1.Study on the method of purifying astragaloside
Xiaobin JIA ; Yan CHEN ; Baochang CAI ; Yafan SHI ; Xiaolei WANG ;
Chinese Traditional Patent Medicine 1992;0(11):-
Objective: To establish the method of purifying astragaloside. Methods: Astrageloside was determined by HPLC fingerprinting to compare macroporous resin absorbing method with extraction refine by n butyl alcohol. Results: The HPLC fingerprints of each method were difference. Conclusion: AB 8 macroporous resin is better than the others for purifying astrageloside.
2.Study on Extraction Process of Polysaccharide in Ophiopogon japonicus
Xiaoyan ZHANG ; Xu ZHANG ; Baochang CAI ; Zhuoran CHEN ; Bi SHI ;
Traditional Chinese Drug Research & Clinical Pharmacology 2000;0(06):-
Objective To optimize the extraction process and to establish a method for the content determination of the polysaccharides in Ophiopogonjaponicus.Methods With extracts rate of polysaccharide as the index,an orthogonal de- sign test was adopted to optimize the extraction process.And phenol-sulphuric acid colorimetric method was used to de- termine the content of polysaccharides in Ophiopogonjaponicus.Results The optimum extract conditions were as follows: refluxing twice with eight times amount of water,thirty minutes each time,and precipitation with 80 % alcohol.A good linearity of polysaccharides was in range of 0.02032~0.10008 mg(r=0.9998),and the average recovery rate was 102.41%,RSD was 1.78 %.Conclusion The polysaccharide can be fully extracted under these conditions.
3.Speed up to formulate "National processing procedures of prepared slices of Chinese crude drugs", unified the national standards of prepared slices.
Jiangyong YU ; Boyang YU ; Zhongzhi QIAN ; Fucheng ZHOU ; Shangmei SHI ; Baochang CAI ; Yongqing XIAO ; Yuzhen REN
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2011;36(19):2751-2754
The prepared slices of Chinese crude drugs are growing important in recent years, and faced with new developments and opportunities. The author analyzed the importance of formulate national processing procedures of prepared slices of Chinese crude drugs combined actual work, proposed the overall objectives and tasks for the formulation, and emphasized to need to correctly deal with several important factors during the process of formulate "National processing procedures of prepared slices of Chinese crude drugs", unified the national standards of prepared slices, solved the real problems that the prepared slices of Chinese crude drugs industry faced.
Chemistry, Pharmaceutical
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methods
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standards
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China
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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chemistry
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Humans
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
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methods
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standards
4.Application of Four in One model for diabetes management in hospital consortium
Haijiao WANG ; Peng FU ; Lei ZHU ; Baochang SHI ; Hong MIAO
Chinese Journal of General Practitioners 2019;18(8):792-795
In 2017,the Diabetes Management Center was founded in Shandong Third Provincial Hospital.On the basis of the center,a network was established which integrated the tertiary hospital,district hospitals,community health service institutions and family of patients forming the"Four in One"model of diabetes management.This article introduces the background,application,and preliminary accomplishments in individualized and standardized diabetic management of this internet plus model.The challenges and suggestions for future development of the "Four in One" model are also discussed.
5.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
6.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
7. Association of single nucleotide polymorphisms of TBX 5 gene and environmental exposure index with susceptibility to oral cancer
Xiaodan BAO ; Lisong LIN ; Fa CHEN ; Fengqiong LIU ; Jing WANG ; Bin SHI ; Lingjun YAN ; Junfeng WU ; Liangkun LIN ; Rui WANG ; Lizhen PAN ; Xiaoyan ZHENG ; Yu QIU ; Rongkai CAO ; Zhijian HU ; Lin CAI ; Baochang HE
Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2019;53(5):480-485
Objective:
To explore the association of
8. Relationship between selenium and the risk for oral cancer: a case-control study
Qing CHEN ; Lisong LIN ; Lin CHEN ; Jing LIN ; Yan DING ; Xiaodan BAO ; Junfeng WU ; Liangkun LIN ; Lingjun YAN ; Rui WANG ; Bin SHI ; Yu QIU ; Xiaoyan ZHENG ; Lizhen PAN ; Fa CHEN ; Jing WANG ; Lin CAI ; Baochang HE ; Fengqiong LIU
Chinese Journal of Epidemiology 2019;40(7):810-814
Objective:
To explore the relationship between selenium and the risk for oral cancer.
Methods:
We performed a case-control study in 325 cases of newly diagnosed primary oral cancer from the First Affiliated Hospital of Fujian Medical University and 650 controls from the same hospital and community. Unconditional logistic regression and stratification analyses were used to explore the association between selenium and oral cancer. Adjusted