N.F. Krebs,
K.M. Hambidge, J.E. Ikemeri, J.E. Westcott, J. Kemp, S. Lei,
L.V. Miller, E. Liechty and F. Esamai. Univ. of Colorado Sch.
of Med., Moi Univ. Sch. of Med., Kenya and Indiana Univ. Sch.
of Med.
8:45
107.4
Comparison of zinc protoporphyrin
concentration in capillary whole blood and venous washed
red blood cells among young Burkinabe children.
S.Y. Hess,
E. Yakes, S. Abbeddou, J.M. Peerson, J.W. Some, Z.P.
Ouedraogo, J-B. Ouedraogo and K.H. Brown. Univ. of
California, Davis, Univ. of New Mexico and IRSS, Burkina Faso.
9:00
107.5
The effect of short-term frozen storage
of human milk on the validity of vitamin A assays using the
iCHECK™ rapid analyzer.
C. Whang, O. Bermudez, A.M.
Chomat and N.W. Solomons. CeSSIAM, Guatemala City,
Tufts Univ. and McGill Univ., Ste Anne de Bellevue.
9:15
107.6
Use of breast milk vitamin A concentration as
an indicator of population vitamin A status in a national survey
in Cameroon.
R. Engle-Stone, M.J. Haskell, M. Nankap, A.O.
Ndjebayi and K.H. Brown. Univ. of California, Davis and Helen
Keller Intl., Yaoundé, Cameroon and Dakar, Senegal.
9:30
107.7
The effects of the acute phase response on
biomarkers of iron status differ in the presence of malaria
infection.
R. Wessells, S. Hess, Z. Ouedraogo, N. Rouamba,
J. Erhardt, J-B. Ouedraogo and K. Brown. Univ. of California,
Davis, Res. Inst. of Hlth. Sci., Burkina Faso and Univ. of
Indonesia.
9:45
107.8
The relationship between inherited blood
disorders and iron biomarkers among young children in Kenya.
K.S. Derby, K.M. Sullivan, L.J. Ruth, T.N. Williams and P.S.
Suchdev. Rollins Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Emory Univ., Ctrs. for Dis.
Control and Prevent. and Ctr. for Geographic Med. Res. Coast,
Kilifi, Kenya.
SUNDAY NUTRITION
30
108. LACTATION: EFFECTS OF LACTATION/
BREASTFEEDING ON THE RECIPIENT INFANT
AND/OR LACTATING MOTHER
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Lactation RIS)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153B
C
haired
: C. l
ovelaDy
C
oChaired
: e. W
iDen
8:00
108.1
Mothers’ reasons for and perceptions of
human milk expression and feeding: a longitudinal, qualitative
investigation.
J.P. Felice, K.M. Rasmussen and C.M. Olson.
Cornell Univ.
8:15
108.2
Infant intake patterns vary by feeding method:
results from a randomized controlled trial.
Z. Maalouf-
Manasseh, C. Chantry and K.G. Dewey. FANTA III/FHI 360,
Washington, DC, Univ. of California Davis Med. Ctr. and Univ. of
California, Davis.
8:30
108.3
How is pregnancy-related weight changes and
breastfeeding related to long-term maternal weight and waist
circumference? A path analysis.
H. Kirkegaard, H. Stovring,
K.M. Rasmussen, B. Abrams, T.I.A. Sorensen and E.A.
Nohr. Aarhus Univ., Denmark, Cornell Univ., Sch. of Publ.
Hlth., Univ. of California, Berkeley and Frederiksberg Univ.
Hosp., Copenhagen.
8:45
108.4
Breastfeeding and birth order modify food
insecurity’s associations with inadequate and excessive
infancy weight gain.
E.S. Metallinos-Katsaras, E.C. Siu and
R. Colchamiro. Simmons Col. and Massachusetts Dept. of
Publ. Hlth., Boston.
9:00
108.5
Infant feding and morbidity in African HIV-1-
exposed uninfected infants: the Kesho Bora Study.
K. Bork, A.
Cournil and C. Cames. IRD, Montpellier.
9:15
108.6
Why does human milk fortification increase
urinary F2-isoprostanes in the premature infant?
J. Friel, B.
Diehl-Jones, C. Cai, Z. Hossein and J. Kim. Univ. of Manitoba.
9:30
108.7
Vitamin D supplementation of mother and
infant versus mother alone.
C.L. Wagner, C.M. Howard, T.C.
Hulsey, M. Ebeling, R.A. Lawrence and B.W. Hollis. Med.
Univ. of South Carolina and Univ. of Rochester.
9:45
108.8
The relationship of vitamin D status of exercising
breastfeeding women on changes in bone mineral density
during the first year postpartum.
