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Jin Sun

Researcher at Ocean University of China

Publications -  153
Citations -  3607

Jin Sun is an academic researcher from Ocean University of China. The author has contributed to research in topics: Early childhood education & Child development. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 139 publications receiving 2626 citations. Previous affiliations of Jin Sun include Hong Kong Institute of Education & Hong Kong University of Science and Technology.

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Adaptation to deep-sea chemosynthetic environments as revealed by mussel genomes

TL;DR: The genomes of a deep-sea vent/seep mussel and a shallow-water mussel are reported, revealing presumed genetic adaptation of theDeep-sea mussel to the presence of its chemoautotrophic endosymbionts and wider insights into the mechanisms of symbiosis in other organisms such as deep- sea tubeworms and giant clams are given.
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Insights from an Integrated View of the Biology of Apple Snails (Caenogastropoda: Ampullariidae)

TL;DR: The great majority of the work to date concerns a single species, Pomacea canaliculata, which the authors see as having the potential to become a model organism in a wide range of fields, however, additional comparative data are essential for understanding this diverse and potentially informative group.
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Diversity and spatial distribution of sediment ammonia-oxidizing crenarchaeota in response to estuarine and environmental gradients in the Changjiang Estuary and East China Sea.

TL;DR: The spatial distribution of putative soil-related AOA in certain sampling stations indicated a strong impact of the Changjiang freshwater discharge on the marine benthic microbial ecosystem.
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Proteomic basis of stress responses in the gills of the pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas.

TL;DR: There was a high consistency between the expression levels determined by iTRAQ and Western blotting, highlighting the high reproducibility of the proteomic approach and its great value in revealing molecular mechanisms of stress responses.
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Marine Biofilms Constitute a Bank of Hidden Microbial Diversity and Functional Potential

TL;DR: This work analyzes 2.5 terabases of newly sequenced datasets and the Tara Oceans metagenomes to study biofilm-forming marine microbes, increasing the known microbial diversity in the oceans by more than 20% and revealing new biosynthetic gene clusters and CRISPR-Cas systems.