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Institution

Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria

About: Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Adipose tissue. The organization has 528 authors who have published 579 publications receiving 18688 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
08 Sep 2015-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The combined analysis of a large number of obesity phenotypes has provided insight in the genetic architecture of the molecular mechanisms underlying these traits indicating that QTLs underlying similar phenotypes are clustered in the genome.
Abstract: The pig is a well-known animal model used to investigate genetic and mechanistic aspects of human disease biology. They are particularly useful in the context of obesity and metabolic diseases because other widely used models (e.g. mice) do not completely recapitulate key pathophysiological features associated with these diseases in humans. Therefore, we established a F2 pig resource population (n = 564) designed to elucidate the genetics underlying obesity and metabolic phenotypes. Segregation of obesity traits was ensured by using breeds highly divergent with respect to obesity traits in the parental generation. Several obesity and metabolic phenotypes were recorded (n = 35) from birth to slaughter (242 ± 48 days), including body composition determined at about two months of age (63 ± 10 days) via dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scanning. All pigs were genotyped using Illumina Porcine 60k SNP Beadchip and a combined linkage disequilibrium-linkage analysis was used to identify genome-wide significant associations for collected phenotypes. We identified 229 QTLs which associated with adiposity- and metabolic phenotypes at genome-wide significant levels. Subsequently comparative analyses were performed to identify the extent of overlap between previously identified QTLs in both humans and pigs. The combined analysis of a large number of obesity phenotypes has provided insight in the genetic architecture of the molecular mechanisms underlying these traits indicating that QTLs underlying similar phenotypes are clustered in the genome. Our analyses have further confirmed that genetic heterogeneity is an inherent characteristic of obesity traits most likely caused by segregation or fixation of different variants of the individual components belonging to cellular pathways in different populations. Several important genes previously associated to obesity in human studies, along with novel genes were identified. Altogether, this study provides novel insight that may further the current understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying human obesity.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The FLIP algorithm/SAF score, although based on purely morphological grounds, are clinically relevant as they identify patients with distinct clinical and biological profiles of disease severity as well as positive linear trends existed between NASH or severe disease and increasing BMI and HOMA-IR.

45 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The capacity of HDL to acquire cholesterol upon lipolysis was reduced in low HDL-C apolipoprotein A-I knock-out mice and was negatively correlated with aortic accumulation of [3H]-cholesterol after oral gavage, attesting this functional characteristic as a negative metric of postprandial atherosclerosis.
Abstract: BackgroundLow concentrations of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) represent a well-established cardiovascular risk factor. Paradoxically, extremely high HDL-C levels are equally associat...

45 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Conditional and haplotype analyses demonstrated a complex association signal, with additional novel SNPs modulating plasma FXI levels in both the F11 and KNG1 loci, which should open the door to new therapeutic targets for thrombosis prevention.
Abstract: Coagulation factor XI (FXI) has become increasingly interesting for its role in pathogenesis of thrombosis. While elevated plasma levels of FXI have been associated with venous thromboembolism and ischemic stroke, its deficiency is associated with mild bleeding. We aimed to determine novel genetic and post-transcriptional plasma FXI regulators. We performed a genome-wide association study (GWAS) for plasma FXI levels, using novel data imputed to the 1000 Genomes reference panel. Individual GWAS analyses, including a total of 16,169 European individuals from the ARIC, GHS, MARTHA and PROCARDIS studies, were meta-analysed and further replicated in 2,045 individuals from the F5L family, GAIT2 and MEGA studies. Additional association with activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) was tested for the top SNPs. In addition, a study on the effect of miRNA on FXI regulation was performed using in silico prediction tools and in vitro luciferase assays. Three loci showed robust, replicating association with circulating FXI levels: KNG1 (rs710446, P-value = 2.07 × 10−302), F11 (rs4253417, P-value = 2.86 × 10−193), and a novel association in GCKR (rs780094, P-value = 3.56 ×10−09), here for the first time implicated in FXI regulation. The two first SNPs (rs710446 and rs4253417) also associated with aPTT. Conditional and haplotype analyses demonstrated a complex association signal, with additional novel SNPs modulating plasma FXI levels in both the F11 and KNG1 loci. Finally, eight miRNAs were predicted to bind F11 mRNA. Over-expression of either miR-145 or miR-181 significantly reduced the luciferase activity in cells transfected with a plasmid containing FXI-3’UTR. These results should open the door to new therapeutic targets for thrombosis prevention.

45 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In obese patients presenting high CRP levels with no obvious explanation, age, gender, BMI, fat mass proportion, OSA, and WAT inflammation should be taken into account to decide to perform further additional medical investigations.

44 citations


Authors

Showing all 528 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Ronald M. Evans199708166722
Thierry Poynard11966864548
Heikki Joensuu10857150300
Gilles Montalescot10064158644
François Cambien9225136260
Antoine Danchin8048330219
Laurence Tiret7919425231
Karine Clément7827532185
Karine Clément7322814710
Pascal Ferré6924123969
Michael T. Osterholm6826022624
Vincent Jarlier6727817060
Florent Soubrier6722624486
Stephen H. Caldwell6630818527
Christian Funck-Brentano6426770432
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202168
202073
201950
201848
201793
201686