MONDAY NUTRITION
268
D245
I 854.7 Partial least squares regression
discriminated high and low total weight loss groups in
overweight and obese adults consuming an energy restricted
diet.
B.D. Piccolo, E.R. Gertz, L.R. Woodhouse, E. Souza, E.
Demmer, N.L. Keim, S.H. Adams, J.W. Newman and M.D.
Van Loan. Univ. of California, Davis and USDA, Davis.
D246
II 854.8 Increase in skimmed milk intakes brings
positive calcium balances during body weight reduction by
exercise.
T. Yamada, S-i. Kurasawa, M. Matsuzaki and A.
Tanaka. Kanto Gakuin Univ. and Kagawa Nutr. Univ., Japan.
D247
I 854.9 Evaluation of a new whole room indirect
calorimeter for measurement of resting metabolic rate.
K.J.
Whyte, R. Rising, J.J. Albu and X. Pi-Sunyer. St. Luke’s-
Roosevelt Hosp., New York.
D248
II 854.10 Phosphorus supplementation increases
thermic response to glucose solution in healthy lean subjects.
M. Bassil, N. Zeeni and O. Obeid. Lebanese American Univ.
and American Univ. of Beirut.
D249
I 854.11 Estimated versus actual resting energy
expenditure and physical activity factor in post-gastric bypass,
lean and obese adults.
F.A. Ramirez-Marrero, K. Edens, T.B.
Curry and M.J. Joyner. Univ. of Puerto Rico and Mayo Clin.
D250
II 854.12 Weight change and the matching of
energy consumption and expenditure.
G.A. Hand, J.R. Hebert,
J.O. Hill and S.N. Blair. Univ. of South Carolina and Anschutz
Hlth. and Wellness Ctr., Denver.
855. OBESITY AND THE METABOLIC SYNDROME II
Poster
(Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism RIS)
m
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D251
I 855.1 Birth weight and risk for cardiovascular
disease in U.S. children and adolescents.
Z. Zhang, P. Kris-
Etherton and T. Hartman. Penn State.
D252
II 855.2 Self-identified race, gender and their
anthropometric correlates of cardiometabolic risk among
healthy university students.
S.S.D. Nichols and N. Dalrymple.
Univ. of West Indies, Trinidad and Tobago.
D253
I 855.3 Hypolipidemic effect of myricetin in db/
db mice.
H-N. Choi, Y-H. Jang, M-J. Kang and J-I. Kim. Inje
Univ. and Changwon Natl. Univ., South Korea.
D254
II 855.4 Antioxidant effect of myricetin in animal
model of type 2 diabetes.
H-N. Choi, M-J. Kang and J-I. Kim.
Inje Univ. and Changwon Natl. Univ., South Korea.
D255
I 855.5 Low-fat dairy differentially improves
metabolic syndrome parameters in male and female adults.
C.E.
Dugan, J. Barona and M.L. Fernandez. Univ. of Connecticut.
D256
II 855.6 Adipokines and cytokines in overweight
and obese adolescents: effect of interventions on physical
activity and nutrition education.
B.E. Martinez-Carillo, R.
Valdés-Ramos, P. Tlatempa-Sotelo, A.L. Guadarrama-
Lopez, R. Oros-Pantoja and C. Alcaraz. Fac. of Med.,
Autonomous Univ. of Mexico State, Toluca.
D257
I 855.7 The effects of high fiber noodle on
metabolic syndrome.
P-C. Chiang, J-H. Yang, P-T. Chen, W-C.
Chiu and Y-W. Chien. Taipei Med. Univ.
D258
II 855.8 Systemic fatty acid uptake and skeletal
muscle inflammatory pathway activation may contribute to the
variability in insulin sensitivity found in obesity.
D.W. Van Pelt,
S.A. Newsom, S. Schenk and J.F. Horowitz. Univ. of Michigan
Sch. of Kinesiol.
D259
I 855.9 Resistin in Mexican adolescents: does
altitude matter?
R. Valdes-Ramos, M.A. Dominguez-Lopez,
P. Tlatempa-Sotelo, A.L. Guadarrama-Lopez, R.M. Velasco,
B.E. Martinez-Carrillo and R. Oros-Pantoja. Fac. of Med.,
Autonomous Univ. of Mexico State, Toluca.
D260
II 855.10 Water intake and metabolic syndrome
risk: a randomized clinical trial.
S. Hernandez-Cordero,
S. Barquera, S. Rodriguez-Ramirez, M.A. Villanueva, T.
Gonzalez de Cossio, J. Rivera and B. Popkin. Natl. Inst. of
Publ. Hlth., Cuernavaca and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill.
D261
I 855.11 DHA dampens endocannabinoid tone
related to cannabinoid receptor expression in proliferating
C2C12 myoblasts.
J. Kim, Y. Li, B. Alzghoul and B.A. Watkins.
Univ. of Connecticut and Jordan Univ. of Sci. and Technol.
D262
II 855.12 Association between ABCA1 R230C
polymorphism, dietary intake, anthropometric measurements
and biochemical parameters in subjects with and without
metabolic syndrome.
I. Medina-Vera, M. Guevara-Cruz, M.
Aguilar-Lopez, E. Erazo-Tapia, N. Vazquez-Manjarrez, A.
Flores-Lopez, E. Jimenez-Rolland, P. Lopez-Romero, A.R.
Tovar and N. Torres. UNAM and Salvador Zubiran Natl. Inst.
of Med. Sci. and Nutr., Mexico City.
D263
I 855.13 Association between GFOD2
(rs12449157) polymorphism, dietary intake, anthropometric
measurements and blood lipids in Mexican subjects.
N.
Vazquez-Manjarrez, M. Guevara-Cruz, A.R. Tovar, I. Medina-
Vera, E. Erazo-Tapia, M. Aguilar-Lopez, A. Flores-Lopez,
J.M. Ordovas and N. Torres. Salvador Zubiran Natl. Inst. of
Med. Sci. and Nutr., Mexico City, USDA at Tufts Univ. and Tufts
Univ. Sch. of Med.
D264
II 855.14 The serum glucose response after a
dietary treatment in subjects with metabolic syndrome was
predicted by a genetic predisposition score that integrated
11 polymorphism.
M. Guevara-Cruz, A.R. Tovar, C.Q. Lai, L.
Parnell, C.E. Smith, Y-C. Lee, J.M. Ordovas and N. Torres.
Salvador Zubiran Natl. Inst. of Med. Sci. and Nutr., Mexico City
and USDA at Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med.
D265
I 855.15 Differential effects of fructose on
glycemic control: a systematic review and meta-analysis
of controlled feeding trials.
A.I. Cozma, R.J. de Souza, L.
Chiavaroli, V. Ha, A. Mirrahimi, J. Beyene, C.W.C. Kendall,
D.J.A. Jenkins and J.L. Sievenpiper. St. Michael’s Hosp.,
Toronto.
D266
II 855.16 Deoxycholic acid is involved in the
initiation and progression of atherosclerosis.
H. Shimizu, M.
Hagio, R. Yoshitsugu, K. Kikuchi, G.H. Joe, H. Hara and S.
Ishizuka. Hokkaido Univ., Japan.
D267
I 855.17 Effects of different amounts and types
of dietary fatty acids on body weight, fat accumulation and lipid
metabolism in hamsters.
J-H. Yang, C-H. Hsia, C-Y. Chen, S-Y.
Lim and Y-W. Chien. Sch. of Nutr. and Hlth. Sci., Taipei Med.
Univ.
D268
II 855.18 Association of Apop gene polymorphism
with obesity related phenotypes in Japanese population.
K.
Okuno, K. Tsuji, O. Yasuda, S. Masaki, N. Tanino, T. Katsuya,
H. Akasaka, H. Rakugi and K. Fukuo. Mukogawa Women’s
Univ., Kumamoto Univ. Hosp., Osaka Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med.
and Sapporo Med. Univ. Sch. of Med., Japan.
