Publications
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Now showing items 4621-4640 of 5385 records
Role of IL-6 in exercise training- and cold-induced UCP1 expression in subcutaneous white adipose tissue
Murholm, M; Allen, TL; Febbraio, MA; Carey, AL; Hansen, JB; Biensø, RS; Hidalgo, J; Basse, AL; Knudsen, JG; Kingwell, BA; Pilegaard, H
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2014
Expression of brown adipose tissue (BAT) associated proteins like uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) in inguinal WAT (iWAT) has been suggested to alter iWAT metabolism. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of interleukin-6 (IL-6) in exercise training and cold exposure-induced iWAT UCP1 expression. The effect of daily intraperitoneal injections of IL-6 (3 ng/g) in C57BL/6 mice for 7 days o...
Methylation of the SLC6a2 gene promoter in major depression and panic disorder
Lambert, G; Barton, D; Baker, EK; El-Osta, A; Jowett, JB; Bayles, R; Esler, M
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
Reduced function of the noradrenaline transporter (NET) has been demonstrated in patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) and panic disorder. Attempts to explain NET dysfunction in MDD and panic disorder by genetic variation in the NET gene SLC6a2 have been inconclusive. Transcriptional silencing of the SLC6a2 gene may be an alternative mechanism which can lead to NET dysfunction independe...
Cardiometabolic risk indicators that distinguish adults with psychosis from the general population, by age and gender
Shaw, JE; Waterreus, A; Foley, DL; Magliano, DJ; Galletly, CA; McGrath, JJ; Watts, GF; Morgan, VA; Mackinnon, A; Castle, DJ
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
Individuals with psychosis are more likely than the general community to develop obesity and to die prematurely from heart disease. Interventions to improve cardiovascular outcomes are best targeted at the earliest indicators of risk, at the age they first emerge. We investigated which cardiometabolic risk indicators distinguished those with psychosis from the general population, by age by gend...
The effects of exercise training in addition to energy restriction on functional capacities and body composition in obese adults during weight loss: a systematic review
Reynolds, J; Levinger, I; Selig, SE; Fraser, SF; Miller, CT; Dixon, JB; Straznicky, NE
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
Withdrawal of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) may not be necessary for the precipitous fall of peripheral arterial resistance and arterial pressure (AP) during vasovagal syncope (VVS). We tested the hypothesis that the MSNA-AP baroreflex entrainment is disrupted before VVS regardless of MSNA withdrawal using the phase synchronization between blood pressure and MSNA during head-up tilt ...
High morbidity during treatment and residual pulmonary disability in pulmonary tuberculosis: under-recognised phenomena
Ralph, AP; Pontororing, GJ; Sandjaja; Kenangalem, E; Kelly, PM; Anstey, NM; Waramori, G; Tjitra, E; Maguire, GP
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
BACKGROUND: In pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB), morbidity during treatment and residual pulmonary disability can be under-estimated. METHODS: Among adults with smear-positive PTB at an outpatient clinic in Papua, Indonesia, we assessed morbidity at baseline and during treatment, and 6-month residual disability, by measuring functional capacity (six-minute walk test [6MWT] and pulmonary function...
Effect of oxygen on cardiac differentiation in mouse iPS cells: role of hypoxia inducible factor-1 and Wnt/beta-catenin signaling
Williams, D; Furtado, M; Lam, NT; Verma, PJ; Costa, M; Medley, TL; Kaye, DM; Idrizi, R
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
BACKGROUND: Disturbances in oxygen levels have been found to impair cardiac organogenesis. It is known that stem cells and differentiating cells may respond variably to hypoxic conditions, whereby hypoxia may enhance stem cell pluripotency, while differentiation of multiple cell types can be restricted or enhanced under hypoxia. Here we examined whether HIF-1alpha modulated Wnt signaling affec...
Does an 'activity-permissive' workplace change office workers' sitting and activity time?
