X-D. Wang. USDA at Tufts Univ. and São Paulo State Univ.,
Botucatu.
12:00
361.7
Linoleic acid suppresses cholesterol efflux and
ATP-binding cassette transporters in murine bone marrow-
derived macrophages.
N.L. Spartano, S. Lamon-Fava, N.R.
Matthan, M.S. Obin, A.S. Greenberg and A.H. Lichtenstein.
Tufts Univ., Boston.
12:15
361.8
Linking the pro-oxidant influences of
epigallocatechin gallate to intestinal cholesterol metabolism via
alterations in sirtuin 1 using Caco-2 cells.
C.J. Wegner, B. Kim,
Y. Yang, Y. Park, S.I. Koo and J. Lee. Univ. of Connecticut.
LAST DAY TO
VISIT EXHIBITS
Tuesday, April 23
9:00 AM – 4:00 PM
POSTER PRESENTERS:
UPLOAD YOUR POSTER
Where: E-Poster Counter, Sun. – Tue. Hall A; Wed. Hall C
Deadline: Tue., April 23, 5:00
pm
; Wed., April 24, 3:00
pm
Uploaded posters will be available online to all
registered attendees following the meeting at
www. experimentalbiology.org
NUTRITION TUESDAY
99
T
U
E
362. W.O. ATWATER MEMORIAL AWARD LECTURE
Keynote Lecture
(Sponsored by: U.S. Department of Agriculture)
t
ue
. 12:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
B
allroom
e
ast
12:45 How can we make diet relevant in the age of powerful
drugs?
D. J.A. Jenkins. Univ. of Toronto.
363. SWEETENED BEVERAGES AND HEALTH:
CURRENT STATE OF SCIENTIFIC
UNDERSTANDINGS
Symposium
(Supported by an educational grant from the Corn
Refiners Association)
(Sponsored by: Medical Nutrition Council)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
B
allroom
e
ast
C
haired
: e. s
altzman
C
oChaired
: J. m. r
ippe
Global and Public Health Nutrition
3:00 Sweetened beverages and obesity: separating
supposition, from demonstrated fact, from
misinformation.
D. Allison. Univ. of Alabama at
Birmingham.
3:24
Solid versus liquid calories. Their effects on appetite:
current understandings and putative mechanisms.
R. D. Mattes. Purdue Univ.
3:48 Metabolic consequences of consuming fructose,
glucose, high fructose corn syrup and sucrose.
K. Stanhope. Univ. of California, Davis.
4:12 Are sweetened beverages addictive? Emerging
understandings from functional MRI studies.
M. Alonso-Alonso. Harvard Med. Sch.
4:36 Metabolic and endocrine response and health
implications of consuming sweetened beverages:
findings from recent, randomized, controlled trials.
J. M. Rippe. Rippe Lifestyle Inst.
364. METABOLIC PROFILING IN NUTRITIONAL AND
METABOLIC DISORDERS
Symposium
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 157aBC
C
haired
: n. m
oustaiD
-m
oussa
C
oChaireD
: D. m. m
uoio
Biochemical, Molecular and Genetic Mechanisms
3:00 Metabolomic profiling in people with nutritionally
reluctant SNPs.
S. Zeisel. Univ. of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill.
3:30
Metabolomics and cardiovascular biomarker discovery.
R. E. Gerszten. Massachusetts Gen. Hosp., Harvard
Med. Sch. and Broad Inst. of Harvard and MIT.
4:00
Metabolic profiling of dietary n-3 PUFA effects in high
fat-fed mice.
N. Moustaid-Moussa. Texas Tech Unv.
4:30 Translating metabolomics signatures to metabolic
mechanisms.
D. M. Muoio. Duke Univ.
365. THE ROLE OF NUTRITIONAL RESEARCH IN
THE SUCCESS OF HUMAN SPACE FLIGHT
Symposium
(Sponsored by: History of Nutrition Committee)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 151aB
C
haired
: h. W l
ane
Education Track/Professional Development
Education
3:00 Nutrition research that led to current nutritional
standards for U.S. human space flight.
H. W. Lane.
NASA, Johnson Space Ctr.
3:30
History of the food technologies and systems for space
flight.
C. Bourland. NASA, ret.
4:00
The challenges of developing a food system for a Mars
mission.
G. Douglas. NASA, Johnson Space Ctr.
4:45
The role of nutrition research in the success of human
space flight.
