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1 can lead to functional impairments known as "lipotoxicity".
2 ed with elevated islet triglyceride content (lipotoxicity).
3 sues when hepatocytes are injured by lipids (lipotoxicity).
4 ic flux and lysosome function contributed to lipotoxicity.
5 hat NHE1 functions as a metabolic sensor for lipotoxicity.
6 ikely by limiting macrophage survival during lipotoxicity.
7 turated fatty acid pools resulting in severe lipotoxicity.
8  Chop(-/-) macrophages were resistant to its lipotoxicity.
9 o IS during IL infusion, indicative of acute lipotoxicity.
10 nctional adaptations of clonal beta-cells to lipotoxicity.
11 oes not display features of acute myocardial lipotoxicity.
12 ts effect on obesity, insulin resistance and lipotoxicity.
13 R(-/-)) displayed reduced palmitate-mediated lipotoxicity.
14 sting that high FAO is distinct from cardiac lipotoxicity.
15  survival, yet their overaccumulation causes lipotoxicity.
16 long-chain fatty acids (VLCFAs) that mediate lipotoxicity.
17 ulated lipogenic program may protect against lipotoxicity.
18 t of pathological conditions associated with lipotoxicity.
19 logical basis for ectopic fat deposition and lipotoxicity.
20 ribute to organ failure, a phenomenon termed lipotoxicity.
21 nts and biomarkers in the setting of hepatic lipotoxicity.
22 may represent a protective mechanism against lipotoxicity.
23  of phosphatidylethanolamine as modifiers of lipotoxicity.
24  although they remain susceptible to hepatic lipotoxicity.
25  role of the lysosomal-mitochondrial axis on lipotoxicity.
26 acid oxidation, inflammation, and eventually lipotoxicity.
27 tes, and protected against palmitate-induced lipotoxicity.
28 ing a receptor-mediated event and not simple lipotoxicity.
29 e deposition, features suggestive of cardiac lipotoxicity.
30 similar to those found in an animal model of lipotoxicity.
31 ed in free fatty acid (FFA)-mediated hepatic lipotoxicity.
32 usly been attributed to glucose toxicity and lipotoxicity.
33 evel hyperleptinemia protects the heart from lipotoxicity.
34 aired triglyceride synthesis, oleate induces lipotoxicity.
35 n non-adipose tissues, a phenomenon known as lipotoxicity.
36 butes to dysfunctional lipid trafficking and lipotoxicity.
37  in nonadipocytes, thus protecting them from lipotoxicity.
38 in beta-cells of so-called glucotoxicity and lipotoxicity.
39 nover while protecting against ER stress and lipotoxicity.
40 turation causing membrane rigidification and lipotoxicity.
41 accumulation in nonadipose tissues and cause lipotoxicity.
42 drogenase (Glud1) had no effect on palmitate lipotoxicity.
43 bition further promoted FFA accumulation and lipotoxicity.
44 ylglycerol (TAG) in lipid droplets (LDs) and lipotoxicity.
45 d to cellular metabolic dysfunction known as lipotoxicity.
46 d S-nitrosating agent (MitoSNO), alleviating lipotoxicity.
47 e investigate the role of IL11 in hepatocyte lipotoxicity.
48 RNA) screen identified >350 genes modulating lipotoxicity.
49 fatty acids (FFAs) are crucial in generating lipotoxicity.
50 , whereas MDA5 knockdown promotes hepatocyte lipotoxicity.
51 GI-58, to reduce free fatty acid release and lipotoxicity.
52 esis and lipid droplet formation to mitigate lipotoxicity.
53 rotecting against fatty acid-induced hepatic lipotoxicity.
54 al turnover and function in beta cells under lipotoxicity.
55 amoya vascular disease, protected cells from lipotoxicity.
56 , and the subsequent generation, from cardio-lipotoxicity.
57 creasing hepatic fat metabolism and reducing lipotoxicity.
58  lipid droplets protect sensory neurons from lipotoxicity.
59 es for treating metabolic diseases linked to lipotoxicity.
60 erase activity protected from all aspects of lipotoxicity.
61 orphology and sensitizes yeast to FA-induced lipotoxicity.
62 ROS production on the development of cardiac lipotoxicity.
63 gradation of membranous organelles, reducing lipotoxicity.
64 as obesity and cancer because of SFA-induced lipotoxicity.
65 :1, mol/mol) and does not induce significant lipotoxicity.
66 redict which patients with NAFL will develop lipotoxicity.
