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Beverly S. Muhlhausler

Researcher at Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

Publications -  176
Citations -  6857

Beverly S. Muhlhausler is an academic researcher from Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Offspring & Adipose tissue. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 169 publications receiving 5740 citations. Previous affiliations of Beverly S. Muhlhausler include Flinders Medical Centre & Sewanee: The University of the South.

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Critical evaluation of the Illumina MethylationEPIC BeadChip microarray for whole-genome DNA methylation profiling

TL;DR: The EPIC array is a significant improvement over the HM450 array, with increased genome coverage of regulatory regions and high reproducibility and reliability, providing a valuable tool for high-throughput human methylome analyses from diverse clinical samples.
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Epigenetics and human obesity

TL;DR: It has become clear that several epigenetic marks are modifiable, by changing the exposure in utero, but also by lifestyle changes in adult life, which implies that there is the potential for interventions to be introduced in postnatal life to modify unfavourable epigenomic profiles.
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Developmental origins of adult health and disease: The role of periconceptional and foetal nutrition

TL;DR: The evidence that such tradeoffs are anticipated from conception and that the periconceptional nutritional environment can programme the developmental trajectory of the stress axis and the systems that maintain and regulate arterial blood pressure is reviewed.
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Increased maternal nutrition alters development of the appetite-regulating network in the brain

TL;DR: Exposure to increased nutrition before birth alters the responses of the central appetite regulatory system to signals of increased adiposity after birth, suggesting that increased maternal nutrition alters development of the appetite‐regulating network in the brain.
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Early origins of obesity: programming the appetite regulatory system.

TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes recent work on the expression and localization of the "appetite regulatory" peptides in the fetal rodent and sheep hypothalamus and their potential role in the early programming of postnatal appetite and obesity.