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Featured researches published by Guohui Ding.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009

SysPTM: A Systematic Resource for Proteomic Research on Post-translational Modifications

Hong Li; Xiaobin Xing; Guohui Ding; Qingrun Li; Chuan Wang; Lu Xie; Rong Zeng; Yixue Li

With the rapid expansion of protein post-translational modification (PTM) research based on large-scale proteomic work, there is an increasing demand for a suitable repository to analyze PTM data. Here we present a curated, web-accessible PTM data base, SysPTM. SysPTM provides a systematic and sophisticated platform for proteomic PTM research equipped not only with a knowledge base of manually curated multi-type modification data but also with four fully developed, in-depth data mining tools. Currently, SysPTM contains data detailing 117,349 experimentally determined PTM sites on 33,421 proteins involving nearly 50 PTM types, curated from public resources including five data bases and four web servers and more than one hundred peer-reviewed mass spectrometry papers. Protein annotations including Pfam domains, KEGG pathways, GO functional classification, and ortholog groups are integrated into the data base. Four online tools have been developed and incorporated, including PTMBlast, to compare a users PTM dataset with PTM data in SysPTM; PTMPathway, to map PTM proteins to KEGG pathways; PTMPhylog, to discover potentially conserved PTM sites; and PTMCluster, to find clusters of multi-site modifications. The workflow of SysPTM was demonstrated by analyzing an in-house phosphorylation dataset identified by MS/MS. It is shown that in SysPTM, the role of single-type and multi-type modifications can be systematically investigated in a full biological context. SysPTM could be an important contribution to modificomics research. SysPTM is freely available online at www.sysbio.ac.cn/SysPTM.


Genome Research | 2014

Whole-genome sequencing of six dog breeds from continuous altitudes reveals adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia

Xiao Gou; Zhen Wang; Ning Li; Feng Qiu; Ze Xu; Dawei Yan; Shuli Yang; Jia Jia; Xiaoyan Kong; Zehui Wei; Shaoxiong Lu; Linsheng Lian; Changxin Wu; Xueyan Wang; Guozhi Li; Teng Ma; Qiang Jiang; Xue Zhao; Jiaqiang Yang; Baohong Liu; Dongkai Wei; Hong Li; Jianfa Yang; Yulin Yan; Guiying Zhao; Xingxing Dong; Mingli Li; Weidong Deng; Jing Leng; Chaochun Wei

The hypoxic environment imposes severe selective pressure on species living at high altitude. To understand the genetic bases of adaptation to high altitude in dogs, we performed whole-genome sequencing of 60 dogs including five breeds living at continuous altitudes along the Tibetan Plateau from 800 to 5100 m as well as one European breed. More than 150× sequencing coverage for each breed provides us with a comprehensive assessment of the genetic polymorphisms of the dogs, including Tibetan Mastiffs. Comparison of the breeds from different altitudes reveals strong signals of population differentiation at the locus of hypoxia-related genes including endothelial Per-Arnt-Sim (PAS) domain protein 1 (EPAS1) and beta hemoglobin cluster. Notably, four novel nonsynonymous mutations specific to high-altitude dogs are identified at EPAS1, one of which occurred at a quite conserved site in the PAS domain. The association testing between EPAS1 genotypes and blood-related phenotypes on additional high-altitude dogs reveals that the homozygous mutation is associated with decreased blood flow resistance, which may help to improve hemorheologic fitness. Interestingly, EPAS1 was also identified as a selective target in Tibetan highlanders, though no amino acid changes were found. Thus, our results not only indicate parallel evolution of humans and dogs in adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia, but also provide a new opportunity to study the role of EPAS1 in the adaptive processes.


Journal of Cell Science | 2012

miR-221 and miR-222 promote Schwann cell proliferation and migration by targeting LASS2 after sciatic nerve injury.

