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Dive into the research topics where Shengdi Fan is active.

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Featured researches published by Shengdi Fan.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2006

Isolation and characterization of a novel Burkholderia cepacia with strong antifungal activity against Rhizoctonia solani

Chunshan Quan; Wei Zheng; Q. Liu; Yoshiyuki Ohta; Shengdi Fan

Strain CF-66 with strong antifungal activity against Rhizoctonia solani was isolated from compost samples. It is clearly demonstrated that strain CF-66 is belonging to Burkholderia cepacia complex by the morphological and biochemical tests and 16S rDNA sequence. The B. cepacia complex consists of a group of bacteria currently organized into nine genomovars, among them genomovar II and genomovar III, contain the highly epidemic strains. However, it was known that strain CF-66 is not a member of genomovar II or III of the B. cepacia complex by species-specific polymerase chain reaction assay. In this study, the antifungal compound CF66I produced by strain CF-66 was purified and characterized. Based on the nuclear magnetic resonance, GC-MS spectral and infrared spectral data, CF66I was confirmed to have amide bonds, α-metyl fatty acid, bromine, and some structural units such as CH2CH2O. CF66I is stable to high temperature, proteolytic enzymes, and organic solvents. CF66I inhibit the growth of a variety of plant pathogenic fungi and pathogenic yeast, whereas bacterial cells are unaffected. CF66I mainly reduced hyphal extension rates in a dose-dependent manner and induced severe change in cell morphology that resulted in swelled and formed very short hyphae with multiple branches.


Journal of Basic Microbiology | 2014

Bacillus amyloliquefaciens Q‐426 as a potential biocontrol agent against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. spinaciae

Pengchao Zhao; Chunshan Quan; Yingguo Wang; Jian-Hua Wang; Shengdi Fan

In recent years, Bacillus species have received considerable attention for the biological control of many fungal diseases. In this study, Bacillus amyloliquefaciens Q‐426 was tested for its potential use against a variety of plant pathogens. Our screen for genes involved in the biosynthesis of antifungal agents revealed that the fen and bmy gene clusters are present in the Q‐426 genome. Lipopeptides such as bacillomycin D, fengycin A, and fengycin B were purified from the bacterial culture broth and subsequently identified by ESI‐mass spectrometry. The minimal inhibitory concentration of fengycin A against Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. spinaciae W.C. Snyder & H.N. Hansen O‐27 was determined to be 31.25 μg ml−1. However, exposure of fungal cells to 50 μg ml−1 of fengycin A did not allow permeation of fluorescein diacetate into the cytoplasm through the cell membrane. Moreover, leakage of intracellular inorganic cations, nucleic acid and protein were also not detected, indicating that the fungal cell membrane is not the primary target of action for fengycin A. Profound morphological changes were observed in the F. oxysporum strain and spore germination was completely inhibited, suggesting that 50 μg ml−1 of fengycin A acts, at least, as a fungistatic agent.


Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology | 2010

Engineering Considerations for Process Development in Mammalian Cell Cultivation

Hu Zhang; Weixiang Wang; Chunshan Quan; Shengdi Fan

Mammalian cell cultivation plays a great role in producing protein therapeutics in the last decades. Many engineering parameters are considered for optimization during process development in mammalian cell cultivation, only shear and mixing are especially highlighted in this paper. It is believed that shear stress due to agitation has been over-estimated to damage cells, but shear may result in nonlethal physiological responses. There is no cell damage in the regions where bubbles form, break up and coalescence, but shear stress becomes significant in the wake of rising bubbles and causes great damage to cells in bubble burst regions. Mixing is not sufficient to provide homogeneous dissolved oxygen tension, pH, CO2 and nutrients in large-scale bioreactors, which can bring severe problems for cell growth, product formation and process control. Scale-down reactors have been developed to address mixing and shear problems for parallel operations. Engineering characterization in conventional and recently developed scale-down bioreactors has been briefly introduced. Process challenges for cultivation of industrial cell lines in high cell densities as well as cultivation of stem cells and other human cells for regenerative medicine, tissue engineering and gene therapy are prospected. Important techniques, such as micromanipulation and nanomanipulation (optical tweezers) for single cell analysis, computational fluid dynamics (CFD) for shear and mixing characterization, and miniaturized bioreactors, are being developed to address those challenges.


Microbial Biotechnology | 2011

Extraction, purification and identification of bacterial signal molecules based on N‐acyl homoserine lactones

Jian-Hua Wang; Chunshan Quan; Xue Wang; Pengchao Zhao; Shengdi Fan

Bacteria possess an extraordinary repertoire for intercellular communication and social behaviour. This repertoire for bacterial communication, termed as quorum sensing (QS), depends on specific diffusible signal molecules. There are many different kinds of signal molecules in the bacterial community. Among those signal molecules, N‐acyl homoserine lactones (HSLs, in other publications also referred to as AHLs, acy‐HSLs etc.) are often employed as QS signal molecules for many Gram‐negative bacteria. Due to the specific structure and tiny amount of those HSL signal molecules, the characterization of HSLs has been the subject of extensive investigations in the last decades and has become a paradigm for bacteria intercellular signalling. In this article, different methods, including extraction, purification and characterization of HSLs, are reviewed. The review provides an insight into identification and characterization of new HSLs and other signal molecules for bacterial intercellular communication.


