Zhejiang A & F University
ORCID: 0000-0002-0957-9245Publishes on Microbial Metabolic Engineering and Bioproduction, CRISPR and Genetic Engineering, Biofuel production and bioconversion. 518 papers and 10.4k citations.
Add your photo, update your bio, and get notified when your ranking changes.
Pseudomonas species are a large class of gram-negative bacteria that exhibit significant biomedical, ecological, and industrial importance. Despite the extensive research and wide applications, genetic manipulation in Pseudomonas species, in particular in the major human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, remains a laborious endeavor. Here we report the development of a genome editing method pCasPA/pACRISPR by harnessing the CRISPR/Cas9 and the phage λ-Red recombination systems. The method allows for efficient and scarless genetic manipulation in P. aeruginosa. By engineering the fusion of the cytidine deaminase APOBEC1 and the Cas9 nickase, we further develop a base editing system pnCasPA-BEC, which enables highly efficient gene inactivation and point mutations in a variety of Pseudomonas species, such as P. aeruginosa, Pseudomonas putida, Pseudomonas fluorescens, and Pseudomonas syringae. Application of the two genome editing methods will dramatically accelerate a wide variety of investigations, such as bacterial physiology study, drug target exploration, and metabolic engineering.
Genealogical patterns in different genomic regions may be different due to the joint influence of gene flow and selection. The existence of two subspecies of cultivated rice provides a unique opportunity for analyzing these effects during domestication. We chose 66 accessions from the three rice taxa (about 22 each from Oryza sativa indica, O. sativa japonica, and O. rufipogon) for whole-genome sequencing. In the search for the signature of selection, we focus on low diversity regions (LDRs) shared by both cultivars. We found that the genealogical histories of these overlapping LDRs are distinct from the genomic background. While indica and japonica genomes generally appear to be of independent origin, many overlapping LDRs may have originated only once, as a result of selection and subsequent introgression. Interestingly, many such LDRs contain only one candidate gene of rice domestication, and several known domestication genes have indeed been "rediscovered" by this approach. In summary, we identified 13 additional candidate genes of domestication.
We developed an in vitro DNA detection system using a pair of dCas9 proteins linked to split halves of luciferase. Luminescence was induced upon colocalization of the reporter pair to a ∼44 bp target sequence defined by sgRNAs. We used the system to detect Mycobacterium tuberculosis DNA with high specificity and sensitivity. The reprogrammability of dCas9 was further leveraged in an array design that accesses sequence information across the entire genome.