S. M. Smith. NASA, Johnson Space Ctr.
366. NUTRITION WITHOUT BORDERS:
EPIDEMIOLOGIC METHODS IN EXAMINING
HEALTH DISPARITIES AND NUTRITION
OUTCOMES IN DIVERSE POPULATIONS
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 152
C
haired
: J. m
C
D
ermiD
C
oChaired
: l.m. t
roy
3:00
366.1
Lower levels of leptin and adiponectin
independent of body mass index in Japanese American
women: the multiethnic cohort.
G. Maskarinec, Y. Morimoto,
Y. Kim, U. Lim, R.V. Cooney, S.M. Conroy, A.A. Franke, L.R.
Wilkens, B.Y. Hernandez, M.T. Goodman, L. Le Marchand
and L.N. Kolonel. Univ. of Hawaii, Alberta Hlth. Svcs.-Cancer
Care, Calgary and Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr.
3:15
366.2
Leptin and lipids serum concentration on early
pregnancy and 2nd and 3rd trimester blood pressure levels: a
prospective cohort study in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
G. Kac, D.R.
Farias, A.B. Franco-Sena, T. de Jesus and J.S. Vaz. Rio de
Janeiro Fed. Univ.
3:30
366.3
Maternal BMI, weight gain during pregnancy,
gestational age and Filipino ethnicity are important predictors
of birth weight in a multiethnic population in Hawaii.
R. Novotny
and C.E.S. Oshiro. Univ. of Hawaii and Kaiser Permanente,
Honolulu.
3:45
366.4
Predictors of body mass index of Colombian
5 to 18 year old children.
I. Gonzalez-Casanova, O.L.
Sarmiento, M. Pratt and A. Stein. Emory Univ. and Univ. of
the Andes, Colombia.
TUESDAY NUTRITION
100
4:00
366.5
Usual nutrient intakes of infants and toddlers
in San Marcos, TX reflect regional differences in nutrition risk.
H.E.B. Thornton, S.H. Crixell, A.M. Reat, J.A. Von Bank and
B.J. Friedman. Texas State Univ.-San Marcos.
4:15
366.6
Socio-demographic and geographic variation
of overweight and obesity in Uganda.
M.J. Christoph, K.N.
Turi and D.S. Grigsby-Toussaint. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign.
4:30
366.7
Association of serum 25OHD with race/
ethnicity and quantitative measures of skin color in urban
schoolchildren.
L.E. Au, S.S. Harris, J.T. Dwyer, P.F. Jacques
and J.M. Sacheck. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy and
USDA at Tufts Univ.
4:45
366.8
Association of food intake with prostate cancer
aggressiveness of African and Caucasian Americans in a
population-based study.
T.M. Vance, Y. Wang, L.J. Su, E.T.H.
Fontham, J.T. Bensen, J.L. Mohler, M-H. Chen and O.K.
Chun. Univ. of Connecticut, NCI, NIH, LSU Sch. of Publ. Hlth.,
Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Roswell Park Cancer
Inst.
367. NUTRITION EDUCATION
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Education RIS)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153a
C
haired
: J. D
ollahite
C
oChaired
: K. C
hapman
-n
ovaKoFsKi
3:00
367.1
Impact of computer-mediated nutrition
education interventions in adolescents: a systematic review.
W.
Ajie and K. Chapman-Novakofski. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana.
3:15
367.2
The effect of menu labels, displaying minutes of
brisk walking needed to burn food calories, on calories ordered
and consumed in young adults.
A. James, B. Adams-Huet, K.
Crisp, J. Mitchell, L. Dart, M. Turner, M. Kasper, J. Bowman,
S. Joeckel, N. Toomey, H. Heefner, E. Blasco and M. Shah.
Texas Christian Univ. and Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med.
Ctr.
3:30
367.3
Family meal behaviors and cognitions among
parents of preschoolers.
J. Martin-Biggers, N. Hongu, J.
Worobey and C. Byrd-Bredbenner. Rutgers, The State Univ.
of New Jersey and Univ. of Arizona.
3:45
367.4
Relationship between psychosocial indicators
and adoption of farm and garden activities and local produce
in early childcare.
C. Wickham, N.L. Cohen and C. Violette.
Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and Univ. of New Hampshire.
4:00
367.5
iCook: use of an online process evaluation
to facilitate quality control of a 5-state 4-H program.
D.R.
Mathews, K. Yerxa, L. Franzen-Castle, M. Krehbiel, S. Colby,
R. Meade, K. Kattelmann, C. Kabala, M. Olfert, S. Flanagan
and A.A. White. Univ. of Maine, Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln,
Scottsbluff, Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, South Dakota State
Univ. and West Virginia Univ.
