J
Joshua D. Rabinowitz
Researcher at Princeton University
Publications - 418
Citations - 53550
Joshua D. Rabinowitz is an academic researcher from Princeton University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 102, co-authored 385 publications receiving 42192 citations. Previous affiliations of Joshua D. Rabinowitz include Stanford University & University of Pennsylvania.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Peak Annotation and Verification Engine for Untargeted LC-MS Metabolomics.
Lin Wang,Xi Xing,Li Chen,Lifeng Yang,Xiaoyang Su,Xiaoyang Su,Herschel Rabitz,Wenyun Lu,Joshua D. Rabinowitz +8 more
TL;DR: A Peak Annotation and Verification Engine (PAVE) is introduced for annotating untargeted microbial metabolomics data with only ∼4% of peaks annotated as apparent metabolites.
Journal ArticleDOI
Chemical Basis for Deuterium Labeling of Fat and NADPH
TL;DR: Knowing of enzyme-catalyzed H-D exchange between water and NADPH enables accurate interpretation of deuterium tracing studies of redox cofactor and fatty acid metabolism, and shows D2O labels fatty acids primarily via NADPH.
Patent
Rapid-heating drug delivery article and method of use
Ron L. Hale,Peter M. Lloyd,Amy T. Lu,Daniel J. Myers,Reynaldo J. Quintana,Joshua D. Rabinowitz,Dennis W. Solas,Soonho Song,Curtis Tom,Martin J. Wensley +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, a heat-conductive substrate is used to produce a drug composition film containing a therapeutically effective dose of a drug when the drug is administered in aerosol form.
Posted ContentDOI
Metabolite discovery through global annotation of untargeted metabolomics data
Li Chen,Li Chen,Wenyun Lu,Lin Wang,Xi Xing,Xin Teng,Xianfeng Zeng,Antonio D Muscarella,Yihui Shen,Alexis J. Cowan,Melanie R. McReynolds,Brandon J Kennedy,Ashley M. Lato,Shawn R. Campagna,Mona Singh,Joshua D. Rabinowitz +15 more
TL;DR: This work presents a global network optimization approach, NetID, to annotate untargeted LC-MS metabolomics data, and identifies a half-dozen novel metabolites, including thiamine and taurine derivatives.
Journal ArticleDOI
The small intestine shields the liver from fructose-induced steatosis
Cholsoon Jang,Cholsoon Jang,Shogo Wada,Steven Yang,Bridget Gosis,Xianfeng Zeng,Zhaoyue Zhang,Yihui Shen,Gina Lee,Zoltan Arany,Joshua D. Rabinowitz +10 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that fructose induces lipogenesis when its dietary intake rate exceeds the intestinal clearance capacity, andModulating the capacity of the intestinal epithelium to catabolize fructose is shown to alter fructose-induced lipogenesis in the mouse liver, suggesting that fructose clearance in the small intestine protects from steatosis.