Nianjun Xu
Ningbo University
8 Papers
10 Citations
Nianjun Xu is an academic researcher from Ningbo University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Peptide sequence. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
Integration of deep transcriptome and proteome analyses of salicylic acid regulation high temperature stress in Ulva prolifera.
Meihua Fan,Meihua Fan,Xue Sun,Nianjun Xu,Zhi Liao,Yahe Li,Wang Jianxin,Yingping Fan,Dalian Cui,Peng Li,Zengliang Miao +10 more
TL;DR: The results indicated that SA alleviated the high-temperature stimulus through partion antioxidant related proteins up-regulated, JA signal pathway enchanced, Ca2+-binding proteins, photosynthesis-related proteins significantly changed, antioxidant enzyme activities increased and photosynthesis index changed.
Hydrolysis and purification of ACE inhibitory peptides from the marine microalga Isochrysis galbana
TL;DR: This study improves the understanding of the ACE inhibitory properties of I. galbana protein hydrolysate and may be useful in further identification ofACE inhibitory peptides in other marine algae.
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Comparative proteomic analysis of Ulva prolifera response to high temperature stress
TL;DR: The present study implied an increase in proteins that were associated with the stress response, oxidative phosphorylation, the cytokinin signal transduction pathway, the abscisic acid signal transduct pathway, and the glutathione metabolism pathway.
Isolation and identification of two strains of pathogenic bacteria and their effects on the volatile metabolites of Gracilariopsis lemaneiformis (Rhodophyta)
TL;DR: 1-octen-3-one, E-2-nonenal, and benzaldehyde might be the characteristic metabolites for the pathogenic infection and could be used as biomarkers for the disease prevention of G. lemaneiformis.
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cDNA cloning, characterization and expression analysis of manganese superoxide dismutase in Ulva prolifera
TL;DR: Data indicate that MnSOD was perhaps involved in the acute response against temperature stress, and salicylic acid could alleviate the high temperature stress effect on U. fasciata.
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