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Yeon-A Jin
Researcher at Seoul National University
Publications - 4
Citations - 57
Yeon-A Jin is an academic researcher from Seoul National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 22 citations.
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Marinobacterium rhizophilum sp. nov., isolated from the rhizosphere of the coastal tidal-flat plant Suaeda japonica.
TL;DR: On the basis of the data from this polyphasic study, strain CL-YJ9(T) belongs to the genus Marinobacterium but is distinguishable from the recognized species.
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Comparison of Genetic Features and Evolution of Global and Chinese Strains of Community-Associated Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus ST22
TL;DR: Comparison of genomic evolution of global ST22 strains suggested that the Chinese subclade is highly virulent, and emerged around 2006, and it was demonstrated that the ST22-SCCmec V may have evolved from the native ST 22-MSSA clone rather than spread from other regions, and the high virulence potential of these ST22 strain may be attributed to the high expression of agr based on the results of virulence assays of Chinese ST22 clones.
Journal ArticleDOI
Rifaximin Modulates the Gut Microbiota to Prevent Hepatic Encephalopathy in Liver Cirrhosis Without Impacting the Resistome
Xiao Yu,Yeon-A Jin,Wangxiao Zhou,Tingting Xiao,Zhongwen Wu,Junwei Su,Hainv Gao,Ping Shen,Bo Zheng,Qixia Luo,Lanjuan Li,Yonghong Xiao +11 more
TL;DR: Prophylactic use of rifaximin for 12 weeks improved hyperammonemia and neurophysiological function, maintained gut microbiota diversity, composition and did not change the overall resistome, which could play a key role in preventing HE.
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Genomic epidemiology and characterisation of penicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus isolates from invasive bloodstream infections in China: an increasing prevalence and higher diversity in genetic typing be revealed
TL;DR: Virulence assays showed that MSSA-PENS exhibited a level of virulence comparable to that of penicillin-resistant MSSA (MSSA- PENR), indicating that more-sensitive strains should not be mistaken for lacking aggressiveness in vivo.