Network analysis of hepatic genes responded to high-fat diet in C57BL/6J Mice: Nutrigenomics data mining from recent research findings
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- Title
- Network analysis of hepatic genes responded to high-fat diet in C57BL/6J Mice: Nutrigenomics data mining from recent research findings
- Author(s)
- E J Kim; E Kim; E Y Kwon; H S Jang; Cheol-Goo Hur; M S Choi
- Bibliographic Citation
- Journal of Medicinal Food, vol. 13, no. 4, pp. 743-756
- Publication Year
- 2010
- Abstract
- Obesity and its associated complications, including diabetes, dyslipidemia, atherosclerosis, and some cancers, have been a global health problem with a rapid increase of the obese population. In this study, we selected 31 obesity candidate genes in the liver of high-fat-induced obese C57BL/6J mice through investigation of literature search and analyzed functional protein-protein interaction of the genes using the STRING database. Most of the obesity candidate genes were closely connected through lipid metabolism, and in particular acyl-coenzyme A oxidase 1 appeared to be a core obesity gene. Overall, genes involved in fatty acid β-oxidation, fatty acid synthesis, and gluconeogenesis were up-regulated, and genes involved in sterol biosynthesis, insulin signaling, and oxidative stress defense system were down-regulated with a high-fat diet. Future identification of core obesity genes and their functional targets is expected to provide a new way to prevent obesity by phytochemicals or functional foods on the basis of food and nutritional genomics.
- Keyword
- high-fat dietnutrigenomicsobesity
- ISSN
- 1096-620X
- Publisher
- Mary Ann Liebert, Inc
- Full Text Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jmf.2009.1350
- Type
- Article
- Appears in Collections:
- 1. Journal Articles > Journal Articles
- Files in This Item:
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