Experimental Biology 2016 Program
Transcription
Experimental Biology 2016 Program
FRIDAY, APRIL 1 Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 1. ASBMB GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL TRAVEL AWARD PROFESSIONAL NETWORKING EVENT Special Event Fri. 5:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Foyer Cochaired: C. Heinen and T. O’Connell Invitation only. Required participation by all Graduate/ Postdoctoral and Graduate Student MAC Supported Travel Award recipients. Follow the conversation: #education Nutrition 2. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE PROGRAM: A GLOBAL APPROACH TO PERSONALIZED NUTRITION FROM THE GENOME TO THE MICROBIOME 4. ASN CAROTENOID AND RETINOID INTERACTIVE GROUP (CARIG) ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM AND BUSINESS MEETING Special Event ASN Satellite (Sponsored by: CARIG RIS) (Organized and Sponsored by: Herbalife) Fri. 1:00 pm—Hilton San Diego Bayfront, Aqua AB Fri. 8:00 am—Hilton San Diego Bayfront, Indigo D Chaired: D. Heber Chaired: S.A. Tanumihardjo Reception and CARIG Poster Competition to follow in Aqua C Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday – Tuesday 9:00 am – 4:00 pm 1 SATURDAY, APRIL 2 Across Societies 5. 10:00 CAREER DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS Workshop Sat. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Exhibit Hall D Career Development The following workshops will be held in the EB2016/FASEB Career Center. Access to the Career Center is FREE to all registered Experimental Biology 2016 meeting attendees. Poster/Platform Presenter Preparation Workshop and Practice Lab FASEB MARC Program will sponsor a Poster/Platform Presenter Preparation Workshop and Practice Lab beginning Saturday, April 2, to provide FASEB MARC poster/oral presentation travel award recipients and other interested EB2016 student/postdoc attendees with an opportunity to practice their presentations and obtain feedback from designated Workshop Mentors/Coaches. If you would like to participate in this workshop/practice lab, sign-up onsite at the Career Center beginning Saturday morning, April 2. First-come, firstserved. Limited space/session availability. 9:00 9:00 9:30 Networking: Optimizing Your Time at EB2016. J. Tringali. Tringali & Assocs. Inc. Get Up With Something on Your Mind. H. Adams. H.G. Adams & Assocs. Inc., Norfolk, VA. How to Choose Your Ideal Career. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. Negotiation Strategies for Scientists Part 1. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 10:30 Understanding Search Committees & Finding Job Announcements. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 11:00 But I Have No Skills!. J. Lombardo. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Marquette Univ. 11:00 Beyond the Bench: Preparing for Your Career Transition in the Life Sciences. J. Tringali. Tringali & Assocs. Inc. 1:00 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 1: Finding & Applying for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 1:00 Transforming Your CV/Cover Letter for Industry Positions. N. Saul. UCSF. 1:00 Negotiation Strategies for Scientists Part 2. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 2:00 Networking: A Required Life Skill. H. Adams. H.G. Adams & Assocs. Inc., Norfolk, VA. 2:30 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 2: Interviewing for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 2:30 Developing Your Core Message/ “Elevator Pitch”. J. Lombardo. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Marquette Univ. 3:00 Networking: Optimizing Your Time at EB2016. J. Tringali. Tringali & Assocs. Inc. 4:00 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 3: Compensation Negotiation for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 4:00 Creating Effective CV’s Cover Letters, Research & Teaching Statements. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. Anatomy 6. UNLOCKING YOUR POTENTIAL IN ACADEMICS: SEIZING OPPORTUNITIES TO SUCCEED WHILE AVOIDING PITFALLS Symposium Sat. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Chaired: H.W. Lambert Professional Development Career Development 8:30 Chair’s Introduction. 8:35 6.1 Finding the Elusive Pathway to Promotion as an Educator. H.W. Lambert, M.J. Zdilla, P.S. Klinkhachorn. West Virginia Univ. Sch. of Med. and West Liberty Univ. 9:00 6.2 Achieving Tenure as a Clinical Researcher. K.B. Foreman. Univ. of Utah. 9:25 6.3 Strategies for Getting Promoted in a Difficult Granting Environment. J.A. Guttman. Simon Fraser Univ., Canada. 9:50 General Discussion. 2 7. “ONCE UPON A TIME”: CULTIVATING THE SKILL OF STORY TELLING Symposium Sat. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Chaired: A. Poznanski Professional Development Career Development 10:30 7.1 The Elements of Story Telling. A. Poznanski. California Northstate Univ. Col. of Med. 10:50 7.2 A Very Short Story: The 6 Minute TED Talk. J.S. Reidenberg. Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai. 11:10 7.3 Your 15 Minutes on the Podium Have Finally Arrived...J.T. Laitman. Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai. 11:30 7.4 60 Minutes of Tension: The Hour Long Research Talk. R. Marcucio. UCSF. 11:50 General Discussion. SATURDAYANATOMY 8. MORPHOGENESIS AND DIFFERENTIATION OF CRANIAL NEURAL CREST AND PLACODES Chaired: S.A. A. Moody 2:15 9.6 Implantation of Insulin-Producing Cells from Human Umbilical Cord Blood Mesenchymal Stem Cells in the Liver and Its Potential to Cure Streptozotocin-Induced Diabetes: An Animal Model Study. M.A. Eladl, M. El-Sherbiny, A.V. Ranade, H. Gabr. Univ. of Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, Univ. of Mansoura, Egypt, ALMaarefa Col., Saudi Arabia and Cairo Univ. Cell Biology 10. Symposium Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Neurobiology This session was funded in part by an AAA Three-Year Research Meetings Outreach Grant 1:00 8.1 Complex Roles of ADAM Cell Surface Metalloproteases during Cranial Neural Crest Cell Migration. D. Alfandari, G. Abbruzzese, K. Mathavan, H. Cousin. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. 1:30 8.2 Self-Organization of Zebrafish Lateral Line Primordium Morphogenesis and Migration. A. Chitnis, D. Dalle Nogare. NICHD, NIH. 2:00 8.3 Neural Crest-Placode Cell Interactions during Cranial Ganglia Assembly. L.A. Taneyhill. Univ. of Maryland College Park. 9. STEM CELLS AND TISSUE ENGINEERING PLATFORM Platform Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Chaired: M. Dunnwald Stem Cells/ Regeneration Tissue Bioengineering This session is part of the Stem Cells Mini-Meeting 1:00 9.1 TGFβ Signaling Regulates Decorin and Biglycan Expression and Distribution during Murine Palatal Fusion. K.K.H. Svoboda, I. Ibrahim, M.J. Serrano, L-B. Ruest. Texas A&M Baylor Col. of Dent. 1:15 9.2 Matrix Reloaded: Devitalized Cartilage as a Functional Extracellular Niche to Promote Osteogenesis and Angiogenesis. J.M. Perry, D.M. Poscablo, B.T. Gaston, D.P. Hu, T. Miclau, K.L. Christman, R.S. Marcucio, C.S. Bahney. UCSF and UCSD. 1:30 9.3 Impact of BMP-7 on Cell Migration in the Meniscus. V. Taylor II, I. Hutchinson, K. Danelson, C. Ferguson. Wake Forest Med. Ctr. and Hosp. for Spec. Surg., NY. (1034.17) 1:45 9.4 Potential Mechanisms of Action for Exogenous Ketone Enhancement of Ischemic Wound Healing in Young and Aged Fischer Rats. S.L. Kesl, M. Wu, L.J. Gould, D.P. D’Agostino. Morsani Col. of Med., Univ. of South Florida. (1036.9) 2:00 9.5 Characterization of Spontaneous Chondrogenesis during Tail Regeneration of the Leopard Gecko (Eublepharis macularius). N. Subramaniam, K. Jacyniak, R.P. McDonald, M.K. Vickaryous. Univ. of Guelph, Canada. BUILDING THE FUTURE OF HISTOLOGY: SYNERGY BETWEEN EDUCATORS, CLINICIANS AND TECHNOLOGY Hybrid Symposium Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Chaired: R. Ettarh Education and Teaching 1:00 10.1 Building LCME-Compliant Histology Teaching and Learning for Clinicians. R. Ettarh. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. 1:30 10.2 Integrating Histology in the Medical Curriculum. D. Bolender. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. 2:00 10.3 Collaboration between Basic Scientists and Clinicians: An Opportunity to Develop a Microanatomy Curriculum to Integrate Curricular Content and Encourage Student Interaction. J.M. McBride. Lerner Col. of Med., Cleveland Clin. 2:15 10.4 The Interrupted Learner – How Students’ Choices to Attend Lectures or Watch Lecture Video Recordings Influence Learning Outcomes in a Medical Histology Course. M. Hortsch, J. Burk-Rafel, A.H. Zureick, J. Purkiss. Univ. of Michigan. 11. BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY PLATFORM Platform Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Chaired: K. Willmore Evolution/Anthropology Developmental Biology/Morphology Emily Middleton is competing as a finalist in the Postdoctoral Platform Presentation Award 1:00 TBD 1:15 11.2 Reconstructing Jaw Adductors in Plesiadapid Plesiadapiforms from Berru, France (Thanetian, ELMA). H. Kristjanson, J.M.G. Perry. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 1:30 11.3 2D versus 3D Shape Signals of Climatic Adaptations in the Trunk Skeleton of Recent Humans. E.R. Middleton. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 1:45 11.4 New Insights into the Anatomy of the Bulbospongiosus Muscle and Its Role in the Composition of the External Anal Sphincter in Humans. M. Hall, J.H. Plochocki, B. Adrian, J.R. Rodriguez-Sosa. Midwestern Univ., AZ. 2:00 11.5 Getting the Shaft?: Investigating Midshaft Location in Immature Femora. C.D. Eleazer, R. Scopa Kelso, F.L. West, L. Williams, R. Stradleigh, A. Shaeffer. Florida Intl. Univ., West Virginia Sch. of Osteo. Med. and Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville. 3 S A T ANATOMY 2:15 11.1 A Comparative and Phylogenetic Analysis of the Relationship between Facial Orientation and Circumorbital Breadths in the Hominoids. E. Leslie, Y. Mehta. Midwestern Univ., IL. 12. SATURDAY 14. ALTERNATIVE PRESERVATION TECHNIQUES TO MEET THE NEEDS OF TODAY’S STUDENTS Symposium Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 SENSATION MECHANISM OF BODY FLUID FLOW BY PRIMARY CILIA Chaired: M. Sochor Education and Teaching Symposium Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Chaired: T. Inoue Cell Biology Developmental Biology/Morphology 3:00 12.1 In Vivo Analysis of Cilia Function and Connections to Renal Disease and Physiology. B.K. Yoder. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. 3:30 12.2 Primary Cilia of Inner Ear Hair Cells Do Not Respond to Mechanical Stimuli. A.A. Indzhykulian, M. Delling, X. Liu, Y. Li, T. Xie, D.P. Corey, D.E. Clapham. Harvard Med. Sch. and Boston Children’s Hosp. 4:00 12.3 The Integration of Mechanobiology and Biomechanics at Primary Cilia. C.R. Jacobs, A. Nguyen. Columbia Univ. 13. 3:00 14.1 Pride, Protectionism, and Prejudice Overcoming Hurdles in Setting-Up Pilots to Evaluate “Fix for Life”, a Low-Hazardous Embalming Method Preserving Life-Like Morphology. A.J. Van Dam. Leiden Univ. Med. Ctr., Netherlands. 3:30 14.2 Preparation of an Anatomical Donor Using the Sikon Soft-Cure Method. R.R. Sikon. Virginia State Anat. Donations Prog., Richmond. 4:00 14.3 Evo-Devo Anatomy Dissected: An Approach Using Soft Embalming That Transforms the Regional-versusSystemic Debate. N.T. Boaz, R.L. Bernor, K. Meshida. Col. of Henricopolis Sch. of Med., VA and Howard Univ. Col. of Med. 15. SKIN DEEP: STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF OSTEODERMS Symposium FUTURE MEDICINE: THE IMPACT OF 3D PRINTING Chaired: T. Owerkowicz Symposium Evolution/Anthropology Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Developmental Biology/Morphology Chaired: D. Mills Tissue Bioengineering Stem Cells/ Regeneration 3:00 13.1 3D Bioprinting Nanocomposite Scaffolds for Complex Tissue Regeneration. G. Zhang. George Washington Univ. 3:30 13.2 Novel Method for the 3D Printing of Bioactive Biomedical Devices. J.A. Weisman, U. Murthy, K. Tappa, D.K. Mills. LSU Hlth. Sci. Cr., Shreveport and Louisiana Tech Univ. 4:00 13.3 3D Printing of Customized Implants for Treatment of Orofacial Deformities and Defects. L. Tayebi. Marquette Univ. Sch. of Dent. Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B 3:00 15.1 Fortified Frogs and Skeletogenesis in the Skin: Osteoderm Development and Structure across Tetrapods. M.K. Vickaryous, E.A.B. Gilbert, S.L. Delorme. Univ. of Guelph, Canada. 3:30 15.2 Bone as a Buffer: Consequences for Vertebrate Design and Anaerobic Physiological Performance. D. Warren. Saint Louis Univ. 4:00 15.3 Heat Transfer through Skin with and without Osteoderms in the American Alligator. T. Owerkowicz. California State Univ., San Bernardino. 16. WELCOME AND KEYNOTE SPEAKER Keynote Lecture Sat. 4:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. 4 Welcome and introduction by AAA President, Kimberly Topp 4:45 4:50 Chair’s Introduction. New Insights into Stem Cells in Mammary Development and Breast Cancer. Z. Werb. UCSF. SATURDAYBIOCHEMISTRY Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 17. ASBMB PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS AND POSTDOCTORAL TRAINEES 21. Special Event Special Session Invitation only. Required participation by all Graduate/ Postdoctoral and Underrepresented Graduate Student Travel Award recipients. Follow the conversation: #education 18. S A T Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B Sat. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Cochaired: C. Heinen and T. O’Connell ASBMB 20TH ANNUAL UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH POSTER COMPETITION Cochaired: K. Cornely, K. Fox and P. Ortiz Pre-registration required. Check-in and set-up begin at Noon. 22. BUILDING YOUR OUTREACH PROGRAM FROM A TO Z ASBMB PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM WORKSHOPS FOR GRADUATE STUDENTS AND POSTDOCTORAL TRAINEES Workshop Sat. 2:30 pm—Locations (multiple) Workshop Pathways to Your Own Lab San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A Sat. 9:00 am—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, San Diego Ballroom C Implementing Your IDP San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Advance event registration required. Learn how to start, expand or improve your own public engagement program. Taking the Industrial Route San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Follow the conversation: #education Follow the conversation: #scicomm 19. ASBMB UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT ANNUAL MEETING ORIENTATION 23. ASBMB EXPLORING CAREERS SPEEDNETWORKING EVENT Special Session Workshop Sat. 11:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B Sat. 4:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Orientation open to all undergraduates attending the poster competition. No registration required. Undergraduates learn about a variety of exciting career options in this fun and fast-paced workshop. 20. 24. COMMUNICATION WORKSHOP: MAKE YOUR ELEVATOR PITCH Workshop Sat. 12:30 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, San Diego Ballroom C ASBMB BUSINESS MEETING Business Meeting Sat. 6:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20BC 5 BIOCHEMISTRY/NUTRITIONSATURDAY 25. ASBMB OPENING LECTURE: HERBERT TABOR RESEARCH AWARD LECTURE 26. ASBMB OPENING RECEPTION Special Event Award Lecture Sat. 7:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Sails Pavilion Sat. 6:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20BC Follow the conversation: #bigtalks 6:00 Awardee introduction. 6:45 25.1 Eukaryotic Transcription Mechanisms: From Nuclear RNA Polymerases to General Initiation Factors, GeneSpecific Activators, Coactivators and Chromatin. R.G. Roeder. The Rockefeller Univ. Immediately follows the ASBMB Opening Lecture. ASBMB members and biochemistry attendees welcome. Science Outreach and ASBMB Student Chapter Activity Posters will be presented during the reception for attendees to explore and become inspired. 27. ASBMB SCIENCE OUTREACH AND STUDENT CHAPTERS ACTIVITY POSTERS Poster Discussion Sat. 7:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Sails Pavilion Science Outreach and ASBMB Student Chapter Activity Posters will be featured during the ASBMB Opening Reception. All posters presented at 7:30 PM. Follow the conversation: #scicomm Nutrition 28. NUTRITIONAL SCIENCES COUNCIL BUSINESS MEETING AND BREAKFAST Business Meeting Sat. 7:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28D/E 29. BIG DATA AND INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING DIETARY PATTERNS AND HEALTH 30. CLINICAL EMERGING LEADER AWARD ORAL COMPETITION Symposium Award Competition (Sponsored by: International Life Sciences Institute, North America) Sat. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC Sat. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: B.O. Schneeman Cochaired: B.D. Flickinger Nutritional Epidemiology 8:30 Welcome and Introduction by Session Chairs. B. Scheeman, B. Flickinger. USAID, Archer Daniels Midland. 8:40 Dietary Patterns and Health Outcomes: A Review. R. Bailey. Purdue Univ. 9:10 Vision for the Future: Big Data and Innovative Approaches to Studying Dietary Patterns and Health/ Disease. B. Lee. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 9:40 Case Study I: Applying Big Data Approaches to Study Food and Diet Patterns on Health Markers. J. Ordovás. USDA at Tufts Univ. 10:10Break. 6 10:30 Case Study II: USDA FoodAPS: Examining Food Assistance Programs. M. Denbaly. USDA Econ. Res. Svc. 11:00 How to Apply Big Data and Analytics to Food Intake Measures at Population and Individual Levels. S. Intille. Northeastern Univ. 11:30 Panel Discussion. Chaired: C.W. Bales 9:00Introduction. 9:15 Effects of Polyphenolic-Rich Dark Chocolate and Almonds on Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Overweight and Obese Adults. Y. Lee, C. Berryman, S. West, C-Y.O. Chen, J. Blumberg, A. Preston, K. Lapsley, J. Fleming, P. Kris-Etherton. Penn State, USDA at Tufts Univ., Hershey Co., PA and Almond Bd. of California, Modesto. (293.1) 9:30 Higher Protein Intake Improves Sleep and Blood Pressure, and Influences the Relation between Changes in Blood Pressure and Sleep during Energy Restriction in Middle-Aged Overweight and Obese Adults. J. Zhou, J.E. Kim, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. (415.6) 10:00 Impact of Body Mass Index and Metabolic Health Status on All-Cause Mortality Risk among Older Adults. F.W. Cheng, X. Gao, D.C. Mitchell, C. Wood, C. Still, G.L. Jensen. Penn State and Geisinger Obesity Inst., Danville, PA. (417.1) SATURDAYNUTRITION 10:15 Effects of Dietary Protein and Fiber at Breakfast on Postprandial Appetite, Neural Responses to Visual Food Stimuli, and Ad Libitum Energy Intake at Lunch in Overweight Adults. R.D. Sayer, A. Amankwaah, G. Tamer; Jr, N. Chen, A. Wright, J. Tregellas, M. Cornier, D. Kareken, T. Talavage, M. McCrory, W. Campbell. Weldon Sch. of Biomed. Engin., Purdue Univ., Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med., Anschutz Med. Campus, Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. and Georgia State Univ. (418.7) 10:30 Impact of Maternal Infection and Breast Inflammation on Infant Growth in Guatemala. H.M. Wren, A.L. Leblanc, C. Li, N.W. Solomons, M.E. Scott, K.G. Koski. McGill Univ., St-Anne-de-Bellevue, Montreal and CeSSIAM, Guatemala City. (45.6) 31. POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCH AWARD ORAL COMPETITION Award Competition Sat. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB 9:30Introduction. 9:40 HIV-Infected Pregnant and Lactating Women Have Higher Serum Aflatoxin Levels Than HIV-Uninfected Women and Aflatoxin Levels Are Higher during Early Postpartum Than during Pregnancy among HIVInfected Women. B.K. Natamba, J-S. Wang, S.L. Young, S. Ghosh, J.K. Griffiths. Harvard Univ., Gulu Univ., Uganda, Univ. of Georgia, Cornell Univ. and Tufts Univ. (668.5) 10:00 Formula Milk Alters Microbial Diversity in Porcine Colon and Impacts Immune Response. M.K. Saraf, A.K. Bowlin, S.V. Chintapalli, K. Shankar, T. LeRoith, M.J. Ronis, T.M. Badger, L. Yeruva. Arkansas Children’s Nutr. Ctr., Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci., VA-MD Col. of Vet. Med. and LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. (406.8) 10:20 Hepcidin Attenuates Zinc Efflux in Caco-2 Cells. S.R. Hennigar, J.P. McClung. U.S. Army Res. Inst. of Envrn. Med., Natick, MA. (292.3) 10:40 A Plasma Proteome Is Associated with Anthropometric Status in School-Aged Children in Nepal. S.E. Lee, P. Christian, K. Schulze, R.N. Cole, L.S.F. Wu, J.D. Yager, J. Groopman, C.P. Stewart, K.P. West; Jr. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Johns Hopkins Sch. of Med. and Univ. of California, Davis. (432.2) 11:00Trimethylamine-N-Oxide Biomarker Response Is a Function of Dietary Precursor Intake and Gut Microbiota Composition in Healthy Young Men. C.E. Cho, S. Taesuwan, O.V. Malysheva, E. Bender, N.F. Tulchinsky, J. Yan, J.L. Sutter, M.A. Caudill. Cornell Univ. (406.6) 11:20 Trace Element Distribution in Flatiron Mice, a Genetic Model of Human Ferroportin Disease. Y.A. Seo, M. Wessling-Resnick. Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth. (292.7) 11:40Conclusion. 32. OBESITY, IRON METABOLISM DYSFUNCTION AND CHRONIC DISEASE Symposium Sat. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC S A T Chaired: L. Tussing-Humphreys Cochaired: N. Gletsu-Miller Cellular and Molecular Nutrition 10:30 Systemic Iron Regulation in Health and Disease. E. Nemeth. UCLA. 10:55 Novel Targets in Obesity and Diabetes: The Role of Iron and Hypoxia in the Regulation of Appetite and Metabolism. D. McClain. Wake Forest Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:20 Macrophage Iron Handling in Health and Disease. A. Hasty. Vanderbilt Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:45 Brain Iron Accumulation, Insulin Resistance and Cognition in Obese Adults. J-M. Fernandez-Real. Hosp. of Girona “Dr. Josep Trueta” 33. GLOBAL NUTRITION: OVERWEIGHT, OBESITY AND NUTRITION TRANSITION Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council) Sat. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B Chaired: TBD Cochaired: M. Garcia Meza 10:30 33.1 Recommended Anthropometric Cut-Offs for Population Screening of Diabetes and Pre-diabetes Need to Be Evaluated in Resource-Limited Settings. E.A. Yu, J.L. Finkelstein, W. Bonam, M.J. Glesby, P.M. Brannon, S. Mehta. Cornell Univ., Arogyavaram Med. Ctr., Andhra Pradesh, India and Weill Cornell Med. Col. 10:45 33.2 Early Childhood Predictors of Lifecourse BMI Latent Class Trajectories in a Guatemalan Cohort. N.D. Ford, M. Ramirez-Zea, R. Martorell, A.D. Stein. Emory Univ. and Inst. of Nutr. of Central America and Panama (INCAP), Guatemala. 11:00 33.3 Stunting and Its Relationship to Obesity in the U.S. Affiliated Pacific: A Study of the Children’s Healthy Living Program. R. Novotny, F. Li, R. Leon Guerrero, P. Coleman, T. Fleming, A. Bersamin, J. Deenik, L.R. Wilkens. Univ. of Hawaii, Mangilao, Guam, Saipan, No. Mariana Islands, Pago Pago, American Samoa and Fairbanks, AK. 11:15 33.4 Height, Weight and Body Mass Index in Lowand Middle-High-Income Urban Preschoolers in the Western Highlands of Guatemala. M.R. García-Meza, C.M. Doak, J.J.S. Beintema, M.N. Orozco, R. Gwaltney, H.B. Rolker, N.W. Solomons. CeSSIAM Quetzaltenango, Guatemala, VU Amsterdam and CeSSIAM, Guatemala City. 11:30 33.5 Parenting Behaviors and Weight Status of Junior High School Students in China. Z. Tian, M. Wen, W. Wang, H. Xue, J. Min, Y. Wang. Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY, Univ. of Utah and Renmin Univ of China, Beijing. 7 NUTRITIONSATURDAY 11:45 33.6 Protein Intake, Breastfeeding Frequency and Breastfeeding Duration Affect BMI from Infancy to Mid Childhood. M. Wright, D. Sotres-Alvarez, M. Mendez, L. Adair. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 12:00 33.7 Development and Evaluation of a Food Behavior Survey to Assess Nutrition Transition among Adolescents in South India. N. Shaikh, S. Patil, U. Ramakrishnan, K. Yount, S. Cunningham. Emory Univ. and BLDE Univ., India. 12:15 33.8 Low Plasma Concentrations of High-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol Associated with Shorter Duration of Pregnancy: A Nested Cohort Study in Ghana. B.M. Oaks, C.P. Stewart, K.D. Laugero, S. Adu-Afarwuah, A. Lartey, S.A. Vosti, P. Ashorn, K.G. Dewey. Univ. of California, Davis, USDA, Davis, Univ. of Ghana and Univ. of Tampere Sch. of Med., Finland. 34. CARIG: CAROTENOID AND RETINOID: MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF ACTION Minisymposium (Sponsored by: CARIG RIS) Sat. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Chaired: E. Johnson Cochaired: L. Jahns 10:30 34.1 Dietary Tomato Powder Inhibits Hepatic Steatosis, Inflammation and Tumorigenesis in BetaCarotene-15, 15’-Oxygenase (BCO1) and Beta-Carotene-9, 10’-Oxygenase (BCO2) Double Knockout Mice. C-C. Li, C. Liu, K. Hu, D.E. Smith, J. von Lintig, X-D. Wang. USDA at Tufts Univ.and Sch. of Med., Case Western Reserve Univ. 10:45 34.2 Lutein, but Not Other Carotenoids, Selectively Inhibits Breast Cancer Cell Growth through Several Molecular Mechanisms. H.M. Swanson, J.R. Smith; Jr., X. Gong, L.P. Rubin. Paul L. Foster Sch. of Med., Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. and Univ. of Texaas El Paso. 11:00 34.3 Astaxanthin Attenuated the Expression of Fibrogenic Genes Induced by High Glucose Alone and in Combination with Transforming Growth Factor 1β in Hepatic Stellate Cells. M. Bae, J-Y. Lee. Univ. of Connecticut. 11:15 34.4 All-trans-Retinoic Acid Inhibits Adipogenesis by Interrupting Gadd45α-Induced Zfp423. B. Wang, M. Zhu, M. Du. Washington State Univ. 11:30 34.5 Vitamin A Supplementation Only Transiently Increases Retinol Concentrations in Extrahepatic Organs of Neonatal Rats Raised under Vitamin A-Marginal Conditions. J.K. Urbanek, L. Tan, M.H. Green, A.C. Ross. Penn State and Univ. of Alabama. 11:45 34.6 SNPs in Lipid and Carotenoid Metabolism and Absorption Genes Impact Carotenoid Responses to a TomatoSoy Juice Intervention. N.E. Moran, J.M. Thomas-Ahner, J.L. Fleming, J.P. McElroy, E.M. Grainger, K.M. Riedl, S.J. Schwartz, S.K. Clinton. The Ohio State Univ. 12:00 34.7 Metabolomic Profile of Serum Retinol Concentrations in the ATBC Study Cohort. D. Albanes, O. Panagiotou, S. Weinstein, S. Moore, A. Mondul. NCI, NIH and Univ. of Michigan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 8 13 12:15 34.8 C Natural Abundance of Serum Retinol Is a Novel Biomarker for Evaluating Effectiveness of Provitamin A Biofortified Maize and Carrots in Male Mongolian Gerbils. B.M. Gannon, I. Pungarcher, L. Mourao, C.R. Davis, P.M. Simon, K.V. Pixley, S.A. Tanumihardjo. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison and Intl. Maize and Wheat Improvement Ctr., El Batan, Mexico. 35. ASN YOUNG MINORITY INVESTIGATOR ORAL COMPETITION Award Competition (Organized by: the ASN Minority and Diversity Affairs Committee) Sat. 11:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC Chaired: M.D. Teran-Garcia 11:30 11:45 Overview and Introduction. M.D. Teran-Garcia. DHA Status is Related to Prefrontal Cortex-Mediated Impulse Control in Adolescents. V. Darcey. Georgetown Univ. (407.3) 12:00 Association of Vitamin D Status with Dual Task Physical Performance in Older Adults. J. Lopez. Florida Intl. Univ. (917.14) 12:15 Maternal Plasma Folate, Vitamin B12 Levels and Multivitamin Supplementation during Pregnancy and Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorder in the Boston Birth Cohort. R. Raghavan. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. (151.6) 12:30 Molds Attack Rice, but We Don’t Know What to Do. A Qualitative Study of Farming Families’ Perceptions of Food Safety in Banke, Nepal. J.A. Chavez. Tufts Univ. (891.10) 12:45 Mango Supplementation Prevents Gut Microbial Dysbiosis and Modulates Short Chain Fatty Acid Production Independent of Body Weight Reduction in C57BL/6 Mice Fed a High Fat Diet. B. Ojo. (1166.6) 36. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE PROGRAM: PULSES FOR HEALTHY PEOPLE AND A HEALTHY PLANET: EMERGING RESEARCH AND OPPORTUNITIES ASN Satellite (Organized and Sponsored by: the US Dry Pea and Lentil Council, Pulse Canada, World Food Center at University of California, Davis and the American Pulse Association) Sat. 12:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC For more information on ASN Sponsored Satellite Programs, please visit http://scientificsessions.nutrition.org /satellitesessions/. SATURDAYNUTRITION 38. PHENHRIG ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM: FLAVONOIDS/POLYPHENOLS AND EPIGENETICS: IS THERE A CONNECTION? 2:15 Symposium (Sponsored by: Plant Phenolic and Human Health Research Interest Group (PhenHRIG)) Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29AB PHENHRIG information, including speakers, is available at http://phenhrig.org 39. GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH AWARD ORAL COMPETITION 2:30 2:45 Award Competition (Sponsored by: Nutritional Sciences Council) Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29CD Chaired: C. Davis - GSRA 1:00 Native African Plant Materials Modify In Vitro Bioaccessibility of Provitamin A Carotenoids from Blended Cereal Products. H. Debelo, C. Ndiaye, M. Ferruzzi, B. Hamaker. Purdue Univ. (914.4) 1:15 Adipocyte-Specific Ablation of Long-Chain Acyl-CoA Synthetase-4 in Mice Protects against Diet-Induced Obesity-Associated Decreases in White Adipocyte Oxygen Consumption and Whole Body Energy Expenditure. E.A. Killion, D. Kong, A.S. Greenberg. USDA at Tufts Univ. and Tufts Univ. Sackler Sch. of Grad. Biomed. Sci. (267.8) 1:30 Using a Humanoid Robot along with a Registered Dietitian in an After-School Program to Promote Healthy Eating Habits and Physical Activity in SchoolAged Children. N. Mikati, M. Eltoukhy, F. Huffman. Florida Intl. Univ. and Univ. of Miami. (276.8) 1:45 DHA Is More Potent Than EPA in Attenuating Cardiometabolic Risk in Men and Women: A Randomized Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Crossover Trial. J. Allaire, P. Couture, A. Charest, M. Leclerc, J. Marin, M-C. Lépine, A. Tchernof, B. Lamarche. Univ. Laval and Univ. Inst. of Cardiol. and Pneumol. of Québec. (130.1) 2:00 MicroRNAs as a Novel Mechanism by Which Eicosapentaenoic Acid Mediates Inflammation in Diet-Induced Obesity. E. Yen, N. Wijayatunga, M. Pahlavani, L. Ramalingam, K.R. Kottapalli, N.S. Kalupahana, P. Gunaratne, K. Rajapakshe, C. Coarfa, S. Dharmawardhane, N. Moustaid-Moussa. Texas Tech Univ., Univ. of Sri Jayewardenepura and Univ. of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka, Univ. of Houston, Baylor Col. of Med. and Univ. of Puerto Rico-Med. Sci. Campus. (911.7) 3:00 3:15 3:30 3:45 40. Effect of Vitamin D Fortified Cheese on Oral Glucose Tolerance in Individuals Exhibiting Marginal Vitamin D Status and an Increased Risk for Developing Type 2 Diabetes: A Double-Blind, Randomized PlaceboControlled Clinical Trial. T.S. Moreira-Lucas, A.M. Duncan, R. Rabasa-Lhoret, R. Vieth, A. Gibbs, A. Badawi, T.M.S. Wolever. Univ. of Toronto, Univ. of Guelph, Canada, Clin. Res. Inst. of Montreal and Publ. Hlth. Agcy. of Canada, Toronto. (917.1) Ablation of BCO2 Leads to Increased Susceptibility to High Fat Diet-Induced Metabolic Disorders in Mice. L. Wu, X. Guo, A. Davis, T.P. Soh, S. Clarke, E. Lucas, B. Smith, W. Wang, D. Medeiros, D. Lin. Oklahoma State Univ., Kansas State Univ. and Univ. of MissouriKansas City. (271.5) Recommended Anthropometric Cut-Offs for Population Screening of Diabetes and Pre-diabetes Need to Be Evaluated in Resource-Limited Settings. E.A. Yu, J.L. Finkelstein, W. Bonam, M.J. Glesby, P.M. Brannon, S. Mehta. Cornell Univ., Arogyavaram Med. Ctr., Andhra Pradesh, India and Weill Cornell Med. Col. (33.1) Zinc and ZIP14 (Slc39a14) Are Required for Adaptation to ER Stress in Mouse Liver. M-H. Kim, T.B. Aydemir, R.J. Cousins. Univ. of Florida. (148.2) Household Food Insecurity Access Scale and Household Food Insecurity Access Prevalence as Predictor of Stunted Child and Overweight/Obese Mother in Urban Indonesia. T. Mahmudiono, D.R. Andrias, T.S. Nindya, H. Megatsari, R. Rosenkranz. Kansas State Univ. and Univ. Airlangga, Indonesia. (273.8) Serum Bone-Building Metabolites Are Enhanced by a Restricted Vitamin A Intervention in Zambian Children with High Liver Reserves of Vitamin A. K.E. Olsen, N. Binkley, B.M. Gannon, S.A. Tanumihardjo. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. (678.24) Depletion of Dietary MicroRNAs from Cow’s Milk Causes an Increase of Purine Metabolites in Human Body Fluids and Mouse Livers. A.G. Aguilar Lozano, S. Baier, J. Adamec, M. Sadri, D. Giraud, J. Zempleni. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. (127.1) SEX AND METABOLISM: LATE BREAKING RESEARCH ON THE ROLE OF ESTROGEN RECEPTORS IN CARDIOMETABOLIC HEALTH Symposium (Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: V.J. Vieira-Potter Cellular and Molecular Nutrition 3:00 3:25 3:50 Estrogen, Metabolism and Energy Homeostasis Brain-related mechanisms. D. Clegg. Cedars-Sinai Diabetes and Obesity Res. Inst. Estrogen Signaling and Insulin-mediated Glucose Uptake after Menopause: “Timing Hypothesis” Revisited. R. Van Pelt. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. Estrogen Signaling and Vascular Endothelial Function with the Menopause Transition. K. Moreau. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. 9 S A T NUTRITIONSATURDAY 4:15 41. Effects of Estrogen Receptor Alpha Signaling on Immunometabolism. A. Hevener. UCLA. DIETARY FIBER’S ESSENTIALITY FOR THE INTESTINE AND THE MICROBIOTA Symposium Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC Chaired: D.T. Gordon Cochaired: D.M. Klurfeld Clinical and Translational Nutrition 3:00 3:25 3:50 42. Mucosal Atrophy and other Intestinal Dysfunctions with Total Parenteral Nutrition and Limited Enteral Nutrition. TBD. Dietary Fiber, Gut Microbiota and Immune Response. C. MacKay. Charles Perkins Ctr.-Sydney Med. Sch. Contributions of Gut Microbiota to Health Benefits of Dietary Fiber. V. Mai. Univ. of Florida. DIET AND CANCER: POPULATIONAL AND MOLECULAR STUDIES OF BREAST AND COLON CANCER Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Diet and Cancer RIS) Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Chaired: E. Park Cochaired: K. Ferrini 3:00 42.1 Consumption of Total and Individual Sugars, Sugary Foods and Sugary Beverages in Relation to AdiposityRelated Cancer Risk in the Framingham Offspring Cohort (1991-2013). N. Makarem, Y. Lin, E.V. Bandera, P. Jacques, N. Parekh. NYU, Rutgers Univ. and USDA at Tufts Univ. 3:15 42.2 Four a priori-Defined Diet Quality Indexes and Survival among Men and Women with Colorectal Cancer: The Multiethnic Cohort. G. Maskarinec, S. Jacobs, B.E. Harmon, L.R. Wilkens, L. Le Marchand, L.N. Kolonel, C.J. Boushey. Univ. of Hawaii and Univ. of Memphis Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 3:30 42.3 Dietary Phytosterols Intakes Are Inversely Associated with Colorectal Cancer Risk among Chinese Population. C-X. Zhang, J. Huang, M. Xu, W-P. Luo, Y-J. Fang. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Cancer Ctr., Sun Yat-sen Univ., China. 3:45 42.4 Dietary Carotenoid, Retinol, and Ascorbic Acid Intake and Its Association with Breast Density in Young Women. J.N. Bodor, S. Jung, C. Klifa, L. Van Horn, J.F. Dorgan. Univ. of Maryland Med. Ctr., Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med., Dangeard Group, Luynes, France and Northwestern Univ. Feinberg Sch. of Med. 4:00 42.5 Effect of 1,25(OH)2D in Regulating GlutamicOxaloacetic Transaminase 1 and Redox Balance during Breast Cancer Progression. X. Zhou, T. Wilmanski, D. Teegarden. Purdue Univ. 4:15 42.6 Reversal Effects of Genistein and (-)-Epigallocatechin-3-Gallate on Repression of BRCA-1 Expression in Human Breast Cancer Cells with Activated AhR. O.I. Selmin, A.J. Papoutsis, D.F. Romagnolo. Univ. of Arizona. 10 4:30 42.7 Effect of Short-Chain Fatty Acid Acetate on Colon Cancer. M. Sahuri Arisoylu, J.D. Bell. Univ. of Westminster, U.K. 4:45 42.8 Inactivation of Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Mediates the Selective Effects of Butyrate on Colorectal Cancer Cells. A. Han, N. Bennett, A. MacDonald, M. Johnstone, J. Whelan, D.R. Donohoe. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville. 43. NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY: INNOVATION AND VALIDATION OF DIETARY ASSESSMENT TOOLS AND THEIR APPLICATIONS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS) Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30A Chaired: C.J. Boushey Cochaired: S. Sahni 3:00 43.1 Method of Assessing Daily Intake-Frequencies for Major Food Groups Using Dietary Screener Data. E. Calloway, T. Smith, C. Pinard, A. Oh, L. Nebeling, E. Hennessy, A. Yaroch. Gretchen Swanson Ctr. for Nutr., Omaha and NCI, NIH. 3:15 43.2 The ASA24-Kids-2014 versus Traditional 24Hour Diet Recall for Assessing Dietary Intake of Adolescents. S. Summer, A. Hughes, L. Benken, N. Ollberding, H.J. Kalkwarf. Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. 3:30 43.3 A Validation of Automated Self-Administered 24-Hour Dietary Recalls Relative to Interviewer-Administered Recalls Using the Nutrition Data System for Research. D.C. Mitchell, F.W. Cheng, C.D. Still, G.L. Jensen. Penn State and Geisinger Hlth. Syst., Danville, PA. 3:45 43.4 Use of Skin Carotenoids as a Biomarker for Fruit and Vegetable Intake among Mexican-Origin Children in a Community Setting. A.L. Aguilera, A. de la Torre, L.L. Kaiser. Univ. of California, Davis. 4:00 43.5 The Breath Carbon Isotope Ratio Is a Promising Biomarker of Added Sugar Intake. D.M. O’Brien, J.A. Black, K. Niles, D. Schoeller. Univ. of Alaska Fairbanks and Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 4:15 43.6 Development and Validation of Empirical Indices of Dietary Insulinemic Potential. F.K. Tabung, W. Wang, T.T. Fung, F.B. Hu, S. Smith-Warner, J.E. Chavarro, W.C. Willett, E.L. Giovannucci. Harvard T.H. Chan. Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Simons Col. and Harvard Med. Sch. 4:30 43.7 Development and Validation of a Nutrition Transition Diet Score for Adolescents in India. N. Shaikh, U. Ramakrishnan, S. Patil, K. Yount, R. Martorell, K.M. Venkat Narayan, S. Cunningham. Emory Univ. and BLDE Univ., India. 4:45 43.8 Evaluation of Dietary Assessment Tools: Does ‘Validated’ Mean What We Think It Means? S.I. Kirkpatrick, A.F. Subar, S.M. Krebs-Smith, F.E. Thompson, J. Reedy, T.E. Schap, L. Vanderlee, P. Robson, I. Csizmadi, B.A. Boucher, I. Massarelli, I. Rondeau. Univ. of Waterloo, Canada, NCI, NIH, USDA, Alexandria, VA, Alberta Hlth. Svcs., Edmonton and Calgary, Cancer Care Ontario and Hlth. Canada, Ottawa. SATURDAYNUTRITION 44. GLOBAL NUTRITION: NUTRITIONAL DEFICIENCY – PREVALENCE AND CONSEQUENCES 45. MATERNAL, PERINATAL AND PEDIATRIC NUTRITION: MATERNAL FACTORS RELATED TO PREGNANCY, LACTATION AND INFANT HEALTH Minisymposium Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council) Maternal, Perinatal and Pediatric Nutrition RIS Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Chaired: P. Christian Chaired: C. Lovelady Cochaired: E. Widen 3:00 44.1 Is There an Increased Risk of Iodine Deficiency among Reproductive-Age Women (18-45) with “Normal” Thyroid Function? P. Panth, N.M. DiMarco, L.J. Petterborg. Texas Woman’s Univ. 3:15 44.2 The Sensitivity and Specificity of Thyroglobulin as an Index of Iodine Status in Mildly Iodine Deficient Adults. S.A. Skeaff, Z.F. Ma. Univ. of Otago, New Zealand. 3:30 44.3 Vitamin B12 Status in Pregnant Women and Their Infants in Southern India. J.L. Finkelstein, P. Dwarkanath, S. Mehta, T. Thomas, A.V. Kurpad. Cornell Univ. and St. John’s Res. Inst., Bangalore. 3:45 44.4 Association of Early Nutrition Deficit with Early Childhood Development in Children 36 to 59 Months within and across Populations in Low- and Middle-Income Countries. L.I. Reyes, E.A. Frongillo, S. Kulkarni, S. Basnet, F. de Castro. Univ. of South Carolina and Mexico Natl. Inst. of Publ. Hlth., Cuernavaca. 4:00 44.5 Determinants of Developmental Milestones in Infants and Young Children in Bihar, India. L. Larson, R. Mehta, P. Kekre, P. Verma, M. Young, A. Webb Girard, U. Ramakrishnan, I. Chaudhuri, S. Srikantiah, R. Martorell. Emory Univ. and CARE India, Patna. 4:15 44.6 Maternal Vitamin D Status and Adverse Pregnancy and Neonatal Outcomes in India. J.L. Finkelstein, C. Duggan, S. Mehta, T. Thomas, K. Srinivasan, A.V. Kurpad. Cornell Univ., St. John’s Res. Inst., Bangalore, Harvard T.H. Chan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Children’s Hosp. Boston. 4:30 44.7 Path Analyses of 18-Month Language, Motor, and Executive Function Scores in Malawi. E.L. Prado, P. Ashorn, U. Ashorn, K. Maleta, J. Sadalaki, C. Stewart, R. Stewart, S. Vosti, K. Dewey. Univ. of California, Davis, Univ. of Tampere Sch. of Med., Finland, Univ. of Malawi Col. of Med. and Univ. of Manchester, U.K. 4:45 44.8 Newly Diagnosed HIV Is Associated with Lower Rates of Gestational Weight Gain and Loss of Mid-Upper Arm Circumference among Pregnant Kenyan Women. E.M. Widen, S. Collins, P. Wekesa, N. Krumdieck, M. Onono, S.L. Young. Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr., Cornell Univ., Kenya Med. Res. Inst. and Weill Cornell Med. S A T 3:00 45.1 Calcium Absorption among Racially Diverse Pregnant Women. M.N.R. Lesser, L. Nguyen, J.C. King, K.O. O’Brien, E.B. Fung. Children’s Hosp. Oakland Res. Inst., Univ. of California, Berkeley and Cornell Univ. 3:15 45.2 Trans-Generational Impact of Diet in Pregnancy: Maternal Dietary Intake of Grains during Pregnancy and Offspring Growth and Obesity from Birth through Age of 7 Years. Y. Zhu, S.F. Olsen, P. Mendola, F. Hu, C. Zhang. NICHD, NIH, Rockville, MD, Statens Serum Inst., Copenhagen and Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 3:30 45.3 Different Duration of Diet Transitions from a High-Fat Diet to a Normal-Fat Diet before Pregnancy Deferentially Affect the Phenotypes of Offspring Obesity with a Sex-Dependent Manner. Q. Fu, Y. Zhou, H. Xu, P. Olson, L. Xie. Univ. of North Dakota, Tongji Hosp and Hubei Cancer Hosp., Wuhan, China and Texas A&M Univ. 3:45 45.4 Association between Breastfeeding, Maternal Weight Loss and Body Composition at 3 Months Postpartum. S.A. Elliott, L.C.R. Pereira, E. Guigard, L.J. McCargar, C.C.M. Prado, R.C. Bell. Univ. of Alberta. 4:00 45.5 Maternal Obesity, 25(OH)D Concentration and Bone Mineral Density in Breastfeeding Dyads. S. Sen, A. Penfield-Cyr, Z. Lu, M. Ebeling, B. Hollis, C. Howard, C. Wagner. Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Rochester Gen. Hosp. 4:15 45.6 Impact of Maternal Infection and Breast Inflammation on Infant Growth in Guatemala. H.M. Wren, A.L. Leblanc, C. Li, N.W. Solomons, M.E. Scott, K.G. Koski. McGill Univ., St-Anne-de-Bellevue, Montreal and CeSSIAM, Guatemala City. 4:30 45.7 Perceived Breastmilk Insufficiency and HIV Are Associated with Exclusive Breastfeeding at 1 and 3 Months among Mothers in Northern Uganda. S.L. Martin, S.M. Collins, E.M. Widen, D. Achidri, S.L. Young. Cornell Univ., Columbia Univ. and PRENAPS Uganda, Gulu. 4:45 45.8 The Effect of the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative on Exclusive Breastfeeding Rates in Hospitals. J.A. Patterson, B.H. Olson, N.S. Keuler. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.core-apps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. 11 NUTRITIONSATURDAY 46. TRANSLATIONAL RESEARCH AWARD COMPETITION 5:00 Award Competition (Sponsored by: Nutrition Translation RIS Beachbody and Tate and Lyle) Sat. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB 5:00 Chaired: M. Braun 3:15Introduction. 3:30 Differences in the Infant Gut Microbiota Related to the Fatty Acid Composition of Human Milk: Results from the GEHM Cohort. D.H. Taft, K.A. Dingess, C.J. Valentine, B.S. Davidson, N.J. Ollberding, D.V. Ward, J.T. Brenna, R.J. McMahon, A.L. Morrow. Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. and Med. Ctr., Mead Johnson Nutr., Glenview, IL, Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. and Cornell Univ. (406.7) 3:45 Assessing the Public’s Comprehension of Dietary Guidelines: Perception of Diet Quality Is Inversely Associated with Dietary ED in U.S. Adults. J.A. Vernarelli, R. Nouri. Fairfield Univ. (429.7) 4:00 Novel Tool for Discrimination of Feeding Intolerance and Necrotizing Enterocolitis Risk in the Preterm Infant. J. Naberhuis, C. Wetzel, K. Tappenden. Baylor Col. of Med., USDA, Houston, Carle Fndn. Hosp., Urbana and Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (151.7) 4:15 Does the Left Hand Know What the Right Hand Is Doing? Part Ii: Alignment between the AFRI Childhood Obesity Prevention Challenge Area Program and the 2010 Dietary Guidelines. M.M. Koenings, C. Perez, K. Krishnan, D.N. Chester. IFSN, NIFA, Washington, DC and Texas A&M Univ., Bryan. (433.2) 4:30 Menstrual Cycle Hormones, Food Intake, and Cravings. S. Krishnan, R. Tryon, L.C. Welch, W.F. Horn, N.L. Keim. Univ. of California, Davis and USDA, Davis. (418.6) 4:45 Network Social Support for Healthy and Obesogenic Behavior Influences Children’s Dietary Intake and Weight Change during Family-Based Behavioral Obesity Treatment. K.N. Balantekin, J.F. Hayes, R.P. Kolko, R.I. Stein, B.E. Saelens, R.R. Welch, M.G. Perri, K.B. Schechtman, L.H. Epstein, D.E. Wilfley. Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., Univ. of Pittsburgh, Seattle Children’s Hosp., Univ. of Florida and Univ. at Buffalo. (270.5) 47. 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 ASN EMERGING LEADERS IN NUTRITION SCIENCE POSTER COMPETITION Poster Award Competition Sat. 6:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Sails Pavilion Finalists of the poster competition will be judged onsite. Announcement of the winners will be at the RIS and Council meetings. Please see the onsite Emerging Leaders in Nutrition Science Poster Competition Program Book for announcement details. Poster judging will occur between 5:00 and 6:00 pm and will be a closed event. The event and reception will open to attendees at 6:00 pm. 12 5:00 5:00 Effects of Polyphenolic-Rich Dark Chocolate and Almonds on Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Overweight and Obese Adults. Y. Lee, C. Berryman, S. West, C-Y.O. Chen, J. Blumberg, A. Preston, K. Lapsley, J. Fleming, P. Kris-Etherton. Penn State, USDA at Tufts Univ., Hershey Co., PA and Almond Bd. of California, Modesto. (293.1) Effect of Vitamin D3 Supplementation on Telomerase Activity in Hispanics with Type 2 Diabetes. G.G. Zarini, M. McLean, J. Vaccaro, J. Exebio, S. Ajabshir, F.G. Huffman. Florida Intl. Univ. (1156.1) Blood Cholesterol in Late-Life and Cognitive Decline: A Longitudinal Study of the Chinese Elderly. C. Ma, Z. Yin, J. Luo, P. Zhu, X. Shi, X. Gao. Penn State, Chinese Ctr. for Dis. Control and Prevent., Beijing. (407.4) Gray Matter Thickness of Inferior Frontal Cortex Mediates the Relationship between Phosphatidylcholine and Executive Functions in Healthy, Older Adults. M.K. Zamroziewicz, T. Das, S.L. Pereira, A.K. Barbey. Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Abbott Nutr., Columbus, OH. (407.7) Dietary Protein and Functional Decline in Middle-Aged and Older Adults in the Framingham Offspring Study. J. Mustafa, M.R. Singer, M.L. Bradlee, R.C. Ellison, L.L. Moore. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med. (1156.3) Hypoxia Compromised Barrier Integrity in IPEC-J2 Monolayer Independent of Oxidative Stress. F. Liu, J.M. Lyte, N.K. Gabler, F.R. Dunshea. Univ. of Melbourne and Iowa State Univ. (1158.1) The Modulatory Effect of Common Dietary Fatty Acids on IPEC-J2 Transport of Lipopolysaccharide and Monolayer Barrier Integrity In Vitro. J.M. Lyte, N.K. Gabler, J.H. Hollis. Iowa State Univ. (1158.2) Black Berry Polyphenol Reduce Nox1 Function to Inhibit Senescence in Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells. J. Huang, R. Feresin, Y. Zhao, S. Pourafshar, B.H. Arjmandi, G. Salazar. Florida State Univ. and Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. (420.2) Consuming < or > 0.5 Servings of Red Meat per Day Does Not Have a Negative Impact on Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. L.E. O’Connor, J. Kim, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. (904.1) Adherence to a Mediterranean Diet, and Effects on Cardiometabolic Health in Older Australian:; Results from the MedIterranean Diet for Cognition and Cardiovascular Health in the Elderly (MedLey) Trial. C.R. Davis, J. Bryan, C. Wilson, J. Hodgson, R. Woodman, K. Murphy. Univ. of South Australia, Sch. of Med., Flinders Univ. and Univ. of Western Australia. (293.5) From Visceral Fat to Brain Function: The Selectively Negative Influence of Central Adiposity on Neuroelectric Indices in Preadolescent Children. L. Raine, N. Cohen, A. Kramer, C. Hillman, N. Khan. Univ. of Illinois Urbana Champaign. (679.1) DHA Status Is Related to Prefrontal Cortex-Mediated Impulse Control in Adolescents. V.L. Darcey, S. El Damaty, E.J. Rose, D.H. Fishbein, J.W. VanMeter. Georgetown Univ. and Penn State. (407.3) SATURDAYNUTRITION 5:00 Fuzhuan Tea Reverses Western Diet-Induced Arterial Stiffness in Mice. D. Lee, M. Battson, D. Jarrell, K. Sevits, T. Weir, K. Cox-York, C. Gentile. Colorado State Univ. (904.15) 5:00 Carbohydrates Differentially Influence Children’s Efficiency during Cognitive Control Tasks. L. Raine, N. Cohen, A. Kramer, C. Hillman, N. Khan. Univ. of Illinois Urbana Champaign. (679.2) 5:00 Differential Relationship between Thigh and Calf Intramuscular Adipose Tissue Depots and Indices of Metabolic Health in Older Overweight and Obese Adults. R.E. Bergia, J.E. Kim, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. (904.4) 5:00 The Fat Content of Milk Does Not Affect the Plasma Glucose and Insulin Responses to a Meal. J. Li, E. Janle, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. (904.5) 5:00 Muscadine Grape (Vitis rotundifolia and Wine Phytochemicals Mitigates Dextran Sulfate SodiumInduced Colitis in Mice. R. Li, A.K. Sandhu, C. Gao, L. Gu. Univ of Florida and Illinois Inst. of Technol. (1158.3) 5:00 Coconut Oil Supplementation: An Innovative Strategy for Cardiovascular Disease Risk Reduction. C. Thompson-Felty, C.S. Johnston, A. Ryder. Arizona State Univ. (904.19) 5:00 Incorporation of Almonds in a Cholesterol-Lowering Diet Improves Non-ABCA1-Mediated Cholesterol Efflux in Normal Weight Adults. C.E. Berryman, J.A. Fleming, P.M. Kris-Etherton. Penn State. (293.2) 5:00 Choline and Its Metabolites Are Differentially Associated with Cardiometabolic Risk and Cardio- and Cerebrovascular Disease. A.J. Roe, A.H. Lichtenstein, I.H. Rosenberg, E.J. Johnson, T.M. Scott. Univ. of Idaho and USDA at Tufts Univ. (904.18) 5:00 Choline Supplementation Improves Behavioral Aspects of Mice Exposed to Ethanol In Utero. E. Pjetri, N. Surzenko, C.A. Munson, S.H. Zeisel. