Publications by authors named "Wei-peng Zhang"

Pulsed vacuum drying (PVD) is a novel vacuum drying method that has demonstrated significant potential in improving energy efficiency and product quality in the drying of foods and agricultural products. The current work provides a comprehensive analysis of the latest advancements in PVD technology, including its historical development, fundamental principles, and mechanistic aspects. The impact of periodic pulsed pressure changes between vacuum and atmospheric pressure on heat and moisture transfer, as well as structural changes in foods at micro- and macro-scales, is thoroughly discussed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many studies have confirmed that climate change leads to frequent urban flooding, which can lead to significant socioeconomic repercussions. However, most existing studies have not evaluated the impacts of climate change on urban flood from both event-scale and annual-scale dimensions. In addition, there are only few studies that simultaneously consider scenario and model uncertainties of climate change, and combine flood risk assessment and uncertainty analysis results to provide practical suggestions for urban drainage system management.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Acquisition of new genes often results in the emergence of novel functions and is a key step in lineage-specific adaptation. As a group of sessile crustaceans, barnacles establish permanent attachment through initial cement secretion at the larval phase followed by continuous cement secretion in juveniles and adults. However, the origins and evolution of barnacle larval and adult cement proteins remain poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the current work, the effects of steam and boiling water blanching on the drying characteristics, water distribution, microstructure, and contents of bioactive substances of () were explored. Results showed that the degree of steaming and blanching was related to the core temperature of . The steaming and blanching pretreatment increased the drying time of the samples by more than 50%.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two novel Gram-stain-negative, facultative anaerobic, non-flagellated, rod-shaped bacterial strains, designated MT13 and MT32, were isolated from sediment samples collected from the Mariana Trench at a depth of 8300 m. The two strains grew at -2-30 °C (optimum, 25 °C), at pH 5.5-10.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Dimethylsulfide (DMS) and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) are widespread in marine environment, and are important participants in the global sulfur cycle. Microbiol oxidation of DMS to DMSO represents a major sink of DMS in marine surface waters. The SAR11 clade and the marine clade (MRC) are the most abundant heterotrophic bacteria in the ocean surface seawater.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Most marine copiotrophic bacteria can produce extracellular enzymes to degrade biopolymers into bio-available smaller solutes, while oligotrophic bacteria usually cannot. Bacterial extracellular enzymes and enzymatic products can be a common resource that could be utilized by both copiotrophs and oligotrophs; when present, oligotrophs may outcompete the enzyme-producing copiotrophs. However, copiotrophs and oligotrophs consistently coexist in the ocean.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Doxorubicin (DOX) is an effective anti-tumor drug widely used in clinics. Hernandezine (HER), isolated from a Chinese medicinal herb, has a selective inhibitory effect on DOX multidrug resistance, making DOX more effective in treating cancer. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the interaction of HER and DOX on pharmacokinetics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Colibactin is an assumed human gut bacterial genotoxin, whose biosynthesis is linked to the clb genomic island that has a widespread distribution in pathogenic and commensal human enterobacteria. Colibactin-producing gut microbes promote colon tumour formation and enhance the progression of colorectal cancer via cellular senescence and death induced by DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs); however, the chemical basis that contributes to the pathogenesis at the molecular level has not been fully characterized. Here, we report the discovery of colibactin-645, a macrocyclic colibactin metabolite that recapitulates the previously assumed genotoxicity and cytotoxicity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The worldwide prevalence of infections caused by antibiotic-resistant Gram-negative bacteria poses a serious threat to public health due to the limited therapeutic alternatives. Cationic peptides represent a large family of antibiotics and have attracted interest due to their diverse chemical structures and potential for combating drug-resistant Gram-negative pathogens. Here, we analyze 7395 bacterial genomes to investigate their capacity for biosynthesis of cationic nonribosomal peptides with activity against Gram-negative bacteria.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the version of this article originally published, the links and files for the Supplementary Information, including Supplementary Tables 1-5, Supplementary Figures 1-25, Supplementary Note, Supplementary Datasets 1-4 and the Life Sciences Reporting Summary, were missing in the HTML. The error has been corrected in the HTML version of this article.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nonribosomal peptide antibiotics, including polymyxin, vancomycin, and teixobactin, most of which contain D-amino acids, are highly effective against multidrug-resistant bacteria. However, overusing antibiotics while ignoring the risk of resistance arising has inexorably led to widespread emergence of resistant bacteria. Therefore, elucidation of the emerging mechanisms of resistance to nonribosomal peptide antibiotics is critical to their implementation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Colibactin is an as-yet-uncharacterized genotoxic secondary metabolite produced by human gut bacteria. Here we report the biosynthetic discovery of two new precolibactin molecules from Escherichia coli, including precolibactin-886, which uniquely incorporates the highly sought genotoxicity-associated aminomalonate building block into its unprecedented macrocyclic structure. This work provides new insights into the biosynthetic logic and mode of action of this colorectal-cancer-linked microbial chemical.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of multidrug resistance (MDR) is the major obstacle in the chemotherapy of breast cancer, and it restricts the application of antitumor drugs in the clinic. Therefore it is urgent to search for ways to reverse MDR and restore sensitivity to chemotherapeutics in breast carcinoma. Currently, histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDACIs) offer a promising strategy for tumor therapy as the effective anticancer drugs.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Glass sponge (Hexactinellida, Porifera) is a special lineage because of its unique tissue organization and skeleton material. Structure and physiology of glass sponge have been extensively studied. However, our knowledge of the glass sponge-associated microbial community and of the interaction with the host is rather limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of operational genes has been widely reported in prokaryotic organisms. However, informational genes such as those involved in transcription and translation processes are very difficult to be horizontally transferred, as described by Woese's complexity hypothesis. Here, we analyzed all of the completed prokaryotic genome sequences (2,143 genomes) in the NCBI (National Center for Biotechnology Information) database, scanned for genomes with high intragenomic heterogeneity of 16S rRNA gene copies, and explored potential HGT events of ribosomal RNA genes based on the phylogeny, genomic organization, and secondary structures of the ribosomal RNA genes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Unlabelled: Marine sponges are the most primitive metazoan and host symbiotic microorganisms. They are crucial components of the marine ecological system and play an essential role in pelagic processes. Copper pollution is currently a widespread problem and poses a threat to marine organisms.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Studies on biofilm assembly in deep-sea environments are limited, with this research focusing on various substrates in the Red Sea's brine pool and bottom water.
  • The study analyzed 51 biofilms using pyrosequenced 16S rRNA gene amplicons, revealing that substrates had a stronger impact on microbial community assembly in the brine pool and during the early biofilm development stages.
  • These findings support species sorting theory, which posits that ecological factors influence microbial community assembly, offering insights into biofilm formation in marine environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Adenosine (Ado) is an important cardioprotective agent. Since endogenous Ado levels are affected by the enzyme Ado deaminase (ADA), polymorphisms within the ADA gene may exert some effect on chronic heart failure (CHF). This study applied a case-control investigation to 300 northern Chinese Han CHF patients and 400 ethnicity-matched healthy controls in which nine single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of ADA were genotyped and association analyses were performed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A hypoxic/suboxic brine pool at a depth of about 850 m was discovered near the Thuwal cold seeps in the Red Sea. Filled with high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide and ammonia, such a brine pool might limit the spread of eukaryotic organisms. Here, we compared the communities of the eukaryotic microbes in a microbial mat, sediments and water samples distributed in 7 sites within and adjacent to the brine pool.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Breast cancer is a common malignant tumor which affects health of women and multidrug resistance (MDR) is one of the main factors leading to failure of chemotherapy. This study was conducted to establish paclitaxel-resistant breast cancer cell line and nude mice models to explore underlying mechanisms of MDR.