A. Sorvillo, L. Wideman and
C. Lovelady. Univ. of North Carolina at Greensboro.
109. OBESITY, INFLAMMATION, AND
NUTRIGENOMICS
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutrient-Gene Interactions RIS)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153C
C
haired
: s.n. h
an
C
oChaired
: K.J. C
layComBe
8:00
109.1
Liver microRNAs are differentially expressed in
human simple steatosis and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis with
potential repercussions on lipid metabolism and inflammatory
status.
E.M. Comelli, T.H. Kim, B.M. Arendt, N. Singh, Z.
Zhang and J.P. Allard. Univ. of Toronto and Toronto Gen.
Hosp. Univ. Hlth. Network.
8:15
109.2
Leptin and resistin are influenced by increased
body fat measurements in pregnant women.
M.K. Ozias, S.
Li, P-C. Lin, A. Schmitt, H.R. Hull and S.E. Carlson. Univ. of
Kansas Med. Ctr. and Howard Univ.
8:30
109.3
Maternal pre-gravid body mass index and
adiposity influence umbilical cord gene expression at term in
AGA infants.
K. Thakali, J. Saben, A. Andres and K. Shankar.
Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci.
8:45
109.4
Bioenergetic characterization of adipogenesis
impaired by inflammation.
D. Esposito, M. Wilson, H. Holway
and S. Komarnytsky. North Carolina State Univ., Kannapolis
and Raleigh, Rutgers Univ. and Davidson Col., NC.
9:00
109.5
Maternal obesity leads to an inflammatory
response and insulin resistance in ovarian tissuse.
M.L. Ruebel,
K. Shankar, T. Badger and A. Andres. Univ. of Arkansas for
Med. Sci.
9:15
109.6
Functional variations of organic cation
transporters associated to inflammatory bowel disease in a
Manitoba cohort.
P.K. Eck, A. Serrano, N. Yurkova and C.
Berstein. Univ. of Manitoba.
9:30
109.7
Activation of pattern recognition receptors in
brown adipocytes induce proinflammatory genes and suppress
uncoupling protein 1 mRNA expression.
J. Bae, C.J. Ricciardi,
J. Chen and L. Zhao. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville.
9:45
109.8
Early growth response protein 1 regulates
pro-inflammatory gene expression in response to palmitate
and TNF
a in human placenta cells and is induced in obese
placenta.
J.L. Saben, A. Andres, S. Borengasser, Y. Zhong
and K. Shankar. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci.
110. UNDERSTANDING AND COMMUNICATING
NUTRITION SCIENCE TO THE PUBLIC
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Translation RIS)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 154
C
haired
: K. r
yan
C
oChaired
: B. r
iCe
8:00
110.1
The type of production system affects the
polyphenolic and flavonoid content of the gourmet mushroom,
Hericium erinaceus.
B. Sobel, H. Guo, K. Mudge and R.H.
Liu. Cornell Univ. and Col. of Food Sci. & Nutr. Engin., China
Agr. Univ., Beijing.
Visit The Exhibits
Sunday–Tuesday
9:00 AM–4:00 PM
NUTRITION SUNDAY
31
S
U
N
8:15
110.2
Green tea and cancer: a qualified health claim
case study.
A. Berhaupt-Glickstein, W.K. Hallman, M. Nucci
and N. Hooker. Rutgers Univ. and The Ohio State Univ.
8:30
110.3
Where are kids getting their empty calories?
The role of stores, schools, and fast food restaurants.
J.M.
Poti, M.M. Slining and B.M. Popkin. Univ. of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill.
8:45
110.4
Parents’ perceptions of the importance and
availability of nutrition and physical activity offerings in out-
of-school time programs.
C.D. Economos, H. Angstrom, S.
Anzman-Frasca, P.R. Dolan, M.B. Newman, S. Sharma and
M.E. Nelson. Tufts Univ., Boston.
9:00
110.5
Survey on understanding, use and willingness
to pay on front of pack labeling in Chile.
D. Gregori, L.V.
Contreras and C. Bahamonde Pérez. Univ. of Padua and
Univ. of Chile.
9:15
110.6
Evaluating food front-of-pack labeling: a pan-
European survey on consumers’ attitudes toward food labeling.
D. Gregori, S. Ballali, C.E. Gafare, G. Stefanini and G.M.
Halpern. Univ. of Padua, Prochild ONLUS, Trieste, Univ. of
Buenos Aires, Zeta Res. Ltd., Trieste and Hong Kong Polytech
Univ.
9:30
110.7
Effect of AXOS on fecal water cytotoxicity and
genotoxicity: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled,
cross-over study.
K. Windey, V. De Preter, W. Broekaert, J.
Herman, T. Louat and K. Verbeke. KU Leuven, Belgium.
