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Dive into the research topics where Yaojun Tong is active.

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Featured researches published by Yaojun Tong.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2015

CRISPR-Cas9 Based Engineering of Actinomycetal Genomes

Yaojun Tong; Pep Charusanti; Lixin Zhang; Tilmann Weber; Sang Yup Lee

Bacteria of the order Actinomycetales are one of the most important sources of pharmacologically active and industrially relevant secondary metabolites. Unfortunately, many of them are still recalcitrant to genetic manipulation, which is a bottleneck for systematic metabolic engineering. To facilitate the genetic manipulation of actinomycetes, we developed a highly efficient CRISPR-Cas9 system to delete gene(s) or gene cluster(s), implement precise gene replacements, and reversibly control gene expression in actinomycetes. We demonstrate our system by targeting two genes, actIORF1 (SCO5087) and actVB (SCO5092), from the actinorhodin biosynthetic gene cluster in Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2). Our CRISPR-Cas9 system successfully inactivated the targeted genes. When no templates for homology-directed repair (HDR) were present, the site-specific DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) introduced by Cas9 were repaired through the error-prone nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway, resulting in a library of deletions with variable sizes around the targeted sequence. If templates for HDR were provided at the same time, precise deletions of the targeted gene were observed with near 100% frequency. Moreover, we developed a system to efficiently and reversibly control expression of target genes, deemed CRISPRi, based on a catalytically dead variant of Cas9 (dCas9). The CRISPR-Cas9 based system described here comprises a powerful and broadly applicable set of tools to manipulate actinomycetal genomes.


Trends in Biotechnology | 2015

Metabolic engineering of antibiotic factories: new tools for antibiotic production in actinomycetes

Tilmann Weber; Pep Charusanti; Ewa Maria Musiol-Kroll; Xinglin Jiang; Yaojun Tong; Hyun Uk Kim; Sang Yup Lee

Actinomycetes are excellent sources for novel bioactive compounds, which serve as potential drug candidates for antibiotics development. While industrial efforts to find and develop novel antimicrobials have been severely reduced during the past two decades, the increasing threat of multidrug-resistant pathogens and the development of new technologies to find and produce such compounds have again attracted interest in this field. Based on improvements in whole-genome sequencing, novel methods have been developed to identify the secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene clusters by genome mining, to clone them, and to express them in heterologous hosts in much higher throughput than before. These technologies now enable metabolic engineering approaches to optimize production yields and to directly manipulate the pathways to generate modified products.


PLOS Biology | 2013

White-Opaque Switching in Natural MTLa/α Isolates of Candida albicans: Evolutionary Implications for Roles in Host Adaptation, Pathogenesis, and Sex

Jing Xie; Li Tao; Clarissa J. Nobile; Yaojun Tong; Guobo Guan; Yuan Sun; Chengjun Cao; Aaron D. Hernday; Alexander D. Johnson; Lixin Zhang; Feng-Yan Bai; Guanghua Huang

All Mating Type Locus strain types of Candida albicans show white-opaque switching competency, not just MTL homozygotes, which allows them to adapt better to environmental changes.


Journal of Natural Products | 2010

Trichodermaketones A-D and 7-O-Methylkoninginin D from the Marine Fungus Trichoderma koningii

Fuhang Song; Huanqin Dai; Yaojun Tong; Biao Ren; Caixia Chen; Nuo Sun; Xiangyang Liu; Jiang Bian; Mei Liu; Hong Gao; Hongwei Liu; Xiaoping Chen; Lixin Zhang

Five new polyketide derivatives, 7-O-methylkoninginin D (1) and trichodermaketones A-D (2-5), together with four known compounds, koninginins A, D, E, and F, were isolated from the marine-derived fungus Trichoderma koningii. Trichodermaketones A (2) and B (3) are unprecedented polyketides with a bistetrafuran-containing tricyclic skeleton. The chemical structures and absolute configurations of compounds 1-5 were elucidated by comparing with literature data and extensive spectroscopic methods, including 2D NMR and CD spectroscopic analysis. Compounds 1-5 were evaluated for action against bacteria and fungi and for synergistic antifungal activity. Compound 2 showed synergistic antifungal activity against Candida albicans with 0.05 microg/mL ketoconazole.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Roles of Candida albicans Gat2, a GATA-type zinc finger transcription factor, in biofilm formation, filamentous growth and virulence.