Methods: The breast cancer drug-sensitive cell line MCF-7 (MCF-7/S) was exposed in stepwise escalating paclitaxel (TAX) to induce a resistant cell line MCF-7/TAX.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the title complex, [ZnCl2(C10H9N5)2], the Zn(II) ion is coordinated by two N atoms from two 2-[(1H-1,2,4-triazol-1-yl)meth-yl]-1H-benzimidazole (tmb) ligands and by two chloride ligands in a slightly distorted tetra-hedral geometry. In the tmb ligands, the benzimidazole rings systems are essentially planar, with maximum deviations from the mean plane of 0.021 (3) and 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To describe the clinical features and surgical outcomes in a series of patients with perforating injuries and foreign bodies located at the exit wound in posterior global wall.

Methods: Retrospective case series of 17 eyes of 17 patients were included in the study, each patient who received treatments between January 2006 and December 2010 had perforating injuries with foreign bodies located at posterior global wall. The exit wounds of perforating injuries were in the area of optic disc and macula in 8 eyes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: To investigate the modification function of visual experience onto synapses by recording developmental changes of spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents (sEPSC) in layer 2 and 3 pyramidal neurons of rat visual cortex, and to observe the spontaneous synaptic activities during the earlier postnatal period.

Methods: This was an experimental study. By combining infrared differential interference contrast (IR-DIC) technique and a CCD-camera system with visual patch clamp whole-cell recording technique, spontaneous EPSCs of P2 approximately 7, P8 approximately 14, P15 approximately 21 and P22 approximately 28 groups were observed and analyzed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF