Publications by authors named "Wen-hui Zeng"

Article Synopsis
  • The study addresses the high energy consumption of welding workshops and aims to reduce carbon emissions during the production process by developing a bi-objective scheduling model that minimizes both completion time and carbon output.
  • An improved Grey Wolf Optimizer (IGWO) is introduced to tackle the multi-objective scheduling problem, incorporating strategies to enhance diversity, convergence, and local optimization.
  • The results demonstrated that the IGWO algorithm significantly lowered carbon emissions to 3.85E + 05 while reducing the completion time to 842.14, outperforming other algorithms like NSGA-II and GWO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * The immune system of termites, governed by immune genes, plays a significant role in their resilience against these microbial threats, making it crucial to explore ways to modify these immune responses.
  • * In the study, researchers identified immune genes in the economically significant termite species Coptotermes formosanus and found that suppressing specific immune genes using dsRNA enhanced the effectiveness of the fungus Metarhizium anisopliae, opening new avenues for termite management strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: RNA interference (RNAi) technology is an environmentally friendly strategy for controlling insect pests. Lipopolysaccharide-binding protein (LBP) recognizes lipopolysaccharides, which are a major outer membrane constituent of Gram-negative bacteria. We propose that the LBP gene is a potential target for termite management; however, to date, no studies have examined this gene in termites.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The colon is an alternative graft organ for esophageal reconstruction. The present study reviewed our experience with the colon interposition for esophageal replacement following corrosive ingestion, to evaluate the outcomes of colon interposition based on our surgical experience. The clinical data of 119 patients who underwent colon interposition for esophageal replacement from January 2005 to March 2017 were retrospectively analyzed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A mitochondria-targeted fluorescence probe (CPBT) for ratiometric detection of endogenous hypochlorite in the living cells was developed. CPBT could detect hypochlorite with high selectivity and sensitivity in a ratiometric manner based on FRET mechanism. In absence of hypochlorite, when CPBT was excited with absorption maximum wavelength of the donor moiety, it showed the emission of acceptor moiety because of FRET process.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Termite (Blattodea: Termitoidae) assemblages have important ecological functions and vary in structure between habitats, but have not been studied in lower subtropical forests. To examine whether differences in the richness and relative abundance of termite species and functional groups occur in lower subtropical regions, termite assemblages were sampled in Dinghushan Biosphere Reserve, China, among pine forest, pine and broad-leaved mixed forest (mixed forest), and monsoon evergreen broad-leaved forest (monsoon forest). The dominant functional group was wood-feeding termites (family Termitidae), and the mixed forest hosted the greatest richness and relative abundance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

High levels of extracellular xylanase activity (211.79 IU/mg) produced by Paenibacillus sp. NF1 were detected when it was submerged-cultured.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cellulose digestion in termites (Isoptera) is highly important for ecological reasons and applications in biofuel conversion. The speciose Termitidae family has lost flagellates in the hindgut and developed diverse feeding habits. To address the response of cellulase activity to the differentiation of feeding habits, a comparative study of the activity and distribution of composite cellulases, endo-β-1,4-glucanase, and β-glucosidase was performed in seven common flagellate-free termites with three feeding habits: the humus-feeding termites Sinocapritermes mushae (Oshima et Maki), Malaysiocapritermes zhangfengensis Zhu, Yang et Huang and Pericapritermes jiangtsekiangensis (Kemner); the fungus-growing termites Macrotermes barneyi Light and Odontotermes formosanus (Shiraki); and the wood-feeding termites Nasutitermes parvonasutus (Shiraki) and Havilanditermes orthonasus (Tsai et Chen).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF