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  1. Maternal nutrition in pregnancy has a crucial impact on the development of the fetus. Dietary trans fatty acids (t FA) are known to have adverse health effects, especially during pregnancy. However, the distribut...

    Authors: Uta Enke, Anke Jaudszus, Ekkehard Schleussner, Lydia Seyfarth, Gerhard Jahreis and Katrin Kuhnt
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:247
  2. In the western world, heart failure (HF) is one of the most important causes of cardiovascular mortality. Supplement with n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) has been shown to improve cardiac function in HF...

    Authors: Linn E Fosshaug, Rolf K Berge, Jan O Beitnes, Kjetil Berge, Hogne Vik, Pål Aukrust, Lars Gullestad, Leif E Vinge and Erik Øie
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:245
  3. ω-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids have been shown to play an important role in health. Enriched with ω-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids modulate expression of a number of genes with such broad functions as cell pro...

    Authors: Tao Guo, Xin F Liu, Xiang B Ding, Fei F Yang, Yong W Nie, Yu J An and Hong Guo
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:244
  4. The mevalonate pathway in human is responsible for the synthesis of cholesterol and other important biomolecules such as coenzyme Q, dolichols and isoprenoids. These molecules are required in the cell for func...

    Authors: Manish Rauthan and Marc Pilon
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:243
  5. The single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor delta (PPARD) gene affects serum lipid profiles, but to what extent alcohol consumption interferes with this association rema...

    Authors: Xian-Liang Wei, Rui-Xing Yin, Lin Miao and Dong-Feng Wu
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:242
  6. The importance of arachidonic acid (ARA) among the elderly has recently gained increased attention. The effects of ARA supplementation in the elderly are not fully understood, although ARA is considered to be ...

    Authors: Saki Kakutani, Yoshiyuki Ishikura, Norifumi Tateishi, Chika Horikawa, Hisanori Tokuda, Masanori Kontani, Hiroshi Kawashima, Yutaka Sakakibara, Yoshinobu Kiso, Hiroshi Shibata and Ikuo Morita
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:241
  7. We previously reported that fenugreek (Trigonella foenum-graecum L.) improved diet-induced metabolic disorders in rats. The purpose of the present study was to examine the dose-dependent effects, safety and toler...

    Authors: Etsuko Muraki, Yukie Hayashi, Hiroshige Chiba, Nobuyo Tsunoda and Keizo Kasono
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:240
  8. Changes in immune function believed to contribute to a variety of age-related diseases have been associated with increased production of nitric oxide (NO). We have recently reported that proteasome inhibitors ...

    Authors: Asaf A Qureshi, Xiaoyu Tan, Julia C Reis, Mostafa Z Badr, Christopher J Papasian, David C Morrison and Nilofer Qureshi
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:239
  9. Brown adipose tissue (BAT) has thermogenic potential. For its activation, cold exposure is considered a critical factor though other determinants have also been reported. The purpose of this study was to asses...

    Authors: Yung-Cheng Huang, Tai-Been Chen, Chien-Chin Hsu, Shau-Hsuan Li, Pei-Wen Wang, Bi-Fang Lee, Ching-Yuan Kuo and Nan-Tsing Chiu
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:238
  10. The presence of smaller low-density lipoproteins (LDL) has been associated with atherosclerosis risk, and the insulin resistance (IR) underlying the metabolic syndrome (MetS). In addition, some research has su...

    Authors: Alexis C Frazier-Wood, Stephen Glasser, W Timothy Garvey, Edmond K Kabagambe, Ingrid B Borecki, Hemant K Tiwari, Michael Y Tsai, Paul N Hopkins, Jose M Ordovas and Donna K Arnett
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:237
  11. Thymoquinone (TQ), the major active component of the medicinal herb Nigella sativa Linn., has been described as a chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic compound.

    Authors: Gamal Badr, Mohamed Mohany and Faisal Abu-Tarboush
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:236
  12. Prolonged wound healing is a complication of diabetes that contributes to mortality. Impaired wound healing occurs as a consequence of excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. Whey protein (WP) is a...

