Xiaofei Zhang
· Assistant ProfessorUniversity of California, Davis · Plant Biology
Active 2001–2024
About
Xiaofei Zhang is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Plant Sciences at UC Davis, specializing in the genetics and breeding of small grains crops. Her research focuses on designing crops that adapt to environmental stresses such as disease pressure, limited water, and changing farming practices. She works with crops including bread wheat, durum wheat, barley, oat, and triticale, utilizing multi-environment field trials, genetics and genomics, and high-throughput phenotyping to improve small grains. Her goals include developing varieties that produce reliable yields and high quality under environmental stress, while meeting the needs of farmers, processors, and consumers. Her research encompasses improving grain quality and human health by studying the genetic control of grain composition, moving useful genetics into the field more efficiently through genomic selection and speed breeding, and developing stable disease resistance across genetic backgrounds, particularly focusing on stripe rust. She also works on yield stability under low-input and stress conditions by developing novel semidwarfing genes and reintroducing useful diversity from landraces to enhance stress tolerance and yield stability. Xiaofei Zhang holds a Ph.D. in Plant Breeding from the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences and a B.S. in Agronomy from Shenyang Agricultural University.
Research topics
- Biology
- Genetics
- Neuroscience
- Cell biology
- Biophysics
- Electronic engineering
- Engineering
- Optics
- Anatomy
- Physics
- Endocrinology
- Nanotechnology
- Materials science
Selected publications
Stem Cell Research · 2020 · 37 citations
- Biology
- Cell biology
- Anatomy
Directed cardiomyogenesis from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) has been greatly improved in the last decade but directed differentiation to pacemaking cardiomyocytes (CMs) remains incompletely understood. In this study, we demonstrated that inhibition of NODAL signaling by a specific NODAL inhibitor (SB431542) in the cardiac mesoderm differentiation stage downregulated PITX2c, a transcription factor that is known to inhibit the formation of the sinoatrial node in the left atrium during cardiac development. The resulting hiPSC-CMs were smaller in cell size, expressed higher pro-pacemaking transcription factors, TBX3 and TBX18, and exhibited pacemaking-like electrophysiological characteristics compared to control hiPSC-CMs differentiated from established Wnt-based protocol. The pacemaker-like subtype increased up to 2.4-fold in hiPSC-CMs differentiated with the addition of SB431542 relative to the control. Hence, Nodal inhibition in the cardiac mesoderm stage promoted pacemaker-like CM differentiation from hiPSCs. Improving the yield of human pacemaker-like CMs is a critical first step in the development of functional human cell-based biopacemakers.
Science Advances · 2020 · 35 citations
- Biophysics
- Physics
- Materials science
7.4 gating provides OHCs with a feedback mechanism that enables the cochlea to overcome viscous drag and resolve sounds at auditory frequencies.
Recent grants
NIH · $393k · 2021
NIH · $43.4M · 2016
Frequent coauthors
- 76 shared
Nipavan Chiamvimonvat
University of California, Davis
- 50 shared
Luigi Di Biase
Montefiore Medical Center
- 36 shared
Phung N. Thai
University of California, Davis
- 33 shared
Andrea Natale
St David's Medical Center
- 32 shared
Valeriy Timofeyev
University of California, Davis
- 31 shared
Lu Ren
Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University
- 30 shared
Ebenezer N. Yamoah
University of Nevada, Reno
- 26 shared
Domenico G. Della Rocca
St David's Medical Center
Education
- 2010
Ph.D.
Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology Chinese Academy of Sciences
- 2004
BS, Agronomy
Shenyang Agricultural University
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