67 s an important mediator of glucotoxicity and lipotoxicity.
68 FL differ in their ability to defend against lipotoxicity.
69 ssociated with in vivo cardiac steatosis and lipotoxicity.
70 on of autophagy and beta-cell function under lipotoxicity.
71 lytic subunit-2 (G6PC2) levels contribute to lipotoxicity.
72  mice consuming a diet that promotes hepatic lipotoxicity.
73 herapeutic target for insulin resistance and lipotoxicity.
74 pendent manner and reduced palmitate-induced lipotoxicity.
75                          In animal models of lipotoxicity, accumulation of triglycerides within cardi
76                            During hepatocyte lipotoxicity, activated MLK3 induces the release of CXCL
77 olved a reduction in cardiac hypertrophy and lipotoxicity, adipose inflammation, and an upregulation
78 leads to alterations in lipid metabolism and lipotoxicity, also contributing to the pro-inflammatory
79 f hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (Hnf4)-induced lipotoxicity and accumulation of free fatty acids as the
80                 ER stress can be elicited by lipotoxicity and an increased demand for insulin in diab
81                       Hepatocytes experience lipotoxicity and become senescent when Smoothened (Smo)
82         Adipocyte dysfunction contributes to lipotoxicity and cardiometabolic diseases.
83 PAK3 knockdown attenuated fatty acid-induced lipotoxicity and cell death in rat and human cardiomyocy
84 id droplets in regulating fatty acid flux in lipotoxicity and cell death.
85                        Obesity-related renal lipotoxicity and chronic kidney disease (CKD) are preval
86  adipose tissue unable to expand, leading to lipotoxicity and conditions such as diabetes and cardiov
87 epresent a novel transcriptional mediator of lipotoxicity and cytokine-induced beta-cell death.
88                                              Lipotoxicity and ectopic fat deposition reduce insulin s
89 s, in promoting cell survival while limiting lipotoxicity and ferroptosis has been increasingly appre
90                              Thus, the terms lipotoxicity and glucolipotoxicity should be used with g
91 druggable' target to reverse obesity-induced lipotoxicity and glucose intolerance.
92 acellular compartmentation of DAG in causing lipotoxicity and hepatic insulin resistance.
93   In summary, empagliflozin reduces podocyte lipotoxicity and improves kidney function in experimenta
94                                      Hepatic lipotoxicity and inflammation are two key factors drivin
95 ects on developmental programming of hepatic lipotoxicity and inflammation in obese mice.
96 stribution of lipids in the liver, producing lipotoxicity and inflammation.
97 ., liver, skeletal muscle, pancreas) through lipotoxicity and inflammatory signaling networks.
98 RING and RZ) implicated in Moyamoya disease, lipotoxicity and innate immunity(4).
99 hout an approved therapy, is associated with lipotoxicity and insulin resistance and is a major cause
100 evention of ectopic lipid deposition-induced lipotoxicity and insulin resistance.
101 to be important for the prevention of tissue lipotoxicity and insulin resistance.
102 s that reduce the risk of developing hepatic lipotoxicity and insulin resistance.
103            The liver injury is propagated by lipotoxicity and is associated with improved blood gluco
104           However, the mechanisms underlying lipotoxicity and its influence on pathophysiology remain
105 utic strategy in protection of cells against lipotoxicity and lipid-related metabolic diseases.
106 r Diabetic Fatty rats involves prevention of lipotoxicity and lipoapoptosis of beta cells, as well as
107 s and heart, and cause nitric oxide-mediated lipotoxicity and lipoapoptosis.
108 mprove insulin sensitivity by preventing ATM lipotoxicity and M1 polarization.
109 induced developmental programming of hepatic lipotoxicity and may help slow the advancing epidemic of
110 ds of cells, and sequester lipids to prevent lipotoxicity and membrane damage.
111 n of fat excess-triggered defects, including lipotoxicity and metaflammation, but the causal mechanis
112                                Inflammation, lipotoxicity and mitochondrial dysfunction have been imp
113 sed patients, lipid accumulation can promote lipotoxicity and mitochondrial dysfunction, thus trigger
114 to the pathogenesis of obesity-induced renal lipotoxicity and nephropathy by regulating the liver kin
115 e cardiometabolic disease (CMD) by promoting lipotoxicity and oxidative stress, yet their therapeutic
116 ith beta-cell function by reduction in gluco-lipotoxicity and possibly directly through PPAR-gamma ag
117        Conversely, AMPK activation mitigates lipotoxicity and renders GSCs resistant to the loss of D
118 ituents protection against oxidative stress, lipotoxicity and secretion of proinflammatory mediators
119 certain species of these lipids with cardiac lipotoxicity and subsequent myocardial dysfunction.