    Authors: Hossam Ebaid, Amir Salem, Abdalla Sayed and Ali Metwalli
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:235
  13. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is one of the most frequent causes of abnormal liver function. Because fatty acids can damage biological membranes, fatty acid accumulation in the liver may be partiall...

    Authors: Xin Wang, Yuzhen Cao, Yunwei Fu, Guifang Guo and Xiuying Zhang
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:234
  14. Despite significant research efforts on cancer therapy, diagnostics and imaging, many challenges remain unsolved. There are many unknown details regarding the interaction of nanoparticles (NPs) and biological ...

    Authors: Mohamed Anwar K Abdelhalim
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:233
  15. The long-lasting and abundant blooming of Pelagia noctiluca in Tunisian coastal waters compromises both touristic and fishing activities and causes substantial economic losses. Determining their molecular mode of...

    Authors: Yosra Ayed, Manel Boussabbeh, Wiem Zakhama, Chayma Bouaziz, Salwa Abid and Hassen Bacha
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:232
  16. The kidneys are essential for the metabolism of vitamin A (retinol) and its transport proteins retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP4) and transthyretin. Little is known about changes in serum concentration after liv...

    Authors: Andrea Henze, Jens Raila, Caroline Kempf, Petra Reinke, Anett Sefrin, Uwe Querfeld and Florian J Schweigert
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:231
  17. The association of rs17321515 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) near TRIB1 gene and serum lipid profiles has never been studied in the Chinese population. Therefore, the present study was undertaken to dete...

    Authors: Lynn Htet Htet Aung, Rui-Xing Yin, Dong-Feng Wu, Qing Li, Ting-Ting Yan, Yi-Ming Wang, Hui Li, Dai-Xun Wei, Yuan-Lu Shi and De-Zhai Yang
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:230
  18. In obesity, phenotypic switches occur in macrophage populations such that the predominantly M2-polarised anti-inflammatory state seen in lean individuals changes to a predominantly M1-polarised pro-inflammator...

    Authors: Suleiman A Isa, José S Ruffino, Maninder Ahluwalia, Andrew W Thomas, Keith Morris and Richard Webb
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:229
  19. Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and DHA-containing ethanolamine plasmalogens (PlsEtn) are decreased in the brain, liver and the circulation in Alzheimer's disease. Decreased supply of plasmalogen precursors to the ...

    Authors: Paul L Wood, Tara Smith, Nina Lane, M Amin Khan, Greg Ehrmantraut and Dayan B Goodenowe
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:227
  20. diabetes is a serious health problem and a source of risk for numerous severe complications such as obesity and hypertension. Treatment of diabetes and its related diseases can be achieved by inhibiting key di...

    Authors: Khaled Hamden, Henda Keskes, Sahla Belhaj, Kais Mnafgui, Abdelfattah feki and Noureddine Allouche
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:226
  21. Endurance exercise is known to promote a substantial effect on the energy balance in rats and humans. However, little is known about the exact mechanisms for the appetite-suppressive effects of endurance exerc...

    Authors: Jiexiu Zhao, Ye Tian, Jincheng Xu, Dongsen Liu, Xiaofang Wang and Binxiu Zhao
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:225
  22. High-density lipoproteins (HDL) and their main apolipoprotein, apoA-I, exhibit anti-inflammatory properties. The development of peptides that mimic HDL apolipoproteins offers a promising strategy to reduce inf...

    Authors: Belinda A Di Bartolo, Laura Z Vanags, Joanne TM Tan, Shisan Bao, Kerry-Anne Rye, Philip J Barter and Christina A Bursill
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:224
  23. Evidence suggests that physical activity (PA) has a beneficial effect on high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL) and triglycerides. However, observational studies show contrasting results for this associati...

    Authors: Jeroen SL de Munter, Irene G van Valkengoed, Karien Stronks and Charles Agyemang
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:223
  24. Synthetic activators of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) stimulate cholesterol removal from macrophages through PPAR-dependent up-regulation of liver × receptor α (LXRα) and subsequent induc...