Han Du; Guobo Guan; Jing Xie; Yuan Sun; Yaojun Tong; Lixin Zhang; Guanghua Huang

Candida albicans is the most common human fungal pathogen, causing not only superficial infections, but also life-threatening systemic disease. C. albicans can grow in several morphological forms including unicellular yeast-form, elongated hyphae and pseudohyphae. In certain natural environments, C. albicans also exists as biofilms, which are structured and surface-attached microbial communities. Transcription factors play a critical role in morphogenesis and biofilm development. In this study, we identified four adhesion-promoting transcription factors (Tec1, Cph1, Ume6 and Gat2) by screening a transcription factor overexpression library. Sequence analysis indicates that Gat2 is a GATA-type zinc finger transcription factor. Here we showed that the gat2/gat2 mutant failed to form biofilms on the plastic and silicone surfaces. Overexpression of GAT2 gene promoted filamentous and invasive growth on agar containing Lees medium, while deletion of this gene had an opposite effect. However, inactivation of Gat2 had no obvious effect on N-acetyl-glucosamine (GlcNAc) induced hyphal development. In a mouse model of systemic infection, the gat2/gat2 mutant showed strongly attenuated virulence. Our results suggest that Gat2 plays a critical role in C. albicans biofilm formation, filamentous growth and virulence.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2012

N-Acetylglucosamine Induces White-to-Opaque Switching and Mating in Candida tropicalis, Providing New Insights into Adaptation and Fungal Sexual Evolution

Jing Xie; Han Du; Guobo Guan; Yaojun Tong; Themistoklis K. Kourkoumpetis; Lixin Zhang; Feng-Yan Bai; Guanghua Huang

ABSTRACT Pathogenic fungi are capable of switching between different phenotypes, each of which has a different biological advantage. In the most prevalent human fungal pathogen, Candida albicans, phenotypic transitions not only improve its adaptation to a continuously changing host microenvironment but also regulate sexual mating. In this report, we show that Candida tropicalis, another important human opportunistic pathogen, undergoes reversible and heritable phenotypic switching, referred to as the “white-opaque” transition. Here we show that N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc), an inducer of white-to-opaque switching in C. albicans, promotes opaque-cell formation and mating and also inhibits filamentation in a number of natural C. tropicalis strains. Our results suggest that host chemical signals may facilitate this phenotypic switching and mating of C. tropicalis, which had been previously thought to reproduce asexually. Overexpression of the C. tropicalis WOR1 gene in C. albicans induces opaque-cell formation. Additionally, an intermediate phase between white and opaque was observed in C. tropicalis, indicating that the switching could be tristable.


Virulence | 2015

Synergistic combinations of antifungals and anti-virulence agents to fight against Candida albicans

Jinhui Cui; Biao Ren; Yaojun Tong; Huanqin Dai; Lixin Zhang

Candida albicans, one of the pathogenic Candida species, causes high mortality rate in immunocompromised and high-risk surgical patients. In the last decade, only one new class of antifungal drug echinocandin was applied. The increased therapy failures, such as the one caused by multi-drug resistance, demand innovative strategies for new effective antifungal drugs. Synergistic combinations of antifungals and anti-virulence agents highlight the pragmatic strategy to reduce the development of drug resistant and potentially repurpose known antifungals, which bypass the costly and time-consuming pipeline of new drug development. Anti-virulence and synergistic combination provide new options for antifungal drug discovery by counteracting the difficulty or failure of traditional therapy for fungal infections.


Molecular Microbiology | 2013

Bcr1 plays a central role in the regulation of opaque cell filamentation in Candida albicans

Guobo Guan; Jing Xie; Li Tao; Clarissa J. Nobile; Yuan Sun; Chengjun Cao; Yaojun Tong; Guanghua Huang