McKay, HA; Gorman, E; Winkler, EA; Hanson, HM; Dunstan, DW; Ashe, MC; Healy, GN; Madden, K
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
INTRODUCTION: To describe changes in workplace physical activity, and health-, and work-related outcomes, in workers who transitioned from a conventional to an 'activity-permissive' workplace. METHODS: A natural pre-post experiment conducted in Vancouver, Canada in 2011. A convenience sample of office-based workers (n=24, 75% women, mean [SD] age = 34.5 [8.1] years) were examined four months...
Inclusion of plasma lipid species improves classification of individuals at risk of type 2 diabetes
Weir, JM; Shaw, J; Magliano, DJ; Zimmet, P; Meikle, PJ; Wong, G; Jowett, JB; Barlow, CK
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
BACKGROUND: A significant proportion of individuals with diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance have fasting plasma glucose less than 6.1 mmol/L and so are not identified with fasting plasma glucose measurements. In this study, we sought to evaluate the utility of plasma lipids to improve on fasting plasma glucose and other standard risk factors for the identification of type 2 diabetes or tho...
Pro-inflammatory action of MIF in acute myocardial infarction via activation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells
Chan, W; Du, XJ; White, DA; Morand, EF; Dart, AM; Fang, L; Gao, XM; Duffy, SJ; Taylor, AJ; Kiriazis, H
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
OBJECTIVES: Macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), a pro-inflammatory cytokine, has been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple inflammatory disorders. We determined changes in circulating MIF levels, explored the cellular source of MIF, and studied the role of MIF in mediating inflammatory responses following acute myocardial infarction (MI). METHODS AND RESULTS: We recruited 15 ...
Tuberculosis outcomes in Papua, Indonesia: the relationship with different body mass index characteristics between Papuan and non-Papuan ethnic groups
Ralph, AP; Pontororing, GJ; Sandjaja; Kenangalem, E; Kelly, PM; Anstey, NM; Maguire, G; Waramori, G; Tjitra, E
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
Weight gain achieved during pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) treatment is associated with the likelihood of bacteriological treatment success. It is recognised that weight and body mass index (BMI) characteristics differ between ethnic groups in health and illness states. However there has been no prior investigation of how ethnic differences in BMI might influence tuberculosis treatment outcome. O...
The business case for bariatric surgery revisited: a non-randomized case-control study
Finkelstein, EA; Globe, D; Dixon, JB; Allaire, BT
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Prior studies reporting that bariatric surgery (including laparoscopic adjustable gastric band (LAGB) and [laparoscopic Roux-en-Y] Gastric Bypass (LRYGB)) is cost-saving relied on a comparison sample of those with a morbid obesity (MO) diagnosis code, a high cost group who may not be reflective of those who opt for the procedures. We re-estimate net costs and time to breake...
Plasma lipid profiling shows similar associations with prediabetes and type 2 diabetes
Weir, JM; Kowalczyk, A; Wong, G; Grantham, N; Greeve, MA; Macintosh, GL; Meikle, PJ; Mahaney, MC; Zimmet, P; Blangero, J; Almasy, L; Curran, JE; Magliano, DJ; Haviv, I; Comuzzie, AG; Shaw, J; Jowett, JB; Barlow, CK
PLOS ONE - 17 Oct 2013
The relationship between lipid metabolism with prediabetes (impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose tolerance) and type 2 diabetes mellitus is poorly defined. We hypothesized that a lipidomic analysis of plasma lipids might improve the understanding of this relationship. We performed lipidomic analysis measuring 259 individual lipid species, including sphingolipids, phospholipids, glycero...
miR-206 represses hypertrophy of myogenic cells but not muscle fibers via inhibition of HDAC4
Winbanks, CE; Hagg, A; Qian, H; Beyer, C; Gregorevic, P; Sepulveda, PV
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
microRNAs regulate the development of myogenic progenitors, and the formation of skeletal muscle fibers. However, the role miRNAs play in controlling the growth and adaptation of post-mitotic musculature is less clear. Here, we show that inhibition of the established pro-myogenic regulator miR-206 can promote hypertrophy and increased protein synthesis in post-mitotic cells of the myogenic line...
