Search results for "BASAL"

showing 10 items of 920 documents

Genomic and non-genomic mechanisms of action of thyroid hormones and their catabolite 3,5-diiodo-l-thyronine in Mammals

2020

Since the realization that the cellular homologs of a gene found in the retrovirus that contributes to erythroblastosis in birds (v-erbA), i.e. the proto-oncogene c-erbA encodes the nuclear receptors for thyroid hormones (THs), most of the interest for THs focalized on their ability to control gene transcription. It was found, indeed, that, by regulating gene expression in many tissues, these hormones could mediate critical events both in development and in adult organisms. Among their effects, much attention was given to their ability to increase energy expenditure, and they were early proposed as anti-obesity drugs. However, their clinical use has been strongly challenged by the concomita…

0301 basic medicinenonalcoholic fatty liver diseaseobesityDiiodothyroninesEndogenyReviewthyroid hormone metabolism and transportMitochondrionmedicine.disease_causeProto-Oncogene Maslcsh:Chemistry0302 clinical medicineTranscription (biology)Settore BIO/10 - BiochimicaGene expressionSettore BIO/06 - Anatomia Comparata E CitologiaSettore MED/49 - Scienze Tecniche Dietetiche Applicatelcsh:QH301-705.5SpectroscopyMammalsReceptors Thyroid Hormonehepatic steatosisthyroid hormone mechanisms of actionGeneral Medicineresistance to thyroid hormones (RTH)Computer Science ApplicationsCell biology35-diiodo-L-thyronineThyroid Hormones030209 endocrinology & metabolismBiologyIodide PeroxidaseCatalysisInorganic Chemistry03 medical and health sciencesmedicineAnimalsHumansPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMolecular BiologyGeneOrganic ChemistryBiological TransportLipid Metabolismhepatic steatosi030104 developmental biologyNuclear receptorlcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999MutationBasal MetabolismLipid PeroxidationOxidative stressHormone
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Mass, phylogeny, and temperature are sufficient to explain differences in metabolic scaling across mammalian orders?

2016

Abstract Whether basal metabolic rate‐body mass scaling relationships have a single exponent is highly discussed, and also the correct statistical model to establish relationships. Here, we aimed (1) to identify statistically best scaling models for 17 mammalian orders, Marsupialia, Eutheria and all mammals, and (2) thereby to prove whether correcting for differences in species’ body temperature and their shared evolutionary history improves models and their biological interpretability. We used the large dataset from Sieg et al. (The American Naturalist 174, 2009, 720) providing species’ body mass (BM), basal metabolic rate (BMR) and body temperature (T). We applied different statistical ap…

030110 physiology0106 biological sciences0301 basic medicineNormalization (statistics)Biologymacrophysiologyphylogeny010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciences03 medical and health sciencesStatisticsScalingEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsNature and Landscape ConservationOriginal ResearchAllometryEcologyEcologyLinear modelbody massOrdinary least squaresBasal metabolic rateExponentAllometryconstraintsbody temperatureLinear equationEcology and Evolution
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Author Correction: On the thermodynamic origin of metabolic scaling

2018

The origin and shape of metabolic scaling has been controversial since Kleiber found that basal metabolic rate of animals seemed to vary as a power law of their body mass with exponent 3/4, instead of 2/3, as a surface-to-volume argument predicts. The universality of exponent 3/4 -claimed in terms of the fractal properties of the nutrient network- has recently been challenged according to empirical evidence that observed a wealth of robust exponents deviating from 3/4. Here we present a conceptually simple thermodynamic framework, where the dependence of metabolic rate with body mass emerges from a trade-off between the energy dissipated as heat and the energy efficiently used by the organi…

0303 health sciencesMultidisciplinaryInformation retrievalComputer scienceBiochemical Phenomena030310 physiologyPublished Erratumlcsh:RMEDLINElcsh:MedicineModels Biological03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicine030220 oncology & carcinogenesisComputingMethodologies_DOCUMENTANDTEXTPROCESSINGAnimalsBody SizeThermodynamicslcsh:QBasal Metabolismlcsh:ScienceAuthor CorrectionScalingScientific Reports
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Facilitators and inhibitors of organic food buying behavior

