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Dive into the research topics where Zhenbo Xu is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Zhenbo Xu.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2009

Occurrence and Characteristics of Class 1 and 2 Integrons in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Isolates from Patients in Southern China

Zhenbo Xu; Lin Li; Mark E. Shirtliff; Munirul Alam; Shinji Yamasaki; Lei Shi

ABSTRACT Class 1 and 2 integrons were detected in 45.8% (54/118) and 19.5% (23/118) of our tested Pseudomonas aeruginosa isolates, respectively. Three strains were positive for both the integrons. This is the first report of class 2 integrons in P. aeruginosa and also of isolates carrying class 1 and 2 integrons simultaneously.


Clinical Microbiology and Infection | 2011

Resistance class 1 integron in clinical methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus aureus strains in southern China, 2001–2006

Zhenbo Xu; Lin Li; Mark E. Shirtliff; Brian M. Peters; Bing Li; Y. Peng; Mohammad Jahangir Alam; Shinji Yamasaki; Lei Shi

As a novel antibiotic resistance determinant, investigation of the occurrence and characteristics of class 1 integron was performed on nosocomial methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) strains sampled during 2001-2006. Seventy-six out of 179 (42.5%) of the tested strains were found to carry class 1 integrons, with four unique arrays of gene cassettes detected. This is the first report of the comprehensive identification and typing of class 1 integrons in clinical MRSA isolates over a 6-year period, representing the first evidence for class 1 integrons as possible antibiotic resistance determinants in clinical MRSA strains.


Current Microbiology | 2008

First Confirmation of Integron-Bearing Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus

Zhenbo Xu; Lin Li; M. J. Alam; Liyan Zhang; Shinji Yamasaki; Lei Shi

Six methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus MRSA strains from two nosocomial infection cases described in a previous study [15], of which two ocurred in March and the other four in May, 2005, were found to possess one copy of class 1 integron with aadA2 gene cassette located on chromosomes by Southern hybridization. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) detection of mecA and pvl, SCCmec typing, multilocus sequence typing (MLST), spaA typing and coa typing were also performed. The results revealed 6 MRSA fell into the ST239-MRSA-III group (clonal complex 8), with the spaA type GKAOMQ and coa type HIJKL, whereas the pvl locus was not detected. DNA fingerprinting analysis by random amplified polymorphic DNA–PCR using three different assays were also performed, and all strains exhibited identical patterns, indicating that they were clonally related and might be mainly due to a specific clone in the hospital. This was the first time, to our knowledge, that class 1 integron-bearing MRSA (I-MRSA), simultaneously carrying two mobile genetic elements was confirmed: class 1 integron and SCCmec.


Molecular Biology Reports | 2011

Class 1 integron in staphylococci

Zhenbo Xu; Lin Li; Lei Shi; Mark E. Shirtliff

As a major concern in public health, methicillin-resistant staphylococci (MRS) still remains one of the most prevalent pathogens that cause nosocomial infections throughout the world and has been recently labeled as a “super bug” in antibiotic resistance. Thus, surveillance and investigation on antibiotic resistance mechanisms involved in clinical MRS strains may raise urgent necessity and utmost significance. As a novel antibiotic resistance mechanism, class 1 integron has been identified as a primary source of antimicrobial resistance genes in Gram-negative organisms. However, most available studies on integrons had been limited within Gram-negative microbes, little is known for clinical Gram-positive bacteria. Based on series studies of systematic integrons investigation in hundreds of staphylococci strains during 2001–2006, this review concentrated on the latest development of class 1 integron in MRS isolates, including summary of prevalence and occurrence of class 1 integron, analysis of correlation between integron and antibiotic resistance, further demonstration of the role integrons play as antibiotic determinants, as well as origin and evolution of integron-associated gene cassettes during this study period.


