Xiaotong Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Xiaotong Wang.
Nature | 2012
Guofan Zhang; Xiaodong Fang; Ximing Guo; Li Li; Ruibang Luo; Fei Xu; Pengcheng Yang; Linlin Zhang; Xiaotong Wang; Haigang Qi; Zhiqiang Xiong; Huayong Que; Yinlong Xie; Peter W. H. Holland; Jordi Paps; Yabing Zhu; Fucun Wu; Yuanxin Chen; Jiafeng Wang; Chunfang Peng; Jie Meng; Lan Yang; Jun Liu; Bo Wen; Na Zhang; Zhiyong Huang; Qihui Zhu; Yue Feng; Andrew Mount; Dennis Hedgecock
The Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas belongs to one of the most species-rich but genomically poorly explored phyla, the Mollusca. Here we report the sequencing and assembly of the oyster genome using short reads and a fosmid-pooling strategy, along with transcriptomes of development and stress response and the proteome of the shell. The oyster genome is highly polymorphic and rich in repetitive sequences, with some transposable elements still actively shaping variation. Transcriptome studies reveal an extensive set of genes responding to environmental stress. The expansion of genes coding for heat shock protein 70 and inhibitors of apoptosis is probably central to the oyster’s adaptation to sessile life in the highly stressful intertidal zone. Our analyses also show that shell formation in molluscs is more complex than currently understood and involves extensive participation of cells and their exosomes. The oyster genome sequence fills a void in our understanding of the Lophotrochozoa.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Xiaotong Wang; Li Li; Yabing Zhu; Yishuai Du; Xiaorui Song; Yuanxin Chen; Ronglian Huang; Huayong Que; Xiaodong Fang; Guofan Zhang
Mollusk shell is one kind of potential biomaterial, but its vague mineralization mechanism hinders its further application. Mollusk shell matrix proteins are important functional components that are embedded in the shell, which play important roles in shell formation. The proteome of the oyster shell had been determined based on the oyster genome sequence by our group and gives the chance for further deep study in this area. The classical model of shell formation posits that the shell proteins are mantle-secreted. But, in this study, we further analyzed the shell proteome data in combination with organ transcriptome data and we found that the shell proteins may be produced by multiple organs though the mantle is still the most important organ for shell formation. To identify the transport pathways of these shell proteins not in classical model of shell formation, we conducted a shell damage experiment and we determined the shell-related gene set to identify the possible transport pathways from multiple organs to the shell formation front. We also found that there may exist a remodeling mechanism in the process of shell formation. Based on these results along with some published results, we proposed a new immature model, which will help us think about the mechanism of shell formation in a different way.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Fei Xu; Xiaotong Wang; Yue Feng; Wen Huang; Wei Wang; Li Li; Xiaodong Fang; Huayong Que; Guofan Zhang
MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play important roles in regulatory processes in various organisms. To date many studies have been performed in the investigation of miRNAs of numerous bilaterians, but limited numbers of miRNAs have been identified in the few species belonging to the clade Lophotrochozoa. In the current study, deep sequencing was conducted to identify the miRNAs of Crassostrea gigas (Lophotrochozoa) at a genomic scale, using 21 libraries that included different developmental stages and adult organs. A total of 100 hairpin precursor loci were predicted to encode miRNAs. Of these, 19 precursors (pre-miRNA) were novel in the oyster. As many as 53 (53%) miRNAs were distributed in clusters and 49 (49%) precursors were intragenic, which suggests two important biogenetic sources of miRNAs. Different developmental stages were characterized with specific miRNA expression patterns that highlighted regulatory variation along a temporal axis. Conserved miRNAs were expressed universally throughout different stages and organs, whereas novel miRNAs tended to be more specific and may be related to the determination of the novel body plan. Furthermore, we developed an index named the miRNA profile age index (miRPAI) to integrate the evolutionary age and expression levels of miRNAs during a particular developmental stage. We found that the swimming stages were characterized by the youngest miRPAIs. Indeed, the large-scale expression of novel miRNAs indicated the importance of these stages during development, particularly from organogenetic and evolutionary perspectives. Some potentially important miRNAs were identified for further study through significant changes between expression patterns in different developmental events, such as metamorphosis. This study broadened the knowledge of miRNAs in animals and indicated the presence of sophisticated miRNA regulatory networks related to the biological processes in lophotrochozoans.
