Liming Chang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
11 Papers
7 Citations
Liming Chang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Microbiome. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 11 publications.
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Papers
The Changes in the Frog Gut Microbiome and Its Putative Oxygen-Related Phenotypes Accompanying the Development of Gastrointestinal Complexity and Dietary Shift.
Mengjie Zhang,Mengjie Zhang,Hua Chen,Lusha Liu,Liangliang Xu,Liangliang Xu,Xungang Wang,Liming Chang,Qing Chang,Guoqing Lu,Jianping Jiang,Lifeng Zhu +11 more
TL;DR: It is found that the remodeling and complexity of the gastrointestinal system during metamorphosis might have a profound effect on the gut microbial community and its putative oxygen-related phenotypes and this basic information is provided for the amphibian conservation and managements.
Remarkable metabolic reorganization and altered metabolic requirements in frog metamorphic climax.
TL;DR: The energic strategy and anabolic requirements during metamorphic climax were revealed at the molecular level and provide background information for ecological, evolutionary, conservation, and developmental studies of amphibians.
Characterizing the composition, metabolism and physiological functions of the fatty liver in Rana omeimontis tadpoles
Wei Zhu,Meihua Zhang,Liming Chang,Wenbo Zhu,Cheng Li,Feng Xie,Huan Zhang,Tian Zhao,Jianping Jiang +8 more
TL;DR: This is the first report that liver can be the primary fat depot in vertebrates with higher evolutionary status than bony fish and showed that the hepatic reserves of tadpoles, especially TG content, may provide body condition signals to modulate metamorphosis.
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Commensal microbiota and host metabolic divergence are associated with the adaptation of Diploderma vela to spatially heterogeneous environments.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the environmental adaptation for three geographic populations (>40 km apart) of Diploderma vela, a lizard endemic to dry-hot valleys of the Hengduan Mountain Region.
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Microbiomic and transcriptomic insight into the pathogenesis of meningitis-like disease in cultured Pelophylax nigromaculatus
Liming Chang,Tian Zhao,Chunlin Zhao,Chunlin Zhao,Wenbo Zhu,Liangliang Xu,Jiongyu Liu,Cheng Li,Feng Xie,Jianping Jiang,Wei Zhu +10 more
TL;DR: The results suggested that E. miricola was likely the etiologic factor of meningitis emerged in this farm, and Transcriptional analyses suggested that frogs could be well divided into asymptomatic, torticollis-only, and torticolls-cataract groups by the variation of their brain transcriptomes.
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