ISSN 1662-4009 (online)

ey0015.11-21 | Diet and the genes | ESPEYB15

11.21 Improving adherence to healthy dietary patterns, genetic risk, and long term weight gain: gene-diet interaction analysis in two prospective cohort studies

T Wang , Y Heianza , D Sun , T Huang , W Ma , EB Rimm , JE Manson , FB Hu , WC Willett , L Qi

To read the full abstract: BMJ. 2018 Jan 10;360:j5644On the basis of scientific evidence and dietary recommendations, several diet quality scores have been developed to evaluate the healthfulness of dietary patterns. Previous studies show that improvement in adherence to healthy dietary patterns is associated with less weight gain (2, 3, 4). But, until now, no study had assessed the interaction betwe...

ey0019.1-1 | Basic Science and Stem Cells | ESPEYB19

1.1. Deciphering the spatial-temporal transcriptional landscape of human hypothalamus development

X Zhou , Y Lu , F Zhao , J Dong , W Ma , S Zhong , M Wang , B Wang , Y Zhao , Y Shi , Q Ma , T Lu , J Zhang , X Wang , Q Wu

Cell Stem Cell. 2022 Feb 3;29(2):328-343.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.stem.2021.11.009. PMID: 34879244.Brief Summary: By applying single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to 112,376 cells of human hypothalamus ranging from 7–20 gestational weeks (GW7–20), the authors produced a spatiotemporal transcriptome atlas of human hypothalamus development and revealed critical regulatory genes control...

ey0020.4-3 | Sexuality, Fertility and Fertility Optimization in DSD | ESPEYB20

4.3. AAV-mediated gene therapy produces fertile offspring in the Lhcgr-deficient mouse model of Leydig cell failure

K Xia , F Wang , X Lai , L Dong , P Luo , S Zhang , C Yang , H Chen , Y Ma , W Huang , W Ou , Y Li , X Feng , B Yang , C Liu , Z Lei , X Tu , Q Ke , FF Mao , C Deng , AP Xiang

Brief summary: In this in vivo study, Xia et al. demonstrate that AAV-mediated gene therapy recovers testosterone levels, restarts sexual development, restores spermatogenesis, and produces fertile offspring in a mouse model of Leydig cell failure (LCF).A null mutation in the gene encoding luteinizing hormone/choriogonadotrophin receptor (Lhcgr) causes a hereditary LCF in mice which is characterized by a reduction in testosterone levels...