +/- 0.2, 2.54 +/- 0.3, 2.57 +/- 0.2 and 2.59 +/- 0.1 cpm at birth and at postnatal age of 7, 14, 21 and 28 days respectively. There were no significant differences in the dominant frequency and the coefficient of instability of the dominant frequency during pre- and postprandial periods. The EEG dominant frequency at postnatal age of 14, 21 and 28 days during pre- and postprandial periods was significantly higher than that at birth and at postnatal age of 7 days (P < 0.05). The coefficient of instability of the dominant frequency at postnatal age of 21 and 28 days was significantly lower than that at birth and at postnatal age of 7 and 14 days (P < 0.05). There were no statistically significant differences in the fed-to-fasting ratio of EGG dominant power in neonates with different ages.
CONCLUSIONSThe pattern of electrical activity in the normal neonatal stomach appears to be different from that demonstrated in adults and children. The percentage of normal gastric rhythm is lower, and tachygastria and bradygastria are more frequently seen. The EEG dominant frequency increases with postnatal age in neonates.
Age Factors ; Electrodiagnosis ; Female ; Humans ; Infant, Newborn ; physiology ; Male ; Postprandial Period ; Stomach ; physiology
4.L-carnitine alleviating cisplatin induced acute kidney injury through serum metabolomics analysis
Songgang JI ; Qiong WU ; Zhenyu ZHU ; Xin DONG ; Zhanying HONG ; Yifeng CHAI
Journal of Pharmaceutical Practice 2015;(5):429-433
Objective To explore specific variables related to cisplatin induced acute kidney injury ,serum metabonomics techniques were applied and simultaneously the value of intervention effects of L-carnitine were appraised .Methods 19 mice were divided into the normal control group ,model group ,and intervention group ,After a three day accommodation period ,the intervention group was given L-carnitine (400 mg/kg ,ip) .Two days later ,cisplatin (20 mg/kg ,ip) was given to the model and intervention groups .The body weight of every mouse in each group was measured daily .Two days after the serum sample of each mice was collected and analyzed by LC-MS ,pattern recognition analysis of metabolomics differences among the groups , and the effectiveness of L-carnitine intervention were evaluated .Results A total of 28 metabolites were identified through ser-um metabolomics analysis .Our data shows that there is a possible mechanism that cisplatin induced AKI was mainly involved in changing phospholipids ,amino acid and fatty acid metabolic pathways and L-carnitine mitigates the damage of acute kidney in-jury induced by cisplatin .Conclusion L-carnitinecan alleviates cisplatin induced acute kidney injury by regulating tryptophan metabolism ,glutamate metabolism ,and energy metabolism .
5.The E protein is a multifunctional membrane protein of SARS-CoV.
Qingfa WU ; Yilin ZHANG ; Hong LÜ ; Jing WANG ; Ximiao HE ; Yong LIU ; Chen YE ; Wei LIN ; Jianfei HU ; Jia JI ; Jing XU ; Jie YE ; Yongwu HU ; Wenjun CHEN ; Songgang LI ; Jun WANG ; Jian WANG ; Shengli BI ; Huanming YANG
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2003;1(2):131-144
The E (envelope) protein is the smallest structural protein in all coronaviruses and is the only viral structural protein in which no variation has been detected. We conducted genome sequencing and phylogenetic analyses of SARS-CoV. Based on genome sequencing, we predicted the E protein is a transmembrane (TM) protein characterized by a TM region with strong hydrophobicity and alpha-helix conformation. We identified a segment (NH2-_L-Cys-A-Y-Cys-Cys-N_-COOH) in the carboxyl-terminal region of the E protein that appears to form three disulfide bonds with another segment of corresponding cysteines in the carboxyl-terminus of the S (spike) protein. These bonds point to a possible structural association between the E and S proteins. Our phylogenetic analyses of the E protein sequences in all published coronaviruses place SARS-CoV in an independent group in Coronaviridae and suggest a non-human animal origin.
Amino Acid Sequence
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Base Sequence
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Cluster Analysis
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Codon
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genetics
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Gene Components
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Genome, Viral
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Membrane Glycoproteins
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metabolism
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Membrane Proteins
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genetics
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metabolism
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Phylogeny
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Protein Conformation
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SARS Virus
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genetics
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Sequence Alignment
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Sequence Analysis, DNA
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Sequence Homology
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Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus
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Viral Envelope Proteins
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genetics
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metabolism
6.Complete genome sequences of the SARS-CoV: the BJ Group (Isolates BJ01-BJ04).