NUTRITION MONDAY
269
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D269
I 855.19 Attenuation of hepatic steatosis
in Zucker rats by dietary creatine supplementation.
S.P.
Waghmare, K.A. Clow, R.J. Brown, M.E. Brosnan and J.T.
Brosnan. Mem. Univ. of Newfoundland, Canada.
856. LIPID AND FATTY ACID METABOLISM AND
TRANSPORT
Poster
(Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism RIS)
m
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D270
I 856.1 ACSL5-specific siRNA reduces human
adipocyte differentiation.
E.A. Killion, M.J. Lee and A.
Greenberg. Tufts Univ. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy,
USDA at Tufts Univ. and Boston Obesity and Nutr. Res. Ctr.
D271
II 856.2 Extra virgin olive oil increases
uncoupling protein 1 content in brown adipose tissue and
enhances noradrenaline and adrenaline secretions in rats.
Y.
Oi-Kano, T. Kawada, T. Watanabe, F. Koyama, K. Watanabe
and K. Iwai. Kobe Women’s Univ., Grad. Sch. of Agr., Kyoto
Univ., Sch. of Food and Nutr. Sci., Univ. of Shizuoka, J-Oil Mils,
Yokohama and Tokyo.
D272
I 856.3 Effects of fasting on adipose stress and
inflammation.
T. Torchon, K. Wong, B. Ji, S. Das, J. Spence
and B. Voy. Worcester Polytech Inst. and Farragut H.S. and
Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville.
D273
II 856.4 The effectiveness of carnitine on
triglyceride catabolism in fatty liver cultured cell model.
T.
Miyazaki, A. Honda, T. Ikegami and Y. Matsuzaki. Tokyo Med.
Univ. Ibaraki Med. Ctr., Japan.
D274
I 856.5 Characterization of the ADRP fatty
acid binding site: a fluorescence binding and circular dichroic
study.
B. Atshaves, J. Lwande, C. Najt, S. Gupta, K. Moon, A.
McIntosh and L. Kuhn. Michigan State Univ. and Texas A&M
Univ.
D275
II 856.6 Effects of pioglitazone on fatty acid
desaturation and fat accumulation in rat tissues.
M. Ochiai and
T. Matsuo. Kagawa Univ., Japan.
D276
I 856.7 Role of NPC1Ll1 (Niemann-Pick C1-like
1) in preventing hepatic steatosis.
E. Chang, L. Kim, J-M. Choi
and C-Y. Park. Kangbuk Samsung Hosp., Sungkyunkwan
Univ. Sch. of Med., South Korea.
D277
II 856.8 Profiling di- and tri-glyceride species
in weight-controlled mice may be associated with cancer
preventive mechanism.
J. Standard, Y. Jiang, X. Su, R. Welti
and W. Wang. Kansas State Univ.
857. DIETARY FACTORS AFFECTING LIPID
METABOLISM
Poster
(Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism RIS)
m
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D278
I 857.1 Korean pine nut oil decreases the
amount of white adipose tissue by affecting lipid metabolism in
C57BL/6 mice.
S. Shin, S. Park, Y. Lim and S.N. Han. Seoul
Natl. Univ.
D279
II 857.2 Effect of high dietary protein intake
on body fat mass and subcutaneous adipose tissue gene
expression in humans.
B. Blokker, A. Rietman, J. Schwarz,
E. Siebelink, F. Kok, M. Müller, D. Tomé, L. Afman and M.
Mensink. Wageningen Univ., Netherlands and AgroParisTech,
Netherlands.
D280
I 857.3 Differential regulation of gene
expression by
a-tocopherol and a-tocopheryl-phosphate in
pre-adipocytes and adipocytes.
M. Lirangi, M. Meydani, J-M.
Zingg and A. Azzi. USDA at Tufts Univ.
D281
II 857.4 Short-term high-fat diet impairs
regulation of hepatic lipogenesis in rats.
