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Dive into the research topics where Jin Zhong is active.

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Featured researches published by Jin Zhong.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2009

Novel Mechanism for Nisin Resistance via Proteolytic Degradation of Nisin by the Nisin Resistance Protein NSR

Zhizeng Sun; Jin Zhong; Xiaobo Liang; Jiale Liu; Xiuzhu Chen; Liandong Huan

ABSTRACT Nisin is a 34-residue antibacterial peptide produced by Lactococcus lactis that is active against a wide range of gram-positive bacteria. In non-nisin-producing L. lactis, nisin resistance could be conferred by a specific nisin resistance gene (nsr), which encodes a 35-kDa nisin resistance protein (NSR). However, the mechanism underlying NSR-mediated nisin resistance is poorly understood. Here we demonstrated that the protein without the predicted N-terminal signal peptide sequence, i.e., NSRSD, could proteolytically inactivate nisin in vitro by removing six amino acids from the carboxyl “tail” of nisin. The truncated nisin (nisin1-28) displayed a markedly reduced affinity for the cell membrane and showed significantly diminished pore-forming potency in the membrane. A 100-fold reduction of bactericidal activity was detected for nisin1-28 in comparison to that for the intact nisin. In vivo analysis indicated that NSR localized on the cell membrane and endowed host strains with nisin resistance by degrading nisin as NSRSD did in vitro, whereas NSRSD failed to confer resistance upon the host strain. In conclusion, we showed that NSR is a nisin-degrading protease. This NSR-mediated proteolytic cleavage represents a novel mechanism for nisin resistance in non-nisin-producing L. lactis.


Current Microbiology | 2005

Purification and Characterization of Two Novel Antimicrobial Peptides Subpeptin JM4-A and Subpeptin JM4-B Produced by Bacillus subtilis JM4

Shimei Wu; Shifang Jia; Dandan Sun; Meiling Chen; Xiuzhu Chen; Jin Zhong; Liandong Huan

An antimicrobial peptides-producing strain was isolated from soil and identified as Bacillus subtilis JM4 according to biochemical tests and 16S rDNA sequence analysis. The corresponding antimicrobial peptides were purified to homogeneity by ammonium sulfate precipitation, sequential SP-Sepharose Fast Flow, Sephadex G-25 and C18 reverse-phase chromatography, and in the final purification step, two active fractions were harvested, designated as Subpeptin JM4-A and Subpeptin JM4-B. The molecular weights, determined by mass spectrometry, were 1422.71 Da for Subpeptin JM4-A and 1422.65 Da for Subpeptin JM4-B, respectively. Amino acid sequencing showed that they differed from each other only at the seventh amino acid except for three unidentified residues, and the two peptides had no significant sequence homology to the known peptides in the database, indicating that they are two novel antimicrobial peptides. In addition, characteristic measurements indicated that both peptides had a relatively broad inhibitory spectrum and remained active over a wide pH and temperature range.


Microbiological Research | 2011

Dissection of the bridging pattern of bovicin HJ50, a lantibiotic containing a characteristic disulfide bridge

Yuheng Lin; Kunling Teng; Liandong Huan; Jin Zhong

Bovicin HJ50, a lantibiotic produced by Streptococcus bovis HJ50, is featured by the presence of a disulfide bridge. This study described a simplified in vitro synthetic strategy for producing bovicin HJ50 totally based on Escherichia coli expression system. In this strategy termed as Semi-in vitro biosynthesis (SIVB), prepeptide BovA and modification enzyme BovM were co-expressed to generate posttranslationally modified BovA. Then a specific protease BovT150 was employed to remove the leader peptide in vitro and produce biologically active bovicin HJ50. Via SIVB, a series of ring-broken bovicin mutants C13A, C21A, C29A and T10A/C32A were prepared by introducing site-directed mutations into bovA gene. Further, we analyzed the bridging patterns of these mutants through chemical modification and successfully clarified the bridging pattern of bovicin HJ50. The results showed that two thioether bridges exist between Thr8 and Cys13, and Thr10 and Cys32, respectively, and that the disulfide bond bridging Cys21 and 29 is very relevant for the antimicrobial activity of bovicin HJ50. This is the first study that reports the bridging pattern of bovicin HJ50.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2014

Cerecidins, novel lantibiotics from Bacillus cereus with potent antimicrobial activity.