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2010

First report of class 2 integron in clinical Enterococcus faecalis and class 1 integron in Enterococcus faecium in South China

Zhenbo Xu; Lin Li; Mark E. Shirtliff; Brian M. Peters; Yi Peng; Mohammad Jahangir Alam; Shinji Yamasaki; Lei Shi

During 2003 to 2004, class 1 integron was detected in 8 out of 10 tested enterococci isolates, with 2 of them positive for class 2 integron. This is the first report of class 2 integron in Enterococcus faecalis and class 1 integron in Enterococcus faecium.


Microbial Drug Resistance | 2015

Antimicrobial resistance investigation on staphylococcus strains in a local Hospital in Guangzhou, China, 2001-2010

Yang Deng; Junyan Liu; Brian M. Peters; Lei Chen; Jian Miao; Bing Li; Lin Li; Dingqiang Chen; Zhenbo Xu; Mark E. Shirtliff

A retrospective study was conducted on 1,739 Staphylococcus isolates from the First Affiliated Hospital of Jinan University (FAHJU) in Guangzhou during 2001-2010. With the exception of teicoplanin and vancomycin, antimicrobial resistance was commonly observed among the isolates examined, with high resistance rates for β-lactamases (94.0% and 73.7% for penicillin and oxacillin) and resistance percentages for cefoxitin, chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, erythromycin, gentamicin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, and tetracycline ranging from 83.9% to 19.4%. Two hundred sixty-three of the 1,739 isolates were subjected to SCCmec typing and 42 to MLST, spaA, and coa typing. ST239-MRSA-III was prevalently identified along with one distinct coa type HIJKL and 2 spaA types (WGKAOMQ-t037 and WGKAQQ-t030). Class 1 integrons were commonly detected (31.6%), although none of the integron-positive MRSA strains had been isolated since 2009. The widespread detection of integron-based antimicrobial resistance determinants may further contribute to the emergence of superbugs.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2015

Reduction and restoration of culturability of beer-stressed and low-temperature-stressed Lactobacillus acetotolerans strain 2011-8.

Yang Deng; Junyan Liu; Lin Li; Huijing Fang; Jingxia Tu; Bing Li; Jing Liu; Huiping Li; Zhenbo Xu

Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are the most common beer-spoilage bacteria, regardless of beer type, and therefore pose significant problems for the brewing industry. The aim of this study was to investigate the viable, but putatively non-culturable (VPNC) state of the hard-to-culture beer-spoilage species, Lactobacillus acetotolerans. Upon prolonged contact with degassed beer, L. acetotolerans was found to show decreased culturability. After 17 subcultures in beer, 100-μL aliquots of the culture were no longer culturable on MRS agar until 14 days of incubation despite the presence of 10(5) viable cells, indicating that a large population of cells entered into a VPNC state. Furthermore, a significant reduction or even putative loss of culturability, but maintenance of viability, of L. acetotolerans could also be induced by storing the strain at 0 °C for 105 days. Adding catalase at a concentration of 1000 U/plate enabled the VPNC cells, both induced by beer subculture treatment and cold treatment, to regain culturability with a resuscitation time of 4 days and 3 days, respectively. Scanning electron microscopy results demonstrated that cells decreased in size and gradually changed morphology from short rods to coccoids when they entered the VPNC state. It was concluded that the difficulty in culturing the spoilage bacterium from brewery environments could be partly attributed the hard-to-culture or the viable, but non-culturable characteristic of this organism.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Investigation of the interaction of naringin palmitate with bovine serum albumin: spectroscopic analysis and molecular docking.

