Fanhong Wang

ORCID: 0009-0004-4311-2448
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Plant Stress Responses and Tolerance
  • Plant Micronutrient Interactions and Effects
  • Aluminum toxicity and tolerance in plants and animals
  • Plant Molecular Biology Research
  • Fern and Epiphyte Biology
  • Heavy metals in environment
  • Trace Elements in Health
  • Plant Parasitism and Resistance
  • Plant and Fungal Species Descriptions
  • Plant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases
  • Heavy Metals in Plants
  • Botany, Ecology, and Taxonomy Studies
  • Light effects on plants
  • Plant Diversity and Evolution
  • Plant Taxonomy and Phylogenetics
  • Agricultural Science and Fertilization
  • Phytochemical and Pharmacological Studies
  • Plant Reproductive Biology
  • Crop Yield and Soil Fertility

Hebei University
2024-2025

Northwest Normal University
2021-2025

University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
2016-2024

Kunming Institute of Botany
2016

Chinese Academy of Sciences
2016

Soil microelement deficiency and heavy metal contamination affects plant growth development, but improving trace element uptake reducing accumulation by genetic breeding can help alleviate this. Cell number regulator 2 (TaCNR2) from common wheat (Triticum aestivum) are similar to cadmium resistance proteins, involved with regulating translocation. Our aim was understand the effect of TaCNR2 on tolerance In this study, real-time quantitative PCR indicated expression in seedlings increased...

10.1038/s41598-018-37352-6 article EN cc-by Scientific Reports 2019-01-29

Heavy metal contaminants and nutrient deficiencies in soil negatively affect crop growth human health. The plant cadmium resistance (PCR) protein transports heavy metals. abundance of PCR is correlated with that cell number regulator (CNR) protein, the two proteins have similar conserved domains. Hence, CNR might also participate transport. We isolated analyzed TaCNR5 from wheat (Triticum aestivum). expression level shoots increased under (Cd), zinc (Zn), or manganese (Mn) treatments....

10.1021/acs.jafc.9b04210 article EN Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 2019-08-09

Sea buckthorn ( Hippophae rhamnoides ssp. sinensis ) is a deciduous shrub or small tree in the Elaeagnaceae family. It dioecious, featuring distinct structures female and male flowers. The MADS-box gene family plays crucial role flower development differentiation of floral organs plants. However, systematic information on sea currently lacking. This study presents genome-wide survey expression profile buckthorn. We identified 92 genes H. Sinensis genome. These are distributed across 12...

10.3389/fpls.2024.1387613 article EN cc-by Frontiers in Plant Science 2024-06-13

SUMMARY Reynoutria japonica Houtt. (Polygonaceae), a traditional Chinese medicine, is one of the top 100 most destructive invasive species worldwide due to its aggressive growth and strong adaptability. Here, we report an 8.04 Gb chromosome‐scale assembly R. with 88 chromosomes across eight homologous sets. Through combined phylogenetic genomic analysis, demonstrate that mixed auto‐/allooctoploid (AAAABBBB). Subgenome A (SubA) exhibited close relationship related Fallopia multiflora . We...

10.1111/tpj.70005 article EN The Plant Journal 2025-02-01

DNA barcoding is a fast-developing technique to identify species by using short and standard sequences. Universal selection of barcodes in ferns remains unresolved. In this study, five plastid regions (rbcL, matK, trnH-psbA, trnL-F rps4-trnS) eight nuclear (ITS, pgiC, gapC, LEAFY, ITS2, IBR3_2, DET1, SQD1_1) were screened evaluated the fern genus Adiantum from China neighboring areas. Due low primer universality (matK) and/or existence multiple copies (ITS), commonly used matK ITS not...

10.1371/journal.pone.0160611 article EN cc-by PLoS ONE 2016-09-07

Mineral nutrients, such as manganese (Mn) and iron (Fe), play essential roles in many biological processes plants but their over-enrichment is harmful for the metabolism. Metal tolerance proteins (MTPs) are involved cellular Mn Fe homeostasis. However, transporter responsible transport of wheat unknown. In our study, TuMTP8, a Mn-CDF from diploid (Triticum urartu), was identified. Expression TuMTP8 yeast strains Δccc1 Δsmf1 Arabidopsis conferred to elevated Fe, not other metals (zinc,...

10.3390/ijms23105683 article EN International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2022-05-19

Abstract Adiantum × meishanianum F. S. Hsu ex Y. C. Liu & W. L. Chiou was regarded as an endemic species in Meishan Village, Kaohsiung, Taiwan, China and a hybrid between A. malesianum Ghatak (the maternal parent) sexually reproducing diploid cryptic of philippense paternal parent), revealed by chloroplast nuclear markers. However, morphological research that is also disjunctively distributed Yunnan its parent possibly menglianense Qian. Thus, this study aimed to confirm these findings...

10.1111/jse.12205 article EN Journal of Systematics and Evolution 2016-04-20

Homeostasis of microelements in organisms is vital for normal metabolism. In plants, the cation diffusion facilitator (CDF) protein family, also known as metal tolerance proteins (MTPs), play critical roles maintaining trace homeostasis. However, little about these wheat. this study, we characterized MTP family Triticum urartu, donor 'A' genome aestivum, and analysed their phylogenetic relationships, sequence signatures, spatial expression patterns diploid wheat, transport activity when...

10.1093/mtomcs/mfab038 article EN Metallomics 2021-06-18

A cadmium-responsive metal ion transporter OsPDR, which was highly upregulated in the shoot of rice (Oryza sativa ssp. japonica cv. Nipponbare) at 24 h after treatment with 50 μmol/L Cd, identified transcriptome profiles analyzed by RNA-Seq. In this study, we isolated OsPDR from and ions transport activity analyzed. The results tolerance experiments showed that overexpression can enhance yeast's to Co, but not Zn, Ni or higher accumulation Co observed compared empty vector-transformed yeast...

10.16476/j.pibb.2018.0242 article EN 2018-12-20
Coming Soon ...