9:45 Conclusion.
111. PRENATAL NUTRIENT PROGRAMMING
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Medical Nutrition Council)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156a
C
haired
: s. a
Brams
8:00
111.1
Voluntary activity is blunted following
undernutrition in early life.
M.L. Fiorotto, B. Scull, T.A. Davis
and R. Fleischmann. Baylor Col. of Med.
8:15
111.2
Prenatal bisphenol A exposure and rapid
growth and overweight in infancy.
D. Valvi, M. Casas, M.A.
Mendez, A. Ballesteros-Gómez, N. Luque, S. Rubio, J.
Sunyer and M. Vrijheid. Ctr. for Res. in Envrn. Epidemiol. and
Hosp. del Mar Res. Inst., Barcelona, Univ. of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill and Univ. of Cordoba, Spain.
8:30
111.3
Maternal-fetal vitamin D status and child bone
health.
S.Y. Huh, S.B. Aspinwall, S.L. Rifas-Shiman, C.A.
Camargo. Jr., C.M. Gordon, A.A. Litonjua and M.W. Gillman.
Boston Children’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch./HPHCI, Brigham
and Women’s Hosp. and Hasbro Children’s Hosp./Brown Univ.
8:45
111.4
Maternal but not paternal fat mass is positively
associated with infant fat mass at age 2 weeks.
A. Andres, K.
Shankar, M.A. Cleves and T.M. Badger. Univ. of Arkansas for
Med. Sci.
9:00
111.5
Maternal choline supplementation programs
offspring choline metabolism in a mouse model of Down
syndrome.
J. Yan, S.D. Ginsberg, B. Powers, M.J. Alldred, A.
Saltzman, B.J. Strupp and M.A. Caudill. Cornell Univ. and
Nathan Kline Inst. and NYU Langone Med. Ctr., Orangeburg,
NY.
9:15
111.6
Fetal programming of metabolic health through
a combined dietary and pharmacological pre-pregnancy
intervention in rats.
C. Dennison, A. Eslinger and R. Reimer.
Univ. of Calgary, Canada.
9:30
111.7
Adding prebiotic fiber to a maternal high fat,
sucrose diet during pregnancy and lactation reduces offspring
body fat in Sprague-Dawley rats.
H.A. Paul, M.R. Bomhof and
R.A. Reimer. Univ. of Calgary, Canada.
9:45
111.8
Adipocytokines and fetal fat accretion in
pregnant teens.
C.M. Whisner, E.K. Pressman, B.E. Young,
B.E. Cooper, R.A. Queenan and K.O. O’Brien. Cornell Univ.
and Univ. of Rochester Sch. of Med.
112. OBESITY: CHRONIC DISEASES
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Obesity RIS)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156B
C
haired
: D. h
eBer
C
oChaired
: G. B
laCKBurn
8:00
112.1
Improvement in coronary heart disease
risk factors during an intermittent fasting/calorie restriction
regimen: relationship to adipokine modulations.
C.M. Kroeger,
M.C. Klempel, S. Bhutani, J.F. Trepanowski and K.A. Varady.
Univ. of Illinois at Chicago.
8:15
112.2
Medium chain triglycerides dose-dependently
prevent liver pathology in a rat model of nonalcoholic fatty liver
disease.
M. Ronis, J. Baumgardner, N. Sharma, J. Vantease,
M. Ferguson, Y. Tong, X. Wu, M. Cleves and T. Badger. Univ.
of Arkansas for Med. Sci.
8:30
112.3
Vegetable consumption linked to decreased
hepatic fat deposition in overweight Latino youth.
L.T. Cook,
G.A. O’Reilly, M.I. Goran, M.J. Weigensberg, D. Spruijt-Metz
and J.N. Davis. Univ. of Southern California, Univ. of Texas at
Austin.
8:45
112.4
Promising applications of nano-encapsulated (-)
epigallocatechin gallate during adipogenesis in 3T3-L1 cells.
P.V. Bapat, M. Sun and S. Wang. Texas Tech Univ.
9:00
112.5
A clinic-academic partnership for recruitment
using an electronic medical record in a trial of diets for
treating polycystic ovary syndrome in overweight and obese
adolescents and young adults.
J.M.W. Wong, H. Gooding, C.M.
Gordon, S.J. Emans, D.S. Ludwig and C.B. Ebbeling. Boston
Children’s Hosp. and Hasbro Children’s Hosp., Providence.
9:15
112.6
Identifying markers of insulin resistance in the
plasma proteome.
J. Jamnik, B. Garcia-Bailo, C. Borchers
and A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto and Univ. of Victoria,
Canada.
9:30
112.7
Vitamin D insufficiency is associated with
greater obesity-related insulin resistance.