K. Axen, M.A. Harper,
Y-F. Kuo and K. Axen. Brooklyn Col. of CUNY.
D282
I 857.5 Effect of inhibitors on CLA enhanced
lipolysis in coconut oil-treated 3T3-L1 cells.
S. Ippagunta and
K.M. Barnes. West Virginia Univ.
D283
II 857.6 Treadmill exercise training modulates
PCSK9 metabolism in high fat fed mice.
S. Wen, K.S. Jadhav,
D.L. Williamson and T.C. Rideout. Univ. at Buffalo.
D284
I 857.7 Dietary intake and coronary heart
disease risk factors in college students.
J. Arts, G.A. Brown,
G.W. Greene and I.E. Lofgren. Univ. of Rhode Island.
D285
II 857.8 Regulation of adipose tissue metabolism
by dietary fat prior to the onset of obesity during fasting and
after refeeding.
V. García-Olivares, N. Torres, A.R. Tovar and
A. Diaz-Villaseñor. Salvador Zubiran Natl. Inst. of Med. Sci.
and Nutr., Mexico City.
D286
I 857.9 Differential effects of caloric intake
and vitamin A status on insulin-regulated Pck1 and Srebp1c
expression in hepatocytes from Zucker fatty rats.
W. Chen, Y.
Li, M.L. Howell and G. Chen. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville.
D287
II 857.10 Acute lipids response to fructose
beverage in adolescents with NAFLD.
R. Jin, N-A. Le and M.
Vos. Emory Univ. and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
D288
I 857.11 Fructose reduction improves CVD risk
in adolescents with NAFLD.
M. Vos, R. Jin, J. Welsh and N-A.
Le. Emory Univ. and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta.
D289
II 857.12 Recommended dairy intake: impact on
lipid profile and surrogate markers of cholesterol homeostasis
in healthy adults from two Canadian cities.
M. Abdullah, A. Cyr,
P. Couture, P. Jones and B. Lamarche. Univ. of Manitoba,
Richardson Ctr. for Funct. Foods and Nutraceuts., Winnipeg
and Inst. of Nutraceuts. and Funct. Foods, Quebac City.
D290
I 857.13 Flaxseed oil supplementation increases
long-chain omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in plasma.
C.L.
Cheatham, K.W. Sheppard, D.S. Lupu and M.D. Niculescu.
Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Kannapolis.
Join Us Next Year!
Experimental Biology
2014
April 26 – 30
San Deigo, CA
MONDAY NUTRITION
270
858. REGULATION OF FOOD INTAKE
Poster
(Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism RIS)
(Cosponsored by: Obesity RIS)
m
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Presentation time: 12:45
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D291
I 858.1 Effect of sugars-containing beverages
on satiety and short-term food intake in normal weight and
overweight/obese girls.
N. Bellissimo, L. Bennett, K. Poirier,
E. Hurton, B. Luhovyy, F. Nunes, M. Constantino and B.
Gladanac. Ryerson Univ., ON and Mount Saint Vincent Univ.,
NS, Canada.
D292
II 858.2 The effects of various consumption
levels of high fructose corn syrup and sucrose on circulating
glucose, insulin, leptin, active ghrelin and triglycerides.
Z.
Fullerton, J. Lowndes, S. Sinnett and J. Rippe. Rippe
Lifestyle Inst., Celebration, FL.
D293
I 858.3 Some like it hot: characteristics
underlying spicy food preference and aversion.
M-J. Ludy.
Bowling Green State Univ. Sch. of Family & Consumer Sci.
D294
II 858.4 Caffeine increases liking and
consumption of novel flavored yogurt.
L.M. Panek, C. Swoboda,
A. Bendlin and J.L. Temple. Univ. at Buffalo.
D295
I 858.5 Effects of caloric restriction on
cardiometabolic risk and bone biomarkers in ovariectomized
rats.
H. Ahn and R. Choue. Kyunghee Univ., South Korea.
D296
II 858.6 Hi-oleic peanut preload lowers energy
intake and energy density of a subsequent meal.
