Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Obese
donkeys are susceptible to a hyperlipaemic crisis characterised by high plasma triglyceride concentrations. In this study, the relationships between the body condition of 24 donkeys and their basal lipid metabolism were investigated. Plasma cholesterol, triglyceride and lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations were measured in healthy donkeys classified according to their body condition as thin, ideal or obese. There were significant differences between the groups in the concentrations of triglyceride and very low density lipoprotein (VLDL), which increased in concentration with body condition (P less than 0.05). Cholesterol, low density lipoprotein (LDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL) concentrations were similar in all the groups. Triglyceride and VLDL concentrations were positively correlated with body weight (r = 0.82) and plasma free fatty acid concentration (r = 0.48). There were no significant differences in basal plasma concentrations of insulin or cortisol. These results suggest that
obesity
in donkeys is associated with changes in lipid and lipoprotein metabolism that might predispose the animals to hyperlipaemia.
Vet
Rec
1990 Nov 17
PMID:An investigation of the relationships between body condition and plasma lipid and lipoprotein concentrations in 24 donkeys. 227 89
The modulating effects of estradiol (E: 1 microgram/3.5 days) and progesterone (P: 2 mg/3.5 days) on the
obesity
and hyperinsulinemic and hyperglycemic components of the diabetes-
obesity
syndrome in female C57BL/KsJ (db/db) mice, which includes cellular atrophy and adiposity in the reproductive tract, were examined and compared to corresponding control (+/?) parameters. All control and diabetic mice received oil (vehicle control), E, or P treatments starting at 4 weeks of age. Body weight, serum insulin levels, blood glucose concentrations, and utero-ovarian lipoprotein lipase activities were analyzed at 8 and 16 weeks of age and related to the ultrastructural changes in the steroid-sensitive uterine epithelium during the treatment period. Neither E nor P had any effect on body weights in (+/?) or (db/db) mice. The pronounced diabetes-associated elevation in serum insulin levels was enhanced by E, and suppressed by P, in 16-week-old (db/db) mice as compared with controls. By 16 weeks of age, the E therapy normalized blood glucose levels in diabetic mice to control levels, whereas P was ineffective in modulating the hyperglycemia. The reduction in blood glucose levels in E-treated diabetic mice correlated temporally with the return of normal intracellular structure including the disappearance of intracellular lipid vacuoles characteristic of uterine epithelium cells of (db/db) mice. The diabetes-induced rise in utero-ovarian lipoprotein lipase activity was normalized by P-therapy. The reduction in utero-ovarian lipoprotein lipase activity coincided temporally with the demonstrated intracellular reorganization in (db/db) reproductive tract tissues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Anat
Rec
1989 Dec
PMID:Effects of estradiol and progesterone on diabetes-associated utero-ovarian atrophy in C57BL/KsJ (db/db) mutant mice. 268 92
Differentiation of adipocytes from their precursor cells (preadipocytes) is an important problem in the study of the pathogenesis of
obesity
. Unfortunately, among the immature stages of adipocytes, only relatively differentiated forms can be identified by their fine structure; because early preadipocytes cannot be distinguished from fibroblasts solely on the basis of their morphology, it is impossible to assess the size of the preadipocyte population. S-100 protein has been identified in various mammalian tissues and recently mature adipocytes have been shown to be positive for this protein. Because fibroblasts are negative for S-100 protein, the present study tested the S-100 immunoreactivity of preadipocytes by the peroxidase-antiperoxidase (PAP) preembedding method at the ultrastructural level both in vivo and in culture. Mature adipocytes and early preadipocytes, including fibroblast-like cells devoid of lipid droplets, were positive both in vivo and in culture. Endothelial cells and pericytes were negative; but flattened, lipid-free, fibroblast-like cells surrounding the pericytes were positive. True fibroblasts both in vivo and in culture were negative. Therefore, S-100 protein can be a useful biochemical marker in distinguishing fibroblasts from early preadipocytes.