120 evels are thought to contribute to beta-cell lipotoxicity and the development of diabetes mellitus.
121  important metabolic pathway associated with lipotoxicity and the underlying inflammation, hepatocell
122  suggest that LMP is a key early mediator of lipotoxicity and underscore the value of interventions t
123 earoyl-PA (18:0/18:0-PA) mediate SFA-induced lipotoxicity and vascular calcification.
124      Effects of 11-DHC could be prevented by lipotoxicity and were associated with paracrine regulati
125 by excess insulin-stimulated lipogenesis and lipotoxicity and, if so, whether the damage can be preve
126 nking myocardial lipid accumulation (cardiac lipotoxicity) and peroxidation to congestive heart failu
127  in nonadipose tissues, causing dysfunction (lipotoxicity) and possible cell death (lipoapoptosis).
128  putative mediator of insulin resistance and lipotoxicity, and accumulation of ceramides within tissu
129  metabolism and mitochondrial bioenergetics, lipotoxicity, and altered signal transduction such as GR
130 ced increases in intramyocardial TAG levels, lipotoxicity, and cardiac dysfunction.
131 SC activation is driven by metabolic stress, lipotoxicity, and chronic inflammation.
132 ciency displayed increased TAG accumulation, lipotoxicity, and diastolic dysfunction comparable to wi
133 myopathy, with a special emphasis on cardiac lipotoxicity, and discuss the role of peroxisome prolife
134                     The terms glucotoxicity, lipotoxicity, and glucolipotoxicity are used to describe
135                     The terms glucotoxicity, lipotoxicity, and glucolipotoxicity have been widely use
136 ating activin A, preserved fat mass, reduced lipotoxicity, and increased insulin sensitivity in 22-mo
137 interplay between mitochondrial performance, lipotoxicity, and insulin action is more complex than pr
138 nadipose tissues with generalized steatosis, lipotoxicity, and lipoapoptosis.
139 ion of AMPK, increased cardiac steatosis and lipotoxicity, and myocardial insulin resistance, which w
140 balance, decreasing hepatic inflammation and lipotoxicity, and providing cardiovascular protection.
141 ) initiation by triggering oxidative stress, lipotoxicity, and subsequent activation of hepatic infla
142 link of ER stress, inflammation, and hepatic lipotoxicity, and that increased expression of CHOP repr
143 rculating glucose and fatty acid substrates, lipotoxicity, and tissue hypoxia.
144 ther such alterations could be the result of lipotoxicity, and whether altered IGFBP-3 could affect p
145 FA) concentrations have been associated with lipotoxicity, apoptosis, and risk of diabetes mellitus a
146         While placental oxidative stress and lipotoxicity are hallmarks of placental dysfunction, the
147  Apoptosis and free fatty acid (FFA)-induced lipotoxicity are important features of NASH pathogenesis
148                   Dyslipidemia and resulting lipotoxicity are pathologic signatures of metabolic synd
149                      Defective autophagy and lipotoxicity are the hallmarks of nonalcoholic fatty liv
150 tance (IR), supporting the current theory of lipotoxicity as a driver of IHTG accumulation.
151 timulated insulin secretion and the role of 'lipotoxicity' as a probable cause of hepatic and muscle
152 her found that the Nlrp3 inflammasome senses lipotoxicity-associated increases in intracellular ceram
153  toward TAG storage in LDs, thereby blunting lipotoxicity-associated insulin resistance.
154 resistance develops in bone as the result of lipotoxicity-associated loss of insulin receptors.
155 centration in hepatocytes during obesity and lipotoxicity attenuates autophagic flux by preventing th
156                             In conclusion, a lipotoxicity-based genetic screen in a model microorgani
157 ORC1)-G9a-H3K9me2 axis in fatty acid-induced lipotoxicity blocks autophagy by repressing key autophag
158 , hepatic insulin resistance originates from lipotoxicity but not from lower mitochondrial capacity,
159 lipid to adipose tissue to reduce peripheral lipotoxicity, but we found no evidence for this.
