9 results match your criteria: "Department of Physiology and East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • * CPT1A is found to be most active in quiescent SCs and decreases as these cells become active, with overexpression of CPT1A in muscle cells leading to reduced muscle strength and regeneration capabilities.
  • * Increased levels of acyl-carnitine, resulting from elevated CPT1A, negatively impact SC proliferation and function, suggesting a critical balance of fatty acid metabolism is essential for SC maintenance and muscle repair.
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Objective: Abnormal lipid metabolism in mammalian tissues can be highly deleterious, leading to organ failure. Carnitine Palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2) deficiency is an inherited metabolic disorder affecting the liver, heart, and skeletal muscle due to impaired mitochondrial oxidation of long-chain fatty acids (mLCFAO) for energy production.

Methods: However, the basis of tissue damage in mLCFAO disorders is not fully understood.

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Medium-chain fatty acid oxidation is independent of l-carnitine in liver and kidney but not in heart and skeletal muscle.

Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol

October 2023

Department of Physiology and East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina, United States.

Medium-chain fatty acid (MCFA) consumption confers a wide range of health benefits that are highly distinct from long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs). A major difference between the metabolism of LCFAs compared with MCFAs is that mitochondrial LCFA oxidation depends on the carnitine shuttle, whereas MCFA mitochondrial oxidation is not. Although MCFAs are said to range from 6 to 14 carbons long based on physicochemical properties in vitro, the biological cut-off length of acyl chains that can bypass the carnitine shuttle in different mammalian tissues is unknown.

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Dietary lipids, particularly omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids, are speculated to impact behaviors linked to the dopaminergic system, such as movement and control of circadian rhythms. However, the ability to draw a direct link between dopaminergic omega-3 fatty acid metabolism and behavioral outcomes has been limited to the use of diet-based approaches, which are confounded by systemic effects. Here, neuronal lipid metabolism was targeted in a diet-independent manner by manipulation of long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase 6 (ACSL6) expression.

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Objective: Skeletal muscle is a heterogeneous and dynamic tissue that adapts to functional demands and substrate availability by modulating muscle fiber size and type. The concept of muscle fiber type relates to its contractile (slow or fast) and metabolic (glycolytic or oxidative) properties. Here, we tested whether disruptions in muscle oxidative catabolism are sufficient to prompt parallel adaptations in energetics and contractile protein composition.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers created a model of muscle acylcarnitine accumulation by deleting the CPT2 enzyme in skeletal muscle, leading to a 22-fold increase in long-chain acylcarnitines compared to controls.
  • Cpt2 mice showed resistance to weight gain and related metabolic issues like glucose intolerance and insulin resistance, potentially due to enhanced lipid excretion and increased energy expenditure.
  • Supplementing with L-carnitine decreased acylcarnitines and improved insulin sensitivity, suggesting that loss of muscle CPT2 can protect against obesity and insulin resistance despite high levels of acylcarnitines.
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Acyl-CoA synthetases as regulators of brain phospholipid acyl-chain diversity.

Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids

October 2020

Department of Physiology and East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, East Carolina University, Brody School of Medicine, NC, United States. Electronic address:

Each individual cell-type is defined by its distinct morphology, phenotype, molecular and lipidomic profile. The importance of maintaining cell-specific lipidomic profiles is exemplified by the numerous diseases, disorders, and dysfunctional outcomes that occur as a direct result of altered lipidome. Therefore, the mechanisms regulating cellular lipidome diversity play a role in maintaining essential biological functions.

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Why Does Exercise "Trigger" Adaptive Protective Responses in the Heart?

Dose Response

December 2015

Department of Physiology and East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Institute, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville NC USA.

Numerous epidemiological studies suggest that individuals who exercise have decreased cardiac morbidity and mortality. Pre-clinical studies in animal models also find clear cardioprotective phenotypes in animals that exercise, specifically characterized by lower myocardial infarction and arrhythmia. Despite the clear benefits, the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms that are responsible for exercise preconditioning are not fully understood.

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Obesity has more than doubled in children and tripled in adolescents in the past 30 yr. The association between metabolic disorders in offspring of obese mothers with diabetes has long been known; however, a growing body of research indicates that fathers play a significant role through presently unknown mechanisms. Recent observations have shown that changes in paternal diet may result in transgenerational inheritance of the insulin-resistant phenotype.

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