Searching journal content for muscle (as phrase) in full text.

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  1. ...muscle cells (Igarashi & Michel 2009). In response to AngII, MAP greatly increased compared to baseline state. Indeed, 30 µg/kgbw AngII was slightly more potent than 10 µg/kgbw AngII. When SHRs were fed with CD, the energy intake markedly increased, resulting in obesity and hyperglycemia (Fig.  4). ~~~
  2. ...muscle - total width of GP (mainly due to reduction in proliferative zone). Tibia length only slightly affected. No change in hypertrophic zone. (Rooman et al. 1999) FVB mice F, 3 wks Dex, 7 days, Daily SC inj, 20µg/day (approx. 2mg /kg/day) BW Nose-tail length Tibiae dissected- GP width and zones T ~~~
  3. ...muscle function 17 Key words: Thyroid hormone, triiodothyronine, skeletal muscle, myogenesis, illness, 18 contraction, nonthyroidal illness syndrome. 19 Word count: 4736 20 Page 1 of 30 Accepted Preprint first posted on 19 October 2017 as Manuscript JOE-16-0611 Copyright © 2017 by the Society for En ~~~
  4. ...muscle mitochondria from Nnt-/- mice have unaltered Idh2 and Me3 enzymatic activities 495 meaning they cannot compensate for the loss of NNT to restore NADPH levels [Nickel et al., 496 2015, Ronchi et al., 2016]. When NNT is ablated in human adrenocortical cells we also see 497 a disturbance of redo ~~~
  5. ...muscle (Spangenburg et al. 2006, Trenerry et al. 2007, Begue et al. 2013). Since whole-body SOCS3-knockout mice exhibit embryonic lethality (Roberts et al. 2001), we employed the Cre-loxP system to produce tissue-specific SOCS3 ablation, as previously described (Mori et al. 2004, Jorgensen et al. 20 ~~~
  6. ...muscle protein synthesis after resistance (Tipton et  al. 1999) and endurance-type exercise (Howarth et al. 2009), meaning that the ingestion of protein in close proximity to exercise is often desired for optimal rates of muscle protein synthesis and subsequent adaptation (Phillips 2006, Phillips & ~~~
  7. ...muscle (Dibner et al. 2010, Buijs et al. 2013). In agreement with this, hepatic triglyceride (TG) content is temporally regulated by the SCN and feeding time (Adamovich et  al. 2014). Exposing rodents to LL leads to circadian disruption, which is associated with metabolic alterations including hepat ~~~
  8. ...muscle contraction and relaxation, as reviewed by Hill and coworkers (Hill et al. 2001). Vascular smooth muscle contraction and relaxation are governed by systemic hormones, neural influences and locally produced factors designed to maintain tissue perfusion and blood pressure (Hill et al. 2001). Th ~~~
  9. ...muscle DNA when animals were killed at 3 months of age (n = 12) or 17–20 months of age (n = 29). Primer pairs included Ell2ko-cSalI-38915, 5 ′ - AT G C AT C G T C G A A C A G G A G T T C A A G G T- 3 ′ and ELL2ko-SaclI-5′-CTGATACCGCGGGTGGAAATCACTCC-3′ (reverse) and Cre-upstream, 5′-TTGCCTGCATTACCGGT ~~~
  10. ...muscle is highly unlikely since nesfatin-1, on the level of the blood vessel, rather precludes vasodilation. In fact, in vitro nesfatin-1 application prevented the sodium nitroprusside-induced relaxation of smooth muscle in mesenteric artery, whereas it did not affect noradrenaline and 5-hydroxytryp ~~~
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