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The Good, The Brown, And The Healthy: Understanding Non-Thermogenic Brown Adipose Function In Obese Mice, Caryn Nicole Carson
The Good, The Brown, And The Healthy: Understanding Non-Thermogenic Brown Adipose Function In Obese Mice, Caryn Nicole Carson
Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Genetic and environmental factors heavily intertwine to affect metabolic homeostasis. To tease out the exact interactions between these two realms of influence, researchers often compare how one or multiple different inbred mouse strains react to various diets. An observation consistently seen across multiple strains on the same diet can reasonably be considered a general dietary effect, whereas an observation seen only in one strain of mice is more likely to result from a genetic cause or gene-by-environment interaction. Similarly to humans, a high fat diet causes many mouse strains to develop obesity and poor metabolic health, with varying degrees of …