32.6
Dietary carotenoids may reduce testicular
steroidogenesis through HMG-CoA reductase in mice with
altered carotenoid metabolism.
J. Smith, N. Ford, S.K. Clinton
and J.W. Erdman, Jr. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
Univ. of Texas at Austin and The Ohio State Univ.
9:30
32.7
Does beta-carotene-9’,10’-oxygenase (CMO2)
generate retinoic acid during embryonic development?
E.
Spiegler, Y-k. Kim and L. Quadro. Rutgers Univ.
9:45
32.8
Structure-function relationships for enzymatic
activity of
b-carotene 9’,10’-oxygenase (CMO2). C. Doerner,
X. Gong, L. Hardy and L.P. Rubin. Univ. of South Florida St.
Petersburg and Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. Paul L. Foster
Sch. of Med.
33. NUTRITIONAL SURVEYS AND
EPIDEMIOLOGICAL STUDIES: EXPLORING AND
ENHANCING METHODS, INTERPRETATION,
AND COMMUNICATION
Symposium
(Sponsored by: International Life Sciences Institute,
North American Branch)
s
at
. 8:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
B
allroom
e
ast
C
haired
: J.a. m
ilner
C
oChaired
: m. l
eahy
Research Methods and Funding
8:30 Welcome.
J. A. Milner, M. Leahy. USDA, Beltsville, The
Coca-Cola Co.
8:45
Introduction: good research is critical to informing good
policy.
TBD.
9:15
Evaluating the evidence for causality between diet and
health: the importance of getting it right.
S. Young.
Natl. Inst. of Stat, Sci., Research Triangle Park.
9:45
The NCI method for estimating usual intakes.
K. Dodd.
NCI, NIH.
10:15 Other methods to consider for improving usual intake
estimation.
K. Tucker. Northeastern Univ.
10:45 The Bayesian perspective.
R. Matthews. Aston Univ.,
UK.
11:15
Simple steps that could improve the use, reporting, and
interpretation of epidemiologic research.
D. Allison.
Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham.
11:45 Moving forward: producing reliable and objective
evidence.
J. A. Milner. USDA, Beltsville.
34. ASN YOUNG MINORITY INVESTIGATOR ORAL
COMPETITION
Special Session
s
at
. 10:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 151aB
35. CALORIC RESTRICTION IN HUMANS: IS IT
FEASIBLE, EFFECTIVE AND SAFE?
Symposium
(Supported by an educational grant from the National
Institute on Aging)
s
at
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 157aBC
C
haired
: s.B. r
oBerts
C
oChaired
: J. s
peaKman
Clinical Nutrition
10:30
Introduction: How is caloric restriction (CR) measured in
humans, and is it safe?
S. B. Roberts. USDA at Tufts
Univ.
10:50 Levels of CR achievable in animal models and their
biological effects.
J. Speakman. Univ. of Aberdeen.
11:10 CR in humans: metabolic effects of a 2-year RCT.
E.
Ravussin. Pennington Biomed. Res. Ctr.
11:30 Effect of long-term CR on bone metabolism and bone
mass.
D. Villareal. Univ. of New Mexico Sch. of Med.,
Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis.
11:50 Effects of 2-year CR on cardiovascular disease risk
factors.
W. E. Kraus. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr.
12:10 Discussant.
E. Hadley. NIA, NIH.
NUTRITION SATURDAY
9
S
A
T
36. COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION
INTERVENTIONS
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS)
s
at
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153C
C
haired
: t. e
rinosho
C
oChaired
: a. a
nDerson
10:30
36.1
Understanding low-income parents’ decisions
to participate in a subsidized fruit and vegetable buying program
in four urban childcare centers.
T. Agrawal, C. Devine, J.
Hoffman, C. Wirth and C. Castaneda-Sceppa. Cornell Univ.
and Northeastern Univ.
10:45
36.2
iCook: development of web-based component
of a 4-H cooking intervention.
S.E. Colby, M. Olfert, D.
Mathews, K.K. Kattelmann, L. Franzen-Castle and A.
White. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, West Virginia Univ., Univ.
of Maine, South Dakota State Univ. and Univ. of Nebraska–
Lincoln.
11:00
36.3
Evaluating Mass in Motion Kids: a multi-sector
intervention to reduce childhood obesity using a community-
clinical partnership.
J. Falbe, K.K. Davison, E.M. Taveras, S.L.
Gortmaker, S.G. Anand, R.E. Blaine, S.R. Criss, M. Perkins,
J-A. Kwass, T. Land and L.A. Smith. Harvard Sch. of Publ.
