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R.B. Clayton

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  5
Citations -  472

R.B. Clayton is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biological activity & In vivo. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 458 citations.

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The utilization of sterols by insects.

TL;DR: A review of the role of sterols in insect physiology can be found in this paper, where the authors show that the sterols per se have diverse roles within the tissues, which for convenience may be described as "structural" and metabolic functions are fulfilled.
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An interstrain difference in cholesterol synthesis in vitro in mice, dependent upon a difference in endogenous NADPH-generating capacity

TL;DR: It is shown that significantly more endogenously generated NADPH is available for reduction of corticosterone in liver homogenates from C57BL/10 male mice than in those from the DBA/2 strain, which mainly produces lanosterol and other precursors of cholesterol which require NADPH for their further metabolism.
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Stimulation of erythroblast maturation in vitro by sphingolipids

TL;DR: A lipid factor previously isolated from leukocytes and found to stimulate basophilic erythroblast formation in an in vitro system of incubated rabbit bone marrow cells has been analyzed and suggests a possible supportive role of plasma ceramides and sphingomyelins in red cell maturation.
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Behavior of sterols of insect muscle during homogenization and differential centrifugation.

TL;DR: Results indicate that in the usual homogenization and fractionation procedure there is little redistribution of mitochondrial sterol that has been incorporated under long-term in vivo conditions, and is viewed as further support for the proposal that some form of structural selectivity regulates the in vivo incorporation of the sterols into the membranous parts of the cell.
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Decreased availability of hepatic nadph in stressed mice.

TL;DR: Incorporation of 3 H-mevalonic acid into cholesterol is significantly impaired in liver homogenates from two inbred strains of mice when the livers are taken from mildly stressed animals and the effect is temporally correlated with the adrenal response to the stress.