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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: leslie stein + stein@monell.org 267-519-4707 + contact  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/5/2008)

Softball Earns Third Seed in SEC Tournament, 9-0
LSUSports.net, LA -
With one out, Shannon Stein singled up the middle. Rachel Mitchell followed suit with a single to right field. After the first pitch to Quinlan Duhon, ...
Lake-Sumter Community College graduates, Class of 2008
Orlando Sentinel, FL - May 3, 2008
... Laura Cole Hasty, Altoona; Allison Zeller Hatcher, Umatilla; Leslie Michelle Haynes, Astatula; Robert Edgar Henzmann III, Clermont; Arisley Herrera, ...
Sense of Style: Smart wardrobe choices ease the load when traveling.
commercialappeal.com (subscription), TN - Apr 26, 2008
Our model is Leslie Gattuso of Colors Agency, Inc. All clothes are from Stein Mart. Fashion editor Barbara Bradley can be reached at 529-2370 or ...
At The Movies 05.02.08
Abilene Reporter-News, TX - May 1, 2008
HH "EXPELLED: NO INTELLIGENCE ALLOWED" (Premiere 10) Writer/actor Ben Stein examines the question of intelligent design. Documentary with Ben Stein. ...
Showing at local galleries
Deseret News, UT - May 3, 2008
Wind sculptures by Lyman Whitaker. Zion Natural History Museum (Zion National Park) ? Watercolors and macro photographs by Joy Stein through May 5.
Technology CEO Donates Video Education Device
PR Web (press release), WA - May 1, 2008
Salandro, president and CEO of IRIS Technologies in Greensburg, and his wife, Leslie, recently donated to IUP the end result of that research, a Landro play ...
NMU track team opens GLIAC meet
Marquette Mining Journal, MI - May 2, 2008
Leslie Luehmann, of Ishpeming, jumped 16-feet-7?-inches to take ninth place in the long jump in front of St. Onge. Natalie Bertucci (Ishpeming), claimed ...
Flunk This Movie!
Reason Online, CA - Apr 16, 2008
This idea was suggested by biologists Francis Crick and Leslie Orgel back in the 1970s. In the film, Stein acts like this a great "gotcha" and is the ...
Capsule reviews for films in theaters week of May 2
Sun-Sentinel.com, FL - May 1, 2008
Leslie Felperin, Variety (NR) College Road Trip ? Martin Lawrence and Raven-Symon? team up as a cop father and precocious daughter who have myriad ...
Show your true colors
FayObserver.com, NC - Apr 21, 2008
?All those pop-art prints are back,? says Nancy Alderman, director of product development for Stein Mart Inc. ?It all plays into your story on color and how ...
Source: Google News

Peptides and the control of meal size -
SC Woods, DB West, LJ Stein, LD McKay, EC Lotter, … - Diabetologia, 1981 - Springer
Summary. There are now a large number of experi- ments demonstrating that
peripheral administration of exogenous cholecystokinin or its synthetic analo-
gue, CCK-8, reduces meal size in a number of species. The peptide interacts ...

[BOOK] The Japanese economy
V Argy, L Stein - 1997 - New York: New York University Press

Effects of repeated exposure and health-related information on hedonic evaluation and acceptance of … -
LJ Stein, H Nagai, M Nakagawa, GK Beauchamp - Appetite, 2003 - Elsevier
The influence of exposure and information on sensory evaluation and acceptance
of bitter flavor was assessed. Following sensory testing in the laboratory,
subjects consumed a commercially-available bittersweet beverage once daily ...

Increased Liking for Salty Foods in Adolescents Exposed During Infancy to a Chloride-Deficient … -
LJ STEIN, BJ COWART, AN EPSTEIN, LJ PILOT, CR … - Appetite, 1996 - Elsevier
... Formula LESLIE J. STEIN and BEVERLY J. COWART Monell Chemical Senses
Center ALAN N. EPSTEIN Department of Biology and Mahoney Institute of
Neurological Sciences, University of Pennsylvania LYNNE ...

Crystal structure of ovalbumin as a model for the reactive centre of serpins -
PE Stein, AGW Leslie, JT Finch, WG Turnell, PJ … - Nature, 1990 - palgrave-journals.com
Linderstr?m-Lang, K. & Ottesen, M. Cr Trav. Lab. Carlsberg 26, 403-442
(1949). ... Wright, HT J. biol. Chem. 259, 14335-14336 (l984). ... Warner,
RC in The Proteins Vol. 2a (eds Neurath, H. & Bailey, K.) 435-485 ...

Crystal structure of uncleaved ovalbumin at 1.95 A resolution. -
PE Stein, AG Leslie, JT Finch, RW Carrell - J Mol Biol, 1991 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Ovalbumin, the major protein in avian egg-white, is a non-inhibitory member of
the serine protease inhibitor (serpin) superfamily. The crystal structure of
uncleaved, hen ovalbumin was solved by the molecular replacement method ...

Spatially restricted expression of pipe in the Drosophila egg chamber defines embryonic dorsal- … -
J Sen, JS Goltz, L Stevens, D Stein - Cell, 1998 - cell.com
Expression of pipe in the somatic tissue of the Drosophila ovary is required for
the formation of embryonic dorsal?ventral polarity. pipe, which encodes an
enzyme similar to the glycosaminoglycan-modifying enzyme heparan sulfate ...

