J
Jing Zhao
Researcher at Ohio State University
Publications - 31
Citations - 714
Jing Zhao is an academic researcher from Ohio State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biclustering & Metagenomics. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 31 publications receiving 421 citations. Previous affiliations of Jing Zhao include University of Georgia & Sanford Health.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cancer exosomes induce tumor innervation
Marianna Madeo,Paul L. Colbert,Daniel W. Vermeer,Christopher T. Lucido,Jacob T. Cain,Elisabeth G. Vichaya,Aaron J. Grossberg,Aaron J. Grossberg,Desi Rae Muirhead,Alex P. Rickel,Zhongkui Hong,Jing Zhao,Jill M. Weimer,William C. Spanos,John H. Lee,Robert Dantzer,Paola D. Vermeer +16 more
TL;DR: It is shown that tumor released exosomes induce tumor innervation and exosome-packaged axonal guidance molecule, EphrinB1 potentiate this activity, which is mediated by cancerExosomes.
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Interpretation of differential gene expression results of RNA-seq data: review and integration
TL;DR: An R/Bioconductor package is provided, Visualization of Differential Gene Expression Results using R, which generates information-rich visualizations for the interpretation of DGE results from three widely used tools, Cuffdiff, DESeq2 and edgeR.
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It is time to apply biclustering: a comprehensive review of biclustering applications in biological and biomedical data.
TL;DR: A brief introduction to the existing biclustering algorithms and tools in public domain are delivered, and a systematically summarize the basic applications of bic Lustering for biological data and more advanced applications for biomedical data are summarized.
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Bioinformatics tools for quantitative and functional metagenome and metatranscriptome data analysis in microbes.
TL;DR: Combining metagenomic and metatranscriptomic analyses will help understand the activity or enrichment of a given gene set, such as drug-resistant genes among microbiome samples, to assist researchers in deciding the appropriate tools for their microbiome studies.
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Supplementation with Major Royal-Jelly Proteins Increases Lifespan, Feeding, and Fecundity in Drosophila.
Xiao-xuan Xin,Yong Chen,Di Chen,Fa Xiao,Laurence D. Parnell,Jing Zhao,Liang Liu,Jose M. Ordovas,Chao-Qiang Lai,Lirong Shen +9 more
TL;DR: There is strong evidence that MRJPs are important components of RJ for prolonging lifespan in Drosophila and the diet supplemented with 2.50% MRP seems to have the optimal dose to improve both physiological and biochemical measures related to aging in both sexes.