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Kai Sun

Researcher at Nanjing Normal University

Publications -  36
Citations -  440

Kai Sun is an academic researcher from Nanjing Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 23 publications receiving 194 citations.

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Mycelial network-mediated rhizobial dispersal enhances legume nodulation.

TL;DR: The results indicate that rhizobia use mycelia as dispersal networks that migrate to legume rhizosphere and trigger nodulation, highlighting the importance of mycelial network-based bacterial dispersal in legume–rhizobium symbiosis.
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Biodegradation of phenanthrene by endophytic fungus Phomopsis liquidambari in vitro and in vivo

TL;DR: P. liquidambari could not only respond to phenanthrene pollution stress in vitro but also exert a mitigation effect on plants accumulated Phenanthrene, providing a foundation for applying endophytic fungi to PAHs bioremediation in vitro and in–vivo.
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Endophytic Pseudomonas induces metabolic flux changes that enhance medicinal sesquiterpenoid accumulation in Atractylodes lancea

TL;DR: New perspectives for mechanisms of medicinal oxygenous terpenoid synthesis are provided, which has important reference values to the cultivation of medicinal plants that have terpenoids as their active ingredients, such as Artemisia annua and Taxus chinensis.
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Auxin signalling of Arachis hypogaea activated by colonization of mutualistic fungus Phomopsis liquidambari enhances nodulation and N2‐fixation

TL;DR: This study demonstrated that auxin signalling activated by P. liquidambari symbiosis is recruited by peanut for bradyrhizobial symbiosis via symbiotic signalling pathway activation and nodule carbon metabolism enhancement.
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Comparative Transcriptomics and Proteomics of Atractylodes lancea in Response to Endophytic Fungus Gilmaniella sp. AL12 Reveals Regulation in Plant Metabolism.

TL;DR: It is proposed that endophyte-plant associations may improve production by increasing the source (photosynthesis), expanding the sink (glycolysis and tricarboxylic acid cycle), and enhancing the metabolic flux (sesquiterpenoids biosynthesis pathway) in A. lancea.