Anat
Rec
1989 Aug
PMID:S-100 protein in white preadipocytes: an immunoelectronmicroscopic study. 278 27
A total of 8268 dogs were surveyed in 11 veterinary practices in the United Kingdom during a period of six months in 1983. The primary purpose of the survey was to assess the level of
obesity
on a five point scale with properly identified criteria. Information on the clinical condition of each dog was also recorded as well as proportions of food types fed, particulars of breed, sex, age, sexual status and the dog's name. Results showed that 21.4 per cent of dogs in the survey were judged to be obese and 2.9 per cent gross; 1.9 per cent were judged as thin, 13.5 per cent lean and 60.3 per cent were optimum. Labradors were found to be the most likely breed to become obese. Neutered females were about twice as likely to be obese as entire females. The same trend was evident with neutered males. Circulatory problems were associated with dogs over 10 years old and those which were gross, rather than obese. A similar trend was discernable with articular/locomotor problems. Skin and reproductive problems showed little relationship with age or
obesity
. Neoplasia was much more prevalent in dogs over 10 years old but had little relationship with either sexual status or
obesity
rating. There was a high rate of usage of prepared food for all categories. The amount of fresh food fed decreased rapidly as the proportion of canned food increased, but the obese and non-obese dogs showed very little difference in the type of food fed.
Vet
Rec
1986 Apr 05
PMID:Study of obesity in dogs visiting veterinary practices in the United Kingdom. 371 92
A biomechanical model of endochondral ossification (Frost and Jee, 1994. Anat.
Rec
., 240:435-446) can help to explain: (1) some differences in fracture patterns in children and adults, (2) increased fractures during the human adolescent growth spurt, (3) localization of stress fractures and pseudofractures to cortical instead of trabecular bone, (4) increased bone mass in adult-acquired and childhood
obesity
, (5) subchondral bone densification and osteopenia in some arthroses, (6) why and where mammals lose spongiosa with aging, (7) why, as percents of the original bone stock, metaphyseal trabecular bone losses with aging usually exceed cortical bone losses, (8) why osteochondritis dissecans and aseptic necroses of bone localize in epiphyses instead of metaphyses, (9) some features of growth plate histology in rickets and the chondrodystrophies, (10) why spontaneous fractures in osteoporotic patients affect vertebral more than metaphyseal spongiosa, (11) why osteopenias develop in most chronic, debilitating diseases, and (12) why histomorphometric values can differ in iliac bone biopsies obtained by the "vertical" Jamshidi and "horizontal" Bordier-Meunier techniques.
Anat
Rec
1994 Dec
PMID:Perspectives: applications of a biomechanical model of the endochondral ossification mechanism. 787 97
Twenty-two domestic cats were fed a commercial low calorie diet for the management of
obesity
for up to 18 weeks and showed an average weight loss of 13.5 per cent of their body-weight. There was no indication that a steady weight loss over the study period had any adverse effect on the hepatic function or general health of the cats. There was an increase in the cats' total serum cholesterol concentration in association with the loss of weight.
Vet
Rec
1994 Apr 09
PMID:A study of obese cats on a calorie-controlled weight reduction programme. 800
Thirteen wild caught juvenile hedgehogs were treated and overwintered in a rehabilitation centre and 12 were released into the wild and monitored by radiotelemetry. Clinical examinations were carried out before they were released and twice afterwards, and any hedgehogs found dead were examined post mortem. The health of the animals was generally good but dental disease,
obesity
and minor injuries were common. One hedgehog died before it was released and had cardiovascular and respiratory lesions, and one was euthanased 28 days after its release and had verminous enteritis and parasitic bronchitis. Three hedgehogs were killed by badgers, two were killed by road traffic and four were known to have survived when the study ended.
Vet
Rec
1996 Jan 20
PMID:Health and welfare of rehabilitated juvenile hedgehogs (Erinaceus europaeus) before and after release into the wild. 873 Jun 98
Obesity
is a heath problem affecting a significant fraction of adult Americans and is on the rise globally. It is of importance to find treatments that achieve medically significant weight loss and successful long-term maintenance of a desired weight. Recent transgenic mouse studies and genetic characterization of spontaneous rodent
obesity
mutants, together with gene linkage analysis in humans, have led to an increased understanding of the physiologic and molecular mechanisms underlying
obesity
. However, much remains to be studied in this complex field of research. In this review, we discuss the physiology and genetics underlying
obesity
and how studies in rodents and humans are converging, producing a greater understanding of the mechanisms underlying this health problem.