Jian Wang; Li Zhang; Kunling Teng; Shutao Sun; Zhizeng Sun; Jin Zhong

ABSTRACT Lantibiotics are ribosomally synthesized and posttranslationally modified antimicrobial peptides that are widely produced by Gram-positive bacteria, including many species of the Bacillus group. In the present study, one novel gene cluster coding lantibiotic cerecidins was unveiled in Bacillus cereus strain As 1.1846 through genomic mining and PCR screening. The designated cer locus is different from that of conventional class II lantibiotics in that it included seven tandem precursor cerA genes, one modification gene (cerM), two processing genes (cerT and cerP), one orphan regulator gene (cerR), and two immunity genes (cerF and cerE). In addition, one unprecedented quorum sensing component, comQXPA, was inserted between cerM and cerR. The expression of cerecidins was not detected in this strain of B. cereus, which might be due to repressed transcription of cerM. We constitutively coexpressed cerA genes and cerM in Escherichia coli, and purified precerecidins were proteolytically processed with the endoproteinase GluC and a truncated version of putative serine protease CerP. Thus, two natural variants of cerecidins A1 and A7 were obtained which contained two terminal nonoverlapping thioether rings rarely found in lantibiotics. Both cerecidins A1 and A7 were active against a broad spectrum of Gram-positive bacteria. Cerecidin A7, especially its mutant Dhb13A, showed remarkable efficacy against multidrug-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MDRSA), vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecalis (VRE), and even Streptomyces.


Microbiology | 2009

Characteristics of the bovicin HJ50 gene cluster in Streptococcus bovis HJ50

Gang Liu; Jin Zhong; Jianqiang Ni; Meiling Chen; Haijie Xiao; Liandong Huan

Bovicin HJ50 is a new lantibiotic containing a disulfide bridge produced by Streptococcus bovis HJ50; its encoding gene bovA was reported in our previous publication. To identify other genes involved in bovicin HJ50 production, DNA fragments flanking bovA were cloned and sequenced. The bovicin HJ50 biosynthesis gene locus was encoded by a 9.9 kb region of chromosomal DNA and consisted of at least nine genes in the following order: bovA, -M, -T, -E, -F, ORF1, ORF2, bovK and bovR. A thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase gene named sdb1 was located downstream of bovR. A knockout mutant of this gene retained antimicrobial activity and the molecular mass of bovicin HJ50 in the mutant was the same as that of bovicin HJ50 in S. bovis HJ50, implying that sdb1 is not involved in bovicin HJ50 production. Transcriptional analyses showed that bovA, bovM and bovT constituted an operon, and the transcription start site of the bovA promoter was located at a G residue 45 bp upstream of the translation start codon for bovA, while bovE through bovR were transcribed together and the transcription start site of the bovE promoter was located at a C residue 35 bp upstream of bovE. We also demonstrated successful heterologous expression of bovicin HJ50 in Lactococcus lactis MG1363, which lacks thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase genes; this showed that thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase genes other than sdb1 are not essential for bovicin HJ50 biosynthesis.


Microbiological Research | 2011

Expression of hepatitis B virus surface antigen determinants in Lactococcus lactis for oral vaccination

Qiuxiang Zhang; Jin Zhong; Liandong Huan

Lactococcus lactis with non-pathogenic and non-colonizing properties is an attractive candidate for delivering biologically active proteins by mucosal routes. In this report we described recombinant L. lactis applicable for the development of live mucosal vaccine against hepatitis B virus (HBV). The PreS region of the HBV surface antigen alone or combined with a determinant of S region (PreSa) was cloned and expressed in the food grade bacterium L. lactis using a nisin-controlled expression (NICE) system. Western blot analysis indicated that both PreS and PreSa fusion proteins were successfully expressed in L. lactis after nisin induction. Oral immunization of BALB/c mice with PreS and PreSa-producing strains induced both mucosal (intestinal IgA) and systemic (serum IgG) immune responses against HBV at the same magnitude. Two additional groups of mice given L. lactis expressing human interferon-alpha 2b as an adjuvant with the PreS or PreSa-producing strains produced higher IgG but not IgA antibody responses. These results indicated that the lactococci-derived vaccines could be promising candidates as alternative HBV vaccines for preventing hepatitis B.


