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Rui Xia

Researcher at South China Agricultural University

Publications -  59
Citations -  9934

Rui Xia is an academic researcher from South China Agricultural University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & RNA. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 57 publications receiving 4086 citations. Previous affiliations of Rui Xia include University of Delaware & Wuhan University.

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TBtools: An Integrative Toolkit Developed for Interactive Analyses of Big Biological Data.

TL;DR: The toolkit incorporates over 130 functions, which are designed to meet the increasing demand for big-data analyses, ranging from bulk sequence processing to interactive data visualization, and a new plotting engine developed to maximum their interactive ability.
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TBtools - an integrative toolkit developed for interactive analyses of big biological data

TL;DR: TBtools (a Toolkit for Biologists integrating various biological data handling tools), a stand-alone software with a user-friendly interface designed to meet the increasing demand for big-data analyses, ranging from bulk sequence processing to interactive data visualization.
Posted ContentDOI

TBtools, a Toolkit for Biologists integrating various HTS-data handling tools with a user-friendly interface

TL;DR: TBtools is described, a Toolkit for Biologists integrating various HTS-data handling tools with a user-friendly interface that facilitates many simple, routine but elaborate tasks working on HTS data, such as bulk sequence extraction, gene set functional enrichment, venn diagram and etc.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phased, Secondary, Small Interfering RNAs in Posttranscriptional Regulatory Networks

TL;DR: Plant phasiRNAs and the possible mechanistic significance of phasiRNA-based regulation of the NB-LRRs are discussed and their role in disease resistance genes is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genome assembly with in vitro proximity ligation data and whole-genome triplication in lettuce.

TL;DR: This work identifies several genomic features that may have contributed to the success of the Compositae family of flowering plants, including genes encoding Cycloidea-like transcription factors, kinases, enzymes involved in rubber biosynthesis and disease resistance proteins that are expanded in the genome.