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Scholar Results 1 - 5 of 5 citing Rogers: Metabolically favorable remodeling of human adipose tissue by human adenovirus type 36. (0.07 sec) 

Acute effect of infection by adipogenic human adenovirus Ad36

- nih.gov
M Pasarica, S Loiler, NV Dhurandhar - Archives of virology, 2008 - Springer
Abstract Human adenovirus Ad36 is causally and cor- relatively associated in
animals and humans, respectively, with increased adiposity and altered metabolic
profile. We inoculated rats with Ad36 or UV-inactivated Ad36, or ...
Cited by 3 - Related articles - All 4 versions

Ad36 adipogenic adenovirus in human non-alcoholic fatty liver disease


GM Trovato, GF Martines, A Garozzo, A … - Liver international: official journal of the International …, 2009 - interscience.wiley.com
Aims: Infection with specific pathogens may lead to increased adiposity. The
human adenovirus 36 (Ad36) is a relatively new factor in promoting adipogenesis.
It seems to improve the metabolic profile, expanding adipose tissue and ...
Related articles - All 2 versions

Human obesity relationship with Ad36 adenovirus and insulin resistance


GM Trovato, A Castro, A Tonzuso, A Garozzo, … - International Journal of Obesity, 2009 - nature.com
Infection with specific pathogens may lead to increased adiposity: a specific
adiposity-promoting effect of Ad36 human adenovirus, without the involvement of
neurological mechanisms, was reported. The aim of this study is to ...
Related articles - All 3 versions

Adipogenic Cascade Can Be Induced Without Adipogenic Media by a Human Adenovirus


MA Rathod, PM Rogers, SD Vangipuram, JMA … - Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.), 2009 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
Several metabolic abnormalities are associated with relative excess or
deficiency of adipose tissue. Identifying the regulators of adipogenic
differentiation is critical for its successful manipulation. Ad36, a human ...
Related articles - All 4 versions

Sujets «métaboliquement sains», bien qu'obèses. Première partie: diagnostic, …


N Esser, N Paquot, AJ Scheen - Obésité, 2009 - Springer
Résumé Environ 30 à 50 % des sujets obèses sont « métaboliquement normaux
» (MHO pour metabolically healthy, but obese) alors qu'inversement, nombre de
sujets non obèses sont « métaboliquement anormaux ». La topographie et ...
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