95 research outputs found

    Evidence of a metabolic memory to early-life dietary restriction in male C57BL/6 mice

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    <p>Background: Dietary restriction (DR) extends lifespan and induces beneficial metabolic effects in many animals. What is far less clear is whether animals retain a metabolic memory to previous DR exposure, that is, can early-life DR preserve beneficial metabolic effects later in life even after the resumption of ad libitum (AL) feeding. We examined a range of metabolic parameters (body mass, body composition (lean and fat mass), glucose tolerance, fed blood glucose, fasting plasma insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), insulin sensitivity) in male C57BL/6 mice dietary switched from DR to AL (DR-AL) at 11 months of age (mid life). The converse switch (AL-DR) was also undertaken at this time. We then compared metabolic parameters of the switched mice to one another and to age-matched mice maintained exclusively on an AL or DR diet from early life (3 months of age) at 1 month, 6 months or 10 months post switch.</p> <p>Results: Male mice dietary switched from AL-DR in mid life adopted the metabolic phenotype of mice exposed to DR from early life, so by the 10-month timepoint the AL-DR mice overlapped significantly with the DR mice in terms of their metabolic phenotype. Those animals switched from DR-AL in mid life showed clear evidence of a glycemic memory, with significantly improved glucose tolerance relative to mice maintained exclusively on AL feeding from early life. This difference in glucose tolerance was still apparent 10 months after the dietary switch, despite body mass, fasting insulin levels and insulin sensitivity all being similar to AL mice at this time.</p> <p>Conclusions: Male C57BL/6 mice retain a long-term glycemic memory of early-life DR, in that glucose tolerance is enhanced in mice switched from DR-AL in mid life, relative to AL mice, even 10 months following the dietary switch. These data therefore indicate that the phenotypic benefits of DR are not completely dissipated following a return to AL feeding. The challenge now is to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying these effects, the time course of these effects and whether similar interventions can confer comparable benefits in humans.</p&gt

    Multivariate paired data analysis: multilevel PLSDA versus OPLSDA

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    Metabolomics data obtained from (human) nutritional intervention studies can have a rather complex structure that depends on the underlying experimental design. In this paper we discuss the complex structure in data caused by a cross-over designed experiment. In such a design, each subject in the study population acts as his or her own control and makes the data paired. For a single univariate response a paired t-test or repeated measures ANOVA can be used to test the differences between the paired observations. The same principle holds for multivariate data. In the current paper we compare a method that exploits the paired data structure in cross-over multivariate data (multilevel PLSDA) with a method that is often used by default but that ignores the paired structure (OPLSDA). The results from both methods have been evaluated in a small simulated example as well as in a genuine data set from a cross-over designed nutritional metabolomics study. It is shown that exploiting the paired data structure underlying the cross-over design considerably improves the power and the interpretability of the multivariate solution. Furthermore, the multilevel approach provides complementary information about (I) the diversity and abundance of the treatment effects within the different (subsets of) subjects across the study population, and (II) the intrinsic differences between these study subjects

    Prenatal exposures and exposomics of asthma

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    This review examines the causal investigation of preclinical development of childhood asthma using exposomic tools. We examine the current state of knowledge regarding early-life exposure to non-biogenic indoor air pollution and the developmental modulation of the immune system. We examine how metabolomics technologies could aid not only in the biomarker identification of a particular asthma phenotype, but also the mechanisms underlying the immunopathologic process. Within such a framework, we propose alternate components of exposomic investigation of asthma in which, the exposome represents a reiterative investigative process of targeted biomarker identification, validation through computational systems biology and physical sampling of environmental medi

    A PLL-based frequency synthesizer for 160-MHz double-sampled SC filters

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    This paper describes a clock generator for a double-sampled switched capacitor (SC) filtering system. The circuit is based on a fast charge-pump phase-locked loop (PLL) system that multiplies an external reference clock signal by a factor of eight and also ensures a high precision and stability of two internal nonoverlapped clock phases up to 80 MHz. This allows the driving of double-sampled SC filters up to 160 MHz sampling rate. The PLL is a third-order system with a bandwidth of 100 kHz and a lock-in time of 15 μs. The output clock jitter is 170 ps r.m.s. The total power consumption at 160 MHz is 25 mW and the total chip area is about 1 mm

    Method for erasing a common mode current signal and transconductor assembly using such method

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    A low-voltage transconductor circuit in which the common mode gain of a first transconductor stage is compensated by a second transconductor stage (connected in parallel with the first transconductor stage) which has no differential mode transconductance, and which is connected so that its common mode transconductance offsets the common mode transconductance of the stage. This greatly reduces the common mode current signal at the output, while avoiding the necessity for a current sink at the source of the input transistors

    Transconductor circuit with high-linearity double input and active filter thereof

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    The invention relates to a transconductor circuit with a double input and a single output, comprising two input transistors (M1, M2) whose primary conduction terminals (D1, S1, D2, S2) are respectively connected together; in this way, variations in load current and voltage can be made lower, thereby also lowering distortion from changes in their transconductance
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