4:15
367.6
Creating student alliances in nutrition medicine
education.
A.M. Hernandez, C. Schoettler, S. Feldman, K.
Peace, C. Smith-Lin, J. Campbell, C. Johnson, J. Redshaw,
A. Stamm, J. Oldfield, N. Mildenhall, K. Ireland, C. Lenders,
C. Lo and E. Saltzman. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med., Boston Univ.
Sch. of Med., Harvard Med. Sch., Boston Med. Ctr., Harvard
Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Tufts Med. Ctr.
4:30
367.7
Assessing the utility of a network-based
curriculum search application (KnowledgeMap) for evaluating
nutrition content in a medical school’s pre-clinical curriculum.
D.S. Seres, J.S. Bogart, B.F. Richards, A.G. Goglia, S.M.J.
Peever and J.R. Marr. Columbia Univ. Col. of P&S, Inst. of
Human Nutr., Med. Ctr. and Teacher’s Col.
4:45
367.8
Evaluation of a novel method for quantifying
nutrition content in medical student patient write-ups.
D.S.
Seres, J.S. Bogart, A.G. Goglia, S.M.J. Peever and J.R.
Marr. Columbia Univ. Col. of P&S, Inst. of Human Nutr., Med.
Ctr. and Teacher’s Col.
368. NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS FOR RISK
FACTOR MODIFICATION IN CHRONIC DISEASE
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Aging and Chronic Disease RIS)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153B
C
haired
: C.W. B
ales
C
oChaired
: C. s
Ceppa
3:00
368.1
Beneficial effects of green tea consumption in
Parkinson’s disease patients.
D. Chen, K. Lyons, R. Pahwa,
Y. Zhou and M. Reddy. Iowa State Univ. and Univ. of Kansas
Med. Ctr.
3:15
368.2
Influence of long-term exercise training
followed by a diet/exercise weight-loss intervention on body
composition and metabolic variables in subjects with pre-
diabetes.
K.N. Starr, E.O. Granville, C.I. Ocampo, C.A. Slentz,
L.A. Bateman, L.H. Willis, S.B. Rose, W.E. Kraus and C.W.
Bales. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr. and Durham VA Med. Ctr.
3:30
368.3
Serum and dietary advanced glycation end
products in patients with diabetic foot ulcers.
H.M. Maier, M.T.
Spicer and B.H. Arjmandi. Florida State Univ.
3:45
368.4
Effect of pistachios on lipids, lipoproteins,
glucose metabolism, and insulin sensitivity in type 2 diabetes.
K.A. Sauder, C.E. McCrea, P.M. Kris-Etherton, J.S. Ulbrecht
and S.G. West. Penn State.
4:00
368.5
Effect of nuts on coronary heart disease risk
factors in type 2 diabetes.
C.W.C. Kendall, L.S.A. Augustin,
B. Bashyam, S. Nishi and D.J.A. Jenkins. Univ. of Toronto.
4:15
368.6
The addition of non-fat dairy products to
the routine diet reduces systolic blood pressure in obese
individuals.
D.R. Machin, M. Mouton, V.J.S. Lee, W. Park, B.A.
Fallow and H. Tanaka. Univ. of Texas at Austin.
4:30
368.7
DASH accordance among older Hispanics:
comparison of three DASH scores.
D. Sarkar, C.C. Tangney,
B.A. Staffileno, S. Foley, C.A. Bacon and J. Wilbur. Rush
Univ. Med. Ctr.
4:45
368.8
Association between changes in plant protein
and mineral intakes and blood pressure as part of a dietary
portfolio: a randomized controlled trial.
R.J. de Souza, C.
Ireland, C. Pellini, P. Galange and D.J.A. Jenkins. St.
Michael’s Hosp., Toronto, McMaster Univ., Canada, Univ. of
Ottawa and Univ. of Toronto.
NUTRITION TUESDAY
101
T
U
E
369. FOOD SECURITY AND ITS CONNECTIONS TO
NUTRITION AND HEALTH
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Community and Public Health RIS)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153C
C
haired
: n. F
itzGeralD
C
oChaired
: D. W
inham
3:00
369.1
Measuring the food security status of
Cambodian women.
L.S. Cordeiro, J.N. Peterman, S. Chen,
R. Mouth and R. An. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and
Cambodian Mutual Assist. Assn. of Greater Lowell Inc., MA.
3:15
369.2
Very low food security in young citizen children
correlates with mothers’ foreign birth: associations vary by
mothers’ length of stay in the U.S.