2021

Abstract Consumption patterns across the globe indicate consumers’ rising interest in purchasing organic food due to increasing personal-health consciousness. However, research on organic food shows a low translation of this interest into stated preferences for purchasing organic food. Limited academic research has explored this puzzling buying behavior of consumers, particularly in developed economies such as Japan. Our study addresses this gap by examining the factors that facilitate or inhibit Japanese consumers’ buying behavior toward organic food. We use the Stimulus-Organism-Response framework, Innovation Resistance Theory, and Dual-Factor Theory to examine these factors by analyzing …

0303 health sciencesNutrition and Dietetics030309 nutrition & dietetics:Samfunnsvitenskap: 200 [VDP]media_common.quotation_subjectNutritional contentdigestive oral and skin physiology04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesHealth consciousness040401 food sciencePurchasing03 medical and health sciences0404 agricultural biotechnologyFacilitatorVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Basale biofag: 470ConsciousnessMarketingPsychologyWelfareFood Sciencemedia_commonFood Quality and Preference
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Intensified forestry as a climate mitigation measure alters surface water quality in low intensity managed forests

2020

Climate change has led to a focus on forest management techniques to increase carbon (C) sequestration as a mitigation measure. Fertilisation and increased removal of biomass have been proposed. But these and other forest practices may have undesirable effects on surface water quality. In naturally acid-sensitive areas such as much of Fennoscandia a concern is acidification due to acid deposition in combination with forest practices that increase the removal of base cations and leaching of nitrate (NO3). Here we apply the biogeochemical model MAGIC to the coniferous-forested catchment at Birkenes, southernmost Norway, to simulate the effects of forest fertilisation and harvest on soil and s…

040101 forestry010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesForest managementBiomassClimate changeForestry04 agricultural and veterinary sciences01 natural sciencesEnvironmental protectionSurface water qualityVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400::Basale biofag: 4700401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental sciencesense organsWater qualityskin and connective tissue diseasesIntensity (heat transfer)0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Current Predictive Resting Metabolic Rate Equations Are Not Sufficient to Determine Proper Resting Energy Expenditure in Olympic Young Adult National…

2021

Predictive resting metabolic rate (RMR) equations are widely used to determine athletes’ resting energy expenditure (REE). However, it remains unclear whether these predictive RMR equations accurately predict REE in the athletic populations. The purpose of the study was to compare 12 prediction equations (Harris-Benedict, Mifflin, Schofield, Cunningham, Owen, Liu’s, De Lorenzo) with measured RMR in Turkish national team athletes and sedentary controls. A total of 97 participants, 49 athletes (24 females, 25 males), and 48 sedentary (28 females, 20 males), were recruited from Turkey National Olympic Teams at the Ministry of Youth and Sports. RMR was measured using a Fitmate GS (Cosmed, Italy…

11035 Institute of General Practice0301 basic medicinePhysiology610 Medicine & healthMeasured RMRlcsh:Physiologypredictive equations03 medical and health sciences2737 Physiology (medical)0302 clinical medicineTotal energy expenditurePhysiology (medical)olympic athletesMedicineResting energy expenditureYoung adultresting metabolic rateOriginal Researchindirect calorimetry030109 nutrition & dieteticslcsh:QP1-981biologyAthletesbusiness.industryLimits of agreement1314 Physiology030229 sport sciencesbiology.organism_classificationlow energy availabilityBasal metabolic rateChristian ministrybusinessDemographyFrontiers in Physiology
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Carbon isotope stratigraphy, magnetostratigraphy, and 40Ar/39Ar age of the Cretaceous South Atlantic coast, Namibe Basin, Angola

2014

This publication results from Projecto PaleoAngola, an international cooperative research effort among the contributing authors and their institutions, funded by the National Geographic Society, the Petroleum Research Fund of the American Chemical Society, Sonangol E.P., Esso Angola, Fundacao Vida of Angola, LS Films, Maersk, Damco, Safmarine, ISEM at SMU, The Royal Dutch Embassy in Luanda, TAP Airlines, Royal Dutch Airlines, The Saurus Institute, and the Perot Museum of Nature and Science. JS was additionally funded by Yale University and the Alfred Kordelin Foundation. We dedicate this contribution to the late Kalunga Lima, our friend and colleague in Projecto PaleoAngola. We thank Margar…