The human fungal pathogen Candida albicans has at least two types of morphological transitions: white to opaque cell transitions and yeast to hyphal transitions. Opaque cells have historically not been known to undergo filamentation under standard filament‐inducing conditions. Here we find that Bcr1 and its downstream regulators Cup9, Nrg1 and Czf1 and the cAMP‐signalling pathway control opaque cell filamentation in C. albicans. We have shown that deletion of BCR1, CUP9, NRG1 and CZF1 results in opaque cell filamentation under standard culture conditions. Disruption of BCR1 in white cells has no obvious effect on hyphal growth, suggesting that Bcr1 is an opaque‐specific regulator of filamentation under the conditions tested. Moreover, inactivation of the cAMP‐signalling pathway or disruption of its downstream transcriptional regulators, FLO8 and EFG1, strikingly attenuates filamentation in opaque cells of the bcr1/bcr1 mutant. Deletion of HGC1, a downstream gene of the cAMP‐signalling pathway encoding G1 cyclin‐related protein, completely blocks opaque cell filamentation induced by inactivation of BCR1. These results demonstrate that Bcr1 regulated opaque cell filamentation is dependent on the cAMP‐signalling pathway. This study establishes a link between the white‐opaque switch and the yeast‐filamentous growth transition in C. albicans.


Marine Drugs | 2012

Quinazolin-4-one Coupled with Pyrrolidin-2-iminium Alkaloids from Marine-Derived Fungus Penicillium aurantiogriseum

Fuhang Song; Biao Ren; Ke Yu; Caixia Chen; Hui Guo; Na Yang; Hong Gao; Xueting Liu; Mei Liu; Yaojun Tong; Huanqin Dai; Hua Bai; Jidong Wang; Lixin Zhang

Three new alkaloids, including auranomides A and B (1 and 2), a new scaffold containing quinazolin-4-one substituted with a pyrrolidin-2-iminium moiety, and auranomide C (3), as well as two known metabolites auranthine (4) and aurantiomides C (5) were isolated from the marine-derived fungus Penicillium aurantiogriseum. The chemical structures of compounds 1–3 were elucidated by extensive spectroscopic methods, including IR, HRESIMS and 2D NMR spectroscopic analysis. The absolute configurations of compounds 1–3 were suggested from the perspective of a plausible biosynthesis pathway. Compounds 1–3 were subjected to antitumor and antimicrobial screening models. Auranomides A–C exhibited moderate cytotoxic activity against human tumor cells. Auranomides B was the most potent among them with an IC50 value of 0.097 μmol/mL against HEPG2 cells.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2014

Antiviral Activity of an Isatin Derivative via Induction of PERK-Nrf2-Mediated Suppression of Cap-Independent Translation

Huifang M. Zhang; Huanqin Dai; Paul Hanson; Huidong Li; Hui Guo; Xin Ye; Maged Gomaa Hemida; L. Wang; Yaojun Tong; Ye Qiu; Selina Liu; Fengping Wang; Fuhang Song; Buchang Zhang; Jian-Guo Wang; Lixin Zhang; Decheng Yang

We report here an isatin derivative 45 (ID45) against coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3) replication, which was synthesized based on a high-throughput screen of a unique natural product library. ID45 showed the most potent anti-CVB3 activity among the four synthesized compounds. Treatment of cells with ID45 before or after infection significantly reduced viral particle formation, resulting in protection of cells from virus-induced apoptosis. In addition, ID45 treatment caused remarkable up-regulation of glucose-regulated protein 78 (GRP78), a hallmark of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress and an indicator of enhanced cell viability. In identifying the ER stress response pathway induced by ID45, we found that ID45 activated PKR-like ER protein kinase (PERK) but failed to up-regulate eIF2α phosphorylation. Instead ID45 activated transcription factor Nrf2 (NF-E2-related factor-2), which is evidenced by its nuclear translocation and upregulation of its downstream target genes NQO1 (NAD(P)H quinone-oxidoreductase 1) and GCLM (glutamate-cysteine ligase, modifier subunit). This observation was further verified by using siRNAs of GRP78 or Nrf2, which blocked both the translocation of Nrf2 and up-regulation of its target genes, leading to aggressive viral replication and enhanced cell apoptosis. Finally, we found that ID45-induced up-regulation of NQO1 protected eIF4GI, a eukaryotic cap-dependent translation initiation factor, from cleavage by CVB3 protease and degradation by proteasomes. Taken together, our findings established that a novel antiviral mechanism of isatin derivative ID45 inhibits CVB3 replication by promoting cell survival through a PERK/Nrf2-dependent ER stress pathway, which benefits host cap-dependent translation but suppresses CVB3 cap-independent translation.

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Lixin Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Huanqin Dai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Biao Ren

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Guanghua Huang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Fuhang Song

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Guobo Guan

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jing Xie

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Hui Guo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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