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Xin Hua Sui

Researcher at University of Minnesota

Publications -  69
Citations -  2902

Xin Hua Sui is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Rhizobia & Bradyrhizobium. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 62 publications receiving 2637 citations. Previous affiliations of Xin Hua Sui include China Agricultural University.

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Diversity of rhizobia associated with Amorpha fruticosa isolated from Chinese soils and description of Mesorhizobium amorphae sp. nov.

TL;DR: A new species, Mesorhizobium amorphae, is proposed for the majority of the isolates, which belonged to a moderately slow- to slow-growing, acid-producing group based upon their distinct phylogenetic position, their unique electrophoretic type, their low DNA homology, and their distinct phenotypic features.
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Rhizobium huautlense sp. nov., a symbiont of Sesbania herbacea that has a close phylogenetic relationship with Rhizobium galegae

TL;DR: A new species Rhizobium huautlense, represented by the Sesbania isolate SO2T, is proposed based upon low estimates of DNA relatedness between the chosen type strain and the type strains for the other species, the dissimilarity of the nucleotide sequence of the 16S rRNA genes, and their distinct ETs compared with R. galegae.
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Biodiversity and biogeography of rhizobia associated with soybean plants grown in the North China Plain.

TL;DR: The association between soil factors (available N, P, and K and pH) and the distribution of genospecies suggest clear biogeographic patterns: Sinorhizobium spp.
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Unique community structure and biogeography of soybean rhizobia in the saline-alkaline soils of Xinjiang, China

TL;DR: Two rhizobial species were found as dominant groups in communities of soybean rhizobia in Xinjiang, whereas three Rhizobium genomic species showed clear correlations with eco-regions and their symbiotic genes were identical or very similar to those of the reference strains for the corresponding species.
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Characterization of symbiotic and endophytic bacteria isolated from root nodules of herbaceous legumes grown in Qinghai–Tibet plateau and in other zones of China

TL;DR: This was the first systematic study of rhizobia isolated from Qinghai–Tibet plateau, and strains resistant to high alkaline (pH 11) and high concentration of NaCl (3–5%, w/v) were found in each of the rhizobial species.