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Featured researches published by Zhiyong Di.


Nature Communications | 2013

The genome of Mesobuthus martensii reveals a unique adaptation model of arthropods

Zhijian Cao; Yao Yu; Yingliang Wu; Pei-Pei Hao; Zhiyong Di; Yawen He; Zongyun Chen; Weishan Yang; Zhiyong Shen; Xiaohua He; Jia Sheng; Xiaobo Xu; Bohu Pan; Jing Feng; Xiaojuan Yang; Wei Hong; Wenjuan Zhao; Zhongjie Li; Kai Huang; Tian-tian Li; Yimeng Kong; Hui Liu; Dahe Jiang; Binyan Zhang; Jun Hu; Youtian Hu; Bin-Bin Wang; Jianliang Dai; Bi-Feng Yuan; Yu-Qi Feng

Representing a basal branch of arachnids, scorpions are known as ‘living fossils’ that maintain an ancient anatomy and are adapted to have survived extreme climate changes. Here we report the genome sequence of Mesobuthus martensii, containing 32,016 protein-coding genes, the most among sequenced arthropods. Although M. martensii appears to evolve conservatively, it has a greater gene family turnover than the insects that have undergone diverse morphological and physiological changes, suggesting the decoupling of the molecular and morphological evolution in scorpions. Underlying the long-term adaptation of scorpions is the expansion of the gene families enriched in basic metabolic pathways, signalling pathways, neurotoxins and cytochrome P450, and the different dynamics of expansion between the shared and the scorpion lineage-specific gene families. Genomic and transcriptomic analyses further illustrate the important genetic features associated with prey, nocturnal behaviour, feeding and detoxification. The M. martensii genome reveals a unique adaptation model of arthropods, offering new insights into the genetic bases of the living fossils.


Journal of Proteomics | 2013

Molecular diversity of Chaerilidae venom peptides reveals the dynamic evolution of scorpion venom components from Buthidae to non-Buthidae

Yawen He; Ruiming Zhao; Zhiyong Di; Zhongjie Li; Xiaobo Xu; Wei Hong; Yingliang Wu; Huabin Zhao; Wenxin Li; Zhijian Cao

UNLABELLED The scorpion family Chaerilidae is phylogenetically differentiated from Buthidae. Their venom components are not known, and the evolution of the venom components is not well understood. Here, we performed a transcriptome analysis of the venom glands from two scorpion species, Chaerilus tricostatus and Chaerilus tryznai. Fourteen types of venom peptides were discovered from two species, 10 of which were shared by both C. tricostatus and C. tryznai. Notably, the venom components of Chaerilidae were also found to contain four toxin types (NaTx, β-KTx, Scamp and bpp-like peptides), previously considered to be specific to Buthidae. Moreover, cytolytic peptides were the most abundant toxin type in C. tricostatus, C. tryznai and the family Euscorpiidae. Furthermore, 39 and 35 novel atypical venom molecules were identified from C. tricostatus and C. tryznai, respectively. Finally, the evolutionary analysis showed that the NaTx, β-KTx, and bpp-like toxin types were recruited into the venom before the lineage split between Buthidae and non-Buthidae families. This study provides an integrated understanding of the venom components of the scorpion family Chaerilidae. The family Chaerilidae has a specific venom arsenal that is intermediate between Buthidae and non-Buthidae, which suggests the dynamic evolution of scorpion venom components from Buthidae to non-Buthidae species. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE This work gave a first overview of the venom components of Chaerilidae scorpions, and discovered large numbers of new toxin molecules, which significantly enriches the molecular diversity of scorpion venom peptides/proteins components. Based on phylogenetic analysis we speculated that the NaTx, β-KTx and bpp-like toxin type genes were recruited into venom before the lineage split between Buthidae and non-Buthidae. By Comparing the toxin types and abundance of the Buthidae, Chaerilidae and non-Buthidae families, we found that the family Chaerilidae has a specific venom arsenal that is intermediate Buthidae and non-Buthidae, which suggests the dynamic evolution of scorpion venom components from Buthidae to non-Buthidae species.


Journal of Proteomics | 2014

Proteomic analysis of the venom from the scorpion Mesobuthus martensii.

