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José M. Bautista

Researcher at Complutense University of Madrid

Publications -  128
Citations -  5903

José M. Bautista is an academic researcher from Complutense University of Madrid. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmodium falciparum & Parasitemia. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 124 publications receiving 5350 citations. Previous affiliations of José M. Bautista include University of Oxford & Hammersmith Hospital.

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Regulation of hepatic lipogenesis by dietary protein/energy in juvenile European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax)

TL;DR: G6PD, ME and ACoAC were found to be the key regulatory enzymes in the lipogenic pathway, with G6PD being the main NADPH-generating enzyme.
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Towards Fish Lipid Nutrigenomics: Current State and Prospects for Fin-Fish Aquaculture

TL;DR: Comparative studies of gene function and distribution are described, which, when integrated with recent fish genome sequence information, provide insights into lipid homeostasis and the outcomes associated with the replacement of FO in fish diets.
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G6PD deficiency: the genotype-phenotype association

TL;DR: The majority of mutations cause red cell enzyme deficiency by decreasing enzyme stability, and the polymorphic mutations affect amino acid residues throughout the enzyme and decrease the stability of the enzyme in the red cell, possibly by disturbing protein folding.
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Abdominal Fat Deposition and Fatty Acid Synthesis Are Lower and β-Oxidation Is Higher in Broiler Chickens Fed Diets Containing Unsaturated Rather than Saturated Fat

TL;DR: The lower fat deposition observed in broilers fed sunflower oil-enriched diets appears to be the net result of an increased rate of lipid catabolism and lower rate of fatty acid synthesis despite higher dietary fat absorption.
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The complete nucleotide sequence of the mitochondrial DNA genome of the rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss

TL;DR: A stem-loop structure inferred for the origin of the L-strand replication (OL) and the presence of a large polycytidine tract in the OL loop is described, explaining the existence of this stretch instead of the usual T-rich sequence reported so far in mammal mtDNAs.