160  to protect nonadipocytes from steatosis and lipotoxicity by preventing the up-regulation of lipogene
161 s and ACSL1 knockdown in human cells prevent lipotoxicity by promoting increased levels of polyunsatu
162        Treatments that rescue the liver from lipotoxicity by restoring adipose tissue insulin sensiti
163 urther show that the human ACSL1 potentiates lipotoxicity by the saturated fatty acid palmitate: sile
164 OP is responsible for HIV PI-induced hepatic lipotoxicity, C57BL/6J wild-type (WT) or CHOP knockout (
165 -6 PUFA represent a novel pathway of cardiac lipotoxicity caused by high n-6 PUFA diets.
166  and insulin-resistant adipocytes results in lipotoxicity, caused by the accumulation of triglyceride
167                                   To prevent lipotoxicity, cells store excess FAs as triglycerides (T
168                           RATIONALE: Cardiac lipotoxicity, characterized by increased uptake, oxidati
169 ate, or dimethyl-alphaKG increased palmitate lipotoxicity compared with media that lacked these anapl
170 y play a role in the ectopic lipogenesis and lipotoxicity complicating obesity in Zucker diabetic fat
171            Diabetes-associated glucotoxicity/lipotoxicity contribute to impaired beta-cell function a
172                              Intramyocardial lipotoxicity contributes to cardiac dysfunction.
173 herapies for common human disorders in which lipotoxicity contributes to pathogenesis.
174 t saturated fatty acid-induced (SFA-induced) lipotoxicity contributes to the pathogenesis of cardiova
175 mong previously unknown genetic modifiers of lipotoxicity, depletion of RNF213, a putative ubiquitin
176 activation of ATGL has beneficial effects on lipotoxicity-driven disorders including insulin resistan
177 etermine the pancreatic lipase(s) regulating lipotoxicity during AP.
178 ental studies have suggested atherogenic and lipotoxicity effects of long-chain and very-long-chain M
179  engages the core apoptotic machinery during lipotoxicity, especially activation of BH3-only proteins
180 epatitis (NASH), a disorder characterized by lipotoxicity, fibrosis, and progressive liver dysfunctio
181              Study of this process, known as lipotoxicity, has provided new insights into the regulat
182 ricle (RV) dysfunction is associated with RV lipotoxicity; however, the underlying mechanism for lipi
183          The results are consistent with the lipotoxicity hypothesis for adipogenic diabetes.
184                     Our findings support the lipotoxicity hypothesis that the deposition of triglycer
185                                 To test the "lipotoxicity hypothesis," which attributes the beta cell
186 etinal pigment epithelium (RPE) function and lipotoxicity in an S1P- and S1P receptor 3-dependent man
187 targets for therapeutic intervention against lipotoxicity in beta-cells.
188 t there is activation of the UPR with lethal lipotoxicity in conditional intestinal apoB100 Mttp-IKO
189 ary, we introduce an unexpected mechanism of lipotoxicity in endothelial cells and provide several no
190 GLT2i affects energy metabolism and podocyte lipotoxicity in experimental Alport syndrome (AS).
191 nuated lipid accumulation, inflammation, and lipotoxicity in hepatocytes subjected to metabolic stres
192 vely profile the transcriptional response to lipotoxicity in hepatocytes, revealing new molecular ins
193 found to enhance lipid metabolism and reduce lipotoxicity in hFUSR521G mice and in cultured neurons a
194 ated insulin secretion that is reduced under lipotoxicity in INS1 cells and mouse islets.
195  to demonstrate that free fatty acid induced lipotoxicity in islets eliminates pulsatile insulin secr
196 ide (100 nmol/L) prevented palmitate-induced lipotoxicity in isolated mouse cardiomyocytes and primar
197 fat, mediated by the LPIN1 gene, may prevent lipotoxicity in muscle, leading to improved insulin sens
198                Here, we induce ER stress and lipotoxicity in myotubes.
199 ASH, suggesting a new potential mechanism of lipotoxicity in NAFLD.
200                                However, that lipotoxicity in nonadipose tissues of congenitally unlep
201 specific ceramide species promoting neuronal lipotoxicity in obesity have remained obscure.
202                                              Lipotoxicity in pancreatic beta-cells, arising from exce
203  adiponectin is sufficient to mitigate local lipotoxicity in pancreatic islets, and it promotes recon
204 r of stearoyl CoA desaturase (SCD), triggers lipotoxicity in patient-derived GBM stem-like cells (GSC
205 ivity of fatty acid synthase, which promotes lipotoxicity in photoreceptors.
