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Paul Trayhurn

Researcher at University of Buckingham

Publications -  185
Citations -  18665

Paul Trayhurn is an academic researcher from University of Buckingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Brown adipose tissue & Adipose tissue. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 181 publications receiving 17815 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Trayhurn include University of Southampton & University of Cambridge.

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Adipokines: inflammation and the pleiotropic role of white adipose tissue.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the term ‘adipokine’ be universally adopted to describe a protein that is secreted from (and synthesised by) adipocytes, excluding signals released only by the other cell types (such as macrophages) in adipose tissue.
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Physiological role of adipose tissue: white adipose tissue as an endocrine and secretory organ

TL;DR: The key challenges in establishing the secretory functions of white fat are to identify the complement of secreted proteins, to establish the role of each secreted protein, and to assess the pathophysiological consequences of changes in adipocyte protein production with alterations in adiposity.
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Localization of leptin receptor mRNA and the long form splice variant (Ob-Rb) in mouse hypothalamus and adjacent brain regions by in situ hybridization

TL;DR: Results indicate that the hypothalamus is a key site of leptin action, although other brain regions are also targeted.
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Glucose transporters (GLUT and SGLT): expanded families of sugar transport proteins.

TL;DR: The number of distinct gene products, together with the presence of several different transporters in certain tissues and cells, indicates that glucose delivery into cells is a process of considerable complexity.
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Hypoxia and Adipose Tissue Function and Dysfunction in Obesity

TL;DR: Overall, hypoxia has pervasive effects on the function of adipocytes and appears to be a key factor in adipose tissue dysfunction in obesity.