Hlth., Harvard Pilgrim Hlth. Care Inst., Natl. Init. for Children’s
Healthcare Quality and Massachusetts Dept. of Publ. Hlth.
11:15
36.4
Using smartphones to maintain engagement of
youth participation in 8-week walking program.
N. Hongu, B.T.
Pope, C.L. Martinez, N.C. Merchant, S.L. Misner and D.J.
Roe. Univ. of Arizona, Tucson and Casa Grande.
11:30
36.5
Exploring the relationship between perceived
stress and weight loss.
M.R. Shen, B.T. Nezami, M. Crane and
D.F. Tate. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
11:45
36.6
Individualized feedback during summer camp
influences anthropometric changes in California’s Central
Valley overweight youth.
G.L. George, C. Schneider, A.
Martin, D. Ginsburg and L. Kaiser. Univ. of California, Davis
and Univ. of California Coop. Ext., Stockton.
12:00
36.7
African American community members
sustain favorable blood pressure outcomes through 12-month
telephone motivational interviewing maintenance.
A.S. Landry,
J. Thomson, J. Zoellner, C.L. Connell, M.B. Madson and K.
Yadrick. Univ. of Southern Mississippi, USDA, Baton Rouge
and Virginia Tech.
12:15
36.8
Efficacy of different schemes of supplementation
with micronutrient powders on anemia and micronutrient status
in infants.
N. Zavaleta, D. Loza, P. Egoavil, J. Sánchez, R.
Mosqueira and L. Neufeld. Nutr. Res. Inst., Lima, Peru and
Micronutr. Init., Ottawa.
37. PREVENTING CHILDHOOD OBESITY
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Education RIS)
s
at
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 154
C
haired
: a. F
erris
C
oChaired
: v. h
aleyzitlin
10:30
37.1
Energy-density and macronutrient profiles of
samples of infant formula provided by low-income mothers
of formula-feeding infants at ~2 and ~4 months of age.
K.F.
Kavanagh, J.C. Nicklas, J.L. Burney and B.P. Greer. Univ. of
Tennessee and Univ. of Tennessee Ext., Knoxville.
10:45
37.2
Relationship between parental feeding and
child eating styles in low-income families with preschool age
children.
R.L. Vollmer and A.R. Mobley. Univ. of Connecticut.
11:00
37.3
Caregivers’ behavioral skills associated
with preschool children consumption of sugar-sweetened
beverages.
K. Lora, D. Wakefield and A. Ferris. Univ. of
Oklahoma Hlth. Sci. Ctr. and Univ. of Connecticut Hlth. Ctr.,
East Hartford.
11:15
37.4
Toddler Obesity Prevention Study increases
toddler health-promoting behaviors.
M.M. Black, K. Hurley, Y.
Wang, M. Candelaria, L. Latta, L. Caulfield and E. Hager.
Univ. of Maryland Baltimore and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg
Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
11:30
37.5
Reduction in average child consumption
of sugar-sweetened beverages without decrease in home
inventory.
A.M. Ferris, D. Wakefield, C. Quesada and K.
Lora. Univ. of Connecticut Hlth. Ctr., East Hartford and Univ. of
Oklahoma Hlth. Sci. Ctr.
11:45
37.6
A qualitative investigation of how parents
determine fullness in their preschool children.
L.S. Goodell,
A.C. Antono, J.C. Daniel, S.L. Walker, S.L. Johnson, T.G.
Power and S.O. Hughes. North Carolina State Univ., Univ.
of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, Washington State Univ.,
Baylor Col. of Med. and USDA, Houston.
12:00
37.7
Parenting picky eaters: strategies to get
preschool children to eat previously rejected foods.
A.C.
Antono, L.S. Goodell, J.C. Daniel, S.L. Walker, S.L. Johnson,
T.G. Power and S.O. Hughes. North Carolina State Univ.,
Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, Washington State
Univ. and USDA, Baylor Col. of Med.
12:15
37.8
Improving Head Start’s system of
communicating children’s weight status and BMI scores to
caregivers.
M.R. DuBois, J. Hoffman, S. Carter, C. Bottino,
S. Nethersole, C. Cox, C. Sceppa and C. Wirth. Northeastern
Univ., ABCD Head Start and Boston Children’s Hosp.