206 ngs suggest important features leading to RV lipotoxicity in pulmonary arterial hypertension and may
207                             We conclude that lipotoxicity in Schwann cells results in cellular dysfun
208 ects of DIO were recapitulated by simulating lipotoxicity in skeletal muscle cells treated with satur
209 , implicating SREBP1c induction in beta-cell lipotoxicity in some forms of type 2 diabetes.
210 ed the protective effect against cholesterol lipotoxicity in Sort1 knock-out mice.
211                   CPT1b deficiency can cause lipotoxicity in the heart under pathological stress, lea
212 n adaptive mechanism that is able to prevent lipotoxicity in the ischemic myocardium.
213 HAL-DBPs and HF also resulted in more severe lipotoxicity in these cells.
214  but not other lipid classes, are central to lipotoxicity in this model.
215                                        This 'lipotoxicity' in liver, muscle, islets, and elsewhere ma
216 otein-1 (MuRF1) protected against gluco- and lipotoxicity-induced apoptosis.
217              However, the molecular basis of lipotoxicity-induced NASH remains elusive.
218 F and metformin protected against gluco- and lipotoxicity-induced osteoblast apoptosis, and depletion
219 onic exposure to high levels of fatty acids (lipotoxicity) inhibits autophagic flux and concomitantly
220 ar changes in PKA signaling, suggesting that lipotoxicity is a contributor to diabetes-induced beta-a
221                                              Lipotoxicity is a presumed pathogenetic process whereby
222                                              Lipotoxicity is a recognized pathological trigger and ac
223                                   Hepatocyte lipotoxicity is characterized by aberrant mitochondrial
224                       HIV PI-induced hepatic lipotoxicity is closely linked to the up-regulation of C
225                                              Lipotoxicity is emerging as a significant contributor to
226                                   Hepatocyte lipotoxicity is one of the main pathogenic factors of li
227                  Lipid overload resulting in lipotoxicity is prominent in a number of chronic disease
228                        Since the hallmark of lipotoxicity is the accumulation of fatty acids and thei
229                        One hallmark of renal lipotoxicity is the ectopic accumulation of lipid drople
230                 Because the role of TXNIP in lipotoxicity is unknown, the goal of the present study w
231       Further study of how BMPR2 mediates RV lipotoxicity is warranted.
232          Although NAFLD represents a form of lipotoxicity, its pathogenesis remains poorly understood
233  concentrations of free fatty acids leads to lipotoxicity (LT)-mediated suppression of glucose-stimul
234 lation of liver free fatty acids and hepatic lipotoxicity marked by an elevation in the amount of pla
235                     Murine data suggest that lipotoxicity may arise from reduction in FA oxidation.
236 isk of developing type 2 diabetes, beta-cell lipotoxicity may play an important role in the progressi
237 protein abundance, and substantially reduced lipotoxicity-mediated oxidative and endoplasmic reticulu
238 pid homeostasis, while inhibition of cardiac lipotoxicity mitigates cardiac dysfunction.
239                                              Lipotoxicity occurred via the ferroptosis pathway.
240 f diabetic cardiomyopathy (DMCM) may involve lipotoxicity of cardiomyocytes in the context of hypergl
241                                              Lipotoxicity of pancreatic beta-cells, myocardium, and s
242 tDNA and lipid trafficking, the influence of lipotoxicity on mtDNA integrity, and how lipid metabolis
243 a (glucotoxicity) or chronic hyperlipidemia (lipotoxicity) on beta-cell function and is often accompa
244 ND Using a transgenic mouse model of cardiac lipotoxicity overexpressing ACSL1 (long-chain acyl-CoA s
245 inst the NAFLD-induced adverse effects, e.g. lipotoxicity, oxidative stress and endoplasmic reticulum
246 y acids in obese mice, which led to cellular lipotoxicity, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfun
247 e have shown that palmitic acid (PA)-induced lipotoxicity (PA-LTx) in nerve growth factor-differentia
248 is study characterizes palmitic acid-induced lipotoxicity (PA-LTx) in Schwann cell cultures grown in
249 ed tubuloglomerular feedback, renal hypoxia, lipotoxicity, podocyte injury, inflammation, mitochondri
250 PTER transgenic expression mitigates cardiac lipotoxicity, preserves cardiac function and alleviates
251   These data suggest that hepatic fat (i.e., lipotoxicity) promotes HCC in this setting and may repre
252                                              Lipotoxicity refers to the cytotoxic effects of excess f
253 in respiratory epithelial cells resulting in lipotoxicity-related lung inflammation and tissue remode
254 lecular mechanisms that underlie SFA-induced lipotoxicity remain unclear.