Anat
Rec
1999 04 15
PMID:Rodent mutant models of obesity and their correlations to human obesity. 1032 34
Hypothyroidism was diagnosed in 50 dogs and excluded in 86 dogs suspected of hypothyroidism, on the basis of the results of bovine thyrotropin response tests. Breed, pedigree, sex or neutering status did not significantly influence the likelihood of the dogs being hypothyroid. The hypothyroid dogs were significantly older than the non-hypothyroid dogs referred to the University of Glasgow during the same period. However, when dogs under two years of age were excluded from the statistical analyses there was no significant difference in age between the two groups. The most common clinical characteristics associated with hypothyroidism were metabolic signs (84 per cent of cases), particularly lethargy (76 per cent),
obesity
or weight gain (44 per cent), and exercise intolerance (24 per cent); and dermatological abnormalities (80 per cent), including alopecia (56 per cent), poor coat quality (30 per cent) and hyperpigmentation (20 per cent). When compared with the laboratory reference limits the most common biochemical and haematological abnormalities were increased concentrations of triglycerides (88 per cent), cholesterol (78 per cent), glucose (49 per cent), and fructosamine (43 per cent), and increased activities of creatine kinase (35 per cent), and decreased concentrations of inorganic phosphate (63 per cent), and a low red blood cell count (40 per cent). When compared with reference limits derived from the euthyroid dogs the most common abnormalities were increased concentrations of gamma-glutamyltransferase (21 per cent), cholesterol (18 per cent), and aspartate aminotransferase (15 per cent) and a decreased red blood cell count (29 per cent), and decreased neutrophils (18 per cent) and decreased activity of creatine kinase (15 per cent). Assessment of cholesterol, creatine kinase, aspartate aminotransferase, gamma-glutamyltransferase, and red blood cell and neutrophil counts may be particularly useful in distinguishing hypothyroid dogs from euthyroid animals with similar clinical signs.
Vet
Rec
1999 Oct 23
PMID:Epidemiological, clinical, haematological and biochemical characteristics of canine hypothyroidism. 1059 70
Type 2 diabetes, characterized by peripheral target tissue resistance to insulin, is epidemic in industrialized countries and is strongly associated with
obesity
. The protein hormone, resistin, secreted specifically by the adipose tissues, is found to antagonize insulin action upon glucose uptake and may serve as an important role between human
obesity
and insulin resistance. Here, we report the production of bioactive recombinant resistin in Escherichia coli. cDNA of resistin was obtained by RT-PCR from mRNA of mouse differentiated NIH/3T3-L1 cells. The cDNA of mature resistin was inserted in the pQE-31 vector and the recombinant plasmid was transferred into E. coli JM109. After IPTG induction, the
rec
. resistin found in the inclusion body was dissolved in 6 M guanidine-HCl in the presence of 10 mM beta-mercaptoethanol. The His-tag containing protein was purified by Ni-NTA column to 95% homogeneity. After a quasi-static-like refolding process, the secondary structure of the
rec
. resistin was elucidated by circular dichroism which indicated that the protein was composed of 34.3% alpha-helix, 8.9% beta-sheet, 23.4% beta-turn, and 31.2% unordered structure. No disulfide-linked homodimers were formed in SDS-PAGE analysis under non-reducing conditions. The
rec
. resistin showed a dose-dependent antagonizing action against insulin in [3H]-2-deoxy-glucose transport in a broad range from 1 ng ml(-1) to 10 microg ml(-1) of resistin. A suppression of 85% of transport was achieved at the dosage of 10 microg ml(-1). This result may indicate that the
rec
. resistin does not need to form homodimers to establish its bioactivity. The
rec
. resistin will be useful for exploring the biological functions of this newly discovered hormone.
...
PMID:Production and characterization of bioactive recombinant resistin in Escherichia coli. 1281 70
1
2
3
4
Next >>