Bin Yu; Songlin Zhou; Yongjun Wang; Tianmei Qian; Guohui Ding; Fei Ding; Xiaosong Gu

microRNAs (miRNAs) are small non-coding RNAs that regulate gene expression at the post-transcriptional level. Their roles in regulating the responses of Schwann cells (SCs) to injury stimuli remain unexplored. Here we report dynamic alteration of miRNA expression following rat sciatic nerve injury using microarray analysis. We harvested the proximal nerve stumps and identified 77 miRNAs that showed significant changes at four time points after nerve transection. Subsequently, we analyzed the expression pattern of miRNA, selected one significant profile, and then integrated putative miRNA targets with differentially expressed mRNA yielding 274 potential targets. The 274 targets were mainly involved in cell proliferation, cell locomotion and cellular homeostasis that were known to play important roles in modulating cell phenotype. The upregulation of the miR-221 and miR-222 cluster (miR-221/222) was found to correlate with the injury-induced SC phenotypic modulation. Enhanced expression of miR-221/222 could promote SC proliferation and migration in vitro, whereas silencing their expression resulted in a reduced proliferation and migration. Further studies revealed that longevity assurance homologue 2 (LASS2) was a direct target of miR-221/222 in SCs because miR-221/222 bound directly to the 3′-untranslated region of LASS2, thus reducing both mRNA and protein levels of LASS2. Silencing of LASS2 recapitulated the effects of miR-221/222 mimics, whereas enforced knockdown of LASS2 reversed the suppressive effects of miR-221/222 inhibitors. Our findings indicate that injury promotes SC proliferation and migration through the regulation of miR-221/222 by targeting LASS2, and provide new insights into the role of miRNAs in nerve regeneration.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

miR-182 inhibits Schwann cell proliferation and migration by targeting FGF9 and NTM, respectively at an early stage following sciatic nerve injury

Bin Yu; Tianmei Qian; Yongjun Wang; Songlin Zhou; Guohui Ding; Fei Ding; Xiaosong Gu

The regulation of Schwann cell (SC) responses to injury stimuli by microRNAs (miRNAs) remains to be explored. Here, we identified 17 miRNAs that showed dynamic expression alterations at five early time points following rat sciatic nerve resection. Then we analyzed the expression pattern of 17 miRNAs, and integrated their putative targets with differentially expressed mRNAs. The resulting 222 potential targets were mainly involved in cell phenotype modulation, including immune response, cell death and cell locomotion. Among 17 miRNAs, miR-182 expression was up-regulated. The enhanced expression of miR-182 was correlated with nerve injury-induced phenotype modulation of SCs. Further investigation revealed that fibroblast growth factor 9 (FGF9) and neurotrimin (NTM) were two direct targets of miR-182 in SCs, with miR-182 binding to the 3′-untranslated region of FGF9 and NTM. Silencing of FGF9 and NTM recapitulated the inhibiting effect of miR-182 mimics on SC proliferation and migration, respectively, whereas enforced knockdown of FGF9 and NTM reversed the promoting effect of miR-182 inhibitor on SC proliferation and migration, respectively. Our data indicate that nerve injury inhibits SC proliferation and migration through rapid regulation of miR-182 by targeting FGF9 and NTM, providing novel insights into the roles of miRNAs in nerve injury and repair.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Transcriptome Analysis of Medicinal Plant Salvia miltiorrhiza and Identification of Genes Related to Tanshinone Biosynthesis

Lei Yang; Guohui Ding; Hai-Yan Lin; Haining Cheng; Yu Kong; Yukun Wei; Xin Fang; Renyi Liu; Lingiian Wang; Xiao-Ya Chen; Chang-Qing Yang

Salvia miltiorrhiza Bunge, a perennial plant of Lamiaceae, accumulates abietane-type diterpenoids of tanshinones in root, which have been used as traditional Chinese medicine to treat neuroasthenic insomnia and cardiovascular diseases. However, to date the biosynthetic pathway of tanshinones is only partially elucidated and the mechanism for their root-specific accumulation remains unknown. To identify enzymes and transcriptional regulators involved in the biosynthesis of tanshinones, we conducted transcriptome profiling of S. miltiorrhiza root and leaf tissues using the 454 GS-FLX pyrosequencing platform, which generated 550,546 and 525,292 reads, respectively. RNA sequencing reads were assembled and clustered into 64,139 unigenes (29,883 isotigs and 34,256 singletons). NCBI non-redundant protein databases (NR) and Swiss-Prot database searches anchored 32,096 unigenes (50%) with functional annotations based on sequence similarities. Further assignments with Gene Ontology (GO) terms and KEGG biochemical pathways identified 168 unigenes referring to the terpenoid backbone biosynthesis (including 144 MEP and MVA pathway genes and 24 terpene synthases). Comparative analysis of the transcriptomes identified 2,863 unigenes that were highly expressed in roots, including those encoding enzymes of early steps of tanshinone biosynthetic pathway, such as copalyl diphosphate synthase (SmCPS), kaurene synthase-like (SmKSL) and CYP76AH1. Other differentially expressed unigenes predicted to be related to tanshinone biosynthesis fall into cytochrome P450 monooxygenases, dehydrogenases and reductases, as well as regulatory factors. In addition, 21 P450 genes were selectively confirmed by real-time PCR. Thus we have generated a large unigene dataset which provides a valuable resource for further investigation of the radix development and biosynthesis of tanshinones.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Complete Sequencing and Pan-Genomic Analysis of Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus Reveal Its Genetic Basis for Industrial Yogurt Production

