T
Thomas M. Badger
Researcher at University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Publications - 305
Citations - 13313
Thomas M. Badger is an academic researcher from University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Soy protein & Offspring. The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 299 publications receiving 12304 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas M. Badger include University of Arkansas & United States Department of Agriculture.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Male testicular development is affected by estrogens but not altered in neonatal piglets receiving soy infant formula
Kelly E. Mercer,Celine Chen,Leah Hennings,Harry D. Dawson,Laxmi Yeruva,Martin J. J. Ronis,Thomas M. Badger +6 more
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RNA-sequencing data analysis of uterus in ovariectomized rats fed with soy protein isolate, 17β-estradiol and casein
Martin J. J. Ronis,Horacio Gomez-Acevedo,Michael L. Blackburn,Mario A. Cleves,Rohit Singhal,Thomas M. Badger +5 more
TL;DR: This data file describes the bioinformatics analysis of uterine RNA-seq data comparing genome wide effects of feeding soy protein isolate compared to casein to ovariectomized female rats age 64 days relative to treatment of casein fed rats with 5 μg/kg/d estradiol and relative to rats treated with estradiola and also fed soyprotein isolate.
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Trace element status and zinc homeostasis differ in breast and formula-fed piglets
Martin J. J. Ronis,Isabelle R. Miousse,Andrew Z. Mason,Neha Sharma,Michael L. Blackburn,Thomas M. Badger +5 more
TL;DR: Data provide evidence that trace element status differs in breastfed, milk-fed, and soy-fed piglets and that despite similar levels of dietary supplementation, allows strong causal inference that significant differences in serum zinc after cow’s milk formula compared to soy formula consumption result in compensatory changes in expression of zinc transporters, binding proteins, and zinc-regulated genes.
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Persistent Effects of a Soy Diet in Early Development on Bone in Female Rats
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Formononetin-an Isoflavone Metabolite Found in the Liver of Rats Fed with Soy Protein Isolate
TL;DR: Soy protein isolate, containing genistein, daidzein and glycitein, was used to study the profiles of soy isoflavone metabolites in Sprague-Dawley rats, and formononetin is proposed to be a metabolite of O-methylation of daidzesin in rat liver and exists mainly in conjugated forms.