    Authors: Ines Kämmerer, Robert Ringseis, Ronald Biemann, Gaiping Wen and Klaus Eder
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:222
  25. Bacterial lipases received much attention for their substrate specificity and their ability to function in extreme environments (pH, temperature...). Many staphylococci produced lipases which were released int...

    Authors: Slim Cherif, Sami Mnif, Fatma Hadrich, Slim Abdelkafi and Sami Sayadi
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:221
  26. Aging and dyslipidemia are processes which can lead to deleterious consequences to renal function. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the effects of both hypercholesterolemia and aging on renal ...

    Authors: Camille M Balarini, Mariana ZT Oliveira, Thiago MC Pereira, Nyam F Silva, Elisardo C Vasquez, Silvana S Meyrelles and Agata L Gava
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:220
  27. Among the digestive enzymes, phospholipase A2 (PLA2) hydrolyzes the essential dietary phospholipids in marine fish and shellfish. However, we know little about the organs that produce PLA2, and the ontogeny of th...

    Authors: Zied Zarai, Nicholas Boulais, Pascale Marcorelles, Eric Gobin, Sofiane Bezzine, Hafedh Mejdoub and Youssef Gargouri
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:219
  28. Previous studies have demonstrated that long chain fatty acids influence fibroblast function at sub-lethal concentrations. This study is the first to assess the effects of oleic, linoleic or palmitic acids on ...

    Authors: Juliana Magdalon, Elaine Hatanaka, Talita Romanatto, Hosana G Rodrigues, Wilson MT Kuwabara, Caitriona Scaife, Philip Newsholme and Rui Curi
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:218
  29. Obese subjects with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) are more susceptible than healthy individuals to oxidative stress and cardiovascular disease. This randomised controlled investigation was designed to test ...

    Authors: Andrea M McNeilly, Gareth W Davison, Marie H Murphy, Nida Nadeem, Tom Trinick, Ellie Duly, Anna Novials and Jane McEneny
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:217
  30. We investigated relationship of low levels of high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), high levels of triglycerides, and renal function for the odds, prognosis and survival following acute coronary events...

    Authors: Kuo-Liong Chien, Hung-Ju Lin, Hsiu-Ching Hsu and Ming-Fong Chen
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:215
  31. To develop effective strategies in cancer chemoprevention, an increased understanding of endogenous biochemical mediators that block metastatic processes is critically needed. Dietary lipids and non-steroidal ...

    Authors: Paul L Wood, M Amin Khan, Tara Smith and Dayan B Goodenowe
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:214
  32. Platelet activating factor (PAF) has been proposed as a key factor and initial trigger in atherosclerosis. Recently, a modulation of PAF metabolism by bioactive food constituents has been suggested. In this st...

    Authors: Constantina Nasopoulou, Alexandros B Tsoupras, Haralabos C Karantonis, Constantinos A Demopoulos and Ioannis Zabetakis
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:213
  33. Since the early 1990s, several strains of genetically modified mice have been developed as models for experimental atherosclerosis. Among the available models, the apolipoprotein E-deficient (apoE-/-) mouse is of...

    Authors: Silvana S Meyrelles, Veronica A Peotta, Thiago MC Pereira and Elisardo C Vasquez
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:211
  34. Probucol is a unique hypolipidemic agent that decreases high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C). However, it is not definite that whether probucol hinders the progression of atherosclerosis by improving H...

    Authors: Jian-Kai Zhong, Zhi-Gang Guo, Chen Li, Zhen-Kun Wang, Wen-Yan Lai and Yan Tu
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:210
  35. Extracellular bacterial lipases received much attention for their substrate specificity and their ability to function under extreme environments (pH, temperature...). Many staphylococci produced lipases which ...

    Authors: Slim Cherif, Sami Mnif, Fatma Hadrich, Slim Abdelkafi and Sami Sayadi
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:209
  36. Liver dominates the production and secretion of apolipoprotein B (apoB) and evidence shows that liver malfunction induced by hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection could lead to apolipoprotein metabolism disorders....