Identification and Functional Characterization of a New CYP2C9 Variant (CYP2C9* 5) Expressed among … -
… , RB Kim, AJJ Wood, CM Stein, GR Wilkinson, UI … - Molecular Pharmacology, 2001 - ASPET
CYP2C9 is a polymorphic gene for which there are four known allelic variants;
CYP2C9*1, CYP2C9*2, CYP2C9*3, and CYP2C9*4. In the present study, DNA from 140
European Americans and 120 African Americans was examined by single-strand ...

[CITATION] Identity Formation in the Adopted Adolescent
JL Hoopes, LA Stein - New York: Child Welfare League of America, 1985

Hepatitis C Virus Seroconversion among Young Injection Drug Users: Relationships and Risks -
… -Shafer, PJ Lum, P Bourgois, E Stein, JL Evans, MP … - The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 2002 - UChicago Press
By Email (NOTE: You must be logged in.) ... ? 2002 by the Infectious Diseases
Society of America. All rights reserved. ... Received 2 May 2002; revised 6
August 2002; electronically published 4 November 2002.

Source: Google Scholar

Contact: Leslie Stein
stein@monell.org
267-519-4707
Monell Chemical Senses Center

Monell researchers find metabolic defect in liver that can lead to obesity

Study opens door to development of new obesity drugs

Philadelphia (July 24, 2007) -- Researchers at the Monell Chemical Senses Center have identified a genetically-transmitted metabolic defect that can lead to obesity in some individuals. The defect involves decreased production of liver enzymes needed to burn fat and may help to explain why some people become obese while others remain thin.

The global obesity epidemic is thought to be caused in part by the increased availability and intake of high calorie foods rich in fat and carbohydrates. These foods promote weight gain in humans and other animals, leading to a diet-induced obesity. The propensity to gain weight and become obese when consuming a high-fat diet is at least partially controlled by genes.

“Results of this study help explain the interaction between genes and diet that underlies diet-induced obesity,” comments senior author Mark Friedman. “They also point to a way to identify individuals at risk for dietary obesity, perhaps even during childhood before the development of unhealthy eating habits.”

The current study, published in the August issue of Metabolism, demonstrates that genetic susceptibility to diet-induced obesity is due to a reduced capacity to burn fat.

Fat is one of the fuels that the body’s cells burn to provide energy. This process, known as fat oxidation, takes place inside mitochondria, the cell’s power plants for generating energy.

If the ability to oxidize fat is impaired, the body’s capacity to make energy is reduced. This leads to increased hunger and overeating, as the body tries to increase the amount of energy available to meet its needs.

When the diet is low in fat, a reduced ability to burn fat has relatively little impact on energy production. However, if fat oxidation is impaired and the diet is high in fat, a greater proportion of calories cannot be used and food intake increases to cover the energy deficit. Because fat fuels are stored in fat tissue when they’re not oxidized, the increased food intake causes weight gain.

To determine whether preexisting differences in fat oxidation might contribute to individual susceptibility to diet-induced obesity, Friedman and lead author Hong Ji used rats that differ in their genetic predisposition to gain weight and become obese when fed a high-fat diet.

The closely-related strains weigh the same and eat the same amount of calories when fed a low-fat diet. However, when switched to a high-fat diet, the strain that is obesity-prone overeats and becomes obese, while the obesity-resistant strain does not.

The researchers found that even when eating a low-fat diet and still lean, the obesity-prone rats were less able to burn fat than were the obesity-resistant rats. This intrinsic deficit in fat oxidation was associated with a decrease in the capacity to make two liver enzymes. One, CD36, is responsible for transferring fat fuels into liver cells, while the second enzyme, acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase, begins the oxidation process in mitochondria.

When fed a high-fat diet, the obesity-prone rats overate and became obese, gaining 36% more weight than resistant animals. Fat oxidation was further compromised due to a decreased ability to make CPT1A, the liver enzyme responsible for transporting fat into mitochondria.

“The inherited propensity to gain weight when eating a high-fat diet appears to be due to a preexisting limit on the ability to burn fat in the liver. This defect persists during the development of obesity and is then further compounded by additional deficits in the fat oxidizing machinery,” comments Friedman.

Other studies in Friedman’s laboratory have demonstrated that a decrease in fat oxidation and energy production in the liver generates a signal that stimulates eating. Experiments in his and other laboratories have also found that treatments that increase fat oxidation reduce food intake and cause weight loss in obese rodents.

With this in mind, Friedman notes, “The present findings point to fat oxidation in the liver as a target for the development of drugs that suppress appetite and promote weight loss in obese individuals.”

Future studies will guide development of such interventions by examining more closely the function and activity of the target enzymes.

###

The Monell Chemical Senses Center is a nonprofit basic research institute based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. For 39 years, Monell has been the nation’s leading research center focused on understanding the senses of smell, taste and chemical irritation: how they function and affect lives from before birth through old age. Using a multidisciplinary approach, scientists collaborate in the areas of: sensation and perception, neuroscience and molecular biology, environmental and occupational health, nutrition and appetite, health and well being, and chemical ecology and communication. For more information about Monell, please visit www.monell.org.

CITATION: Ji, H. and Friedman, M.I. Reduced capacity for fatty acid oxidation in rats with inherited susceptibility to diet-induced obesity. Metabolism, 2007, 56, 1124-30.

 
 
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