Institution
Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences
Nonprofit•Beijing, China•
About: Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences is a nonprofit organization based out in Beijing, China. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 8107 authors who have published 7929 publications receiving 92095 citations. The organization is also known as: Zhōngguó shuǐchǎn Kēxuéyánjiūyuàn & Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences.
Topics: Population, Gene, Shrimp, Genome, Mitochondrial DNA
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A high-quality genome assembly for a channel catfish from a breeding stock inbred in China for more than three generations, which was originally imported to China from North America is reported, which is comparable to a recent report of the “Coco”Channel catfish.
Abstract: The channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus), a species native to North America, is one of the most important commercial freshwater fish in the world, especially in the United States’ aquaculture industry. Since its introduction into China in 1984, both cultivation area and yield of this species have been dramatically increased such that China is now the leading producer of channel catfish. To aid genomic research in this species, data sets such as genetic linkage groups, long-insert libraries, physical maps, bacterial artificial clones (BAC) end sequences (BES), transcriptome assemblies, and reference genome sequences have been generated. Here, using diverse assembly methods, we provide a comparable high-quality genome assembly for a channel catfish from a breeding stock inbred in China for more than three generations, which was originally imported to China from North America. Approximately 201.6 gigabases (Gb) of genome reads were sequenced by the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform. Subsequently, we generated high quality, cost-effective and easily assembled sequences of the channel catfish genome with a scaffold N50 of 7.2 Mb and 95.6 % completeness. We also predicted that the channel catfish genome contains 21,556 protein-coding genes and 275.3 Mb (megabase pairs) of repetitive sequences. We report a high-quality genome assembly of the channel catfish, which is comparable to a recent report of the “Coco” channel catfish. These generated genome data could be used as an initial platform for molecular breeding to obtain novel catfish varieties using genomic approaches.
35 citations
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TL;DR: The results suggest that CsGLys might play an important role in half-smooth tongue sole host defense against the bacteria infection.
34 citations
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TL;DR: The effects of high carbohydrate diet on growth, serum physiological response, and hepatic heat shock protein 70 expression in Wuchang bream were determined at 25°C and 30°C.
Abstract: The effects of high carbohydrate diet on growth, serum physiological response, and hepatic heat shock protein 70 expression in Wuchang bream were determined at 25°C and 30°C. At each temperature, the fish fed the control diet (31% CHO) had significantly higher weight gain, specific growth rate, protein efficiency ratio and hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase activities, lower feed conversion ratio and hepatosomatic index (HSI), whole crude lipid, serum glucose, hepatic glucokinase (GK) activity than those fed the high-carbohydrate diet (47% CHO) (p<0.05). The fish reared at 25°C had significantly higher whole body crude protein and ash, serum cholesterol and triglyceride, hepatic G-6-Pase activity, lower glycogen content and relative levels of hepatic growth hormone (GH) gene expression than those reared at 30°C (p<0.05). Significant interaction between temperature and diet was found for HSI, condition factor, hepatic GK activity and the relative levels of hepatic GH gene expression (p<0.05). (Key Words: Megalobrama amblycephala, Dietary Carbohydrate, Temperature, Growth, Serum Parameters, Hepatic Enzymes Activities)
34 citations
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TL;DR: Data indicated that a high concentration of the probiotic strain JCM5805 upregulated the expression of IFN&agr; via the TLR7/TLR9‐Myd88 pathway and enhanced disease resistance of larvae.
34 citations
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University of Palermo1, Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn2, Spanish National Research Council3, Agricultural University of Tirana4, Adolfo Ibáñez University5, Federal University of São Paulo6, University of Malta7, Ocean University of China8, University of Dubrovnik9, Södertörn University10, University of Patras11, University of Aveiro12, American Museum of Natural History13, National Institute of Oceanography, India14, University of Alicante15, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences16, Aswan University17, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu18, Rhodes University19, University of Washington20, Northeastern University21, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences22, University of Milano-Bicocca23, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center24, University of Tromsø25, Polytechnic University of Valencia26, National Research Council27, Cawthron Institute28, Life University29, Alexandria University30, Universiti Sains Malaysia31, University of Hong Kong32
TL;DR: The rapid, global spread of COVID-19, and the measures intended to limit or slow its propagation, are having major impacts on diverse sectors of society as mentioned in this paper, and these impacts are occurring in the...
Abstract: The rapid, global spread of COVID-19, and the measures intended to limit or slow its propagation, are having major impacts on diverse sectors of society. Notably, these impacts are occurring in the...
34 citations
Authors
Showing all 8142 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Yu Huang | 136 | 1492 | 89209 |
Meilin Liu | 117 | 827 | 52603 |
Lin Li | 104 | 2027 | 61709 |
Jian Xu | 94 | 1366 | 52057 |
Xiaolong Wang | 81 | 966 | 31455 |
Sheng Luan | 76 | 272 | 21253 |
Peng Xu | 75 | 1151 | 25005 |
Qiang Li | 73 | 856 | 30598 |
Deliang Chen | 68 | 461 | 16966 |
Chao Li | 64 | 561 | 17253 |
Min Du | 61 | 326 | 11328 |
Lei Wang | 59 | 988 | 14887 |
Quan Chen | 52 | 154 | 16697 |
Jun Li | 50 | 562 | 12002 |
James P. Barry | 49 | 162 | 10687 |