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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Oleic Acid Attenuates Palmitic Acid-Induced Impairments In Mouse Blastocyst Development, Maisoon Dafalla Yousif Jun 2019

Oleic Acid Attenuates Palmitic Acid-Induced Impairments In Mouse Blastocyst Development, Maisoon Dafalla Yousif

Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository

Palmitic acid (PA) and oleic acid (OA) are the most abundant saturated and monounsaturated non-esterified fatty acids, respectively, in serum. The consequences of PA and OA treatment on preimplantation mouse embryo development were investigated. It was hypothesized that OA treatment from the two-cell stage onwards would attenuate PA-induced reductions in mouse blastocyst development. PA significantly reduced development to the blastocyst stage. Transcript analysis revealed that PA increased ER stress pathway markers activating transcription factor 3 and C/EBP homologous protein transcripts, and XBP1 splicing. Co-culture of PA-treated embryos with OA prevented this PA-induced ER stress and rescued blastocyst development. Cytoplasmic lipid …


Adipose-Derived Autotaxin Regulates Inflammation And Steatosis Associated With Diet-Induced Obesity, J. Anthony Brandon, Maria Kraemer, Julia Vandra, Suchismita Halder, Margo F. Ubele, Andrew J. Morris, Susan S. Smyth Feb 2019

Adipose-Derived Autotaxin Regulates Inflammation And Steatosis Associated With Diet-Induced Obesity, J. Anthony Brandon, Maria Kraemer, Julia Vandra, Suchismita Halder, Margo F. Ubele, Andrew J. Morris, Susan S. Smyth

Gill Heart & Vascular Institute Faculty Publications

Autotaxin (ATX) is a secreted enzyme that generates the bioactive lipid lysophosphatidic acid (LPA). We generated mice with global inducible post-natal inactivation or adipose-specific loss of the Enpp2 gene encoding ATX. The animals are phenotypically unremarkable and exhibit differences in adipocyte size and adipose tissue expression of inflammatory genes after high fat feeding without gross differences in fat distribution or body mass. Surprisingly, both models of Enpp2- deficiency exhibited marked protection from high fat diet-induced hepatic steatosis. This phenotype was not associated with differences in dietary fat absorption but may be accounted for by differences in hepatic expression of …


Visceral Adipose Tissue Modulates Radiosensitivity In Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma, Ann Marie Mongan, Niamh Lynam-Lennon, Suzanne Doyle, Rory Casey, Eibhlin Carr, Aoife Cannon, Melissa J Conroy, Graham P Pidgeon, Lorraine Brennan, Joanne Lysaght, John V. Reynolds, Jacintha O’Sullivan Jan 2019

Visceral Adipose Tissue Modulates Radiosensitivity In Oesophageal Adenocarcinoma, Ann Marie Mongan, Niamh Lynam-Lennon, Suzanne Doyle, Rory Casey, Eibhlin Carr, Aoife Cannon, Melissa J Conroy, Graham P Pidgeon, Lorraine Brennan, Joanne Lysaght, John V. Reynolds, Jacintha O’Sullivan

Articles

Oesophageal adenocarcinoma (OAC) is an exemplar model of obesity-associated cancer. Response to neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (NA CRT) is a clinical challenge. We examined if visceral adipose tissue and obesity status alter radiosensitivity in OAC. The radioresistant (OE33R) and radioresponsive (OE33P) OAC isogenic model was cultured with adipose tissue conditioned media from three patient cohorts: non-cancer patients, surgery only OAC patients and NA CRT OAC patients. Cell survival was characterised by clonogenic assay, metabolomic profiling by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and adipokine receptor gene expression by qPCR. A retrospective in vivo study compared tumour response to NA CRT in normal weight (n=53) …