Engineering in Life Sciences | 2009

CFD simulation coupled with population balance equations for aerated stirred bioreactors

Hu Zhang; Kai Zhang; Shengdi Fan

Mammalian cells have been widely used to produce therapeutic proteins in stirred bioreactors in suspension culture. Local hydrodynamics can have a great impact on cell proliferation and protein synthesis, but there are few reports on spatial heterogeneity of nutrients, gas bubbles, and mass transfer coefficients. We have employed computational fluid dynamics (CFD) coupled with population balance equations to study local hydrodynamics in a 20 L stirred bioreactor. The flow patterns, energy dissipation rates, gas volume fraction, gas bubble size distribution and local mass transfer coefficient have been displayed throughout the whole bioreactor. Their implications for mammalian cell culture have been discussed. This study provides an insight into rational design and optimum operation conditions in a stirred bioreactor for mammalian cell cultivation.


Marine Drugs | 2016

Potential Pharmacological Resources: Natural Bioactive Compounds from Marine-Derived Fungi

Liming Jin; Chunshan Quan; Xiyan Hou; Shengdi Fan

In recent years, a considerable number of structurally unique metabolites with biological and pharmacological activities have been isolated from the marine-derived fungi, such as polyketides, alkaloids, peptides, lactones, terpenoids and steroids. Some of these compounds have anticancer, antibacterial, antifungal, antiviral, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antibiotic and cytotoxic properties. This review partially summarizes the new bioactive compounds from marine-derived fungi with classification according to the sources of fungi and their biological activities. Those fungi found from 2014 to the present are discussed.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2007

Antifungal activity of a novel compound from Burkholderia cepacia against plant pathogenic fungi

Xin Li; Chunshan Quan; Shengdi Fan

Aims:  To investigate antifungal activity of a novel compound (named as CF66I provisionally) against plant pathogenic fungi, mainly including Fusarium sp., Colletotrichum lindemuthianum, Rhizoctonia solani, etc.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2010

Determination of diketopiperazines of Burkholderia cepacia CF-66 by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry

Jian-Hua Wang; Chunshan Quan; Xiao-Hui Qi; Xin Li; Shengdi Fan

Bacteria communicate with each other by a process termed “quorum sensing” (QS), and diffusible, low-molecular-weight chemicals, called signal molecules, are used as the communication languages. In cell-free Burkholderia cepacia CF-66 culture supernatants, five compounds suspected of being signal molecules were identified. The gene (cepI) related with AHLs synthesis were not detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using specific primers. Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) revealed that these compounds were not AHLs but the diketopiperazines (DKPs) cyclo(Pro–Phe), cyclo(Pro–Tyr), cyclo(Ala–Val), cyclo(Pro–Leu), and cyclo(Pro–Val), all of which were both d and l-type. Four kinds of DKPs had been isolated from other Gram-negative bacteria, but the other was a novel kind discovered in CF-66, and l-cyclo (Pro–Phe) was quantified by GC–MS. It was found that exogenous DKPs had a negative effect on the candidacidal activity of the culture supernatant extracts.


Journal of Fish Diseases | 2015

Mechanisms of quorum sensing and strategies for quorum sensing disruption in aquaculture pathogens

Jing Zhao; M Chen; Chunshan Quan; Shengdi Fan

In many countries, infectious diseases are a considerable threat to aquaculture. The pathogenicity of micro-organisms that infect aquaculture systems is closely related to the release of virulence factors and the formation of biofilms, both of which are regulated by quorum sensing (QS). Thus, QS disruption is a potential strategy for preventing disease in aquaculture systems. QS inhibitors (QSIs) not only inhibit the expression of virulence-associated genes but also attenuate the virulence of aquaculture pathogens. In this review, we discuss QS systems in important aquaculture pathogens and focus on the relationship between QS mechanisms and bacterial virulence in aquaculture. We further elucidate QS disruption strategies for targeting aquaculture pathogens. Four main types of QSIs that target aquaculture pathogens are discussed based on their mechanisms of action.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2013

Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP)-Based Overexpression Screening and Characterization of AgrC, a Receptor Protein of Quorum Sensing in Staphylococcus aureus

Lina Wang; Chunshan Quan; Baoquan Liu; Yongbin Xu; Pengchao Zhao; Wen Xiong; Shengdi Fan

Staphylococcus aureus AgrC is an important component of the agr quorum-sensing system. AgrC is a membrane-embedded histidine kinase that is thought to act as a sensor for the recognition of environmental signals and the transduction of signals into the cytoplasm. However, the difficulty of expressing and purifying functional membrane proteins has drastically hindered in-depth understanding of the molecular structures and physiological functions of these proteins. Here, we describe the high-yield expression and purification of AgrC, and analyze its kinase activity. A C-terminal green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusion to AgrC served as a reporter for monitoring protein expression levels in real time. Protein expression levels were analyzed by the microscopic assessment of the whole-cell fluorescence. The expressed AgrC-GFP protein with a C-terminal His-tagged was purified using immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) and size exclusion chromatography (SEC) at yields of ≥10 mg/L, following optimization. We also assessed the effects of different detergents on membrane solubilization and AgrC kinase activity, and polyoxyethylene-(23)-lauryl-ether (Brij-35) was identified as the most suitable detergent. Furthermore, the secondary structural stability of purified AgrC was analyzed using circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. This study may serve as a general guide for improving the yields of other membrane protein preparations and selecting the appropriate detergent to stabilize membrane proteins for biophysical and biochemical analyses.

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Chunshan Quan

Dalian Nationalities University

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Pengchao Zhao

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Jian-Hua Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Liming Jin

Dalian Nationalities University

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Lina Wang

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Xin Li

Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics

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Nam-Chul Ha

Seoul National University

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Jing Zhao

Dalian Nationalities University

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Wen Xiong

Dalian Nationalities University

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Yongbin Xu

Dalian Nationalities University

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