Xia Zhang; Lin Li; Zhenbo Xu; Zhili Liang; Jianyu Su; Jianrong Huang; Bing Li

Background Bovine serum albumin (BSA) contains high affinity binding sites for several endogenous and exogenous compounds and has been used to replace human serum albumin (HSA), as these two compounds share a similar structure. Naringin palmitate is a modified product of naringin that is produced by an acylation reaction with palmitic acid, which is considered to be an effective substance for enhancing naringin lipophilicity. In this study, the interaction of naringin palmitate with BSA was characterised by spectroscopic and molecular docking techniques. Methodology/Principal Findings The goal of this study was to investigate the interactions between naringin palmitate and BSA under physiological conditions, and differences in naringin and naringin palmitate affinities for BSA were further compared and analysed. The formation of naringin palmitate-BSA was revealed by fluorescence quenching, and the Stern-Volmer quenching constant (KSV) was found to decrease with increasing temperature, suggesting that a static quenching mechanism was involved. The changes in enthalpy (ΔH) and entropy (ΔS) for the interaction were detected at −4.11±0.18 kJ·mol−1 and −76.59±0.32 J·mol−1·K−1, respectively, which indicated that the naringin palmitate-BSA interaction occurred mainly through van der Waals forces and hydrogen bond formation. The negative free energy change (ΔG) values of naringin palmitate at different temperatures suggested a spontaneous interaction. Circular dichroism studies revealed that the α-helical content of BSA decreased after interacting with naringin palmitate. Displacement studies suggested that naringin palmitate was partially bound to site I (subdomain IIA) of the BSA, which was also substantiated by the molecular docking studies. Conclusions/Significance In conclusion, naringin palmitate was transported by BSA and was easily removed afterwards. As a consequence, an extension of naringin applications for use in food, cosmetic and medicinal preparations may be clinically and practically significant, especially in the design of new naringin palmitate-inspired drugs.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Transcriptomic analysis on the formation of the viable putative non-culturable state of beer-spoilage Lactobacillus acetotolerans

Junyan Liu; Yang Deng; Brian M. Peters; Lin Li; Bing Li; Lequn Chen; Zhenbo Xu; Mark E. Shirtliff

Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are the most common beer-spoilage bacteria regardless of beer type, and thus pose significant problems for the brewery industry. The aim of this study was to investigate the genetic mechanisms involved in the ability of the hard-to-culture beer-spoilage bacterium Lactobacillus acetotolerans to enter into the viable putative non-culturable (VPNC) state. A genome-wide transcriptional analysis of beer-spoilage L. acetotolerans strains BM-LA14526, BM-LA14527, and BM-LA14528 under normal, mid-term and VPNC states were performed using RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) and further bioinformatics analyses. GO function, COG category, and KEGG pathway enrichment analysis were conducted to investigate functional and related metabolic pathways of the differentially expressed genes. Functional and pathway enrichment analysis indicated that heightened stress response and reduction in genes associated with transport, metabolic process, and enzyme activity might play important roles in the formation of the VPNC state. This is the first transcriptomic analysis on the formation of the VPNC state of beer spoilage L. acetotolerans.


Molecular Biology Reports | 2016

Chromogenic media for MRSA diagnostics.

Zhenbo Xu; Yuchao Hou; Brian M. Peters; Dingqiang Chen; Bing Li; Lin Li; Mark E. Shirtliff

For the past decade, a number of chromogenic media for methicillin-resistance Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) detection have been developed and applied, including Oxoid Brilliance™ MRSA, CHROMagar™ MRSA, BBL™ CHROMagar™ MRSA, MRSASelect and chromID MRSA. The advantages of these chromogenic media offers direct detection of visible staphylococcal colonies, coupled with the use of chromogenic enzymatic substrates that can be hydrolyzed by S. aureus to confirm species or strain identification. BBL™ CHROMagar™ MRSA and MRSASelect are designed for detection of nasal colonization by MRSA, while CHROMagar™ MRSA, Oxoid Brilliance™ MRSA and chromID MRSA are readily applied in bacterial screening. This review summarizes the characteristics, principles and capacities of these selective media, and focuses on comparison of different chromogenic media.

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Lin Li

South China University of Technology

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Bing Li

South China University of Technology

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Dingqiang Chen

Guangzhou Medical University

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Yang Deng

South China University of Technology

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Junyan Liu

University of Tennessee

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Junyan Liu

University of Tennessee

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Jianyu Su

South China University of Technology

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Lei Shi

South China University of Technology

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