108 results on '"Gilbert, Elizabeth R."'
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2. Intracerebroventricular injection taurine changes free amino acid concentrations in the brain and plasma in chicks
3. Nutrient Transporter GeneExpression in Poultry, Livestock and Fish
4. Intracerebroventricular injection of taurine induces hypothermia through modifying monoaminergic pathways in chicks
5. Editorial: Fat Metabolism and Deposition in Poultry: Physiology, Genetics, Nutrition and Interdisciplinary Research, Volume I
6. Dietary Flavonoids as Modulators of Lipid Metabolism in Poultry
7. Central Taurine Attenuates Hyperthermia and Isolation Stress Behaviors Augmented by Corticotropin-Releasing Factor with Modifying Brain Amino Acid Metabolism in Neonatal Chicks
8. DNA methylation-modifiers reduced food intake in juvenile chickens (Gallus gallus) and Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica)
9. Heat Stress Responses in Birds: A Review of the Neural Components
10. The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis During Heat Stress in Chickens: A Review
11. 537 Animal Growth and Development—A Scorecard and Recalibration
12. Prostaglandin E2-induced anorexia involves hypothalamic brain-derived neurotrophic factor and ghrelin in chicks
13. Ferulic acid, a phytochemical with transient anorexigenic effects in birds
14. The anorexigenic effect of neuropeptide AF in Japanese quail, Coturnix japonica, is associated with activation of the melanocortin system
15. Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis regulation and organization in urban and rural song sparrows
16. Migratory state and patterns of steroid hormone regulation in the pectoralis muscle of a nomadic migrant, the pine siskin (Spinus pinus)
17. Dietary Supplementation of Baicalein Affects Gene Expression in Broiler Adipose Tissue During the First Week Post-hatch
18. Central GABAA receptor mediates taurine-induced hypothermia and possibly reduces food intake in thermo-neutral chicks and regulates plasma metabolites in heat-exposed chicks
19. Potential Role of Amino Acids in the Adaptation of Chicks and Market-Age Broilers to Heat Stress
20. The hypothalamic mechanism of neuropeptide S-induced satiety in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) involves the paraventricular nucleus and corticotropin-releasing factor
21. Reduced food intake during exposure to high ambient temperatures is associated with molecular changes in the nucleus of the hippocampal commissure and the paraventricular and arcuate hypothalamic nuclei
22. Chronic stress, epigenetics, and adipose tissue metabolism in the obese state
23. Oxyntomodulin induces satiety and activates the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus in Japanese quail
24. The anorexigenic effect of beta-melanocyte-stimulating hormone involves corticotrophin-releasing factor and mesotocin in birds
25. Short communication: Short-term fasting and refeeding induced changes in subcutaneous adipose tissue physiology in 7-day old Japanese quail
26. Anorexigenic effects of substance P in Coturnix japonica
27. Early-Life Stress Induced Epigenetic Changes of Corticotropin-Releasing Factor Gene in Anorexic Low Body Weight–Selected Chicks
28. Chronic stress and adipose tissue in the anorexic state: endocrine and epigenetic mechanisms
29. Short communication: Adipogenic, metabolic, and apoptotic marker mRNA in cellular fractions of adipose tissue from chickens predisposed to be anorexic or obese
30. The anorexigenic effect of neuropeptide K in chicks involves the paraventricular nucleus and arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus
31. Gastrin releasing peptide-induced satiety is associated with hypothalamic and brainstem changes in chicks
32. Hypothalamic mechanisms associated with neuropeptide K-induced anorexia in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica)
33. Anorexigenic effects of mesotocin in chicks are genetic background-dependent and are associated with changes in the paraventricular nucleus and lateral hypothalamus
34. Changes in adipose tissue physiology during the first two weeks posthatch in chicks from lines selected for low or high body weight
35. Hypothalamic mechanism of corticotropin-releasing factor’s anorexigenic effect in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica)
36. Central injection of oxytocin reduces food intake and affects hypothalamic and adipose tissue gene expression in chickens
37. Hypothalamic mechanisms associated with corticotropin-releasing factor-induced anorexia in chicks
38. Changes in Adipose Tissue Physiology during the First Two Weeks Post‐hatch in Chicks from Lines Selected for Low or High Body Weight
39. Fasting differentially alters the hypothalamic proteome of chickens from lines with the propensity to be anorexic or obese
40. Fasting and refeeding induce differential changes in hypothalamic mRNA abundance of appetite-associated factors in 7 day-old Japanese quail, Coturnix japonica
41. Glucose Tolerance and Plasma Non-Esterified Fatty Acid Levels in Chickens Selected for Low Body Weight, Red Junglefowl, and their Reciprocal Cross
42. Supplemental methionine sources have a neutral impact on oxidative status in broiler chickens
43. Appetite-associated responses to central neuropeptide Y injection in quail
44. Responses to peripheral neuropeptide Y in avian adipose tissue are diet, depot, and time specific
45. Gene expression and activity of methionine converting enzymes in broiler chickens fed methionine isomers or precursors
46. Whole-transcriptome analysis of atrophic ovaries in broody chickens reveals regulatory pathways associated with proliferation and apoptosis
47. Peripheral neuropeptide Y differentially influences adipogenesis and lipolysis in chicks from lines selected for low or high body weight
48. Alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone-induced anorexia in Japanese quail (Coturnix japonica) likely involves the ventromedial hypothalamus and paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus
49. Factors affecting adipose tissue development in chickens: A review
50. A high fat diet enhances the sensitivity of chick adipose tissue to the effects of centrally injected neuropeptide Y on gene expression of adipogenesis-associated factors
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