1171 Geosciences010506 paleontologyPaleomagnetismeducationBiostratigraphy010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesWESTERNCretaceous/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/life_below_waterPaleontologyStable carbon isotopesOCEANChemostratigraphySDG 14 - Life Below WaterChemostratigraphyMagnetostratigraphy0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesBasaltCURVEBIOSTRATIGRAPHYMagnetic polarity stratigraphyGEOCHRONOLOGYMOSASAURSGeologyCretaceousBOUNDARY13. Climate actionASTRONOMICAL CALIBRATIONBURIALGeochronologyAfricaAtlanticCenomanianGeologyJournal of African Earth Sciences
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Meta-analysis of real-time fMRI neurofeedback studies using individual participant data: How is brain regulation mediated?

2015

An increasing number of studies using real-time fMRI neurofeedback have demonstrated that successful regulation of neural activity is possible in various brain regions. Since these studies focused on the regulated region(s), little is known about the target-independent mechanisms associated with neurofeedback-guided control of brain activation, i.e. the regulating network. While the specificity of the activation during self-regulation is an important factor, no study has effectively determined the network involved in self-regulation in general. In an effort to detect regions that are responsible for the act of brain regulation, we performed a post-hoc analysis of data involving different ta…

2805 Cognitive NeuroscienceVentrolateral prefrontal cortexBrain regulationCognitive NeuroscienceStress-related disorders Donders Center for Medical Neuroscience [Radboudumc 13]610 Medicine & healthCIBM-SPCddc:616.0757Brain mapping050105 experimental psychologyProcedural memory03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBasal gangliamedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAnterior cingulate cortexBrain Mapping05 social sciencesBrainCognitionNeurofeedbackMagnetic Resonance Imagingmedicine.anatomical_structureNeurofeedback Real-time fMRI Brain regulationNeurology10054 Clinic for Psychiatry Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics2808 NeurologyMeta-analysisReal-time fMRINeurofeedbackPsychologyNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBrain Regulation ; Neurofeedback ; Real-time FmriNeuroImage
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Understanding the Significance of the Hypothalamic Nature of the Subthalamic Nucleus

2021

AbstractThe subthalamic nucleus (STN) is an essential component of the basal ganglia and has long been considered to be a part of the ventral thalamus. However, recent neurodevelopmental data indicated that this nucleus is of hypothalamic origin which is now commonly acknowledged. In this work, we aimed to verify whether the inclusion of the STN in the hypothalamus could influence the way we understand and conduct research on the organization of the whole ventral and posterior diencephalon. Developmental and neurochemical data indicate that the STN is part of a larger glutamatergic posterior hypothalamic region that includes the premammillary and mammillary nuclei. The main anatomic charact…

5neuroanatomyHypothalamusVentral anterior nucleusBiologyGlobus PallidusBasal GangliaMidbrainDiencephalonSubthalamic NucleusNeural PathwaysBasal gangliamedicineTheory/New Conceptsbehaviorsystem neuroscienceGeneral NeuroscienceGeneral MedicineIntegrative SystemsSubthalamic nucleusmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemHypothalamusNeuroscienceNucleusNeuroanatomyeneuro
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Selective Activation of Serotonin2C Receptors Stimulates GABA-ergic Function in the Rat Substantia Nigra Pars Reticulata: A Combined in Vivo Electrop…

2007

In vivo electrophysiology and microdialysis were used to investigate the physiological role of 5-HT2C receptors in the control of substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) function. Extracellular single-unit recordings were performed from putative GABA-containing neurons in the SNr of anesthetized rats, and local GABA release was studied by in vivo microdialysis in the SNr of awake freely-moving rats. Systemic administration of the selective 5-HT2C receptor agonist (S)-2-(chloro-5-fluoro-indol-1-yl)-1-methylethylamine 1:1 C4H4O4 (RO 60-0175) caused a dose-dependent excitation of about 30% of the SNr neurons recorded. However, the remaining neurons were either inhibited or unaffected by systemi…

5-HT2C receptorGABAmicrodialysisbasal gangliasubstantia nigra pars reticulataelectrophysiology
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