Pei Hao; Huajun Zheng; Yao Yu; Guohui Ding; Wenyi Gu; Shuting Chen; Zhonghao Yu; Shuangxi Ren; Munehiro Oda; Tomonobu Konno; Wang S; Xuan Li; Zai-Si Ji; Guoping Zhao

Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus (Lb. bulgaricus) is an important species of Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) used for cheese and yogurt fermentation. The genome of Lb. bulgaricus 2038, an industrial strain mainly used for yogurt production, was completely sequenced and compared against the other two ATCC collection strains of the same subspecies. Specific physiological properties of strain 2038, such as lysine biosynthesis, formate production, aspartate-related carbon-skeleton intermediate metabolism, unique EPS synthesis and efficient DNA restriction/modification systems, are all different from those of the collection strains that might benefit the industrial production of yogurt. Other common features shared by Lb. bulgaricus strains, such as efficient protocooperation with Streptococcus thermophilus and lactate production as well as well-equipped stress tolerance mechanisms may account for it being selected originally for yogurt fermentation industry. Multiple lines of evidence suggested that Lb. bulgaricus 2038 was genetically closer to the common ancestor of the subspecies than the other two sequenced collection strains, probably due to a strict industrial maintenance process for strain 2038 that might have halted its genome decay and sustained a gene network suitable for large scale yogurt production.


BMC Bioinformatics | 2007

Modular co-evolution of metabolic networks

Jing Zhao; Guohui Ding; Lin Tao; Hong Yu; Zhonghao Yu; Jianhua Luo; Zhiwei Cao; Yixue Li

BackgroundThe architecture of biological networks has been reported to exhibit high level of modularity, and to some extent, topological modules of networks overlap with known functional modules. However, how the modular topology of the molecular network affects the evolution of its member proteins remains unclear.ResultsIn this work, the functional and evolutionary modularity of Homo sapiens (H. sapiens) metabolic network were investigated from a topological point of view. Network decomposition shows that the metabolic network is organized in a highly modular core-periphery way, in which the core modules are tightly linked together and perform basic metabolism functions, whereas the periphery modules only interact with few modules and accomplish relatively independent and specialized functions. Moreover, over half of the modules exhibit co-evolutionary feature and belong to specific evolutionary ages. Peripheral modules tend to evolve more cohesively and faster than core modules do.ConclusionThe correlation between functional, evolutionary and topological modularity suggests that the evolutionary history and functional requirements of metabolic systems have been imprinted in the architecture of metabolic networks. Such systems level analysis could demonstrate how the evolution of genes may be placed in a genome-scale network context, giving a novel perspective on molecular evolution.


BMC Genomics | 2007

The use of global transcriptional analysis to reveal the biological and cellular events involved in distinct development phases of Trichophyton rubrum conidial germination.