Shengli BI ; E'de QIN ; Zuyuan XU ; Wei LI ; Jing WANG ; Yongwu HU ; Yong LIU ; Shumin DUAN ; Jianfei HU ; Yujun HAN ; Jing XU ; Yan LI ; Yao YI ; Yongdong ZHOU ; Wei LIN ; Hong XU ; Ruan LI ; Zizhang ZHANG ; Haiyan SUN ; Jingui ZHU ; Man YU ; Baochang FAN ; Qingfa WU ; Wei LIN ; Lin TANG ; Baoan YANG ; Guoqing LI ; Wenming PENG ; Wenjie LI ; Tao JIANG ; Yajun DENG ; Bohua LIU ; Jianping SHI ; Yongqiang DENG ; Wei WEI ; Hong LIU ; Zongzhong TONG ; Feng ZHANG ; Yu ZHANG ; Cui'e WANG ; Yuquan LI ; Jia YE ; Yonghua GAN ; Jia JI ; Xiaoyu LI ; Xiangjun TIAN ; Fushuang LU ; Gang TAN ; Ruifu YANG ; Bin LIU ; Siqi LIU ; Songgang LI ; Jun WANG ; Jian WANG ; Wuchun CAO ; Jun YU ; Xiaoping DONG ; Huanming YANG
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2003;1(3):180-192
Beijing has been one of the epicenters attacked most severely by the SARS-CoV (severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus) since the first patient was diagnosed in one of the city's hospitals. We now report complete genome sequences of the BJ Group, including four isolates (Isolates BJ01, BJ02, BJ03, and BJ04) of the SARS-CoV. It is remarkable that all members of the BJ Group share a common haplotype, consisting of seven loci that differentiate the group from other isolates published to date. Among 42 substitutions uniquely identified from the BJ group, 32 are non-synonymous changes at the amino acid level. Rooted phylogenetic trees, proposed on the basis of haplotypes and other sequence variations of SARS-CoV isolates from Canada, USA, Singapore, and China, gave rise to different paradigms but positioned the BJ Group, together with the newly discovered GD01 (GD-Ins29) in the same clade, followed by the H-U Group (from Hong Kong to USA) and the H-T Group (from Hong Kong to Toronto), leaving the SP Group (Singapore) more distant. This result appears to suggest a possible transmission path from Guangdong to Beijing/Hong Kong, then to other countries and regions.
Genome, Viral
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Haplotypes
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Humans
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Mutation
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Open Reading Frames
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Phylogeny
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SARS Virus
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genetics
7.A genome sequence of novel SARS-CoV isolates: the genotype, GD-Ins29, leads to a hypothesis of viral transmission in South China.
E'de QIN ; Xionglei HE ; Wei TIAN ; Yong LIU ; Wei LI ; Jie WEN ; Jingqiang WANG ; Baochang FAN ; Qingfa WU ; Guohui CHANG ; Wuchun CAO ; Zuyuan XU ; Ruifu YANG ; Jing WANG ; Man YU ; Yan LI ; Jing XU ; Bingyin SI ; Yongwu HU ; Wenming PENG ; Lin TANG ; Tao JIANG ; Jianping SHI ; Jia JI ; Yu ZHANG ; Jia YE ; Cui'e WANG ; Yujun HAN ; Jun ZHOU ; Yajun DENG ; Xiaoyu LI ; Jianfei HU ; Caiping WANG ; Chunxia YAN ; Qingrun ZHANG ; Jingyue BAO ; Guoqing LI ; Weijun CHEN ; Lin FANG ; Changfeng LI ; Meng LEI ; Dawei LI ; Wei TONG ; Xiangjun TIAN ; Jin WANG ; Bo ZHANG ; Haiqing ZHANG ; Yilin ZHANG ; Hui ZHAO ; Xiaowei ZHANG ; Shuangli LI ; Xiaojie CHENG ; Xiuqing ZHANG ; Bin LIU ; Changqing ZENG ; Songgang LI ; Xuehai TAN ; Siqi LIU ; Wei DONG ; Jun WANG ; Gane Ka-Shu WONG ; Jun YU ; Jian WANG ; Qingyu ZHU ; Huanming YANG
Genomics, Proteomics & Bioinformatics 2003;1(2):101-107
We report a complete genomic sequence of rare isolates (minor genotype) of the SARS-CoV from SARS patients in Guangdong, China, where the first few cases emerged. The most striking discovery from the isolate is an extra 29-nucleotide sequence located at the nucleotide positions between 27,863 and 27,864 (referred to the complete sequence of BJ01) within an overlapped region composed of BGI-PUP5 (BGI-postulated uncharacterized protein 5) and BGI-PUP6 upstream of the N (nucleocapsid) protein. The discovery of this minor genotype, GD-Ins29, suggests a significant genetic event and differentiates it from the previously reported genotype, the dominant form among all sequenced SARS-CoV isolates. A 17-nt segment of this extra sequence is identical to a segment of the same size in two human mRNA sequences that may interfere with viral replication and transcription in the cytosol of the infected cells. It provides a new avenue for the exploration of the virus-host interaction in viral evolution, host pathogenesis, and vaccine development.
Base Sequence
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China
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Cluster Analysis
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Gene Components
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Genetic Variation
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Genome, Viral
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Genotype
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Phylogeny
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Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
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SARS Virus
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genetics
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Sequence Analysis, DNA
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Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
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genetics