J.T. Cook, D.A. Frank, S.
Coleman, S. Ettinger de Cuba and J. Pasquariello. Boston
Univ. Sch. of Med. and Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Children’s Hlth.
Watch, Boston Med. Ctr.
3:30
369.3
School-based nutrition programs are
associated with reduced child food insecurity in a longitudinal
study among Mexican-origin mother child dyads in Texas
border colonias.
C. Nalty, J.R. Sharkey and W.R. Dean. Sch.
of Rural Publ. Hlth., College Station, TX.
3:45
369.4
Prediction of child health and nutrient intake by
child versus parent reports of child food insecurity.
S.K. Choi,
E.A. Frongillo and M.S. Fram. Col. of Social Work, Univ. of
South Carolina.
4:00
369.5
Food insecurity is associated with dietary
intake and diet quality of low-income adults.
C.W. Leung, E.S.
Epel, L.D. Ritchie, P.B. Crawford and B.A. Laraia. UCSF and
Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of California, Berkeley.
4:15
369.6
Determinants of iron-deficient anemia among
food insecure Brazilian infants.
T. Lemos, M.R. Vitolo and D.J.
Hoffman. Rutgers Univ. and Fed. Univ. of Hlth. Sci. of Porto
Alegre, Brazil.
4:30
369.7
Food insecurity in early life and BMI z-score
change among children from 2 to 15 years.
M.M. Demment
and C.M. Olson. Cornell Univ.
4:45
369.8
Food insecurity and medication utilization in
low-income older Medicare beneficiaries with diabetes.
E.L.P.
Sattler, J.S. Lee and V. Bhargava. Univ. of Georgia.
370. NUTRIENT-GENE INTERACTIONS:
EPIGENETICS AND THE GENOME
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutrient-Gene Interactions RIS)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 154
C
haired
: J. C
rott
C
oChaired
: m.J. r
oWlinG
3:00
370.1
Glutamine-mediated dual regulation of heat
shock transcription factor-1 activation and expression.
H. Xue,
D. Slavov and P. Wischmeyer. Univ. of Colorado Denver,
Anshutz Med. Campus.
3:15
370.2
Effects of folylpolyglutamate synthase
modulation on CpG promoter DNA methylation and gene
expression in human colon cancer cells.
S-E. Kim, T. Hinoue,
M. Kim, K-J. Sohn, D. Weisenberger, P.W. Laird and Y-I. Kim.
Univ. of Toronto, Univ. of Southern California and St. Michael’s
Hosp., Toronto.
3:30
370.3
S-adenosylmethionine lowers inflammatory
response in human monocytic cells (THP-1) and alters DNA
methylation.
A.C. Pfalzer, S-W. Choi, L.K. Park, T. Bottiglieri
and S. Lamon-Fava. USDA at Tufts Univ. and Baylor Res. Inst.,
Dallas.
3:45
370.4
Aging alters global hepatic DNA
hydroxymethylation in mice, as determined by a novel LC/MS-
MS method.
S.A. Tammen, G.G. Dolnikowski, L.M. Ausman,
S. Friso and S-W. Choi. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy
and USDA at Tufts Univ. and Sch. of Med., Univ. of Verona.
4:00
370.5
Enrichment of meiotic recombination hotspot
sequences by avidin capture technology.
D. Camara Teixeira,
J. Zempleni and S.A. Malkaram. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln
and West Virginia State Univ.
4:15
370.6
Dietary sulforaphane elicits off-target effects
at loci coding for long terminal repeats in lymphocytes from
healthy adults and in IMR-90 fibroblast cultures, possibly
impairing genome stability.
S.R. Baier, R. Zbasnik, V. Schlegel
and J. Zempleni. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln.
4:30
370.7
Characterization of a GCN2/eIF2alpha
independent pathway that regulates the expression of
eukaryotic initiation factor 4E-binding protein 1.
K.M. Mazor
and M. Stipanuk. Cornell Univ.
4:45
370.8
Epigenetic synergies between methyl donors
and biotin in gene repression are mediated by holocarboxylase
synthetase.
J. Xue, S.S.K. Wijeratne and J. Zempleni. Univ. of
Nebraska.
371. DIETARY BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS OF
MEDICINAL, FUNCTIONAL AND WHOLE FOODS
(INCLUDING PROBIOTICS AND FERMENTED
FOODS)
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS)
t
ue
. 3:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156a
C
haired
: J. l
ee
3:00
371.1
Effect of whole wheat and its fractions on
adiposity, insulin resistance, and fatty liver.
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