Cui Yang
Jiangnan University
5 Papers
14 Citations
Cui Yang is an academic researcher from Jiangnan University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tyrosol & Phenylpyruvate decarboxylase. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Engineering Eschericha coli for Enhanced Tyrosol Production.
TL;DR: This investigation suggests that microbial tyrosol production has application potential, and the reintroduction of the phenylpyruvate decarboxylase gene ARO10 and the aromatic amino acid aminotransferase geneARO8 were introduced into Escherichia coli to generate two recombinant tyosol producers.
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Reconstruction of tyrosol synthetic pathways in Escherichia coli
TL;DR: A recombinant Escherichia coli strain constructed by overexpressing the phenylpyruvate decarboxylase ARO10 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae could produce tyrosol from glucose, and genes encoding key enzymes from the competing phenylalanine and tyrosine synthesis pathways and the repression protein TyrR were eliminated.
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Patent
Recombinant strain capable of producing tyrosol and construction method thereof
Chen Xianzhong,Yuxiang Xue,Cui Yang,Fan You,Shen Wei +4 more
- 31 May 2017
TL;DR: In this paper, a recombinant strain capable of producing tyrosol and a construction method thereof was revealed, and belongs to the field of microorganisms, where the method consisted of the following steps: constructing a mixture of recombinant carriers pRSFDuet-ARO10-ARORO8 by a gene engineering technology; transforming the recombinant carrier into escherichia coli BL21(DE3) from which a gene pheA and a gene feaB are removed by gene engineering to obtain a strain BE0; carrying out a whole-cell
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Modular Engineering of Tyrosol Production in Escherichia coli.
TL;DR: It is suggested that microbial production of tyrosol in E. coli has potential for industrial applications.
High-Level Production of Tyrosol with Noninduced Recombinant Escherichia coli by Metabolic Engineering.
TL;DR: Engineering a productive E. coli strain with high tyrosol titer from glucose using a medium that does not require added amino acids, inducer, or antibiotic is provided, which provides a solid basis to produce tyosol through microbial fermentation.