SATURDAY NUTRITION
10
38. BIOAVAILABILITY AND METABOLISM OF
CAROTENOIDS AND VITAMIN A
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: CARIG RIS)
s
at
. 10:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 156a
C
haired
: m. F
erruzzi
C
oChaired
: l. r
uBin
10:30
38.1
Increased carotenoid bioavailability from a
unique, cis-lycopene containing tangerine-type tomato.
J.L.
Cooperstone, R.A. Ralston, K.M. Riedl, D.M. Francis, G.B.
Lesinski, S.K. Clinton and S.J. Schwartz. The Ohio State
Univ., Columbus and Wooster.
10:45
38.2
Bioaccessibility of all trans-astaxanthin from
salmon.
C. Chitchumroonchokchai and M.L. Failla. The Ohio
State Univ.
11:00
38.3
Comparison of the bioaccessibility and Caco-2
accumulation of lutein from human milk and infant formula.
T.E.
Lipkie, Z.E. Jouni and M.G. Ferruzzi. Purdue Univ. and Mead
Johnson Pediat. Inst., Evansville.
11:15
38.4
The relative vitamin A value of 9-cis and 13-cis
b-carotene as compared to all-trans b-carotene in Mongolian
gerbils.
K. Bresnahan, C. Davis and S. Tanumihardjo. Univ.
of Wisconsin-Madison.
11:30
38.5
Purified recombinant human
b-carotene
15-15´
-oxygenase cleaves
b-apocarotenals and lycopene. C.
dela Sena, S. Narayanasamy, R.W. Curley and E.H. Harrison.
The Ohio State Univ.
11:45
38.6
Pharmacokinetics of
13
C-lycopene in healthy
adults .
N.E. Moran, M.J. Cichon, K.M. Riedl, E.M. Grainger,
S.J. Schwartz, J.W. Erdman, Jr. and S.K. Clinton. Ohio State
Univ.-Wexner Med. Ctr., The Ohio State Univ. and Univ. of
Illinois, Urbana.
12:00
38.7
Model-based compartmental analysis of vitamin
A kinetics in vitamin A-supplemented neonatal rats predicts
extensive recycling and altered inter-compartmental exchange
rates.
L. Tan, M.H. Green and A.C. Ross. Penn State.
12:15
38.8
Storage stability of provitamin A carotenoids in
biofortified yellow maize.
T. Muzhingi and G. Tang. USDA at
Tufts Univ.
39. POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH AWARD
COMPETITION, SUPPORTED BY SOLAE, LLC
Special Session
(Supported by an educational grant from Solae, LLC)
(Sponsored by: Young Professional Interest Group)
s
at
. 12:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 151aB
C
haired
: h. D
urham
Education Track/Professional Development
12:00 Overview.
12:15 Marginal zinc deficiency impairs ductal growth and
alveologenesis in mammary glands leading to
compromised secretory function.
Z. Bostanci, C.
Dempsey, D.I. Soybel and S.L. Kelleher. Penn State,
University Park and Hershey.
(122.1)
12:30 Associations of maternal obesity and psychosocial
factors with breastfeeding intention, initiation,
and duration.
L.E. Hauff, S.A. Leonard and K.M.
Rasmussen. Cornell Univ., Santa Clara Univ. and
UCLA.
(122.6)
12:45
Changes in coffee intake and subsequent risk of type 2
diabetes in women.
S.N. Bhupathiraju, A. Pan, W.C.
Willett, R.M. van Dam and F.B. Hu. Harvard Sch. of
Publ. Hlth. and Saw Swee Hock Sch. of Publ. Hlth.,
Singapore.
(106.1)
1:00 Linking obesity with colorectal polyp risk.
S.S.
Comstock, K. Hortos, B. Kovan, S. McCaskey, D.R.
Pathak and J.I. Fenton. Michigan State Univ. and Tri-
County Gastroenterol. P.C., Clinton Township.
(372.4)
1:15 Central adiposity predicts hippocampal-dependent
relational memory in prepubertal children.
N.A. Khan,
C.L. Baym, L.B. Raine, E. Drollette, M. Scudder,
A.F. Kramer, N.J. Cohen and C.H. Hillman. Univ. of
Illinois, Urbana.
(360.4)
1:30
g-Tocopherol additionally improves vascular endothelial
function following smoking cessation by decreasing
pro-inflammatory responses.
E. Mah, K.D. Ballard,
R. Pei, Y. Guo, J.S. Volek and R.S. Bruno. Univ. of
Connecticut and The Ohio State Univ.
