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Ella W. Englander

Researcher at University of Texas Medical Branch

Publications -  60
Citations -  2418

Ella W. Englander is an academic researcher from University of Texas Medical Branch. The author has contributed to research in topics: Apelin & DNA damage. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 60 publications receiving 2280 citations. Previous affiliations of Ella W. Englander include Southern Illinois University Carbondale & Shriners Hospitals for Children - Galveston.

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Ghrelin, A New Gastrointestinal Endocrine Peptide that Stimulates Insulin Secretion: Enteric Distribution, Ontogeny, Influence of Endocrine, and Dietary Manipulations

TL;DR: The findings indicate that ghrelin is an important stomach hormone sensitive to nutritional intake; gh Relin may link enteric nutrition with secretion of GH, insulin, and gastrin.
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Apelin, a new enteric peptide: Localization in the gastrointestinal tract, ontogeny, and stimulation of gastric cell proliferation and of cholecystokinin secretion

TL;DR: Data indicate that apelin is an important new stomach peptide with a potential physiological role in the gastrointestinal tract and the ontogeny of gastric apelin expression and peptide and the influence of apelin on gastric cell proliferation in vitro are indicated.
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Mitochondrial DNA damage and a hypoxic response are induced by CoCl2 in rat neuronal PC12 cells

TL;DR: It is found that in the presence of hypoxia-mimicking concentrations of CoCl(2), mitochondrial but not nuclear DNA damage is induced in rat neuronal, PC12 cells, the first documentation of induction of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage under these conditions.
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Ghrelin--not just another stomach hormone.

TL;DR: A maximal expression of ghrelin in the stomach suggests that there is a gastrointestinal hypothalamic-pituitary axis that influences GH secretion, body growth and appetite that is responsive to nutritional and caloric intakes.
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Evidence That Growth Hormone Exerts a Feedback Effect on Stomach Ghrelin Production and Secretion

TL;DR: It is suggested that endogenous pituitary GH exerts a feedback action on stomach ghrelin homeostasis and support the hypothesis that a stomach-ghrelin-pituitary-GH axis exists.