He Zhang
Nanjing Agricultural University
11 Papers
12 Citations
He Zhang is an academic researcher from Nanjing Agricultural University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Swine gut microbiota and its interaction with host nutrient metabolism.
TL;DR: The bidirectional regulation between gut microbiota and nutrient metabolism in swine is outlined and the action mechanisms underlying the complex microbiome–host crosstalk via the gut microbiota–gut–brain axis are emphasized.
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New Insights into the Diurnal Rhythmicity of Gut Microbiota and Its Crosstalk with Host Circadian Rhythm
Hongyu Wang,He Zhang,Yong Su +2 more
TL;DR: The diurnal rhythmicity of the gut microbiota; its crucial role in host physiology, health, and metabolism; and the crosstalk between the gut microbial rhythmicity and host circadian rhythm are discussed.
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Antagonization of Ghrelin Suppresses Muscle Protein Deposition by Altering Gut Microbiota and Serum Amino Acid Composition in a Pig Model
TL;DR: The antagonization of ghrelin reduced the concentration of important signal molecules (Arg, Met and Ile) that activate the mTOR pathway, concurrently reduce the concentrate of HDAC inhibitors (acetate), promote autophagy and finally reduce protein deposition in muscles.
Feeding frequency affects the growth performance, nutrient digestion and absorption of growing pigs with the same daily feed intake
TL;DR: Investigation of the growth, digestion and absorption functions of growing pigs under different feeding frequencies with the same total daily feed intake showed that final body weight (FBW), average daily gain (ADG) in M3 and M5 groups were significantly higher than in the M1 group, but feed: gain was significantly lower.
12
Feeding Frequency Modulates the Intestinal Transcriptome Without Affecting the Gut Microbiota in Pigs With the Same Daily Feed Intake.
TL;DR: In this article, the impacts of irregular eating patterns on the gut microbiota and transcriptomic responses in a pig model with different feeding regimens were investigated, and the results showed that different feeding frequencies had no significant effects on the microbial composition of ileal digesta, colonic digesta and colon mucosa.