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Featured researches published by Hongyue Dang.


Microbiology | 2008

Diversity and spatial distribution of sediment ammonia-oxidizing crenarchaeota in response to estuarine and environmental gradients in the Changjiang Estuary and East China Sea

Hongyue Dang; Xiaoxia Zhang; Jin Sun; Tiegang Li; Zhinan Zhang; Guanpin Yang

Ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) have recently been found to be potentially important in nitrogen cycling in a variety of environments, such as terrestrial soils, wastewater treatment reactors, marine waters and sediments, and especially in estuaries, where high input of anthropogenic nitrogen is often experienced. The sedimentary AOA diversity, community structure and spatial distribution in the Changjiang Estuary and the adjacent East China Sea were studied. Multivariate statistical analysis indicated that the archaeal amoA genotype communities could be clustered according to sampling transects, and the station located in an estuarine mixing zone harboured a distinct AOA community. The distribution of AOA communities correlated significantly with the gradients of surface-water salinity and sediment sorting coefficient. The spatial distribution of putative soil-related AOA in certain sampling stations indicated a strong impact of the Changjiang freshwater discharge on the marine benthic microbial ecosystem. Besides freshwater, nutrients, organic matter and suspended particles, the Changjiang Diluted Water might also contribute to the transport of terrestrial archaea into the seawater and sediments along its flow path.


Microbial Ecology | 2009

Diversity and Distribution of Sediment NirS-Encoding Bacterial Assemblages in Response to Environmental Gradients in the Eutrophied Jiaozhou Bay, China

Hongyue Dang; Chunyan Wang; Jing Li; Tiegang Li; Fang Tian; Wei Jin; Yongsheng Ding; Zhinan Zhang

A gene-clone-library-based molecular approach was used to study the nirS-encoding bacteria–environment relationship in the sediments of the eutrophic Jiaozhou Bay. Diverse nirS sequences were recovered and most of them were related to the marine cluster I group, ubiquitous in estuarine, coastal, and marine environments. Some NirS sequences were unique to the Jiaozhou Bay, such as the marine subcluster VIIg sequences. Most of the Jiaozhou Bay NirS sequences had their closest matches originally detected in estuarine and marine sediments, especially from the Chesapeake Bay, indicating similarity of the denitrifying bacterial communities in similar coastal environments in spite of geographical distance. Multivariate statistical analyses indicated that the spatial distribution of the nirS-encoding bacterial assemblages is highly correlated with environmental factors, such as sediment silt content, NH4+ concentration, and OrgC/OrgN. The nirS-encoding bacterial assemblages in the most hypernutrified stations could be easily distinguished from that of the least eutrophic station. For the first time, the sedimentological condition was found to influence the structure and distribution of the sediment denitrifying bacterial community.


Journal of Applied Microbiology | 2009

Diversity and spatial distribution of amoA‐encoding archaea in the deep‐sea sediments of the tropical West Pacific Continental Margin

Hongyue Dang; Jing Li; X. Zhang; Tiegang Li; F. Tian; W. Jin

Aims:u2002 The ecological characteristics of the deep‐sea amoA‐encoding archaea (AEA) are largely unsolved. Our aim was to study the diversity, structure and distribution of the AEA community in the sediments of the tropical West Pacific Continental Margin, to develop a general view of the AEA biogeography in the deep‐sea extreme environment.