A. Coates,
J. Barbour, J. Buckley, J. Bryan and P. Howe. Univ. of South
Australia.
D297
I 858.7 Effect of peanut consumption on satiety
and energy intake.
J.A. Barbour, P.R.C. Howe, J.D. Buckley,
J. Bryan and A.M. Coates. Univ. of South Australia.
D298
II 858.8 The role of substrate oxidation on
food intake regulation in normal-weight boys and men.
S.
Hunschede, D. El Khoury, C. Smith, S. Antoine-Jonville,
S. Thomas and H. Anderson. Univ. of Toronto and Univ. of
French West Indies and Guiana, French Guiana.
D299
I 858.9 Oat and barley
b-glucans induce satiety
and reduce energy intake—a study on acute and longer-term
effects.
M. Kristensen, S. Ibrügger, M.S. Mikkelsen, M.W.
Poulsen, J. Ejsing, M.J. Bak, L.O. Dragsted, B.M. Jespersen,
S.B. Engelsen and S. Bügel. Univ. of Copenhagen,
Frederiksberg C.
859. MICRONUTRIENT BIOAVAILABILITY,
FUNCTIONS AND INTERVENTIONS
Poster
(Sponsored by: Vitamins and Minerals RIS)
m
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D300
I 859.1 Analysis of antioxidant activity of silicon
in vitro and murine macrophages.
M-K. Choi, E-J. Kim, S-Y. Bu,
M-K. Sung, C-W. Jo and M. Kang. Kongju Natl. Univ., Kyungil
Univ., Sookmyung Women’s Univ. and Hoseo Univ., South Korea.
D301
II 859.2 Toxicological and cancer-
chemopreventive evaluation of a novel soluble silicate.
D.A.
Vattem, V. Maitin and C.R. Richardson. Texas State Univ.-
San Marcos.
D302
I 859.3 Evaluation of anti-diabetic potential of a
novel soluble silicate in rodent models.
D.A. Vattem, V. Maitin
and C.R. Richardson. Texas State Univ.-San Marcos.
D303
II 859.4 High-dose (4000 IU) vitamin D
supplementation does not increase circulating concentrations
of free 25-hydroxyvitamin D.
A.M. Belenchia, A. Tosh, L.
Hillman and C.A. Peterson. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia.
D304
I 859.5 Differential effects of military training
on tibia bone strength indices in male and female recruits.
E.
Gaffney-Stomberg, L.J. Lutz, N.E. Murphy, L.J. Marchitelli,
S.J. Cable, A.J. Young and J.P. McClung. U.S. Army Res.
Inst. of Exptl. Med., Natick, MA and Initial Military Trng. Ctr. of
Excellence, Fort Eustis, VA.
D305
II 859.6 Glycosuria: a risk factor for loss of
nutrients in diabetic patients?
V. Suen, A. Silva-Santos, R.D.S.
Santos, D. Ribas-Filho, J.S. Marchini and M.C. Foss-Freitas.
Univ. of São Paulo, Brazilian Assn. of Nutrol. ABRAN and Padre
Albino Sch. of Med., Catanduva, Brazil.
D306
I 859.7 Effects of processing on the pollen and
nutrient content of honey.
K. Beals and D. Ropa. Univ. of Utah
and Ropa Sci. Res., Cross Plains, WI.
D307
II 859.8 Trends in mineral supplement
prescriptions from military treatment facilities: 2007 to 2011.
S. Attipoe, D. Jones, M.B. Stephens and P.A. Deuster.
Uniformed Svcs. Univ. of Hlth. Sci.
D308
I 859.9 Biofortified black beans (Phaseolus
vulgaris L.) in a maize and bean diet provide more bioavailable
iron to chickens (Gallus gallus) than standard black beans.
E.
Tako, S. Beebe, S. Reed, E. Boy and R. Glahn. USDA, Cornell
Univ., Intl. Ctr. of Trop. Agr., Cali,, Colombia and HarvestPlus,
Washington, DC.
D309
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