Xiaobo Xu; Zhigui Duan; Zhiyong Di; Yawen He; Jianglin Li; Zhongjie Li; Chunliang Xie; Xiongzhi Zeng; Zhijian Cao; Yingliang Wu; Songping Liang; Wenxin Li

UNLABELLED The scorpion Mesobuthus martensii is the most populous species in eastern Asian countries, and several toxic components have been identified from their venoms. Nevertheless, a complete proteomic profile of the venom of M. martensii is still not available. In this study, the venom of M. martensii was analyzed by comprehensive proteomic approaches. 153 fractions were isolated from the M. martensii venom by 2-DE, SDS-PAGE and RP-HPLC. The ESI-Q-TOF MS results of all fractions were used to search the scorpion genomic and transcriptomic databases. Totally, 227 non-redundant protein sequences were unambiguously identified, composed of 134 previously known and 93 previously unknown proteins. Among 134 previously known proteins, 115 proteins were firstly confirmed from the M. martensii crude venom and 19 toxins were confirmed once again, involving 43 typical toxins, 7 atypical toxins, 12 venom enzymes and 72 cell associated proteins. In typical toxins, 7 novel-toxin sequences were identified, including 3 Na(+)-channel toxins, 3K(+)-channel toxins and 1 no-annotation toxin. These results increased 230% (115/50) venom components compared with previous studies from the M. martensii venom, especially 50% (24/48) typical toxins. Additionally, a mass fingerprint obtained by MALDI-TOF MS indicated that the scorpion venom contained more than 200 different molecular mass components. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE This work firstly gave a systematic investigation of the M. martensii venom by combined proteomics strategy coupled with genomics and transcriptomics. A large number of protein components were unambiguously identified from the venom of M. martensii, most of which were confirmed for the first time. We also contributed 7 novel-toxin sequences and 93 protein sequences previously unknown to be part of the venom, for which we assigned potential biological functions. Besides, we obtained a mass fingerprint of the M. martensii venom. Together, our study not only provides the most comprehensive catalog of the molecular diversity of the M. martensii venom at the proteomic level, but also enriches the composition information of scorpion venom.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011

Ctriporin, a New Anti-Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus Peptide from the Venom of the Scorpion Chaerilus tricostatus

Zheng Fan; Luyang Cao; Yawen He; Jun Hu; Zhiyong Di; Yingliang Wu; Wenxin Li; Zhijian Cao

ABSTRACT Antibiotic-resistant microbes, such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, seriously threaten human health. The outbreak of “superbugs” in recent years emphasizes once again the need for the development of new antimicrobial agents or resources. Antimicrobial peptides have an evident bactericidal effect against multidrug-resistant pathogens. In the present study, a new antimicrobial peptide, ctriporin, was cloned and characterized from the venom of the scorpion Chaerilus tricostatus, an animal which has not yet been explored for toxic peptide resources. The MICs of ctriporin against Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus thuringiensis, Bacillus subtilis, Micrococcus luteus, and Candida albicans are 5 to 20 μg/ml. Meanwhile, it MIC against clinical antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains is 10 μg/ml. Furthermore, the potential for ctriporin to be used as a topical antibiotic for treating staphylococcal skin infections was investigated. External use of the peptide ctriporin dramatically decreased the bacterial counts and cured skin infections in mice. In addition, ctriporin demonstrates antimicrobial efficacy via the bactericidal mechanism of rapid cell lysis. Together, these results suggest the potential of developing ctriporin as a new topical antibiotic.


Toxins | 2014

Overview of scorpion species from China and their toxins.

Zhijian Cao; Zhiyong Di; Yingliang Wu; Wenxin Li

Scorpions are one of the most ancient groups of terrestrial animals. They have maintained a steady morphology over more than 400 million years of evolution. Their venom arsenals for capturing prey and defending against predators may play a critical role in their ancient and conservative appearance. In the current review, we present the scorpion fauna of China: 53 species covering five families and 12 genera. We also systematically list toxins or genes from Chinese scorpion species, involving eight species covering four families. Furthermore, we review the diverse functions of typical toxins from Chinese scorpion species, involving Na+ channel modulators, K+ channel blockers, antimicrobial peptides and protease inhibitors. Using scorpion species and their toxins from China as an example, we build the bridge between scorpion species and their toxins, which helps us to understand the molecular and functional diversity of scorpion venom arsenal, the dynamic and functional evolution of scorpion toxins, and the potential relationships of scorpion species and their toxins.