255  toxic to cells, although the basis for this lipotoxicity remains incompletely understood.
256 s from nonadipose tissues is known to induce lipotoxicity resulting in cellular dysfunction and death
257 flammation and reduced cardiac steatosis and lipotoxicity, resulting in normalization of heart failur
258 ocyte free fatty acid accumulation, however, lipotoxicity results.
259 t complications of human obesity may reflect lipotoxicity similar to that described in rodents.
260                  Moreover, in the context of lipotoxicity, some MAFK and TCF4 target genes were to th
261 an lead to further injury by contributing to lipotoxicity, sympathetic up-regulation, inflammation, o
262 at C youth are more susceptible to beta-cell lipotoxicity than AA youth, or alternatively, that AA yo
263 leptin resistance in the pathogenesis of the lipotoxicity that complicates obesity and results in the
264                    This may cause a state of lipotoxicity that compromises left ventricular function
265 ll survival, their overaccumulation triggers lipotoxicity that leads to metabolic syndrome.
266 stic insights into the ill-defined placental lipotoxicity that may inspire PLA2G6-targeted therapeuti
267 on (LMP) is an early event during PA-induced lipotoxicity that precedes MMP and apoptosis.
268 meliorates fatty acid oxidation avoiding the lipotoxicity that results from cell exposure to high fat
269                  Ceramides contribute to the lipotoxicity that underlies diabetes, hepatic steatosis,
270 ing insulin sensitivity and preventing islet lipotoxicity, this activity of leptin may prevent adipog
271 ty acids serve a protective function against lipotoxicity though promotion of triglyceride accumulati
272  hepatocytes promotes lipid accumulation and lipotoxicity through lysosomal-mitochondrial permeabiliz
273 nding the metabolic mechanism of EPA-induced lipotoxicity to further enhance its anticancer effects.
274 letal muscle is a unifying mechanism linking lipotoxicity to metabolic disease.
275 ubnetwork of beta cells that are targeted by lipotoxicity to suppress insulin secretion.
276 t beta-cells from glucose toxicity, and that lipotoxicity, to the extent it can be attributable to hy
277  buffer function of TAG accumulation against lipotoxicity under fatty acid overload.
278 erexpression aids LCFA oxidation and reduces lipotoxicity under pathological stress of transverse aor
279                        By mitigating cardiac lipotoxicity, via redirected LCFA trafficking to ceramid
280                       eEF1A-1 involvement in lipotoxicity was confirmed in H9c2 cardiomyoblasts, in w
281 toleate induced an overt ER stress response, lipotoxicity was only observed in beta-cells exposed to
282                                              Lipotoxicity was recently reported in several forms of k
283                      Ceramide, a mediator of lipotoxicity, was increased in PAH RVs versus controls.
284         To explore the mechanism of cellular lipotoxicity, we cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells in
285 date mechanisms of FA-induced cell death, or lipotoxicity, we generated Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) c
286  fed a high-fat diet, and in vitro models of lipotoxicity, we show that outer mitochondrial membrane
287   To elucidate molecular events critical for lipotoxicity, we used retroviral promoter trap mutagenes
288                 Downregulation of SERCA2 and lipotoxicity were equivalent in Akita and Akita/ACE2KO h
289 ine whether the factors previously linked to lipotoxicity were uniquely increased by palmitate.
290 ance and metabolic complications of obesity (lipotoxicity), whereas comparable IMTG accumulation in e
291 xifies and stockpiles fatty acids to prevent lipotoxicity, whereas TAG hydrolysis (lipolysis) remobil
292 action results in unrestrained lipolysis and lipotoxicity, which are hallmarks of the metabolic syndr
293 KO) cells manifest delayed FA processing and lipotoxicity, which can be rescued by SCD1 overexpressio
294    Uncontrolled FA release from WAT promotes lipotoxicity, which is characterized by inflammation and
295                                              Lipotoxicity, which is triggered when cells are exposed
296 e ER is a key event for initiating beta-cell lipotoxicity, which leads to disruption of ER lipid raft
297 ose tissue, metabolic dysfunction, and liver lipotoxicity will result in improvements in the clinical
298 n, co-treatment of NGFDPC12 cells undergoing lipotoxicity with DHA significantly reduced LMP, suggest
299 implicated in insulin secretion thus linking lipotoxicity with early aspects of pancreatic beta-cell
300 mportance of FFAs, an oversupply can trigger lipotoxicity with impaired membrane function, endoplasmi

 
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