    Authors: Fu-Bing Wang, Cheng-liang Zhu, Xinghui Liu and Guo-sheng Gao
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:207
  37. Apolipoprotein E (apoE) is a key component of the lipid metabolism. Polymorphisms at the apoE gene (APOE) have been associated with cardiovascular disease, lipid levels and lipid-lowering response to statins. We ...

    Authors: Alvaro Cerda, Fabiana DV Genvigir, Maria AV Willrich, Simone S Arazi, Marcia MS Bernik, Egidio L Dorea, Marcelo C Bertolami, Andre A Faludi, Mario H Hirata and Rosario DC Hirata
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:206
  38. This study evaluated the relationship between ulcerative colitis and obesity, which are both chronic diseases characterized by inflammation and increases in immune cells and pro-inflammatory cytokines.

    Authors: Lílian G Teixeira, Alda J Leonel, Edenil C Aguilar, Nathália V Batista, Andréa C Alves, Candido C Coimbra, Adaliene VM Ferreira, Ana Maria C de Faria, Denise C Cara and Jacqueline I Alvarez Leite
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:204
  39. Long and persistent uncontrolled diabetes tends to degenerate the immune system and leads to an increased incidence of infection. Whey proteins (WPs) enhance immunity during early life and have a protective ro...

    Authors: Gamal Badr, Mohamed Mohany and Ali Metwalli
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:203
  40. Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is emerging as the most common liver disease of industrialized countries. Thus, discovering food components that can ameliorate NAFLD is of interest. Lotus root, the ed...

    Authors: Yumi Tsuruta, Koji Nagao, Shunichi Kai, Keisuke Tsuge, Takashi Yoshimura, Kazuyoshi Koganemaru and Teruyoshi Yanagita
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:202
  41. One of the well-defined and characterized protein modifications usually produced by oxidation is carbonylation, an irreversible non-enzymatic modification of proteins. However, carbonyl groups can be introduce...

    Authors: Rafael Medina-Navarro, Renato Nieto-Aguilar and Cleto Alvares-Aguilar
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:201
  42. Several polymorphisms in the apolipoprotein C3 (APOC3) gene have been found association with hypertriglyceridemia(HTG), but the link with coronary heart disease(CHD) risk between ethnicities was still controve...

    Authors: Juan Yu, Jingjing Huang, Yan Liang, Baodong Qin, Su He, Jing Xiao, Huimin Wang and Renqian Zhong
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:200
  43. Apolipoprotein M (apoM) may have potential antiatherosclerotic properties. It has been reported that apoM expression could be regulated by many intracellar and extracellar factors. In the present study we furt...

    Authors: Chunhua Zhu, Dongmei Di, Xiaoying Zhang, Guanghua Luo, Zongchun Wang, Jiang Wei, Yuanping Shi, Maria Berggren-Söderlund, Peter Nilsson-Ehle and Ning Xu
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:199
  44. Obesity is characterized by increased cell death and inflammatory reactions in the adipose tissue. Here, we explored pathophysiological alterations taking place in the adipose tissue in long-standing obesity. ...

    Authors: Mehmet M Altintas, Maria A Rossetti, Behzad Nayer, Alvaro Puig, Patricia Zagallo, Luis M Ortega, Kevin B Johnson, George McNamara, Jochen Reiser, Armando J Mendez and Ali Nayer
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:198
  45. Hepatic lipase (HL), an enzyme present in the hepatic sinusoids, is responsible for the lipolysis of lipoproteins. Human HL contains four polymorphic sites: G-250A, T-710C, A-763G, and C-514T single-nucleotide...

    Authors: Alvaro Pulchinelli Jr, Ana Maria Massad Costa, Cristina V de Carvalho, Naiara Correa Nogueira de Souza, Mauro A Haidar, Adagmar Andriolo and Ismael DC Guerreiro da Silva
    Citation: Lipids in Health and Disease 2011 10:197

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