ZooKeys | 2011

The scorpions of Yunnan (China): updated identification key, new record and redescriptions of Euscorpiops kubani and E. shidian (Arachnida, Scorpiones)

Zhiyong Di; Yawen He; Yingliang Wu; Zhijian Cao; Hui Liu; Dahe Jiang; Wenxin Li

Abstract We present an identification key to the scorpion species of Yunnan (China) with notes on the distribution and ecology. Euscorpiops kubani is recorded for the first time for China. The redescriptions of Euscorpiops shidian and Euscorpiops kubani are provided. The number of known scorpion species from Yunnan is raised to nine.


ZooKeys | 2013

Notes on the scorpions (Arachnida, Scorpiones) from Xizang with the redescription of Scorpiops jendeki Kovařík, 2000 (Scorpiones, Euscorpiidae) from Yunnan (China)

Zhiyong Di; Xiaobo Xu; Zhijian Cao; Yingliang Wu; Wenxin Li

Abstract Until now, there are 26 scorpion species of 7 genera of 5 families recorded in Xizang (China). Xizang Autonomous Region (Tibet) is the scorpion biodiversity richest area in China (53 scorpion species of 12 genera of 5 families), also the highest altitude habitat of scorpions in the world. We present information of type specimens, an identification key of the scorpion species from Xizang, the distribution, updated feature pictures, and discussion on the disputed species. The redescriptions of Scorpiops jendeki Kovařík, 2000 (Yunnan) and Scorpiops tibetanus Hirst, 1911 (Xizang), comments and feature figures of species of genus Scorpiops are provided for identification.


Bioscience Reports | 2017

Molecular characterization and expression analysis of CSαβ defensin genes from the scorpion Mesobuthus martensii

Yange Lang; Xiaohuan Pi; Zhiyong Di; Quian Zhang; Huijuan Wang; Bingzheng Shen; Fangfang Li; Gaomin Liu; Yao Yu; Xuan Li; Yingliang Wu; Wenxin Li; Zhijian Cao

Defensins are important components of innate host defence system against bacteria, fungi, parasites and viruses. Here, we predicted six potential defensin genes from the genome of the scorpion Mesobuthus martensii and then validated four genes from them via the combination of PCR and genomic sequence analysis. These four scorpion defensin genes share the same gene organization and structure of two exons and one phase-I intron with the GT-AG rule. Conserved motif and phylogenetic analysis showed that they belonged to the members of the invertebrate cysteine-stabilized α-helix/β-sheet motif defensin (CSαβ) defensin family. All these four CSαβ defensin genes have the expression feature of constitutive transcription (CON) by the whole scorpion infection model, promoter sequence analysis and dual luciferase assays. Further evolution and comparison analysis found that the invertebrate CSαβ defensin genes from most of arachnids and mollusks appear to share the expression pattern of CON, but those from insects and lower invertebrates (nematodes, annelids, cnidarians and sponges) seem to have identical inducible transcription (IND) after being challenged by microorganisms. Together, we identified four scorpion CSαβ defensin genes with the expression feature of CON, and characterized the diversified expression patterns of the invertebrate CSαβ defensin genes, which will shed insights into the evolution of the invertebrate CSαβ defensin genes and their expression patterns.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2015

Genome-wide analysis of homeobox genes from Mesobuthus martensii reveals Hox gene duplication in scorpions.

Zhiyong Di; Yao Yu; Yingliang Wu; Pei Hao; Yawen He; Huabin Zhao; Yixue Li; Guoping Zhao; Xuan Li; Wenxin Li; Zhijian Cao


Biomaterials | 2013

Design of histidine-rich peptides with enhanced bioavailability and inhibitory activity against hepatitis C virus.

Wei Hong; Runhong Zhang; Zhiyong Di; Yawen He; Zhenhuan Zhao; Jun Hu; Yingliang Wu; Wenxin Li; Zhijian Cao

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Wei Hong

Nanjing University of Science and Technology

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Yao Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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