66 research outputs found

    Mitochondrial Glycerol-3-phosphate Acyltransferase-1 Is Essential in Liver for the Metabolism of Excess Acyl-CoAs

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    In vitro studies suggest that the mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase-1 (mtGPAT1) isoform catalyzes the initial and rate-controlling step in glycerolipid synthesis and aids in partitioning acyl-CoAs toward triacylglycerol synthesis and away from degradative pathways. To determine whether the absence of mtGPAT1 would increase oxidation of acyl-CoAs and restrict the development of hepatic steatosis, we fed wild type and mtGPAT1-/- mice a diet high in fat and sucrose (HH) for 4 months to induce the development of obesity and a fatty liver. Control mice were fed a diet low in fat and sucrose (LL). With the HH diet, absence of mtGPAT1 resulted in increased partitioning of acyl-CoAs toward oxidative pathways, demonstrated by 60% lower hepatic triacylglycerol content and 2-fold increases in plasma beta-hydroxybutyrate, acylcarnitines, and hepatic mRNA expression of mitochondrial HMG-CoA synthase. Despite the increase in fatty acid oxidation, liver acyl-CoA levels were 3-fold higher in the mtGPAT1-/- mice fed both diets. A lack of difference in CPT1 and FAS mRNA expression between genotypes suggested that the increased acyl-CoA content was not because of increased de novo synthesis, but instead, to an impaired ability to use long-chain acyl-CoAs derived from the diet, even when the dietary fat content was low. Hyperinsulinemia and reduced glucose tolerance on the HH diet was greater in the mtGPAT1-/- mice, which did not suppress the expression of the gluconeogenic genes glucose-6-phosphatase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase. This study demonstrates that mtGPAT1 is essential for normal acyl-CoA metabolism, and that the absence of hepatic mtGPAT1 results in the partitioning of fatty acids away from triacylglycerol synthesis and toward oxidation and ketogenesis

    Bodyweight Perceptions among Texas Women: The Effects of Religion, Race/Ethnicity, and Citizenship Status

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    Despite previous work exploring linkages between religious participation and health, little research has looked at the role of religion in affecting bodyweight perceptions. Using the theoretical model developed by Levin et al. (Sociol Q 36(1):157–173, 1995) on the multidimensionality of religious participation, we develop several hypotheses and test them by using data from the 2004 Survey of Texas Adults. We estimate multinomial logistic regression models to determine the relative risk of women perceiving themselves as overweight. Results indicate that religious attendance lowers risk of women perceiving themselves as very overweight. Citizenship status was an important factor for Latinas, with noncitizens being less likely to see themselves as overweight. We also test interaction effects between religion and race. Religious attendance and prayer have a moderating effect among Latina non-citizens so that among these women, attendance and prayer intensify perceptions of feeling less overweight when compared to their white counterparts. Among African American women, the effect of increased church attendance leads to perceptions of being overweight. Prayer is also a correlate of overweight perceptions but only among African American women. We close with a discussion that highlights key implications from our findings, note study limitations, and several promising avenues for future research

    Alternative Splicing in the Differentiation of Human Embryonic Stem Cells into Cardiac Precursors

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    The role of alternative splicing in self-renewal, pluripotency and tissue lineage specification of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) is largely unknown. To better define these regulatory cues, we modified the H9 hESC line to allow selection of pluripotent hESCs by neomycin resistance and cardiac progenitors by puromycin resistance. Exon-level microarray expression data from undifferentiated hESCs and cardiac and neural precursors were used to identify splice isoforms with cardiac-restricted or common cardiac/neural differentiation expression patterns. Splice events for these groups corresponded to the pathways of cytoskeletal remodeling, RNA splicing, muscle specification, and cell cycle checkpoint control as well as genes with serine/threonine kinase and helicase activity. Using a new program named AltAnalyze (http://www.AltAnalyze.org), we identified novel changes in protein domain and microRNA binding site architecture that were predicted to affect protein function and expression. These included an enrichment of splice isoforms that oppose cell-cycle arrest in hESCs and that promote calcium signaling and cardiac development in cardiac precursors. By combining genome-wide predictions of alternative splicing with new functional annotations, our data suggest potential mechanisms that may influence lineage commitment and hESC maintenance at the level of specific splice isoforms and microRNA regulation

    Fourteen Recommendations to Create a More Inclusive Environment for LGBTQ+ Individuals in Academic Biology

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    Individuals who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, and otherwise non-straight and/or non-cisgender (LGBTQ+) have often not felt welcome or represented in the biology community. Additionally, biology can present unique challenges for LGBTQ+ students because of the relationship between certain biology topics and their LGBTQ+ identities. Currently, there is no centralized set of guidelines to make biology learning environments more inclusive for LGBTQ+ individuals. Rooted in prior literature and the collective expertise of the authors who identify as members and allies of the LGBTQ+ community, we present a set of actionable recommendations to help biologists, biology educators, and biology education researchers be more inclusive of individuals with LGBTQ+ identities. These recommendations are intended to increase awareness of LGBTQ+ identities and spark conversations about transforming biology learning spaces and the broader academic biology community to become more inclusive of LGBTQ+ individuals

    Accounting for Extreme Events in the Economic Assessment of Climate Change

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