Publications by authors named "Jun-Wu Ma"

Gout is one of the most common inflammatory arthritis caused by hyperuricaemia, which is affected by both genetic factors and environmental factors. Early researches show that a few of rare monogenic mutations, such as PRPS1 and HPRT1 mutations, lead to abnormal purine anabolism and then cause hyperuricaemia and gout. In recent years, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified dozens of susceptibility loci and/or candidate genes associated with hyperuricemia and gout.

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The efficacy of an inactivated foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) vaccine is mainly dependent on the integrity of the foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) particles. At present, the standard method to quantify the active component, the 146S antigen, of FMD vaccines is sucrose density gradient (SDG) analysis. However, this method is highly operator dependent and difficult to automate.

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Foot-and-mouth disease virus (FMDV) causes a highly contagious infection in cloven-hoofed animals. The format of FMD virus-like particles (VLP) as a non-replicating particulate vaccine candidate is a promising alternative to conventional inactivated FMDV vaccines. In this study, we explored a prokaryotic system to express and assemble the FMD VLP and validated the potential of VLP as an FMDV vaccine candidate.

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Identification of major genes that genetically impact female fertility is important for successful selection of high prolificacy pig lines. Because it is the rate-limiting enzyme in the conversion of arachidonic acid to prostaglandins (PGs), which are important for ovulation, fertilization, implantation, decidualization and parturition, prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2 gene (PTGS2) is a potential candidate gene affecting porcine reproductive traits. In this study, a PCR-RFLP was used to genotype a total of 1 031 animals, including 661 from twelve Chinese local pig breeds, 190 from three Western pig breeds and 180 F2 sows from Nanchang pig resource family.

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Four missense substitutions (T30N, G52S, V199I and R200Q) in the porcine PRKAG3 gene were considered as the likely candidate loci affecting meat quality. In this study, the R200Q substitution was investigated in a sample of 62 individuals from Hampshire, Chinese Min and Erhualian pigs, and the genetic variations of T30N, G52S and V199I substitutions were detected in 1505 individuals from 21 Chinese indigenous breeds, 5 Western commercial pig breeds, and the wild pig. Allele 200R was fixed in Chinese Min and Erhualian pigs.

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Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli F18(ECF18) is a main pathogen that causes edema disease and post-weaning diarrhoea in piglets, and al-fucosytransferase (FUT1) gene has been identified as a candidate gene for controlling the expression of the receptor for ECF18 bacteria. The genetic variations at position 307 nucleotide in open reading frame of FUT1 gene in 26 pig breeds (total 1458 individuals) from 5 western commercial pig breeds and 21 Chinese native pig breeds were investigated by PCR-RFLP. The results showed that the genetic polymorphisms of the FUT1 locus were only detected in 5 western pig breeds and the Chinese Lingao pig breed, 5 western pig breeds possessed 3 different genotypes, and Lingao pig breed had two susceptible genotypes GG and AG, while all the other 20 Chinese native pig breeds only presented the susceptible genotype GG.

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