D. Sulistyoningrum,
D. Gasevic, T.J. Green, S.A. Lear and A.M. Devlin. Univ. of
British Columbia and Simon Fraser Univ., Canada.
9:45
112.8
Effect of sugar-sweetened soft drinks on
serum uric acid and associated metabolic risk factors.
P.W.
Crutchley and L. Te Morenga. Otago Univ. and Riddet Inst.,
New Zealand.
SUNDAY NUTRITION
32
113. PROTEIN AND AMINO ACID METABOLISM I
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism RIS)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156C
C
haired
: s. C
hevalier
C
oChaired
: m. F
iorotto
8:00
113.1
Comparing glycine and serine kinetics in
adolescent girls and adult women during early and late
pregnancy.
J.W. Hsu, M.M. Thame, H.M. Fletcher, T.M. Baker,
G.J. Tang and F. Jahoor. USDS, Baylor Col. of Med. and Univ.
of West Indies, Jamaica.
8:15
113.2
Arginine production and nitric oxide synthesis
in pregnancy: a study in Jamaican, American and Indian
women.
J.M. Karnes, J.W. Hsu, G.J. Tang, T.M. Baker, M.M.
Thame, P. Dwarkanath, A.V. Kurpad and F. Jahoor. USDA,
Baylor Col. of Med., Univ. of West Indies, Jamaica and St.
John’s Natl. Acad. of Hlth. Sci., Bangalore.
8:30
113.3
Methyl group partitioning during insufficient
and excess availability via guanidinoacetate and creatine
supplementation in young pigs.
L.E. McBreairty, J.L.
Robinson, J.A. Brunton and R.F. Bertolo. Mem. Univ. of
Newfoundland, Canada.
8:45
113.4
The association of plasma homocysteine and
cysteine with antioxidant enzyme activities in patients with
colorectal polyps and colorectal cancer.
F-P. Chen, Y-C. Huang,
C-C. Lin, H-M. Wang and F-F. Chiang. Chung Shan Med. Univ.
and Hosp. and Taichung Veterans Gen. Hosp., Taiwan.
9:00
113.5
The cysteine dioxygenase knockout mouse:
altered cysteine metabolism leading to excess hydrogen
sulfide production.
M.H. Stipanuk, H.B. Roman and L.L.
Hirschberger. Cornell Univ.
9:15
113.6
BCAT2 regulates BCAA metabolic fate during
adipogenesis.
L.G. Noriega, I. Estrada, M.R. Tenorio, N.
Torres and A.R. Tovar. Salvador Zubiran Natl. Inst. of Med.
Sci. and Nutr., Mexico City.
9:30
113.7
Leucine + phenylalanine modify the glucose
and insulin response to glucose.
F.Q. Nuttall, J.F. Iverson
and M.C. Gannon. Minneapolis VA Hlth. Care Syst./Univ of
Minnesota and Park Nicollet Clin., St. Louis Park, MN.
9:45
113.8
Extrarenal citrulline utilization in mice.
J.C.
Marini and I.C. Didelija. USDA, Baylor Col. of Med.
114. PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM: REGULATION OF
GROWTH AND METABOLISM THROUGH AMINO
ACID SENSING
Special Session
(Supported by an educational grant from Ajinomoto Co., Inc.)
s
un
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
B
allroom
e
ast
C
haired
: t.a. D
avis
Biochemical, Molecular and Genetic Mechanisms
10:30
Role of amino acid transporters in amino acid sensing.
P. Taylor. Univ. of Dundee.
11:10
Amino acid control of the protein synthetic machinery.
C.
Proud. Univ. of Southampton.
11:50 Integration of signals generated from nutrients,
hormones, and exercise.
S. R. Kimball. Penn State
Col. of Med.
114A. SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC VARIABLES, LIFESTYLE
VARIABLES, AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO
NUTRITIONAL BIOMARKERS – FINDINGS FROM
NHANES
(Sponsored by: Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention)
s
un
. 12:45 pm – B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 154
12:45 How to model without over modeling.
M. Sternberg.
Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent.
1:15
Dietary supplement use and smoking are important
correlates of blood levels of B vitamins.
C. Pfeiffer.
Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent.
1:45
Race-ethnicity is a strong determinant of vitamin D
status after adjustment for sociodemographic and
lifestyle variables.
R. Schleicher. Ctrs. for Dis. Control
and Prevent.
2:15
Sociodemographic and lifestyle variables are compound-
and class-specific correlates of urine phytoestrogen
levels.
M. Rybak. Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent.
115. NUTRITION RESEARCH AT USDA’S NATIONAL
INSTITUTE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
Special Session
s
un
. 12:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 157aBC
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