Tao Liu; Qian Zhang; Lingling Wang; Lu Yu; Wenchuan Leng; Jian Yang; Lihong Chen; Junping Peng; Li Ma; Jie Dong; Xingye Xu; Ying Xue; Yafang Zhu; Wenliang Zhang; Li Yang; Weijun Li; Lilian Sun; Zhe Wan; Guohui Ding; Fudong Yu; Kang Tu; Ziliang Qian; Ruoyu Li; Yan Shen; Yixue Li; Qi Jin

BackgroundConidia are considered to be the primary cause of infections by Trichophyton rubrum.ResultsWe have developed a cDNA microarray containing 10250 ESTs to monitor the transcriptional strategy of conidial germination. A total of 1561 genes that had their expression levels specially altered in the process were obtained and hierarchically clustered with respect to their expression profiles. By functional analysis, we provided a global view of an important biological system related to conidial germination, including characterization of the pattern of gene expression at sequential developmental phases, and changes of gene expression profiles corresponding to morphological transitions. We matched the EST sequences to GO terms in the Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD). A number of homologues of Saccharomyces cerevisiae genes related to signalling pathways and some important cellular processes were found to be involved in T. rubrum germination. These genes and signalling pathways may play roles in distinct steps, such as activating conidial germination, maintenance of isotropic growth, establishment of cell polarity and morphological transitions.ConclusionOur results may provide insights into molecular mechanisms of conidial germination at the cell level, and may enhance our understanding of regulation of gene expression related to the morphological construction of T. rubrum.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Profile of MicroRNAs following Rat Sciatic Nerve Injury by Deep Sequencing: Implication for Mechanisms of Nerve Regeneration

Bin Yu; Songlin Zhou; Yongjun Wang; Guohui Ding; Fei Ding; Xiaosong Gu

Unlike the central nervous system, peripheral nerves can regenerate when damaged. MicroRNA (miRNA) is a novel class of small, non-coding RNA that regulates gene expression at the post-transcriptional level. Here, we report regular alterations of miRNA expression following rat sciatic nerve injury using deep sequencing. We harvested dorsal root ganglia tissues and the proximal stumps of the nerve, and identified 201 and 225 known miRNAs with significant expression variance at five time points in these tissues after sciatic nerve transaction, respectively. Subsequently, hierarchical clustering, miRNA expression pattern and co-expression network were performed. We screened out specific miRNAs and further obtained the intersection genes through target analysis software (Targetscan and miRanda). Moreover, GO and KEGG enrichment analyses of these intersection genes were performed. The bioinformatics analysis indicated that the potential targets for these miRNAs were involved in nerve regeneration, including neurogenesis, neuron differentiation, vesicle-mediated transport, homophilic cell adhesion and negative regulation of programmed cell death that were known to play important roles in regulating nerve repair. Finally, we combined differentially expressed mRNA with the predicted targets for selecting inverse miRNA-target pairs. Our results show that the abnormal expression of miRNA may contribute to illustrate the molecular mechanisms of nerve regeneration and that miRNAs are potential targets for therapeutic interventions and may enhance intrinsic regenerative ability.


BMC Genomics | 2006

Analysis of the dermatophyte Trichophyton rubrum expressed sequence tags

Lingling Wang; Li Ma; Wenchuan Leng; Tao Liu; Lu Yu; Jian Yang; Li Yang; Wenliang Zhang; Qian Zhang; Jie Dong; Ying Xue; Yafang Zhu; Xingye Xu; Zhe Wan; Guohui Ding; Fudong Yu; Kang Tu; Yixue Li; Ruoyu Li; Yan Shen; Qi Jin

BackgroundDermatophytes are the primary causative agent of dermatophytoses, a disease that affects billions of individuals worldwide. Trichophyton rubrum is the most common of the superficial fungi. Although T. rubrum is a recognized pathogen for humans, little is known about how its transcriptional pattern is related to development of the fungus and establishment of disease. It is therefore necessary to identify genes whose expression is relevant to growth, metabolism and virulence of T. rubrum.ResultsWe generated 10 cDNA libraries covering nearly the entire growth phase and used them to isolate 11,085 unique expressed sequence tags (ESTs), including 3,816 contigs and 7,269 singletons. Comparisons with the GenBank non-redundant (NR) protein database revealed putative functions or matched homologs from other organisms for 7,764 (70%) of the ESTs. The remaining 3,321 (30%) of ESTs were only weakly similar or not similar to known sequences, suggesting that these ESTs represent novel genes.ConclusionThe present data provide a comprehensive view of fungal physiological processes including metabolism, sexual and asexual growth cycles, signal transduction and pathogenic mechanisms.

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Yixue Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hong Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhen Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Guoping Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Lu Xie

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chuan Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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