Indirect estimation of the comparative treatment effect in pharmacogenomic subgroups
Pekarsky, BA; Coory, M; Sorich, MJ
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
Evidence of clinical utility is a key issue in translating pharmacogenomics into clinical practice. Appropriately designed randomized controlled trials generally provide the most robust evidence of the clinical utility, but often only data from a pharmacogenomic association study are available. This paper details a method for reframing the results of pharmacogenomic association studies in terms...
Light-intensity physical activity and cardiometabolic biomarkers in US adolescents
Owen, N; Carson, V; Winkler, EA; Howard, B; Salmon, J; Healy, GN; Ridgers, ND; Dunstan, DW
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
BACKGROUND: The minimal physical activity intensity that would confer health benefits among adolescents is unknown. The purpose of this study was to examine the associations of accelerometer-derived light-intensity (split into low and high) physical activity, and moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity with cardiometabolic biomarkers in a large population-based sample. METHODS: The...
L-arginine and vitamin D adjunctive therapies in pulmonary tuberculosis: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial
Pontororing, GJ; Kenangalem, E; Morris, PS; Price, RN; Maguire, GP; Tjitra, E; Anstey, NM; Lumb, R; Wiguna, A; Soemanto, RK; Waramori, G; Bastian, I; Kelly, PM; Yeo, TW; Sandjaja; Chatfield, MD; Lolong, DB; Ralph, AP; Eisman, J
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
BACKGROUND: Vitamin D (vitD) and L-arginine have important antimycobacterial effects in humans. Adjunctive therapy with these agents has the potential to improve outcomes in active tuberculosis (TB). METHODS: In a 4-arm randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled factorial trial in adults with smear-positive pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) in Timika, Indonesia, we tested the effect of oral adj...
An apolipoprotein A-I mimetic peptide designed with a reductionist approach stimulates reverse cholesterol transport and reduces atherosclerosis in mice
Sviridov, D; Kesani, R; D'Souza, W; Ditiatkovski, M; de Haan, JB; Chin-Dusting, J; Remaley, A
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
Apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I) mimetic peptides are considered a promising novel therapeutic approach to prevent and/or treat atherosclerosis. An apoA-I mimetic peptide ELK-2A2K2E was designed with a reductionist approach and has shown exceptional activity in supporting cholesterol efflux but modest anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant properties in vitro. In this study we compared these in vitro pr...
Downregulation of microRNA-130a contributes to endothelial progenitor cell dysfunction in diabetic patients via its target Runx3
Zhang, X; Meng, S; Fu, D; Fang, L; Li, Y; Cao, J; Lv, Z; Wang, C; Fan, Y
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
Dysfunction of endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) contributes to diabetic vascular disease. MicroRNAs (miRs) have emerged as key regulators of diverse cellular processes including angiogenesis. We recently reported that miR-126, miR-130a, miR-21, miR-27a, and miR-27b were downregulated in EPCs from type II diabetes mellitus (DM) patients, and downregulation of miR-126 impairs EPC function. The...
Women versus men with chronic atrial fibrillation: insights from the Standard versus Atrial Fibrillation spEcific managemenT studY (SAFETY)
Carrington, MJ; SAFETY Investigators; Wood, KA; Ball, J; Stewart, S
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
BACKGROUND: Gender-based clinical differences are increasingly being identified as having significant influence on the outcomes of patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD), including atrial fibrillation (AF). OBJECTIVE: To perform detailed clinical phenotyping on a cohort of hospitalised patients with chronic forms of AF to understand if gender-based differences exist in the clinical present...
Insulin-mediated activation of the L-arginine nitric oxide pathway in man, and its impairment in diabetes
Chong, AL; Rajapakse, NW; Zhang, WZ; Kaye, DM
PLOS ONE - 01 Jan 2013
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Impaired L-arginine transport has been reported in cardiovascular diseases, providing a possible mechanism for reduced nitric oxide (NO) production. Given that cardiovascular diseases are also associated with insulin resistance, and insulin is known to induce vasodilation via a NO-dependent pathway, we hypothesised that abnormal insulin modulation of L-arginine transport may co...
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