Microbial Ecology | 2006

Concurrence of cat and tet Genes in Multiple Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria Isolated from a Sea Cucumber and Sea Urchin Mariculture Farm in China

Hongyue Dang; Linsheng Song; Mingna Chen; Yaqing Chang

A basic understanding of abundance and diversity of antibiotic-resistant microbes and their genetic determinants is necessary for finding a way to prevent and control the spread of antibiotic resistance. For this purpose, chloramphenicol and multiple antibiotic-resistant bacteria were screened from a mariculture farm in northern China. Both sea cucumber and sea urchin rearing ponds were populated with abundant antibiotic-resistant bacteria, especially marine vibrios. Sixty-five percent chloramphenicol-resistant isolates from sea cucumber harbored a cat gene, either cat IV or cat II, whereas 35% sea urchin isolates harbored a cat gene, actually cat II. The predominant resistance determinant cat IV gene mainly occurred in isolates related to Vibrio tasmaniensis or Pseudoalteromonas atlantica, and the cat II gene mainly occurred in Vibrio splendidus-like isolates. All the cat-positive isolates also harbored one or two of the tet genes, tet(D), tet(B), or tet(A). As no chloramphenicol-related antibiotic was ever used, coselection of the cat genes by other antibiotics, especially oxytetracycline, might be the cause of the high incidence of cat genes in the mariculture farm studied.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2008

Myroides profundi sp. nov., isolated from deep‐sea sediment of the southern Okinawa Trough

Xi-Ying Zhang; Yan-Jiao Zhang; Xiu-Lan Chen; Qi-Long Qin; Dian-Li Zhao; Tiegang Li; Hongyue Dang; Yu-Zhong Zhang

A Gram-negative, nonmotile, aerobic and oxidase- and catalase-positive bacterium, designated D25T, was isolated from the deep-sea sediments of the southern Okinawa Trough area. Phylogenetic analyses of 16S rRNA gene sequences showed that strain D25T fell within the genus Myroides, with 99.2%, 96.0% and 93.4% sequence similarities to the only three recognized species of Myroides. However, the DNA-DNA similarity value between strain D25T and its nearest neighbour Myroides odoratimimus JCM 7460T was only 49.9% (<70%). Several phenotypic properties could be used to distinguish strain D25T from other Myroides species. The main cellular fatty acids of strain D25T were iso-C15:0, iso-C17:1omega9c, iso-C17:03-OH and Summed Feature 3 (comprising C16:1omega7c and/or iso-C15:02-OH). The major respiratory quinone was MK-6. The DNA G+C content was 33.0 mol%. The results of the polyphasic taxonomy analysis suggested that strain D25T represents a novel species of the genus Myroides, for which the name Myroides profundi sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is D25T (=CCTCC M 208030T=DSM 19823T).


World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2008

Dominant chloramphenicol-resistant bacteria and resistance genes in coastal marine waters of Jiaozhou Bay, China

Hongyue Dang; Jing Ren; Linsheng Song; Song Sun; Liguo An


World Journal of Microbiology & Biotechnology | 2009

Extracellular hydrolytic enzyme screening of culturable heterotrophic bacteria from deep-sea sediments of the Southern Okinawa Trough

Hongyue Dang; Hu Zhu; Jing Wang; Tiegang Li


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2006

Molecular characterizations of oxytetracycline resistant bacteria and their resistance genes from mariculture waters of China

Hongyue Dang; Xiaoxia Zhang; Linsheng Song; Yaqing Chang; Guanpin Yang


Chemical & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2008

Benzaldehyde Derivatives from Eurotium rubrum , an Endophytic Fungus Derived from the Mangrove Plant Hibiscus tiliaceus

Dong-Li Li; Xiao-Ming Li; Tiegang Li; Hongyue Dang; Peter Proksch; Bin-Gui Wang


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2007

Wangia profunda gen. nov., sp nov., a novel marine bacterium of the family Flavobacteriaceae isolated from southern Okinawa Trough deep-sea sediment

Qi-Long Qin; Dian-Li Zhao; Jing Wang; Xiu-Lan Chen; Hongyue Dang; Tiegang Li; Yu-Zhong Zhang; Pei-Ji Gao

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Tiegang Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jing Li

China University of Petroleum

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Bin-Gui Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chunyan Wang

China University of Petroleum

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Dong-Li Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Guanpin Yang

Ocean University of China

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Jing Wang

China University of Petroleum

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Mingna Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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