(347.1)
40. THE B-24 PROJECT: EVALUATING THE
EVIDENCE BASE TO SUPPORT THE INCLUSION
OF INFANTS AND CHILDREN FROM BIRTH TO
24 MONTHS IN THE DIETARY GUIDELINES
Symposium
(Sponsored by: Medical Nutrition Council and Nutrition
Sciences Council)
s
at
. 12:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 157aBC
C
haired
: D. r
aiten
C
oChaired
: v. h
uBBarD
Pediatric Nutrition and Early Development
12:45 B-24 Project: an overview.
D. Raiten. Eunice Kennedy
Shriver NICHD, NIH.
1:05
NEL’s systematic review process for B-24.
J. Spahn.
USDA, Alexandria, VA.
1:25
Evidence and research gaps on infancy: period of sole
nutrient source feeding.
S. Baker. Univ. of Buffalo.
1:50
Evidence and research gaps on infancy: period of
complementary feeding (6-12 months).
F. Greer. Univ.
of Wisconsin-Madison.
2:10
Evidence and research gaps on toddlerhood: period
of transitional feeding (12-24 months).
S. Atkinson.
McMaster Univ., Canada.
2:30
Evidence and research gaps on caregiver (maternal,
other) factors influencing nutrient needs, dietary
quality and food habits.
K. Rasmussen. Cornell Univ.
NUTRITION SATURDAY
11
S
A
T
41. PHENOLIC COMPOUNDS AND NUTRIGENOMIC
INTERACTIONS
Special Function
(Sponsored by: PHENHRIG)
s
at
. 1:00
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
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xhiBition
C
enter
, 152
C
haired
: t. W
ilson
42. GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH AWARD
COMPETITION
Special Session
(Sponsored by: Nutritional Sciences Council)
s
at
. 2:30
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 151aB
C
haired
: m. W
atForD
Education Track/Professional Development
2:30 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D regulation of pyruvate
carboxylase and glucose addiction in MCF10a-
ras human breast epithelial cells.
W. Zheng and D.
Teegarden. Purdue Univ. (639.19)
2:45
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. (370.8)
3:00
Chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter transcription
factor II regulates the expression of retinoic acid
receptors and retinoid X receptors in hepatocytes.
R. Li and G. Chen. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville.
(347.5)
3:15
Dietary cocoa reduces adipose tissue inflammation in
high-fat fed obese mice.
Y. Gu, K. Harvatine and J.D.
Lambert. Penn State. (861.1)
3:30
The metabolic fate of anthocyanins in humans.
R.M.
de Ferrars, A. Cassidy, P. Curtis, K. Saki Raheem,
Q. Zhang and C.D. Kay. Univ. of East Anglia and St
Andrews Univ., U.K.
(125.7)
3:45
Caffeine intake and the plasma proteome.
O. Tian, A.R.
Josse and A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto. (1080.3)
4:00
Metabolomics profiling predicts SORT1 LDL-cholesterol
locus in a fit, young adult population.
L. Kirtiadi,
E. Gnatiuk, A. Karlos, K. Connors, H.J. Vogel, J.
Shearer and D.S. Hittel. Univ. of Calgary, Canada.
(1073.13)
4:15
A 50:50 blend of insoluble and soluble fibers added to
enteral formula increases fermentation and prevents
decline in gut bacteria.
K. Koecher, W. Thomas and J.
Slavin. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul and Minneapolis.
(1056.5)
4:30
Increased healthy food purchasing associated with
exposure to carry-out intervention in low-income
urban setting.
S.H. Lee-Kwan, R. Yong, S.N. Bleich
and J. Gittelsohn. Johns Hopkins Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
(842.12)
4:45
Iron status is related to cognitive performance: a
longitudinal analysis of data from the InCHIANTI
Study.
L. Chen, K.V. Patel and L.E. Murray-Kolb.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of
Washington and Penn State.
(346.8)
5:00
Restaurant meals—almost a full day’s worth of calories,
fats and sodium.
M.J. Scourboutakos and M.R.
L’Abbe. Univ. of Toronto. (842.8)
5:15 Cesarean delivery and maternal knowledge are
important predictors of early breastfeeding practices
in Bangladesh, Ethiopia and Vietnam.
K. Begum,
K.G. Dewey, J. Peerson, K.K. Saha, D. Ali, P.H.
Nguyen, R. Rawat and P. Menon. Univ. of California,
Davis and Intl. Food Policy Res. Inst., Washington,
DC.
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