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Francesco Capozzi

Researcher at University of Bologna

Publications -  122
Citations -  3629

Francesco Capozzi is an academic researcher from University of Bologna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Foodomics & Metabolome. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 112 publications receiving 2919 citations. Previous affiliations of Francesco Capozzi include University of Calabria & International School for Advanced Studies.

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Nutrimetabolomics: An Integrative Action for Metabolomic Analyses in Human Nutritional Studies

TL;DR: A methodological description of nutritional metabolomics is provided that reflects on the state-of-the-art techniques used in the laboratories of the Food Biomarker Alliance as well as points of reflections to harmonize this field.
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Foodomics: a new comprehensive approach to food and nutrition.

TL;DR: Foodomics is a new approach to food and nutrition that studies the food domain as a whole with the nutrition domain to reach the main objective, the optimization of human health and well-being.
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Gut microbiota, metabolome and immune signatures in patients with uncomplicated diverticular disease

TL;DR: Patients with colonic diverticular disease show depletion of microbiota members with anti-inflammatory activity associated with mucosal macrophage infiltration, and metabolome profiles were linked to inflammatory pathways and gut neuromotor dysfunction and showed the ability to discriminate diverticular subgroups and controls.
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A first step towards a consensus static in vitro model for simulating full-term infant digestion.

TL;DR: A gastrointestinal static in vitro model was developed for infants born at term and aged 28days, which compared with those obtained while submitting the same formula to the adult international consensus protocol of in vitro static digestion.
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The iron-sulfur cluster (Fe4S4) centers in ferredoxins studied through proton and carbon hyperfine coupling. Sequence-specific assignments of cysteines in ferredoxins from Clostridium acidi urici and Clostridium pasteurianum

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used 1 H NOESY and TOCSY spectroscopies to identify and assign the protons of coordinated cysteines to each cluster with use of a procedure based on the assignment of two spatially close βCH 2 pairs and on the shift ratios of each β CH 2 proton in oxidized, half-reduced, and reduced forms.