Molecular Biology Reports | 2014
Xiaorui Song; Xiaotong Wang; Li Li; Guofan Zhang
Abstract Nacrein-like proteins have carbonic anhydrase (CA)-like domains, but their coding regions are flanked by inserted repeat sequence, such as Gly-X-Asn. Reportedly, nacrein-like proteins show the highest similarity to human carbonic anhydrase 1(α-CA1), possess CA catalytic functions, and play a key role in shell biomineralization. In the present study, two novel nacrein-like proteins were firstly identified from the shell-forming mantle of the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas. With numerous analyses, it was identified and characterized that both the nacrein-like proteins F1 and F2 were secreted and most closely related to the nacrein-like protein of California mussel Mytilus californianus via phylogenetic analysis. RT-PCR analysis showed that the nacrein-like proteins F1 and F2 were expressed in multiple tissues and the expression levels remarkably rose after entering the spat stage, which were basically consistent with the increase of calcite fractions in the total shell volume. Surprisingly, the Gly-X-Asn repeat domain, which is distinctive in most nacrein-like proteins, was absent in the two newly identified nacrein-like proteins in C. gigas and replaced with a series of acidic amino acids (D/E). Regardless, nacrein-like proteins in mollusks seem to be vital to the deposition of calcium carbonate and likely perform diverse functions.
Molecular Biology Reports | 2011
Xiaotong Wang; Li Li; Fei Xu; Guofan Zhang
Molluscs are an extraordinarily diverse group of animals and to discriminate them based on one molecular marker/gene is very difficult because of the too fast or slow rate of nucleotide substitution. In the study, the tropomyosin cds (coding sequences) of 43 animal species were analyzed, the results of which suggested that the tropomyosin gene was a nice marker gene to phylogenetic analysis of molluscs, even for all the studied animals. In addition, InDels (insertions and deletions) in tropomyosin cds of turbo cornutus were also studied and one segment repeat, which probably happened recently and was of functional importance, was found.
Molecular Biology Reports | 2014
Xiaotong Wang; Li Li; Yabing Zhu; Xiaorui Song; Xiaodong Fang; Ronglian Huang; Huayong Que; Guofan Zhang
Two calcium carbonate crystal polymorphs, aragonite and calcite, are the main inorganic components of mollusk shells. Some fossil evidences suggest that aragonite shell is more ancient than calcite shell for the Bivalvia. But, the molecular biology evidence for the above deduction is absent. In this study, we searched for homologs of bivalve aragonite-related and calcite-related shell proteins in the oyster genome, and found that no homologs of calcite-related shell protein but some homologs of aragonite-related shell proteins in the oyster genome. We explained the results as the new evidence to support that aragonite shells are more ancient than calcite shells in bivalves combined the published biogeological and seawater chemistry data.
Molluscan Research | 2013
Linlin Zhang; Li Li; Fei Xu; Haigang Qi; Xiaotong Wang; Huayong Que; Guofan Zhang
The Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) is globally distributed and is one of the most commercially and ecologically important marine organisms. However, little is known about the genome of this species. In this study, a C. gigas fosmid library was constructed that contains 459,936 clones with an average insert size of approximately 40 kb, representing 22.34-fold haploid genome equivalents. End sequencing generated 90,240 fosmid end sequences (FESs) with an average length of 384.27 base pairs (bp), covering approximately 2.58% of the Pacific oyster genome. The FESs were subsequently assembled and annotated, resulting in 6332 sequences with predicted open reading frames≥300 and 1,189,100 bp repeats. Furthermore, a total of 3200 microsatellite repeats were identified, and dinucleotide repeats were found to occur most abundantly, with AG and AAT being the most abundant repeat class of dinucleotides and trinucleotides. We also found that the repeat number was generally negatively proportional to the repeat element length. Microsatellites composition between the transcribed sequences and genomic sequences was shown to be different. Point mutations of microsatellite were non-random and underwent strong selection stress. Overall, a comprehensive sequence resource for the Pacific oyster was created, including annotated transposable elements, tandem repeats, protein coding sequences and microsatellites. These initial findings will serve as resources for further in-depth studies of physical mapping, gene discovery, microsatellite marker developing and evolution studies.
BMC Genomics | 2014
Xiaotong Wang; Qiye Li; Jinmin Lian; Li Li; Lijun Jin; Huimin Cai; Fei Xu; Haigang Qi; Linlin Zhang; Fucun Wu; Jie Meng; Huayong Que; Xiaodong Fang; Ximing Guo; Guofan Zhang
Archive | 2011
Xiaotong Wang; Li Li; Fei Xu; Guofan Zhang
Current Zoology | 2013
Xiaotong Wang; Xiaorui Song; Tong Wang; Qihui Zhu; Guoying Miao; Yuanxin Chen; Xiaodong Fang; Huayong Que; Li Li; Guofan Zhang