Biotechnology Letters | 2010

Improvement of human interferon alpha secretion by Lactococcus lactis

Qiuxiang Zhang; Jin Zhong; Xiaobo Liang; Wenjun Liu; Liandong Huan

To improve the secretion and expression of human interferon alpha 2b (IFN) in Lactococcus lactis, a synthetic pro-peptide, LEISSTCDA (LEISS), was fused to the N-terminus of IFN. This gave a higher secretion efficiency (12% vs. 5%) and yield (~2.8-fold) of IFN. The signal peptide, SPSlpA (SlpA, an S-layer protein of Lactobacillus brevis), was also tested to secrete IFN instead of SPUsp45 (Usp45, the main secreted protein in L. lactis). This gave increased IFN secretion (~3-fold) but lower total production. All the recombinant IFN had appropriate bioactivities in an antiviral assay.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2011

Autoregulation of Lantibiotic Bovicin HJ50 Biosynthesis by the BovK-BovR Two-Component Signal Transduction System in Streptococcus bovis HJ50

Jianqiang Ni; Kunling Teng; Gang Liu; Caixia Qiao; Liandong Huan; Jin Zhong

ABSTRACT Streptococcus bovis HJ50 produces a lacticin 481-like 33-amino-acid-residue lantibiotic, designated bovicin HJ50. bovK-bovR in the bovicin HJ50 biosynthetic gene cluster is predicted to be a two-component signal transduction system involved in sensing signals and regulating gene expression. Disruption of bovK or bovR resulted in the abrogation of bovicin HJ50 production, suggesting both genes play important roles in bovicin HJ50 biosynthesis. Addition of exogenous bovicin HJ50 peptide to cultures of a bovM mutant that lost the capability for bovicin HJ50 production and structural gene bovA transcription in S. bovis HJ50 induced dose-dependent transcription of the bovA gene, demonstrating that bovicin HJ50 production was normally autoregulated. The transcription of bovA was no longer induced by bovicin HJ50 in bovK and bovR disruption mutants, suggesting that BovK-BovR plays an essential role in the signal transduction regulating bovicin HJ50 biosynthesis. A phosphorylation assay indicated that BovK has the ability to autophosphorylate and subsequently transfer the phosphoryl group to the downstream BovR protein to carry on signal transduction. Electromobility shift assays (EMSA) and green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter gene expression assays showed the specific binding of BovR to the bovA promoter, indicating that BovR regulates bovA expression by direct binding between them. Taken together, bovicin HJ50 biosynthesis is induced by bovicin HJ50 itself and regulated via the two-component signal transduction system BovK-BovR.


Microbiological Research | 2010

Adverse effect of nisin resistance protein on nisin-induced expression system in Lactococcus lactis

Xiaobo Liang; Zhizeng Sun; Jin Zhong; Qiuxiang Zhang; Liandong Huan

Nisin is a bacteriocin that is widely used as a safe, natural preservative in food products. Nisin-controlled gene expression (NICE) systems and food-grade expression systems with nisin resistance as the selection marker are increasingly attracting attention owing to their food-grade statuses. However, the putative influence of nisin resistance on NICE systems deserves consideration when nisin is used as both the inducer and selection agent in lactococcal strains. In this paper, we described the cloning of the nisin resistance gene (nsr) and studied the effect of the encoded nisin resistance protein (NSR) on the efficiency of the NICE system in Lactococcus lactis, with the green fluorescence protein as the reporter protein. Results showed that NSR expression significantly weakened the inducing activity of nisin. Further studies have confirmed that this reduction in the inducing activity of nisin was a consequence of the proteolytic activity of NSR against nisin; the digested products showed drastically decreased inducing activities than native nisin. Conclusively, the expression of NSR imposes an adverse effect on the NICE system in L. lactis.


Molecular Biotechnology | 2007

Secretory expression of nattokinase from Bacillus subtilis YF38 in Escherichia coli.

Xiaobo Liang; Shifang Jia; Yufang Sun; Meiling Chen; Xiuzhu Chen; Jin Zhong; Liandong Huan

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Liandong Huan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Meiling Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaobo Liang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiuzhu Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qiuxiang Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhizeng Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Kunling Teng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Gang Liu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jianqiang Ni

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shifang Jia

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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