Leveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic Processes

<p>The origin of man has motivated researchers to investigate differences between humans and our non-human relatives. The striking phenotypic differences that distinguish humans from chimpanzees are likely controlled by a relatively modest number of genetic changes present between these speci...

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Main Author: Pfefferle, Lisa Warner
Other Authors: Wray, Gregory A
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6124
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-61242014-10-15T03:29:08ZLeveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic ProcessesPfefferle, Lisa WarnerGeneticsgenomicsmetabolismprimates<p>The origin of man has motivated researchers to investigate differences between humans and our non-human relatives. The striking phenotypic differences that distinguish humans from chimpanzees are likely controlled by a relatively modest number of genetic changes present between these species. As energy acquisition and processing effect multiple organ systems, the dramatic changes in the human diet are thought to underpin many of these unique phenotypes. The evolution of the human diet is marked by omnivory with increased consumption of animal products, cereal grain and vegetable oil associated with the Paleolithic era, domestication of plants and the industrial revolution respectively. Nutrition is essential for life and is unique as it both shapes, and is shaped by the genome. Given this complex interaction, teasing out actors and responders in the genome-diet relationship is a challenge. I took several expression approaches by interrogating regulatory regions, candidate networks and genomes in tissues of dietary relevance. These experiments uncovered combinations of physiological and morphological changes between humans and non-human primates. Taken together, the combined power of <italic>in vitro</italic> and <italic>in vivo</italic> approaches elucidates several genetic mechanisms important in uniquely human bioenergetic processes.</p>DissertationWray, Gregory A2012Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/6124
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Genetics
genomics
metabolism
primates
spellingShingle Genetics
genomics
metabolism
primates
Pfefferle, Lisa Warner
Leveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic Processes
description <p>The origin of man has motivated researchers to investigate differences between humans and our non-human relatives. The striking phenotypic differences that distinguish humans from chimpanzees are likely controlled by a relatively modest number of genetic changes present between these species. As energy acquisition and processing effect multiple organ systems, the dramatic changes in the human diet are thought to underpin many of these unique phenotypes. The evolution of the human diet is marked by omnivory with increased consumption of animal products, cereal grain and vegetable oil associated with the Paleolithic era, domestication of plants and the industrial revolution respectively. Nutrition is essential for life and is unique as it both shapes, and is shaped by the genome. Given this complex interaction, teasing out actors and responders in the genome-diet relationship is a challenge. I took several expression approaches by interrogating regulatory regions, candidate networks and genomes in tissues of dietary relevance. These experiments uncovered combinations of physiological and morphological changes between humans and non-human primates. Taken together, the combined power of <italic>in vitro</italic> and <italic>in vivo</italic> approaches elucidates several genetic mechanisms important in uniquely human bioenergetic processes.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Wray, Gregory A
author_facet Wray, Gregory A
Pfefferle, Lisa Warner
author Pfefferle, Lisa Warner
author_sort Pfefferle, Lisa Warner
title Leveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic Processes
title_short Leveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic Processes
title_full Leveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic Processes
title_fullStr Leveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic Processes
title_full_unstemmed Leveraging Complementary In Vivo and In Vitro Gene Expression Measurements to Elucidate Uniquely Human Metabolic Processes
title_sort leveraging complementary in vivo and in vitro gene expression measurements to elucidate uniquely human metabolic processes
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/6124
work_keys_str_mv AT pfefferlelisawarner leveragingcomplementaryinvivoandinvitrogeneexpressionmeasurementstoelucidateuniquelyhumanmetabolicprocesses
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