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Kannapolis. (679.3) 5:00 EGCG Decreases Mortality in a Dose-Dependent Fashion but Does Not Improve Cognition in Aged Mice. B.D. Pence, T.K. Bhattacharya, J.L. Rytych, P. Park, J.M. Allen, Y. Sun, R.H. McCusker, K.W. Kelley, R.W. Johnson, J.S. Rhodes, J.A. Woods. Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. (407.1) 5:00 Relation of Total Sugars and Fructose-Containing Sugars with Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Prospective Cohort Studies. T.A. Khan, S. Blanco-Mejia, R. de Souza, C.W.C. Kendall, J.L. Sievenpiper. St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto, Univ. of Toronto, McMaster Univ., Hamilton, ON and Univ. of Saskatchewan, Canada. (904.7) 5:00 Metabolism of Uniformly Labelled 13C-Eicosapentaenoic Acid and 13C-Arachidonic Acid during Healthy Aging. P. Léveillé, R. Chouinard-Watkins, S. Cunnane, J.T. Brenna, M. Plourde. Univ. of Sherbrooke, Res. Ctr. on Aging, Sherbrooke, Laval Univ., Canada and Cornell Univ. (1156.5) 5:00 Gene Expression of Vitamin D Regulatory Enzymes in Renal Tissue of Growing Pigs Is Modulated by Maternal Dietary Vitamin D Concentrations. L. Amundson, T. Crenshaw. Univ. of WisconsinMadison. (287.2) 5:00 Consequences of Maternal Iron-Deficiency: Fetal Anemia, and Hypoxia in Select Tissues of the Conceptus. A. Woodman, Y. Mansour, S. Bourque. Univ. of Alberta. (287.3) 5:00 Prebiotics and β-Glucan Affect Jejunal and Serum Alkaline Phosphatase Affinity in Weanling Pigs. M-A.N. Hayhoe, T. Archbold, M.Z. Fan. Univ. of Guelph, Canada. (915.38) 5:00 Alpha-Melanocyte Stimulating Hormone Affects Adipose Tissue Physiology in Broiler Chicks. S.L. Shipp, G. Wang, X. Fu, M. Cline, E. Gilbert. VPI and State Univ. (915.25) 5:00 Multiple Vitamins, Not Glutamine-Supplemented Resuscitation Fluid Improves Intestinal Integrity and Alters Systemic Inflammatory Mediators in Rats with Trauma-Hemorrhagic Shock. Y.H. Lin, H-C. Lo, T-C. Su. Fu Jen Catholic Univ. and Changhua Christian Hosp., Taiwan. (915.32) 5:00 Effects of Choline Deficiency on Composition of Sow’s Milk. A.T. Mudd, S.K. Johnson, L.S. Alexander, C.M. Getty, R.N. Dilger. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana. (915.7) 5:00 Maternal Consumption of a Diet Lacking Omega-3 Fatty Acids during Development Alters Pup Behavior and Brain Metabolism Later in Life. C. Jackson, M. Alhado, E. Gonzales, J. Shumake, D. Barrett, F. Gonzalez-Lima, M.A. Lane. Texas State Univ. and Univ. of Texas at Austin. (915.3) 5:00 Enriching the Maternal Diet in Long Chain n-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Alters Lipid Metabolites and Adiposity in Broiler Chicks. R. Beckford, S. Howard, S. Das, A. Tester, S. Campagna, J. Whelan, J. Wilson, B. Voy. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville and Univ. of Georgia. (124.1) 5:00 Time-Restricted Feeding of a High-Fat Diet Reduces Adiposity and Inflammatory Cytokine Production in Mice. S. Sundaram, L. Yan. USDA, Grand Forks. (915.31) 5:00 Activation of Ubiquitin-Proteasome System Components in Heat-Stressed Pig Skeletal Muscle. L.D. Zhao, Z. Zhang, G. Xie, J.T. Selsby, L.H. Baumgard, R.P. Rhoads. Virginia Tech and Iowa State Univ. (915.34) 5:00 Metabolic Phenotype and Increased Adiposity in a Mouse Model of Chronic Gestational Alcohol Exposure. R.M. Amos-Kroohs, D.W. Nelson, C-L.E. Yen, S.M. Smith. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. (287.5) 5:00 Food Insecurity Is Associated with Faster Cognitive Decline: Boston Puerto Rican Health Study. J. Wong, T. Scott, P. Wilde, Y. Li, K.L. Tucker, X. Gao. Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Tufts Med. Ctr., Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy, Tufts Univ., Univ. of South Florida, Univ. of Massachusetts Lowell and Penn State. (273.3) 5:00 HomeStyles: Recruitment Strategies for a Childhood Obesity Prevention Randomized Controlled Trial. J.T. Martin-Biggers, C. Delaney, M. Koenings, C. ByrdBredbenner. Rutgers Univ. (422.2) 5:00 Food Label Use Improves Dietary Quality and Mediates Improved Glycemic Control in Latinos with Type 2 Diabetes: The DIALBEST Trial. G. Kollannoor Samuel, F.M. Shebl, S. Segura-Pérez, J. Chhabra, S. Vega-López, R. Pérez-Escamilla. Yale Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Hispanic Hlth. Council, Harford, CT, Hartford Hosp. and Arizona State Univ. (422.5) 13 S A T NUTRITIONSATURDAY 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 14 Cross-Country Comparison of the Acceptability of a Social Support Behavior Change Strategy to Improve Adherence to Antenatal Calcium and Iron-Folic Acid Supplementation. S. Martin, M. Omotayo, G. Chapleau, R. Stoltzfus, Z. Birhanu, S. Ortolano, K. Dickin. Cornell Univ. and Jimma Univ., Ethiopia. (422.7) The Impact of Nutrition Label Usage on Food Selection and Consumption in a University Dining Setting. M.J. Christoph, B.D. Ellison. Univ. of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign. (422.8) Women’s Empowerment and Food Security Status: A Global Comparative Study of Women Living in Rural and Urban Areas. K. Sinclair, D. Ahmadigheidari, D. Dallmann, H. Melgar-Quiñonez. McGill Univ., Ste. Anne de Bellevue, QC. (149.2) Marginal Food Insecurity Is Associated with Increased Sodium and Decreased Fruit Consumption in Mothers and Toddlers from Low-Income Households. M. Spiker, K. Hurley, Y. Wang, R. Arbaiza, M. Black. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. (149.4) Strong Interpersonal Relationships Buffer the Impact of Chaos on Quality of Family Meal Interactions in FoodInsecure Households. T.N. Rosemond, C. Blake, J. Bernal, M.P. Burke, E.A. Frongillo. Univ. of South Carolina, Univ. Simon Bolivar, Venezuela and USDA, Alexandria, VA. (149.6) Ethnic Differences in Cumulative Exposure to Food Insecurity and Risk of Childhood Asthma. L.D. Mangini, Y. Dong, M.D. Hayward, M.R. Forman. The Univ. of Texas at Austin. (273.1) Household Food Insecurity Access Scale and Household Food Insecurity Access Prevalence as Predictor of Stunted Child and Overweight/Obese Mother in Urban Indonesia. T. Mahmudiono, D.R. Andrias, T.S. Nindya, H. Megatsari, R. Rosenkranz. Kansas State Univ. and Univ. Airlangga, Indonesia. (273.8) The Relationship between Weight Loss Advice from Friends on Self-Perception of Weight and Eating Habits. T. Thibodeau, I. van Woerden, P. OhriVachaspati, J. Huberty, M. Bruening. Arizona State Univ. (408.2) Promotion of Drinking Water among Latino Immigrant Youth. N. Barrett, U. Colón-Ramos, I. Rivera, W.D. Evans, M. Edberg. George Washington Univ. Milken Inst. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Rivera Group Inc., Washington, DC. (408.3) Nutrient Intake among Overweight/Obese Hispanic Women Based on Type 2 Diabetes Diagnosis Status. M. Arias-Gastelum, N.M. Lindberg, A.G. Rosales, M. Petrovic, E.S. LeBlanc, V.J. Stevens, T.J. Kapka, R.T. Meenan, S. Vega-López. Arizona State Univ., Kaiser Permanente Ctr. for Hlth. Res., Portland and Virginia Garcia Mem. Hlth. Ctr., Hillsboro, OR. (408.4) Associations between Dysfunctional Eating Behaviors and Cardiovascular Risk among Latinos. A.A. LopezCepero, C.M. Frisard, S.C. Lemon, M.C. Rosal. Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. (408.6) Availability and Price of Fruits and Vegetables at Food Retailers in Western Massachusetts Counties. Q. Jiang, J. Burdick, J. Chaiken, S. Walsh, N. Cohen. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. (129.3) 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 The Usual Nutrient Intakes of U.S. Children and Adolescents by Milk Drinking Behavior. Y. Zhao, R. Bailey, C. Weaver, G. McCabe, H. Eicher-Miller Purdue Univ. (899.2) Food Security: Motivations to Volunteer in Food Rescue Nutrition. T.Y. Mousa, J.H. Freeland-Graves. Univ. of Texas at Austin. (899.5) Usual Dietary Intake among Children 2-5 Years in a Community at High Risk for Obesity: Comparison to Age-Matched NHANES Data, 2009-2012. B.R. Markides, S.H. Crixell, L. Biediger-Friedman. Texas State Univ. (901.13) Acculturation, Diet and Psychological Health of Asian International Students at the University of Delaware. H. Jiang. Purdue Univ. (901.25) Comparing the Food Environment of Native American Tribal Areas to That of Non-tribal Areas in California. Y. Shen, D. Antiporta, S. Kodish, V.M. Oddo, G. Chodur, J.C. Jones-Smith. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. (1151.2) Impact of Folic-Acid Intervention and MTHFRC677T Gene Polymorphism on All-Cause Mortality Associated with Elevated Serum Homocysteine Levels in Chinese Adults with Hypertension. B. Xu, X. Kong, R. Xu, M. Zhao, Y. Song, C. Zhang, T. Yu, L. Liu, F. Fan, Y. Zhang, X. Qin, G. Tang, B. Wang, F.F. Hou, Y. Huo, J. Li. River Hill High Sch., Clarksville, MD, Peking Univ. First Hosp., Beijing, Nanfang Hosp., Southern Med. Univ., Guangzhou and Anhui Med. Univ., China. (422.3) Longitudinal Quality of Life Improvement after a FamilyBased Lifestyle Intervention in Youth with Obesity. S.R. Engebretsen, K. Briggs Early, R. Sorrells, J.P. Yi-Frazier, M. Sanchez, K. Gottlieb, B.L. Gonzalez, B. Lopez. Pacific Northwest Univ. of Hlth. Sci., Seattle Children’s Res. Inst. and Yakima Valley Mem. Hosp., WA. (422.4) Understanding Acceptance, Compliance, and Utilization of Micronutrient Powder in Northern Nigeria – Informing Implementation through Formative Research. S.R. Kodish, C.L. Ejembi, T. Osunkentan, A. Imohe, P. Mathema. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Ahmadu Bello Univ., Nigeria and UNICEF Nigeria. (422.6) Differential Associations of Food Insecurity Risk on Dietary Intake-Frequency among Parents and Their Adolescent Children. E. Calloway, T. Smith, C. Pinard, A. Oh, L. Nebeling, E. Hennessy, A. Yaroch. Gretchen Swanson Ctr. for Nutr., Omaha and NCI, NIH. (149.1) High Household Food Insecurity Impacts Dietary Patterns in Rural and Urban American Indian Families with Young Children. E. Tomayko, K. Mosso, K. Cronin, R. Prince, A. Adams. Univ. of WisconsinMadison. (149.8) Are Monthly Food Insecurity Assessments Necessary? A Longitudinal Analysis in Rural Zambia. M. Na, B.L. Caswell, S.A. Talegawkar, A. Palmer. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and George Washington Univ. (273.6) SATURDAYNUTRITION 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 A More Efficient Method of Assessing Corner Store Healthfulness. R. DeWeese, M. Todd, A. Karpyn, M. Yedidia, M. Kennedy, M. Bruening, C. Wharton, P. Ohri-Vachaspati. Arizona State Univ., Univ. of Delaware and Rutgers Univ. (129.5) What Do Parents and Children Talk about While Grocery Shopping? A Content Analysis of Shopping Trips. E. Calloway, A. Pritchard, C. Roberts-Gray, S. Sweitzer, M. Briley. Gretchen Swanson Ctr. for Nutr., Omaha, Univ. of Texas at Austin and Third Coast Res., Galveston. (129.6) E-Mechanic Exercise Interventions Eliminate the Unexpected Association between Weight Gain and a Healthy Food Environment. C.A. Myers, S.T. Broyles, T.S. Church, C.K. Martin. Pennington Biomed. Res. Ctr., Baton Rouge. (1151.7) Perceived Benefits of Livestock Ownership among Female Smallholder Farmers of Mixed HIV Status in Nyanza Province, Kenya. A. Maranga, S.E. Dumas`, P.E. Mbullo, P. Wekesa, M. Onono, S.L. Young. Cornell Univ. and Kenya Med. Res. Inst. (KEMRI), Nairobi. (273.2) Food Insecurity Is Associated with Depression and Stress among a Cohort of Pregnant Kenyan Women of Mixed HIV Status. I. Tsai, N.R. Krumdieck, S. Collins, E.M. Widen, P. Wekesa, M. Onono, S.L. Young. Cornell Univ., Weill Cornell Med., Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. and Kenya Med. Res. Inst., Kisumu. (273.4) It’s Not How Much Your Spend, It’s Where You Spend It: How Consumer Behavior Predicts Dietary Energy Density. A. Massedge, J.A. Vernarelli. Fairfield Univ. (129.4) High Overweight/Obesity Risk among Children Enrolled in Michigan Migrant and Seasonal Head Start Programs, 2012. C. Nance-Panek, S. Song, Y.M. Lim, E.T. Crockett, W.O. Song. Michigan State Univ. (901.9) Physical Activity and Inactivity and Its Association with Overweight and Obesity on Children and Adolescents between 10 to 14 Years Old. I.Y. Pantoja, X. Sandoval, J.O. Talavera, M. Pérez. UNAM, Univ. Iberoamericana and Mexican Soc. Security Inst., Mexico City. (1151.9) Cranberry Extract Initiates Intrinsic Apoptosis in HL-60 Cells by Increasing Bad Activity through the Inhibition of Akt Phosphorylation. R. Mansouri, S.S. Percival. Univ. of Florida. (147.8) Effect of 1,25(OH)2D in Regulating Glutamic-Oxaloacetic Transaminase 1 and Redox Balance during Breast Cancer Progression. X. Zhou, T. Wilmanski, D. Teegarden. Purdue Univ. (42.5) Microenvironment Folate Stress Promotes WarburgMetabolic Switched-Cancer Stem Cell Signaling Network and Stemness Features to Mediate Invasion and Metastasis of Lung Cancers. W-J. Chen, R-F.S. Huang. Fu-Jen Catholic Univ., Taiwan. (147.7) Inactivation of Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex Mediates the Selective Effects of Butyrate on Colorectal Cancer Cells. A. Han, N. Bennett, A. MacDonald, M. Johnstone, J. Whelan, D.R. Donohoe. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville. (42.8) 5:00 Dried Plums Modify Fecal Short Chain Fatty Acid Concentrations and Gene Expression in a Rat Model of Colon Carcinogenesis. D.V. Seidel, K.K. Hicks, S.S. Taddeo, M.A. Azcarate-Peril, R.J. Carroll, N.D. Turner. Texas A&M Univ. and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (147.3) 5:00 Apiaceous and Cruciferous Vegetables Fed in the Post-initiation Stage Reduce Colonic Precancerous Lesions and the Cancer Stem Cell Marker DCLK1, and Alter the miRNA Expression Profile in 1,2-Dimethylhydrazine-Treated Rats. S. Kim, S.P. Trudo, D.D. Gallaher. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul and Univ. of Arkansas Sch. of Human Envrn. Sci. (147.4) 5:00 Dietary Tomato Reduces Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer Burden in the TRAMP Model. J.W. Smith, J.L. Rowles III, R.J. Miller, S.K. Clinton, W.D. O’Brien; Jr., J.W. Erdman; Jr. Univ. of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign and The Ohio State Univ. (147.1) 5:00 The Effect of Oil Palm Phenolics on Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma in Transgenic Mouse Model. N.H. Razalli, P. Gowthaman, N. Saadat, S. Vemuri, A. Goja, R. Sambanthamurthi, S.V. Gupta. Wayne State Univ. and Malaysian Palm Oil Bd., Kajang. (147.2) 5:00 Consumption of Total and Individual Sugars, Sugary Foods and Sugary Beverages in Relation to Adiposity-Related Cancer Risk in the Framingham Offspring Cohort (1991-2013). N. Makarem, Y. Lin, E.V. Bandera, P. Jacques, N. Parekh. NYU, Rutgers Univ. and USDA at Tufts Univ. (42.1) 5:00 Effect of Short-Chain Fatty Acid Acetate on Colon Cancer. M. Sahuri Arisoylu, J.D. Bell. Univ. of Westminster, U.K. (42.7) 5:00 Excess Dietary Iron Modulates Intestinal Tumorigenesis. L. Glosser, J. Swain. Case Western Reserve Univ. (1167.9) 5:00 Dietary Supplementation with Tart Cherries for Prevention of Inflammation-Associated Colorectal Cancer in Mice. A. Hunter, D. Larson, S. Phatak, K. Hintze, A. Benninghoff. Utah State Univ. (1167.12) 5:00 Protective Effect of Betaine against Liver Steatosis Involves Depletion of Homocysteine via Upregulation of Betaine-Homocysteine Methyltransferase. C.W. Ahn, D.S. Jun, J.D. Na, Y.J. Choi, Y.C. Kim. Seoul Natl. Univ. (691.19) 5:00 Genetic Background Determines Anthocyanin Effects on Glutathione Redox Balance. K.M. Norris, R. Pazdro. Univ. of Georgia. (691.27) 5:00 Unfermented and Fermented Cocoa Extracts as Inhibitors of Pancreatic α-Amylase, α-Glucosidase, and Pancreatic Lipase. C. Ryan, L. Ye, S. O’Keefe, A.P. Neilson. Virginia Tech. (691.30) 5:00 The Effects of Dietary Cocoa Powder on Inflammatory Markers and Catalase Activity in Participants with Type 2 Diabetes following a Fast Food Style Meal Challenge. M. Foster, N. Betts, D. Fu, T. Lyons, A. Basu. Oklahoma State Univ. and Queen’s Univ. of Belfast. (1174.14) 5:00 Dried Plum Consumption Improves Antioxidant Capacity and Reduces Inflammation in Postmenopausal Women. M. Nakamichi-Lee, S. Hooshmand, M. Kern, A. Ahouraei, M.Y. Hong. Sch. of Exer. & Nutr. Sci., San Diego State Univ. (1174.19) 15 S A T NUTRITIONSATURDAY 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 16 Lycopene Inhibits Amyloid-β25-35-Induced Apoptosis by Decreasing Intracellular and Mitochondrial Ros Levels in Human Neuronal SH-SY5Y Cells. S. Hwang, J.W. Lim, H. Kim. Col. of Human Ecol., Yonsei Univ., South Korea. (404.5) The Heat Shock Protein 70 Is a Novel Target for Nobiletin in Human Colon Cancer Cells. Z. Gao, J. Zheng, X. Wu, K. Dimova, S. Scordilis, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and Smith Col. (691.2) Modulation of Cerebral Activity Induced by α-Casozepine, a Benzodiazepine-Like Peptide Derived from Bovine Casein. S. Benoit, C. Chaumontet, Cakir-Kiefer, D. Tomé, L. Miclo. AgroParisTech, INRA, Univ. ParisSaclay and Univ. de Lorraine-Nancy, France. (125.4) Long-Term Feeding of a Soy-Protein-Based Diet Improves Trabecular and Cortical Bone Outcomes in Low-Fit, Intact and Ovariectomized Female Rats. M.W. Richard, L.C. Ortinau, T.M. Zidon, P.S. Hinton, V. Vieira-Potter. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. (125.3) Collagen Peptides Derived from Alaska Pollock Skin Protect against TNFα-Induced Dysfunction of Tight Junctions in Caco-2 Cells. Q. Chen, B. Li, I. Martin, J.B. Blumberg, C-Y.O. Chen. Ocean Univ. of China, USDA at Tufts Univ. and State Univ. of Campinas, Brazil. (125.5) Cocoa Increases Postprandial GLP-1 Response in Adults with Impaired Glucose Tolerance. K. Strat, B.M. Davy, M.W. Hulver, K.P. Davy, A.P. Neilson. Virginia Tech. (428.5) Green Tea Extract Lowers NFκB-Mediated Inflammation during Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis in Mice Fed a HighFat Diet Consistent with Reduced Toll-Like Receptor-4 Signaling. J. Li, C. Chitchumroonchokchai, J.B. Kim, M.V. Moller, R.S. Bruno. The Ohio State Univ. (269.2) Anti-inflammatory and Anti-cancer Effects of the Colonic Metabolites of Polymethoxyflavone. M. Wang, X. Wu, M. Song, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. (269.1) The Impact of Limonin on Gut Microbiota. M. Gu, J. Sun, C. Qi, K.X. Cai, T. Goulette, Y.M. Song, M.X. You, D. Sela, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and Jiangnan Univ., China. (416.5) Effect of Frequent Broccoli Intake on Rat Gut Microbiota Metabolism and Composition. Y. Wang, X. Liu, M.J. Miller, E.H. Jeffery. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana. (690.13) Efficacy of Chewing Gum as a Delivery System for Water and Fat Soluble Vitamins. W.Y.H. Khoo, J.D. Lambert. Penn State. (690.18) Acute Bioavailability of (Poly)phenolic Content of Different Varieties of Vaccinium spp. in Ovariectomized Rats. M. Maiz, D.P. Cladis, P.J. Lachcik, E.M. Janle, M.A. Lila, M.G. Ferruzzi, C.M. Weaver. Purdue Univ. and North Carolina State Univ., Kannapolis. (690.20) Delta and Gamma Tocotrienol Attenuate NLRP3 Inflammasome Activation in J774 Macrophages via NFκB-Dependent Priming Inhibition. T. Buckner, Y. Kim, S. Chung, M. Engel. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. (1174.6) 5:00 Validating Polyphenol Intake Estimates from a FoodFrequency Questionnaire Using Repeated 24-Hour Dietary Recalls and a Unique Method of Triads Approach with Two Biomarkers. N. BurkholderCooley, S. Rajaram, E. Haddad, G.E. Fraser, K. Oda, K. Jaceldo-Siegl. Loma Linda Univ. (690.6) 5:00 Intake of 2 Eggs for Breakfast Increases Plasma Lutein Concentration in Association with Increased Large HDL and Zeta Potential as Compared to an Oatmeal Breakfast. A.C. Missimer, S. Hu, Y. Luo, C.N. Blesso, M-L. Fernandez. Univ. of Connecticut. (690.7) 5:00 Korean Red Ginseng Extract Inhibits p53-Dependent Apoptosis In Helicobacter pylori- Infected Gastric Epithelial Cells. HJ. Kang, J.W. Lim, H. Kim. Col. of Human Ecol., Yonsei Univ., South Korea. (691.24) 5:00 Cyanidin, a Natural Anti-glycation Agent, Inhibits Methylglyoxal- and Glucose-Mediated Protein Glycation In Vitro. T. Suantawee, H. Cheng, S. Adisakwattana. Chulalongkorn Univ., Thailand and LSU Sch. of Vet. Med. (692.9) 5:00 Xylobiose Ameliorates Hyperglycemia and Dyslipidemia via Regulating Hepatic Lipogenic Genes in db/db Mice. E. Kim, E. Lim, S. Jung, S-H. Yoo, Y. Kim. Ewha Womans Univ., TS Corp., Inchon and Sejong Univ., South Korea. (692.10) 5:00 The Effect of Oil Palm Phenolics on Urinary Metabolomic Profile In Atherogenic Diet-Induced Rat Model of Alzheimer’s Disease. Y. Wu, V. Srirajavatsavai, R. Sambanthamurthi, S.V. Gupta. Wayne State Univ. and Malaysian Palm Oil Board, Kuala Lumpur. (692.21) 5:00 Neurorescue Effect of EGCG in an Animal Model of Parkinson’s Disease. Q. Xu, M. Langley, A. Kanthasamy, M. Reddy. Iowa State Univ. (1174.11) 5:00 Anti-proliferative and Anti-inflammatory Action of Blueberry Polyphenols in HIG-82 Rabbit Synoviocytes. S. South, J. Lucero, V. Imrhan, C. Prasad, P. Vijayagopal, S. Juma. Texas Woman’s Univ. (1174.20) 5:00 Blueberry Supplementation Alters Biomarkers of Oxidative Stress in High-Fat Fed Rats. K.I. Keirsey, S. Lee, C.B. de La Serre, J.G. Fischer. Univ. of Georgia. (1174.23) 5:00 Tannase-Treated Grape Pomace Attenuates IL-1βInduced Inflammation in Caco-2 Cells. I. Martin, G. Macedo, J. Blumberg, C-Y.O. Chen. USDA at Tufts Univ. and State Univ. of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil. (269.4) 5:00 Gamma Tocotrienol Suppresses NLRP3 Inflammasome by Dual Mechanism of A20-Mediated Priming Inhibition and AMPK/Autophagy Axis Activation. Y. Kim, S. Chung. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. (269.5) 5:00 Protective Effect of Pteropyrum scoparium and Oxalis Corniculata against Streptozotocin- Induced Diabetes in Rats. I.R.S. Al-Qalhati, M. Waly, Z. Al-Attabi, L.K. Al-Subhi. Sultan Qaboos Univ., Oman. (1176.4) 5:00 Avenanthramides 2c, 2f and 2p Regulate Osteoblast Gene Expression and Survival In Vitro. G.G. Pellegrini, C.C. Morales, J. Johnson, T.C. Wallace, T. Bellido. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med., PepsiCo Inc., Barrington, IL and Natl. Osteoporosis Fndn., Arlington, VA. (1174.9) SATURDAYNUTRITION 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 Effects of Acute n-3 Fatty Acid Administration on Cardiac Lipid Metabolism and Ca2+ Homeostasis during Ischemia-Reperfusion. H. Zirpoli, N. Quadri, K.M. O’Shea, R. Ananthakrishan, M. Abdillahi, R. Rosario, R.J. Deckelbaum, R. Ramasamy. Col. of P&S, Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. and NYU Med. Ctr. (404.2) Dietary Small RNA Modulation of Gut Microbiota Composition: In Silico and In Vitro Analyses. H. Huang, C. Davis, L. Yu, T.T.Y. Wang. USDA, Beltsville, MD, ODS, NIH and Univ. of Maryland College Park. (416.1) Probiotic Lacidofil® STRONG Mitigates the AntibioticInduced Alteration of the Fecal MicroRNA Signature in Healthy Humans. A. Taibi, E.M. Comelli, S-A. Girard, T.A. Tompkins. Univ. of Toronto, Ctr. for Child Nutr. and Hlth., Toronto and Lallemand Hlth. Solutions, Monreal. (289.7) Effects of Almonds on Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Overweight and Obese Koreans. H. Jung, C-Y.O. Chen, J.B. Blumberg, H-K. Kwak. Korea Natl. Open Univ., Seoul and Tufts Univ., Boston. (1175.5) Beneficial Cardiovascular Effects of Muscadine Grape Extract in Normotensive Female Rats. A.V. Duncan, H.A. Shaltout, E.N. Tommasi, P.E. Gallagher, E.A. Tallant, D.I. Diz. Wake Forest Sch. of Med. (1175.7) Nutritional Polyphenol Metabolites’ Kinetics in Plasma, Urine, and Saliva following Consumption by Normal, Healthy, Subjects. Y.Y. Choy, S.N. Hester, A. Mastaloudis, S.M. Wood, R. Gray, R.P. O’Donnell, J.L. Barger, P. Quifer-Rada, R.M. LamuelaRaventós, A.L. Waterhouse. Univ. of California, Davis, Nu Skin Enterprises, Provo, UT, LifeGen Technols., Madison, WI, Univ. of Barcelona and Inst. of Hlth. Carlos III, Madrid. (690.2) Soy Proteins Deficient in the α’ Subunit of β-Conglycinin and Various Glycinin Subunits Maintain the Ability to Modulate Hepatic Lipid and Glucose Metabolism. C. Chatterjee, J. Liu, C. Wood, C. Gagnon, E.R. Cober, J.A. Fregeau-Reid, S. Gleddie, C. Xiao. Hlth. Canada, Agr. & Agri-Food Canada and Carleton Univ., Ottawa. (1175.2) Green Tea Extract and Catechol-O-Methyltransferase (COMT) Genotype Modify Fasting Serum Insulin and Plasma Adiponectin Concentrations in a Randomized Controlled Trial of Overweight and Obese Postmenopausal Women. A. Dostal, H. Samavat, L. Espejo, A. Arikawa, N.R. Stendell-Hollis, M.S. Kurzer. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul, Univ. of North Florida and Central Washington Univ. (289.1) Effect of 3 Probiotic Strains on Bile Acids and Glucose Metabolism in Healthy Adults: A Randomized, Double-Blind Placebo-Controlled Crossover Study. T. Culpepper, C.C. Rowe, C. Nieves, S-A. Girard, M. Christman, S. Chung, T.A. Thompkins, B. Langkamp-Henken. Univ. of Florida, Lallemand Hlth. Solutions, Montreal, MCC Stat. Consulting LLC, Gainesville and Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. (289.6) Inhibition of High Glucose-Induced Diabetic Retinal Angiogenesis by Dietary Compound Chrysin. M. Kang,Y-H. Kang. Hallym Univ., South Korea. (691.16) 5:00 Obesity-Breast Cancer Interactions: Effects of Adipocytes on Breast Cancer Cells and Preventive Effects of Omega 3 Fatty Acids. S.A. Alhaj, A. Aljawadi, L. Ramalingam, N. Moustaid-Moussa. Texas Tech Univ. (691.29) 5:00 Ellagic Acid and Quercetin Are High-Affinity Ligands of Human Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Alpha in an In Vitro Competitive Binding Assay. G. Sasaki, T. Luo, N.F. Shay. Oregon State Univ. (691.7) 5:00 Inulin Effect on Weight Loss and Associated Parameters with the Development of Cardiovascular Disease in Obese Adults. F.H. Castro-Sanchez, D.A. Ochoa-Acosta, N.G. Valenzuela-Rubio, M. Dominguez-Rodriguez, J.A. Fierros-Valdez, M. Vergara-JimenezSch. of Nutr. and Gastron., Autonomous Univ. of Sinaloa, Mexico. (1176.22) 5:00 The Effect of Fructose-Containing Sugars on Glycemic Control: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Controlled Trials. V.L. Choo, A.I. Cozma, E. Viguiliouk, S. Blanco Mejia, C.W.C. Kendall, R.J. de Souza, D.J.A. Jenkins, J.L. Sievenpiper. Univ. of Toronto, St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto and McMaster Univ., Canada. (685.5) 5:00 Higher Protein Intake Improves Sleep and Blood Pressure, and Influences the Relation between Changes in Blood Pressure and Sleep during Energy Restriction in Middle-Aged Overweight and Obese Adults. J. Zhou, J.E. Kim, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. (415.6) 5:00 Protection against Insulin Resistance in Obesity Is Accompanied by Low Rates of Systemic Fatty Acid Mobilization and Attenuated Markers of Fibrosis and Inflammation in Adipose Tissue. D.W. Van Pelt, A.Y. Wang, J.F. Horowitz. Univ. of Michigan. (291.1) 5:00 Lipid Emulsions, Rich in n-3 or n-9 Fatty Acids, Reverse the Progression of Parenteral Nutrition-Induced Hepatic Steatosis in Mice. K-H. Huang, P.B. Smith, A.D. Patterson, A.C. Ross. Penn State. (267.2) 5:00 Intake of Genistein and Daidzein Ameliorates Adiposity and Metabolic Syndrome in High Fat Fed C57BL/6JMice. T. Luo, O. Miranda, A. Adamson, N.F. Shay. Oregon State Univ. (291.5) 5:00 Dietary Linoleic Acid Increases Linoleic- and Arachidonic Acid-Derived Bioactive Lipids, Despite Not Altering Tissue Fatty Acid Levels. S.M. Leng, H.M. Aukema. Univ. of Manitoba and CCARM, Winnipeg. (130.7) 5:00 The Effect of Dietary Protein on Bone during Weight Loss: A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Review. C.S. Wright, J. Li, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. (415.4) 5:00 Effects of Dietary Protein and Fiber at Breakfast on Postprandial Appetite, Neural Responses to Visual Food Stimuli, and Ad Libitum Energy Intake at Lunch in Overweight Adults. R.D. Sayer, A. Amankwaah, G. Tamer; Jr, N. Chen, A. Wright, J. Tregellas, M. Cornier, D. Kareken, T. Talavage, M. McCrory, W. Campbell. Weldon Sch. of Biomed. Engin., Purdue Univ., Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med., Anschutz Med. Campus, Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. and Georgia State Univ. (418.7) 17 S A T NUTRITIONSATURDAY 5:00 DHA Is More Potent Than EPA in Attenuating Cardiometabolic Risk in Men and Women: A Randomized Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Crossover Trial. J. Allaire, P. Couture, A. Charest, M. Leclerc, J. Marin, M-C. Lépine, A. Tchernof, B. Lamarche. Univ. Laval and Univ. Inst. of Cardiol. and Pneumol. of Québec. (130.1) 5:00 Effects of Hormone Therapy on the Association between Erythrocyte Levels of n-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Depression in Postmenopausal Women. Y. Jin, Y. Park. Hanyang Univ., South Korea. (267.3) 5:00 Adipocyte-Specific Ablation of Long-Chain Acyl-CoA Synthetase-4 in Mice Protects against Diet-Induced Obesity-Associated Decreases in White Adipocyte Oxygen Consumption and Whole Body Energy Expenditure. E.A. Killion, D. Kong, A.S. Greenberg. USDA at Tufts Univ. and Tufts Univ. Sackler Sch. of Grad. Biomed. Sci. (267.8) 5:00 The Relationship between Dietary Protein Intake Distribution and Lean Mass Loss in Free-Living Older Adults: Effect of Sex and Total Protein Intake. S. Farsijani, J.A. Morais, H. Payette, P. Gaudreau, B. Shatenstein, K. Gray-Donald, S. Chevalier. McGill Univ., Univ. of Sherbrooke, CHUMRC, Montreal and Univ. of Montreal. (415.1) 5:00 Postprandial Glycemic and Insulinemic Responses to Common Breakfast Beverages Consumed with a Standard Meal in Overweight and Obese Individuals. J. Li, E. Janle, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. (1160.9) 5:00 Ablation of BCO2 Leads to Increased Susceptibility to High Fat Diet-Induced Metabolic Disorders in Mice. L. Wu, X. Guo, A. Davis, T.P. Soh, S. Clarke, E. Lucas, B. Smith, W. Wang, D. Medeiros, D. Lin. Oklahoma State Univ., Kansas State Univ. and Univ. of MissouriKansas City. (271.5) 5:00 Leucine in the Presence of Inflammation Alters BCAA Metabolism in Human Myotubes. E.S. Riddle, H. Roman, M. Ahsan, H. Shin, A. Thalacker-Mercer. Cornell Univ. (430.7) 5:00 Altered Fatty Acid Metabolism Remodels the Hypothalamic Metabolome to Stimulate Feeding Behavior in BCO2 Knockout Mice. X. Guo, L. Wu, T. Soh, W. Chowanadisai, S. Clarke, E. Lucas, B. Smith, W. Wang, D. Medeiros, D. Lin. Oklahoma State Univ., Kansas State Univ. and Univ. of MissouriKansas City. (271.6) 5:00 Effect of Plant Sources of Omega-3 PUFA on Mood Status in Healthy Subjects: A Crossover Feeding Trial. W.M. Young. Loma Linda Univ. (130.8) 5:00 Meta-analysis of Saturated Fatty Acid Intake and Breast Cancer Risk. H. Xia, G. Sun, S. Wang. Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Southeast Univ., China. (1163.14) 5:00 Effect of Stimulation to the Oral Cavity on Diet-Induced Thermogenesis and the Substrate Oxidation of Macronutrients. Y. Hamada, N. Hayashi. Grad. Sch. of Decision Sci. and Technol., Tokyo Inst. of Technol. (906.8) 5:00 Protein and Glutathione Kinetics in Protein Deficient Piglets with Colitis in Response to Nutritional Interventions: Protein Repletion or N-Acetylcysteine Supplementation. M. Hong, J.Y. Xiao, E. Nitschmann, L.J. Wykes. Sch. of Dietetics and Human Nutr., McGill Univ. (685.4) 18 5:00Dietary α-Linolenic Acid-Rich Flax Oil Elevates Renal and Hepatic Docsosahexaenoic Acid-Derived Bioactive Lipids. J.G. Devassy, T. Yamaguchi, N. Ibrahim, M. Gabbs, T. Winter, A. Ravandi, H.M. Aukema. Univ. of Manitoba and St. Boniface Hosp. Res. Ctr., Winnipeg. (267.5) 5:00 Modulation of Omega-3 Fatty Acid Profile in the Duck Liver by Various Dietary Fats. X. Chen, X. Du, J. Shen, L. Lu, W. Wang. Kansas State Univ., Zhejiang Acad. Agr. Sci. and Zhejiang Zhuowang Agr. Sci-Tech Ltd. Co., China. (1163.18) 5:00 Dairy Milk Components Differentially Affect Gastrointestinal Health Markers in C57Bl/6 Mice. T.R. Price, S.A. Baskaran, K. Moncada, Y. Minamoto, C. Klemashevich, A. Jayaraman, J.S. Suchodolski, R.L. Walzem. Texas A&M Univ. (685.2) 5:00 Impact of Vitamin D Status and High-Dose Vitamin D3 Administration on the Plasma Metabolome in Critically Ill Adults. K. Perry-Walker, D.I. Walker, J.A. Alvarez, J.E. Han, J.L. Jones, L. Hao, S. Li, K. Uppal, V.T. Tran, L. Brown, V. Tangpricha, G.S. Martin, D.P. Jones, T.R. Ziegler. Med. Col. of Georgia and Emory Univ. (271.3) 5:00 Genes Associated with Amino Acid Sensing in Human Skeletal Muscle Are Altered by Amino Acid Availability and Acute Lysosomal Perturbation. T.G. Graber, M.S. Borack, P.T. Reidy, E. Volpi, B.B. Rasmussen. Univ. of Texas Med. Branch. (430.5) 5:00 Development of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver in Superoxide Dismutase-1 Knockout Mice Was Associated with Altered Expression of Hepatic Fibroblast Growth Factor-21. D. Chakraborty, X.G. Lei. Cornell Univ. (267.7) 5:00 Assessing the Role of Saturated Fats in Adipose Tissue Inflammation. M. Morgan-Bathke, W. Faubion, M. Jensen. Mayo Clin. and Viterbo Univ., WI. (130.2) 5:00 Obesity and Dietary Fat Modulate HDL Function in Adolescents: Results from a Cross-Sectional Analysis and a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Crossover Trial. A.M. McMorrow, M. O’Reilly, R.M. Connaughton, E. Carolan, D. O’Shea, F.E. Lithander, F.C. McGillicuddy, H.M. Roche. University Col. Dublin, St Vincent’s Univ. Hosp., Dublin and Univ. of Canberra. (130.6) 5:00 Citrulline Is a More Efficient Supplement Than Arginine to Increase Systemic Arginine Availability in Mice. U. Agarwal, I.C. Didelija, J.C. Marini. Baylor Col. of Med. (430.6) 5:00 Predicting Initial Lipid Release from Masticated Tree Nuts Using Mathematical Modelling. T. Grassby, Y. Shen, L. Wagner, S. Beckett, W. Hall, S. Berry. King’s Col. London. (405.6) 5:00 Metabolic Control of Cell Death : The Role of Bcl-xL. H-A. Park, P. Licznerski, Y. Niu, N. Mnatsakanyan, P. Miranda, J. Wu, S. Sacchetti, B.M. Polster, K.N. Alavian, E.A. Jonas. Yale Sch. of Med., Univ. of Maryland Baltimore and Imperial Col. London. (1162.2) 5:00 Use of Plasma Metabolomics at Diagnosis to Identify Metabolic Pathways Associated with Pulmonary Tuberculosis Clearance: A Pilot Study. E. Chong, J.K. Frediani, J.A. Alvarez, V. Tangpricha, H.M. Blumberg, D.P. Jones, T. Yu, T.R. Ziegler. Emory Univ. (271.8) SATURDAYNUTRITION 5:00 Effects of Exercise, Caloric Restriction and Subsequent Weight Regain following the Loss of Ovarian Function on Mitochondrial Respiration. R. Oljira, M. Jackman, R. Foright, J. Houck, G. Johnson, V. Sherk, P.S. MacLean. Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med. (906.13) 5:00 Protein Intake Is Associated with Plasma InsulinLike Growth Factor 1 in Postmenopausal Women but Not in Premenopausal Women. K.N. Drake, J. Foganholo, A. Brindisi, H. Samavat, K. Sturgeon, K. Schmitz, M.S. Kurzer, A.Y. Arikawa. Univ. of North Florida, Univ. of Minnesota, Saint Paul and Univ. of Pennsylvania. (1164.3) 5:00 Early Childhood Predictors of Lifecourse BMI Latent Class Trajectories in a Guatemalan Cohort. N.D. Ford, M. Ramirez-Zea, R. Martorell, A.D. Stein. Emory Univ. and Inst. of Nutr. of Central America and Panama (INCAP), Guatemala. (33.2) 5:00 Access and Adoption of Nutrition Specific and Nutrition Sensitive Messages in Ethiopia: A Qualitative Gendered Comparison. M. Min-Barron. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy, Boston. (274.1) 5:00 Predicted Effects of Current and Potential Micronutrient Intervention Programs on Adequacy of Folate and Vitamin B-12 Intake in a National Sample of Women and Young Children in Cameroon. H. Luo, C.P. Stewart, K.H. Brown, R. Engle-Stone. Univ. of California, Davis and Bill & Melinda Gates Fndn. (891.3) 5:00 Length-for-Age and Weight-for-Age z Scores at Birth Using the World Health Organization Growth Standards versus the New INTERGROWTH 21st Newborn Size Standards. N. Perumal, J. Shi, D. Bassani, A. Al-Mahmud, M.M. Islam, T. Ahmad, D. Roth. Dalla Lana Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Toronto, Hosp. for Sick Children, Toronto and icddr,b, Dhaka, Bangladesh. (432.3) 5:00 Determinants of Developmental Milestones in Infants and Young Children in Bihar, India. L. Larson, R. Mehta, P. Kekre, P. Verma, M.Young, A. Webb Girard, U. Ramakrishnan, I. Chaudhuri, S. Srikantiah, R. Martorell. Emory Univ. and CARE India, Patna. (44.5) 5:00 Oregano Essential Oil and Carvacrol Reduce Cryptosporidium parvum Infectivity of HCT-8 Cells. S. Gaur, T.B. Kuhlenschmidt, M.S. Kuhlenschmidt, J.E. Andrade. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (668.12) 5:00 Non-responsive Feeding Behaviors Are Negatively Associated with Growth and Dietary Diversity at 24 Months in Rural Bangladesh. Z.T. Chowdhury, K.M. Hurley, M. Jahan, S. Shaikh, S. Mehra, H. Ali, A.A. Shamim, P. Christian Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and JiVitA Proj., Bangladesh. (432.8) 5:00 An Enteropathy Score Predicts Subsequent Length Better Than Lactulose Mannitol Ratio Alone in Children Enrolled in a Community-Based Randomized Trial of Complementary Food Supplements in Rural Bangladesh. R. Campbell, K. Schulze, S. Shaikh, H. Ali, S. Mehra, L. Wu, P. Christian. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and JiVitA, Bangladesh. (432.4) 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 Consumption of Novel Thiamin-Fortified Fish Sauce Improves the Thiamin Status of Rural Cambodian Women of Childbearing Age and Their Children <5 Years. K.C. Whitfield, C.D. Karakochuk, H. Kroeun, B. Chan, M. Borath, L.D. Lynd, E.C.Y. Li-Chan, D.D. Kitts, T.J. Green. Univ. of British Columbia, Helen Keller Intl. - Cambodia, Ministry of Planning, Phnom Penh and South Australian Hlth. and Med. Res. Inst., Adelaide. (891.9) Social Support Enhances Adherence to Antenatal Calcium and Iron-Folic Acid Supplements: Acceptability and Impact of Adherence Partners. S. Martin, M. Omotayo, R. Stoltzfus, K. Dickin. Cornell Univ. (150.3) Effect of Short-Term Maternal Supplementation with Small Amounts of Vitamin A or Beta-Carotene on Breast Milk Retinol Concentrations among Lactating Filipino Women. R. Engle-Stone, A. Osei, M.F.D. Reario, A. Hall, J.E. Arsenault, N. Haselow, G. Lietz, K.H. Brown, M.J. Haskell. Univ. of California, Davis, Helen Keller Intl., NY, Newcastle Univ., U.K. and Bill & Melinda Gates Fndn., Seattle. (150.7) Large-Scale Television Campaign Associated with Higher Prevalence of Exclusive Breastfeeding in Vietnam. T.T. Nguyen, S. Alayón, P.H. Nguyen, A. Jimerson, N. Hajeebhoy, J. Baker, E.A. Frongillo. FHI 360, Hanoi, FHI 360, Save the Children and IFPRI, Washington, DC and Univ. of South Carolina. (274.8) High Prevalence of Low Urinary Iodine among Pregnant and Lactating Women of Bangladesh Does Not Respond to Daily Lipid-Based Nutrient Supplement Containing 250 µg Iodine. M.K. Mridha, S.L. Matias, S.A. Khan, R.R. Paul, Z. Siddiqui, B. Ullah, S. Hussain, R.T. Young, C.D. Arnold, K.G. Dewey. Univ. of California, Davis, ICDDR,B, Care Bangladesh and Save the Children, Dhaka, Bangladesh. (150.4) Physical Activity and Work Productivity in Response to Iron and Iodine Double-Fortified Salt Trial in Indian Tea Estate Workers. M.M. Blakstad, J.E.H. Nevins, S. Venkatramanan, E.M. Przybyszewski, J.D. Haas. Cornell Univ. and McGill Univ., Ste. Anne de Bellevue. (150.5) Prebiotic Diet Modulates Gut Microbial Composition and Metabolic Functions in Metabolic Syndrome Patients: Follow-Up of a Double Blind, Controlled, Crossover Intervention. B. Upadhyaya, R. Juenemann, L. McCormack, A.R. Fardin-Kia, J. Clapper, S. Nichenametla, B. Specker, M. Dey. South Dakota State Univ. and USDA, College Park, MD. (419.4) Gastrointestinal Microbial Changes following Whole Grain Barley and Oat Consumption in Healthy Men and Women. S.V. Thompson, K.S. Swanson, J.A. Novotny, D.J. Baer, H.D. Holscher. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USDA, Beltsville, MD. (406.1) Three Doses of Vitamin D on Insulin Resistance and Osteocalcin Measures in Older Women. L.C. Pop, S.H. Schneider, D. Sukumar, Y. Schlussel, S.A. Shapses. Rutgers Univ., Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Med. Sch. and Drexel Univ. (419.8) 19 S A T NUTRITIONSATURDAY 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 20 Modulation of Colonic Microbiota Populations by Polyphenolic Containing Sorghum Brans May Protect against Development of Metabolic Disease. S.K. Lloyd, L.E. Ritchie, K.K. Hicks, M.A. Azcarate-Peril, N.D. Turner. Texas A&M Univ. and Univ. of North Carolina Sch. of Med. (683.4) Pectin Feeding for 16 Weeks Improves Learning and Memory in Young C57BL/6_J Mice: A Relationship to the Gut Microbiota? L. Mailing, J. Allen, T-W. Liu, T. Bhattacharya, P. Park, B. Pence, J. Rodney, G. Fahey, K. Swanson, J. Rhodes, J. Woods. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (683.10) Prospective Association of Fasting Blood Glucose Levels with Risk of Incident Stroke among Hypertensive Patients in China: Impact of Folic-Acid Intervention. R. Xu, X. Kong, B. Xu, M. Ji, Y. Zhang, B. Wang, F.F. Hou, J. Ge, Y. Huo, J. Li. River Hill H.S., Clarksville, MD, Peking Univ. First Hosp., Beijing, Zhongshan Hosp., Fudan Univ., China, Nanfang Hosp., So. Med. Univ., China. (419.6) Influence of Daily and Per Meal Protein Intakes on Function and Body Composition in Frail, Obese Older Adults Undergoing Weight Reduction. K.N. Porter Starr, M.C. Orenduff, S.R. McDonald, C.F. Pieper, H.C. Mulder, K. Maloney, C.W. Bales. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr. and Durham VA Med. Ctr. (419.1) Differences in the Infant Gut Microbiota Related to the Fatty Acid Composition of Human Milk: Results from the GEHM Cohort. D.H. Taft, K.A. Dingess, C.J. Valentine, B.S. Davidson, N.J. Ollberding, D.V. Ward, J.T. Brenna, R.J. McMahon, A.L. Morrow. Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. and Med. Ctr., Mead Johnson Nutr., Glenview, IL, Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. and Cornell Univ. (406.7) Formula Milk Alters Microbial Diversity in Porcine Colon and Impacts Immune Response. M.K. Saraf, A.K. Bowlin, S.V. Chintapalli, K. Shankar, T. LeRoith, M.J. Ronis, T.M. Badger, L. Yeruva. Arkansas Children’s Nutr. Ctr., Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci., VA-MD Col. of Vet. Med. and LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. (406.8) Impact of Almond Consumption on the Composition of the Gastrointestinal Microbiota of Healthy Adult Men and Women. A.M. Taylor, K.S. Swanson, J.A. Novotny, D.J. Baer, H.D. Holscher. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and USDA, Beltsville, MD. (406.5) Perceived Breastmilk Insufficiency and HIV Are Associated with Exclusive Breastfeeding at 1 and 3 Months among Mothers in Northern Uganda. S.L. Martin, S.M. Collins, E.M. Widen, D. Achidri, S.L. Young. Cornell Univ., Columbia Univ. and PRENAPS Uganda, Gulu. (45.7) Impact of Maternal Infection and Breast Inflammation on Infant Growth in Guatemala. H.M. Wren, A.L. Leblanc, C. Li, N.W. Solomons, M.E. Scott, K.G. Koski. McGill Univ., St-Anne-de-Bellevue, Montreal and CeSSIAM, Guatemala City. (45.6) Women with a Common Genetic Variant in ZnT2 (T288S) Have Altered Breast Milk Composition: Implications for Suboptimal Lactation. S. Lee, C. Dalrymple, S.L. Kelleher. Penn State Hershey Col. of Med. (673.1) 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 Lean Mass Accretion Associates with Vitamin D Intake: A 6 Month Randomized Controlled Trial in 2-8 Year Olds Using Fortified Foods. N.R. Brett, C.A. Parks, P. Lavery, S. Agellon, C.A. Vanstone, J.L. Maguire, F. Rauch, H.A. Weiler. Sch. of Dietetics and Human Nutr., McGill Univ., Li Ka Shing Inst. of St. Michael’s Hosp., Univ. of Toronto and Shriners Hosp. for Children, McGill Univ. (151.3) Erythrocyte Omega-3 Long Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Are Associated with Lumbar Spine but Not Whole Body Bone Mineral Density in Healthy Children. C.A. Parks, N.R. Brett, S. Agellon, P. Lavery, C.A. Vanstone, J.L. Maguire, F. Rauch, H.A. Weiler. Sch. of Dietetics and Human Nutr., McGill Univ., Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst. of St. Michael’s Hosp., Univ. of Toronto and McGill Univ., Montreal. (151.4) Eating, Feeling, and Feeding: Does Maternal Binge Eating Predict Use of Child Feeding Practices through Emotional Responsiveness? J.A. Saltzman, M. Pineros-Leano, J.M. Liechty, K.K. Bost, B.H. Fiese. Sch. of Social Work, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana. (1150.12) Role of Human Milk Oligosaccharides in Feto-placental Endothelial Function in Gestational Diabetes Mellitus. E. Jantscher-Krenn, J. Aigner, U. Lam, M. van Poppel, L. Bode, G. Desoye. Med. Univ. of Graz, Univ. of Graz, Austria and UCSD. (275.6) Mammary Gland Structure and Functional Changes in Mouse Model of Chronic Gestational Alcohol Exposure. R.M. Amos-Kroohs, A.A. Cheng, R.D. Clugston, T-N. Huang, C-L. Yen, W.S. Blaner, S.M. Smith. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison and Columbia Univ. (275.4) INSIGHT Study Parenting Intervention to Prevent Childhood Obesity Improves Patterns of Dietary Exposures in Infants. E.E. Hohman, J.S. Savage, I.M. Paul, L.L. Birch. Penn State, Penn State Col. of Med. and Univ. of Georgia. (295.2) Calcium Absorption among Racially Diverse Pregnant Women. M.N.R. Lesser, L. Nguyen, J.C. King, K.O. O’Brien, E.B. Fung. Children’s Hosp. Oakland Res. Inst., Univ. of California, Berkeley and Cornell Univ. (45.1) Association between Breastfeeding, Maternal Weight Loss and Body Composition at 3 Months Postpartum. S.A. Elliott, L.C.R. Pereira, E. Guigard, L.J. McCargar, C.C.M. Prado, R.C. Bell. Univ. of Alberta. (45.4) Standing by Human Milk through Thick and Thin: The Effect of Thickeners on Human Milk Viscosity. J.K. Koo, L. Bode, J.H. Kim. UCSD/Rady Children’s Hosp. of San Diego. (151.5) Using Skin Carotenoids to Assess Potential Dietary Changes after One Academic Year in the Shaping Healthy Choices Program. L.M. Nguyen, R.E. Scherr, M. Dharmar, I.V. Ermakov, W. Gellermann, L. Jahns, J.D. Linnell, C.L. Keen, S. Miyamoto, F.M. Steinberg, H.M. Young, S. Zidenberg-Cherr. Univ. of California, Davis, Sch. of Nursing, Davis Hlth. Syst., Sacramento, Image Technols. Corp., Salt Lake City, USDA, Grand Forks, Univ. of California Agr. and Nat. Resources and Penn State Col. of Nursing. (896.19) SATURDAYNUTRITION 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 Observed Differences in Child Picky Eating Behaviors between the Child’s Home and Center- or HomeBased Childcare. V. Luchini, S-Y. Lee, S. Donovan. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (895.13) Peer-Education about Weight Steadiness (PAWS Club): Pilot Test of Family Menu Planning Lesson for Parents and Their Young Adolescents. C.J. Nikolaus, C.A. Liguori, A.N. Winslow, S.M. Nickols-Richardson. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (896.18) Adolescents with At-Risk Eating and Lifestyle Behaviors Are Impacted by After-School Schedules across the Clinical Weight Spectrum. L. Perez, C.K. Miller, J.A. Groner. The Ohio State Univ. and Nationwide Children’s Hosp. (1155.11) Fluid Intake in Male Brazilian Teens According to Recommendations for Age, BMI and Physical Activity Patterns – The Fitfood Study. R.H.V. Machado, I. Iglesia, C. Martinelli, A.C.L. Rocha, C.A. Hartwick, A. Pires, M. Fisberg, L. Moreno. Sabara Children’s Hosp./José Luiz Egydio Setubal Fndn., São Paulo, Univ. of Zaragoza, Spain, Danone Res. and Danone Inst. Intl., Paris and Fed. Univ. of São Paulo. (1155.9) Evaluating the Young Adult Motivation to Prepare Healthy Foods Questionnaire Using Exploratory Factor Analysis. A.D. Bailey, D. Miketinas, M. Cater, B. Zawodniak, G. Tuuri. LSU and LSU AgCtr. (676.11) Participants in the Shaping Healthy Choices Program Increased the Intensity of Physical Activity. D.S. Fetter, R.E. Scherr, J.D. Linnell, M. Dharmar, S.E. Schaefer, K.M. Brian, S. Zidenberg-Cherr. Univ. of California, Davis, Sch. of Nursing, Davis Hlth. Syst., Sacramento, Agr. and Nat. Resources, Davis and Coop. Ext., Auburn, CA. (895.10) Nudges: Fun, Motivational Messages to Encourage and Reassure Parents in the Homestyles Randomized Controlled Trial. C. Delaney, J.T. Martin-Biggers, G. Povis-Alleman, N. Hongu, J. Worobey, C. ByrdBredbenner. Rutgers Univ. and Univ. of Arizona. (896.15) Nutrition Recommendations Critical to Teach LowIncome Adults in EFNEP: U.S. Dietary Guidelines Expert Panel Opinion. E. Murray, S. Baker, G. Auld. Colorado State Univ. (896.16) Validation of Two Brief Questionnaires Designed to Assess Fruit and Vegetable Intake among 3rd-5th Grade SNAP-Ed Participants. Y. Zhang, G. Hurtado, M. Reicks. Univ. of Minnesota-Twin Cities. (896.9) Parent and Adolescent Child Perceptions of a Grocery Store Tour: Comparison of Adult- versus Teen-Led Education. C.J. Nikolaus, C.A. Liguori, S.M. NickolsRichardson. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (896.14) Effects of an Educational Group Intervention for Patients with Type 2 Diabetes on Lifestyle and Glycemic Control. L.M. Sterpone, K. Haua-Navarro, A.B. Perez-Lizaur. Univ. Iberoamericana, Mexico City. (676.10) Culinary Skills Intervention: Immediate Impacts on Knowledge, Attitudes and Self-Efficacy in Adolescent Youth. A.R. Oakley, S.M. Nickols-Richardson. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (896.6) 5:00 Perceptions, Beliefs, and Implementation of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans Consumer Messages by Low-Income Parents. M. Chea, A.R. Mobley. Univ. of Connecticut. (896.7) 5:00 The Effects of Nutrition Education on Fruit and Vegetable Consumption in Food Pantry Clients. S. St. Cyr, A. Bruzina, M. Linek, M. Butsch-Kovacic, S-Y. Lee. Univ. of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. (896.17) 5:00 Teacher Characteristics Influence Implementation of a Multi-component, School-Based Nutrition Intervention in Fourth-Grade Classrooms. J.D. Linnell, M.H. Smith, M. Briggs, K.M. Brian, R.E. Scherr, M. Dharmar, S. Zidenberg-Cherr. Univ. of California, Davis, Placer and Nevada Counties Coop. Ext., Auburn and Univ. of California Davis Hlth. Syst., Sacramento. (1155.8) 5:00 Comparing Dietary Strategies to Increase Vegetable Consumption: Encouraging Tomato Products versus Raw Vegetable Consumption. S. Rahman, E. Park, K. Reimers, B.M. Burton-Freeman. Illinois Inst. of Technol. and ConAgra Foods, Omaha. (895.9) 5:00 MicroRNAs as a Novel Mechanism by Which Eicosapentaenoic Acid Mediates Inflammation in Diet-Induced Obesity. E. Yen, N. Wijayatunga, M. Pahlavani, L. Ramalingam, K.R. Kottapalli, N.S. Kalupahana, P. Gunaratne, K. Rajapakshe, C. Coarfa, S. Dharmawardhane, N. Moustaid-Moussa. Texas Tech Univ., Univ. of Sri Jayewardenepura and Univ. of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka, Univ. of Houston, Baylor Col. of Med. and Univ. of Puerto Rico-Med. Sci. Campus. (911.7) 5:00 Depletion of Dietary MicroRNAs from Cow’s Milk Causes an Increase of Purine Metabolites in Human Body Fluids and Mouse Livers. A.G. Aguilar Lozano, S. Baier, J. Adamec, M. Sadri, D. Giraud, J. Zempleni. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. (127.1) 5:00 Gene, Sex and Diet Interact to Control the Tissue Metabolome. A. Wells, W. Barrington, D. Threadgill, S. Dearth, S. Campagna, A. Saxton, B. Voy. Univ. of Tennessee and Texas A&M Univ. (127.2) 5:00 A Genome-Wide Association Study of Plasma α2Macroglobulin Concentrations in Young Adults. J. Jamnik, C. Borchers, A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto and Univ. of Victoria, Canada. (127.3) 5:00 Differential DNA Methylation between Obese and Normal Weight Women in CD4+ and CD8+ T Cells, and CD16+ Neutrophils. N.M. Hohos, A.K. Smith, V. Kilaru, H.J. Park, D.B. Hausman, L.B. Bailey, R.D. Lewis, R.B. Meagher. Univ. of Georgia and Emory Univ. (431.1) 5:00 Effects of Maternal Vitamin D Deficiency on Fetal Epigenetic Reprogramming. J. Xue, F.Y. Ideraabdullah. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (912.1) 5:00 Monounsaturated Fatty Acids Impede Inflammation Partially through Activation of AMPK. C.L. Lyons, O.F. Finucane, A.M. Murphy, A.A. Cooke, B. Viollet, P.M. Vieira, W. Oldham, B.B. Kahn, H.M. Roche. Conway Inst. of Biomolec. and Biomed. Res., Dublin, Inst. Cochin, INSERM, Paris, Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr., Harvard Med. Sch. and Brigham and Women’s Hosp. (296.5) 21 S A T NUTRITIONSATURDAY 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 22 Effect of a Diet Rich in Whole Grains on Gut Microbiota, and Immune and Inflammatory Markers of Healthy Adults. S.M. Vanegas, M. Meydani, J.B. Barnett, A. Kane, B. Goldin, D. Wu, J.P. Karl, C. Brown, P. Vangay, D. Knights, L. Li, S.S. Jonnalagadda, M. Thomas, E. Satlzman, S.N. Meydani. USDA and Sch. of Med., Tufts Univ., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis and General Mills, Minneapolis. (296.8) Vitamin a Supplementation and LipopolysaccharideInduced Inflammation in the Neonate a Pilot Study in C57BL/6 Mice. C-H. Wei, A.C. Ross. Penn State. (916.2) Feeding a Maternal Diet Enriched in Docosahexaenoic Acid to Lactating Dams Improves the Ex Vivo Tolerance Response to Egg Protein in Suckled Pups. C. Richard, E.D. Lewis, S. Goruk, C.J. Field. Univ. of Alberta. (296.6) Effects of a Randomized, Controlled Trial of Daily Vitamin D3 Supplementation during Pregnancy on Regulatory Immunity and Inflammation. M. Zerofsky, B. Jacoby, T.L. Pedersen, C.B. Stephensen. USDA, Davis and UC Davis Med. Ctr., Sacramento. (296.7) The Impact of Environmental Enteropathy and Systemic Inflammation on Infant Growth Failure. C. Naylor, M. Lu, J.A. Ma, A.M. Prentice, W.A. Petri. MRC Unit, The Gambia, Univ. of Virginia and London Sch. of Hyg. and Trop. Med. (296.4) Dietary Supplementation with Montmorency Tart Cherry Prevents the Alterations in Gut Mucosal Immunity That Occurs with Ovarian Hormone Deficiency. E.K. Crockett, J.L. Graef, P. Ouyang, S.L. Clarke, U. DeSilva, E.A. Lucas, B.J. Smith. Oklahoma State Univ. (916.14) Mapping Inflammation and Cancer-Modifying Regions in Broccoli Genome. W. Bussler, J. Alley, H. Chandler, C. Thetford, G. Yousef, A. Brown, D. Esposito, M.A. Lila, S. Komarnytsky. North Carolina State Univ., Kannapolis and Raleigh, Iowa State Univ. and Catawba Col., NC. (131.8) Adherence to the 2015 Dietary Guidelines for Americans and Risk of Healthy and Unhealthy Obesity among Canadian Adults. M. Jessri, W. Lou, M. L’Abbe. Dalla Lana Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Toronto. (131.3) Improving the Food Supply by Product Reformulation: Using Nutrient Profiling to Evaluate Foods Consumed in the USA. F. Mölenberg, A. Vlassopoulos, G. Masset, U. Lehmann. Wageningen Univ., Netherlands and Nestle Res. Ctr., Lausanne. (681.7) Development of Novel Hollow Zein Nanoparticles for Delivery of Nutraceuticals. S. Hu, M-L. Fernandez, Y. Luo. Univ. of Connecticut. (680.9) Analysis of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons for Reduction in Simple-Processed Foods According to Manufacturing System. S-J. Kang, S-Y. Yang, K-W. Lee. Col. of Life Sci. and Biotechnol., Korea Univ. (680.8) Are Foods of Higher Nutritional Quality More Expensive Than Their Less Healthy Counterparts? An Analysis of Canadian Packaged Foods. M-E. Labonté, S. Noorhosseini, J. Bernstein, M. Ahmed, M. L’Abbé. Univ. of Toronto. (131.7) 5:00 Berberine Ameliorates Hepatic Steatosis and Suppresses Liver and Adipose Tissue Inflammation in Obesity Mice Independent of AMPK. S-L. Woo, T. Guo, X. Guo, H. Li, J. Zheng, R. Botchlett, Y. Cai, X. Li, Q. Li, X. Xiao, Y. Huo, C. Wu. Texas A&M Univ., Hubei Hosp. of Chinese Med., Wuhan, The First Hosp. of CMU, China and Georgia Regents Univ. (126.5) 5:00 Orbitofrontal Cortex Response to Food Portion Size Is Linked with Obesogenic Appetitive Profile in Children. L.K. English, S.N. Fearnbach, M. Lasschuijt, S.J. Wilson, M. Tanofsky-Kraff, B.J. Rolls, K.L. Keller. Penn State, Wageningen Univ., Netherlands and Uniformed Svcs. Univ. of Hlth. Sci., Bethesda. (270.3) 5:00 Weight Gain with Metabolic Dysfunction Is Associated with Obesity-Related Cancer. S. Chadid, M.R. Singer, B.E. Kreger, L.L. Moore. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med. (910.4) 5:00 Secretory Factors Produced by Stromal Cultures of Human Omental Adipose Tissue Inhibit Adipose Differentiation. R.T. Pickering, M-J. Lee, M. Jager, M. Layne, S.K. Fried. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med. (126.7) 5:00 Soy Positively Impacts Cecal Microbiota of Ovariectomized Rats Selectively Bred for Low Aerobic Capacity. T-W. Liu, T.M. Zidon, R.J. Welly, Y-M. Park, S.L. Britton, L.G. Koch, J. Padilla, V.J. Vieira-Potter, K.S. Swanson. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, Univ. of Missour-Columbiai and Univ. of Michigan. (146.1) 5:00 Relationship between Human Gut Microbiota and Interleukin 6 Levels in Overweight and Obese Adults. D. Cooper, E.B. Kim, M. Marco, B. Rust, L. Welch, W. Horn, R. Martin, N. Keim. Univ. of California, Davis, USDA, Davis and Seoul Natl. Univ. (146.4) 5:00 Does Milk Portion Size or Energy Density Affect Preschool Children’s Lunch Intake? S.M.R. Kling, L.S. Roe, B.J. Rolls. Penn State. (270.1) 5:00 Comparison of MRI and DXA for Measurement of Visceral Adipose Tissue in Adolescent Females. S.L. Belcher, J.M. Kindler, N.K. Pollock, H.L. Ross, C.M. Modlesky, E.M. Laing, R.D. Lewis. Univ. of Georgia, Med. Col. of Georgia-Georgia Regents Univ. and Univ. of Delaware. (686.8) 5:00 Energy Expenditure in Children with Prader-Willi Syndrome during Walking. F.A. Chavoya, A. Slowetzky-Amaro, D. Castner, A. Hyde, J. Ramirez, A. Wong, V. Layvant, D. Rubin. California State Univ., Fullerton. (687.2) 5:00 Gut Microbiota Metabolites in Infancy: Associations with Breastfeeding and Childhood Overweight. S. Bridgman, P. Koleva, R. Mandal, M. Azad, C. Field, A. Haqq, A. Becker, S. Turvey, P. Mandhane, P. Subbarao, M. Sears, D. Wishart, A. Kozyrskyj. Univ. of Alberta, Univ. of Manitoba, Univ. of British Columbia, Univ. of Toronto and McMaster Univ., Canada. (146.3) 5:00 Effects of an Almond-Enriched Energy Restricted Diet on Body Composition, Visceral Adipose Tissue and Blood Pressure in Obese Adults. J. Dhillon, R. Mattes. Purdue Univ. (146.8) 5:00 Differences in Plasma Metabolites in Insulin Resistant and Insulin Sensitive Obese Individuals during a Hyperinsulinemic/Euglycemic Clamp. J.L. Casey, D.W. Van Pelt, C. Burant, J. Horowitz, C. Evans. Univ. of Michigan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Sch. of Kinesiol. (889.3) SATURDAYNUTRITION 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 Therapeutic Potential of AICAR in Attenuating ObesityInduced Metabolic, Liver and Kidney Disease. E. Borgeson, V.W. Borgeson, C. Godson, K. Sharma. Univ. of Gothenburg, Sweden, University Col. Dublin, Ireland and UCSD. (126.4) Network Social Support for Healthy and Obesogenic Behavior Influences Children’s Dietary Intake and Weight Change during Family-Based Behavioral Obesity Treatment. K.N. Balantekin, J.F. Hayes, R.P. Kolko, R.I. Stein, B.E. Saelens, R.R. Welch, M.G. Perri, K.B. Schechtman, L.H. Epstein, D.E. Wilfley. Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., Univ. of Pittsburgh, Seattle Children’s Hosp., Univ. of Florida and Univ. at Buffalo. (270.5) Improved Bioavailability of Iron from Amino Acid Chelates in Fully Differentiated Human Intestinal Epithelial (Caco-2) Cells. C. Doguer, N. Shay, J.F. Collins. Univ. of Florida and Oregon State Univ. (918.4) High Dietary Iron Intake Impairs Growth and Causes Copper Deficiency in Sprague-Dawley Rats. J-H. Ha, C. Doguer, S. Zhao, X. Wang, S.R. Flores, J.F. Collins. Univ. of Florida. (292.4) Lack of Intestinal Divalent Metal-Ion Transporter 1 Perturbs Copper Homeostasis in Mice. X. Wang, S. Flores, J-H. Ha, C. Doguer, J.F. Collins. Univ. of Florida. (292.1) Maternal Choline Supplementation Modulates Maternal and Fetal Choline Metabolism and Downregulates Inflammatory Gene Expression in a Mouse Model of Placental Insufficiency. J.H. King, S.T. Kwan, J. Yan, X. Jiang, V.G. Fomin, M.S. Roberson, M.A. Caudill. Cornell Univ. and Brooklyn Col. (272.1) Lower Hepatic Iron Storage Associated with Obesity in Mice Can Be Restored by Decreasing Body Fat Mass through Feeding a Low Fat Diet. H. Chung, D. Wu, D. Smith, S.N. Meydani, S.N. Han. Seoul Natl. Univ. and USDA at Tufts Univ. (1173.3) Iron Status and Regulation in High-Risk Pregnant African American Women. L. Welke. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. (292.5) High Iron Diet during Prenatal Alcohol Exposure (PAE) May Normalize Iron Homeostasis in PAE Fetuses. A.A. Cheng, S.M. Huebner, S.M. Smith. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. (1172.5) The AHR Pathway and Its Potential Role in the Regulation of the 15 kDa Selenoprotein. S.E. Galinn, L.E. Rosso, B.A. Carlson, R. Tobe, S. Naranjo-Suarez, P.A. Tsuji. Towson Univ., NCI, NIH, Ritsumeikan Univ., Japan and Johns Hopkins Univ. (1170.5) Zinc-Induced Upregulation of Metallothionein-2A Is Predicted by Gene Expression of Zinc Transporters in Healthy Adults. A. Chu, M. Foster, S. Ward, K. Zaman, D. Hancock, P. Petocz, S. Samman. Univ. of Otago, New Zealand, Univ. of Sydney and Macqurie Univ., Australia. (148.1) 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 5:00 Effect of High Folic Acid Diet on Mitochondrial DNA Content in Young Adult and Aged Mice. J. Mustra Rakic, H. Sawaengsri, C. Reginaldo, J. Selhub, L. Paul. USDA and Tufts Univ. (1171.4) Iron-Dependent Regulation of Cytoglobin in Neuro 2A Cells. J. Fiddler, T. Soh, M. Davis, W. Chowanadisai, S. Clarke. Oklahoma State Univ. and Midwestern Univ., AZ. (1173.4) 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D Regulates Energy Substrate Metabolism to Reduce Triacylglycerol Accumulation in 3T3-L1 Adipocytes. B.M. Larrick, K-H. Kim, S.S. Donkin, D. Teegarden. Purdue Univ. (128.2) Characterization of Cystathionine Beta-Synthase and Cystathionine Gamma-Lyase in the Production of Hydrogen Sulfide Biomarkers, Lanthionine and Homolanthionine, in a HepG2 Cell Culture Model. B. DeRatt, M. Ralat, J. Gregory. Univ. of Florida. (1171.5) Prevalence and Determinants of Suboptimal Vitamin B6 Status in Young Adult Women in Metro Vancouver. C-l. Ho, T.A.W. Quay, J.L. Black, A.M. Devlin, Y. Lamers. Univ. of British Columbia, Child and Family Res. Inst., Vancouver and Fraser Hlth. Authority, Surrey, Canada. (1171.6) Zinc and ZIP14 (Slc39a14) Are Required for Adaptation to ER Stress in Mouse Liver. M-H. Kim, T.B. Aydemir, R.J. Cousins. Univ. of Florida. (148.2) Dietary Glycine Alters One-Carbon Metabolic Kinetics In Vivo. Y-H. Huang, E-P.I. Chiang. Natl. Chung Hsing Univ., Taiwan. (272.4) Effect of Vitamin D Fortified Cheese on Oral Glucose Tolerance in Individuals Exhibiting Marginal Vitamin D Status and an Increased Risk for Developing Type 2 Diabetes: A Double-Blind, Randomized PlaceboControlled Clinical Trial. T.S. Moreira-Lucas, A.M. Duncan, R. Rabasa-Lhoret, R. Vieth, A. Gibbs, A. Badawi, T.M.S. Wolever. Univ. of Toronto, Univ. of Guelph, Canada, Clin. Res. Inst. of Montreal and Publ. Hlth. Agcy. of Canada, Toronto. (917.1) Hepcidin Attenuates Zinc Efflux in Caco-2 Cells. S.R. Hennigar, J.P. McClung. U.S. Army Res. Inst. of Envrn. Med., Natick, MA. (292.3) Novel Role of Glutathione Peroxidase-1 in Liver and Muscle Protein Metabolism of Mice. L. Tao, Z.P. Zhao, X.G. Lei. Cornell Univ. (148.5) Vitamin B12 and Placental Expression of Transcobalamin in Pregnant Adolescents. A.J. Layden, K.O. O’Brien, E.K. Pressman, T.R. Kent, J.L. Finkelstein. Cornell Univ., Univ. of Rochester Med. Ctr. and St. John’s Res. Inst., Bangalore. (272.3) 23 S A T PATHOLOGYSATURDAY Pathology 48. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BASIS OF DISEASE: FROM PREVENTION TO CANCER METASTASIS: THE BIOLOGY AND THERAPY OF BREAST CANCER METASTASIS Symposium (Supported by unrestricted educational grants from Elsevier and Friends for an Earlier Breast Cancer Test) (Sponsored by: the ASIP Breast Cancer and Tumor Microenvironment & Metastasis Scientific Interest Groups) Sat. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Chaired: B. Felding Cochaired: W.B. Coleman Cancer Biology Breast Cancer Neoplasia 8:30 Targeting the Tumor Microenvironment in Breast Cancer. D. Panigrahy. Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr. 9:15 Breast Cancer Brain Metastasis: Molecular Subtypes and Prognosis. S. Wei. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham Sch. of Med. 10:00 Metabolism in Breast Cancer Brain Metastasis. S. Kesari. UCSD. 10:45 Mechanisms of Breast Cancer Metastasis and Opportunities for Intervention. B. Felding. The Scripps Res. Inst. 49. PATHOBIOLOGY FOR BASIC SCIENTISTS: METABOLISM RUN AMOK: UNDERSTANDING BIOCHEMICAL PATHWAYS AND THEIR PATHOLOGIC CONSEQUENCES IN CANCER AND SYSTEMS BIOLOGY Course (Sponsored by: the ASIP Education Committee ) Sat. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: W. Mars Cochaired: R.N. Mitchell Cancer Biology Metabolism and Metabolic Disease Microbiome 8:30 Tumor Metabolic Pathways; Warburg Effect (Glioblastoma as a Model). P. Mischel. UCSD Sch. of Med. 9:30 How the Microbiome Influences Human Metabolism. G. Siuzdak. The Scripps Res. Inst. 10:30 Obesity, Metabolic Syndrome, and Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis. D. Cohen. Harvard Med.Sch. 24 50. EMERGING TRANSLATIONAL PATHWAYS IN PULMONARY PATHOLOGY Minisymposium Sat. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Chaired: S.H. Phan Pulmonary Pathobiology 8:30 Current Overview of Pulmonary Fibrosis. 8:45 50.1 Neutrophil Extracellular Traps Drive BleomycinInduced Lung Fibrosis by Regulating TGFβ1-Dependent Interactions of Platelets and Macrophages. D.R. Riehl, J. Roewe, S. Klebow, N.L. Esmon, S. Eming, G. Colucci, K. Schäfer, M. Gunzer, A. Waisman, P.A. Ward, C.T. Esmon, M. Bosmann. Univ. Med. Ctr. Mainz, Oklahoma Med. Res. Fndn., Univ. of Cologne, Clin. Luganese Moncucco, Switzerland, Univ. Duisburg-Essen, Germany and Univ. of Michigan Med. Sch. 9:00 50.2 Dimethyl Fumarate Ameliorates Pulmonary Hypertension In Vivo and Prevents Fibrosis via βTRCP-Mediated Degradation of β-Catenin and TAZ. A. Grzegorzewska, R. Han, F. Seta, L. Stawski, C. Feghali-Bostwick, J. Browning, M. Trojanowska. Boston Univ. and Med. Univ. of South Carolina. 9:15 50.3 Allergen-Induced Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Regulates Lung Inflammation and Fibrosis. S. Jalahalli Mariswamy, E.M. Nakada, B. Mihavics, S. Hoffman, D. Chapman, C.G. Irvin, A. Dixon, M. Poynter, V. Anathy. Univ. of Vermont. 9:30 50.4 Organic Cation Transporter Novel Type-1 and Pulmonary Responses to Secondhand Tobacco Smoke. D.C. Milner, J.B. Lewis, D.R. Winden, J. Gassman, T. Monson, D. Broberg, J.A. Arroyo, P.R. Reynolds. Brigham Young Univ. and Roseman Univ. of Hlth. Sci. 9:45 50.5 Knockdown Glucose-6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Promotes EMT through Downregulation of E-Cadherin by miR-200b Inhibition in A549 Cells. Y-H. Wu, Y-H. Lee, D.T-Y. Chiu. Chang Gung Univ. and Chang Gung Mem. Hosp., Taiwan. 10:00 50.6 Amphiregulin Promotes Fibroblast Activation in Pulmonary Fibrosis. T. Liu, F. Gonzalez De Los Santos, L. Ding, Z. Wu, S.H. Phan. Univ. of Michigan. 10:15 50.7 R-Spondin2 Is Upregulated in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis and Affects Fibroblasts Behavior. A. Munguia, C. Becerril, C. Mendoza, Y. Balderas, R. Ramirez, J. Melendez, A. Pardo, M. Selman. Biol. Sci., Natl. Inst. of Resp. Dis., Fac. of Sci. and Natl. Inst. of Genomic Med., UNAM, Mexico City. 10:30 50.8 TMPRSS4: A Novel Serine Protease Involved in IPF Development? A.M. Valero, J. Cisneros, R. Ramírez, M. Gaxiola, C. Becerril, A. Pardo, M. Selman. Fac. of Sci, Natl. Autonomous Univ. of Mexico and INER, Mexico City. 10:45 50.9 Advancement in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Granulomatous/Lymphocytic Interstitial Lung Disease. B.R. Hoffmann, A. Vallejos, A.S. Greene, J.M. Routes. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Children’s Hosp. of Wisconsin. 11:00 50.10 Absence of Mast Cells in an Experimental Model of Pulmonary and Cardiac Fibrosis, the CUX-1 Mice. N.A. Reddy, F. Raza, A. Said, S. Livingston, D. Jacobsen, D. Kearns, R. Baybutt, G. Van Den Heuvel, A. Molteni, S. Hamidpour. Univ. of Missouri Kansas City, Wheaton Col., IL and Western Michigan Univ. SATURDAYPATHOLOGY 51. IMAGING PATHOLOGY: HOW TO CATCH LIGHT IN A BOTTLE 52. Minisymposium XVITH ANNUAL WORKSHOP ON GRADUATE EDUCATION IN PATHOLOGY: INTEGRATING CLINICAL AND ANATOMIC PATHOLOGY Sat. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Workshop Chaired: R. Levenson (Sponsored by: the ASIP Education Committee and the Association of Pathology Chairs ) Cochaired: D. Kaufman Digital and Computational Pathology Sat. 11:45 am—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Temecula Imaging, Immunohistochemistry and Microscopy Chaired: D. Karcher 8:30 Introduction. 8:35 51.1 Assessment of Autofluorescent Signatures in Multiple Tissue Types with Novel Excitation-Scanning Hyperspectral Imaging. P.F. Favreau, J.A. Deal, D.A. Weber, T.C. Rich, S.J. Leavesley. Univ. of South Alabama. 8:50 51.2 Potential of Hyperspectral Imaging for LabelFree Tissue and Pathology Classification. J.A. Deal, P. Favreau, D. Weber, T. Rich, S. Leavesley. Univ. of South Alabama. 9:05 51.3 MUSE: A New, Fast, Simple Microscopy Method for Slide-Free Histology and Surface Topography. R.M. Levenson, F. Fereidouni. Univ. of California Davis Med. Ctr., Sacramento. 9:20 51.4 Lymphocyte Response Assay: Report on Precision of Novel Cell Culture Test. A.E. Lynch, R. Jaffe. Hlth. Studies Collegium, Ashburn, VA. 9:35 51.5 Monitoring Cell Death in Real-Time/TimeLapse Studies. R. Edward. BioStatus Ltd., Shepshed, U.K. 9:50 51.6 How Different Are We? Performing Formalin Fixed Paraffin Embedded Tissue Immunohistochemistry across Species. K.N. Gibson-Corley, G. Ofori-Amanfo, M.R. Leidinger, A.M. Lambertz. Univ. of Iowa. 10:05 51.7 FLIM-FRET Imaging of Ligand-Receptor Binding in Tumor Cells In Vitro and In Vivo. M.M. Barroso, A. Rudkouskaya, S. Patel, N. Sinsuebphon, X. Intes. Albany Med. Col. and Rensselaer Polytech Inst. 10:20 51.8 Digital Determination of Chemotherapeutic Drug-Induced Damage Sites in Single DNA Molecules Using Nanofluidic Channels. D.G. Kaufman, P.D. Chastain, S.A. Soper. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and William Carey Univ. Col. of Osteo. Med., MS. 10:35 51.9 Deterministic Transfection and Genetic Manipulation of Organotypic Brain Slice Cultures for Ex Vivo Imaging. P.E. Gygli, S. Byers, N. Higuita-Castro, C. Czeisler, D. Gallego-Perez, J.J. Otero. The Ohio State Univ. and Kenyon Col., OH. 10:50 Discussion. Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday 9:00 AM–4:00 PM Cochaired: M. Willis Education Pathobiology Education 11:45Introduction. D. Karcher. The George Washington Univ. 11:50 The Graduate Program at UCSD. S. Gonias. UCSD 12:00 The Graduate Program at the University of Pittsburgh. G.K. Michalopoulos. Univ. of Pittsburgh 12:10 The Graduate Program at UNC. J. Homeister. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 12:30Discussion. 53. HIGHLIGHTS: GRADUATE STUDENT RESEARCH IN PATHOLOGY Poster Discussion (Sponsored by: ASIP Committee for Career Development and Diversity) Sat. 1:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: T.A. Reaves Cochaired: B. Woolbright 1:30 Welcome and Introduction. 1:35 Oral Presentations 1:45 Microvascular Endothelial Cells Can Exhibit Autophagy In Vivo: Role in Neutrophil Transendothelial Cell Migration? C.M. Pickworth, R. Beal, N. Reglero, L. Lintermans, B. Colom, M-B. Voisin, M. Golding, S. Nourshargh. Barts and The London Sch. of Med. and Dent., Queen Mary Univ. of London. (165.8) Role of Sumoylation in Aldehyde Dehydrogenase 2 Function during Alcoholic Liver Disease. C. Cossu, K. Ramani, Y. Spissu, A. Floris, M.L. Tomasi. CedarsSinai Med. Ctr., Univ. of Sassari and Univ. of Cagliari, Italy. (516.10) Activation of TRPVv1 by 12(S)-HpETE and 20-HETE Releases CGRP and Protects the Heart against the Cardiac Dysfunction Caused by LPS. J. Chen, A.J.P. Hamers, M. Finsterbusch, C. Thiemermann, A. Ahluwalia. Barts and The London Sch. of Med. and Dent., Queen Mary Univ. of London. (306.4) 1:55 2:05 25 S A T PATHOLOGYSATURDAY 2:05 Poster Presentations P2 Foxi3: A Sly Regulator of Bone Development, Promotes Prostate Cancer. A. Mukherjee. Troy Univ. (698.20) Mechanisms Underlying the Induction of a Profibrotic Epithelial Phenotype during Renal Fibrosis. J. Folke Bialik, M. Rozycki, P. Speight, Z.M. Miranda, S.G. Szeto, D.A. Yuen, Q. Dan, K. Szászi, S.F. Pedersen, A. Kapus. St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto, Univ. of Copenhagen and Univ. of Toronto. (445.6) Inflammation as a Contributor to Ingestive and Vocal Dysfunction in a PINK1 Knockout Rat Model of Parkinson Disease. K.M. Yang, H.N. Mulholland, M.P. Kurup, M.R. Ciucci. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. (1179.2) A Novel Bioinspired Microfluidic Assay for Investigation of the Role of Protein Kinase C-Delta in Human Neutrophil-Endothelium Interaction during Acute Inflammation. F. Soroush, Y. Tang, P. Pandian, L.E. Kilpatrick, M.F. Kiani. Temple Univ. and CFD Research Corp., Huntsville, AL. (1177.3) Cell-Type Specific Mechanisms Regulate Rhythmic Leukocyte Migration to Tissues. W. He, K. Kraus, D. Druzd, A. de Juan, L. Ince, C-S. Chen, C. Scheiermann. Ludwig Maximilians Univ., Munich. (165.11) OxLDL Exerts a Biphasic Effect on Endothelial Function: A Role for Oxidised Lipids in Angiogenesis and Inflammation. M. Olding, M.R. Ardern-Jones, E. Healy, T.M. Millar. Univ. of Southampton. (165.9) P4 P6 P8 P10 P12 2:55 Oral Presentations 3:05 CD36-Myeloperoxidase Connection and the Activation of Intestinal Fibroblasts. M. Anderson-Thomas, A. Nillas, T.A. Reaves. Med. Univ. of South Carolina. (922.1) Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 1 Regulates Left Ventricular Leukocyte Recruitment, Cardiac Remodeling and Function in Pressure OverloadInduced Heart Failure. A.M. Salvador, T. Nevers, M. Aronovitz, B. Wang, I. Jaffe, R. Blanton, P. Alcaide. Tufts Med. Ctr. (306.6) Influence of PI3K and MAPK Pathway Mutations on Response to Mono and Dual Treatment with Targeted Kinase Inhibitors. R.S. McNeill, D.A. Canoutas, R.E. Bash, R.S. Schmid, B.H. Constance, G.L. Johnson, C.R. Miller. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (515.1) 3:05 3:05 3:05 Poster Presentations P1 Expression Analysis of Arpin, a Novel Arp2/3 Inhibitor, in Endothelial and Epithelial Cells under Basal and Inflammatory Conditions. S.D. Chanez Paredes, J. Garcia Cordero, H. Vargas Robles, L. Cedillo Barron, M. Schnoor. CINVESTAV, Mexico City. (1180.2) Nicotine Promotes Cholangiocarcinoma Growth in Xenograft Mice. A. O’Brien, C. Hall, L. Ehrlich, T. White, T. Lairmore, D.E. Dostal, S. Glaser. Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Baylor Scott & White Healthcare and Central Texas Veterans Hlth. Care Syst., Temple. (56.5) P3 26 P5 Cathepsin Localization and Activity on the Intestinal Epithelial Barrier of Rats following Hemorrhagic Shock and Reperfusion. A.S. Courelli, F. DeLano, G.W. Schmid-Schonbein. UCSD. (920.2) P7 Role of Cox Pathway in Human Monocytes and Monocyte-Derived Dendritic Cells Infected by Trypanosoma cruzi. S.C.H. Lonien, R.C. de Freitas, H.T. Suzukawa, F.F. dos Santos, M.I. Lovo-Martins, G.F. Silveira, P.F. Wowk, J. Bordignon, P. PingeFilho. State Univ. of Londrina and Oswaldo Cruz Fndn., Curitiba, Brazil. (925.20) P9FoxP3+ T-Cells and PD-L1 Highlight ImmuneSuppressive Profiles in Vulvar Squamous Cell Carcinoma. E.R. Holthoff, T. Kelly, C.M. Quick, S.R. Post. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. (439.10) P11 Pharmacological Inhibition of p38/MAPK Improves Cardiac Function in Cardiac-Specific Bag3-P209L Transgenic Mice. S.C. Eaton, S. Takayama, T.N. Sidorova, K.T. Murray, M.S. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Boston Univ. and Vanderbilt Univ. (306.5) 3:50 ASIP Young Scientist Leadership Award Lecture: Approaching Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis from Cellular, System and Technological Angles. C. Kolarcik. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 3:50 Concluding Remarks. 54. ASIP YOUNG SCIENTIST LEADERSHIP AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture Sat. 3:35 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Neurobiology Neuropathology 3:35 55. ASIP Young Scientist Leadership Award Lecture: Approaching Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis from Cellular, System and Technological Angles. C. Kolarcik. Univ. of Pittsburgh. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR BASIS OF DISEASE: FROM PREVENTION TO CANCER METASTASIS Symposium (Sponsored by: the ASIP Tumor Microenvironment & Metastasis Scientific Interest Group ) Sat. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Chaired: P. Dasqupta Cochaired: A. Maitra Cancer Biology Breast Cancer Tumor Microenvironment and Metastasis 2:00Introduction. M.E. Sobel. ASIP. 2:05 ASIP Gold-Headed Cane Award Lecture: Biology and Therapy of Cancer Metastasis. I. Fidler. Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Ctr. SATURDAYPATHOLOGY 3:00 3:45 56. Origin and Evolution of Metastatic Traits in Breast Cancer. Y. Kang. Princeton Univ. Getting across the Endothelial Gate: Mechanisms and Opportunities to Prevent Metastasis. L. IruelaArispe. UCLA. CELL-MOLECULE CIRCUITRY OF LIVER INJURY AND REGENERATION Minisymposium 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Chaired: K. Nejak-Bowen Cochaired: H. Francis Liver Pathobiology Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) 2:00 56.1 Hepatic Stellate Cells Play an Essential Role in Acetaminophen-Induced Hepatocyte Injury with or without Prior Endotoxemia. R. Rani, A. Tandon, S. Kumar, C.R. Gandhi. Univ. of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. 2:15 56.2 Cross-Talk among Kupffer Cells and Hepatic Stellate Cells Is Critical for Kupffer Cell Activation during Liver Injury. K. Roth, B. Copple, R. Albee. Michigan State Univ. 2:30 56.3 Epigenetic Silencing of MicroRNA-34a in Human Cholangiocarcinoma Cells via DNA Methylation and EZH2: Impact on Regulation of Notch Pathway. H. Kwon, K. Song, C. Han, J. Zhang, N. Ungerleider, L. Yao, T. Wu. Tulane Univ. 2:45 56.4 A Balancing Act: Role of HNF4α and β-Catenin in Hepatobiliary Development and Cholangiocarcinoma Pathogenesis. C. Walesky, W. Goessling. Harvard Med. Sch., Brigham and Women’s Hosp. 3:00 56.5 Nicotine Promotes Cholangiocarcinoma Growth in Xenograft Mice. A. O’Brien, C. Hall, L. Ehrlich, T. White, T. Lairmore, D.E. Dostal, S. Glaser. Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Baylor Scott & White Healthcare and Central Texas Veterans Hlth. Care Syst., Temple. 3:15 56.6 Stem Cell-Based Biliary Organoids and Gallbladder-Like Structures for Disease Modeling of Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis and Alagille Syndrome. D. Contreras, J. Ignatius Irudayam, A.W. Annamalai, A. Klein, S.W. French, V. Arumugaswami. Bd. of Governors Regen. Med., Inst., Cedars Sinai Med. Ctr. and UCLA. 3:30 56.7 The Secretin Receptor Antagonist (SCT 5-27) Reduces Biliary Hyperplasia and Liver Fibrosis in an Animal Model of Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis. S. Glaser, F. Meng, N. Wu, J. Venter, K. Kyritsi, G. Alpini. Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Central Texas Veterans Hlth. Care Syst. and Baylor Scott & White Healthcare. 3:45 56.8 Cholangiocyte Regeneration and Liver Repair Are Impaired in HDC-/- Mice following 70% Partial Hepatectomy via Dysregulated Notch Signaling. H. Francis, L. Hargrove, F. Meng, L. Kennedy, S. DeMorrow, G. Alpini. Central Texas Veterans Hlth. Care Syst., Baylor Scott & White Hlth. and Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Temple. 4:00 56.9 Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Signaling: A Double-Edged Sword in Acetaminophen-Induced Liver Injury and Regeneration. B. Bhushan, P. Borude, M.W. Manley, H. Chavan, Y. Xie, K. Du, M. McGill, M. Lebofsky, H. Jaeschke, P. Kasturi, U. Apte. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 4:15 56.10 Dysregulation of miRNA Regulatory Networks by Chronic Ethanol Consumption Impairs Liver Regeneration. A. Parrish, E. Juskeviciute, J.B. Hoek, R. Vadigepalli. Thomas Jefferson Univ. 4:30 56.11 Cell-Specific Wnts Regulate Liver Zonation and Regeneration. M. Preziosi, J. Yang, H. Okabe, C. Diegel, B. Williams, S. Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh and Van Andel Inst., Grand Rapids, MI. 4:45 56.12 Deletion of Estrogen Receptor Alpha in Rats Speeds Up Liver Regeneration after CCl4-Induced Liver Injury. S. McGreal, M.A.K. Rumi, M. Soares, U. Apte. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 57. TISSUE INFLAMMATION AND LEUKOCYTE TRAFFICKING Minisymposium Sat. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Chaired: D. McCay Cochaired: R. Jones Inflammation/Immunity Inflammation Vascular Biology 2:00 57.1 Extracts of the Tapeworm, Hymenolepis diminuta, Recruit CCR2+PDL1+ Myeloid Cells with the Capacity to Inhibit Dextran Sodium Sulphate-Induced Colitis. F. Lopes, J.L. Reyes, G. Leung, N. Mancini, A. Wang, D. McKay. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. 2:15 57.2 Microbiota-Derived Tryptophan Metabolites Activate Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor and Induce IL-10 Receptor Expression in Intestinal Epithelia. E.E. Alexeev, J.M. Lanis, K.D. Schwisow, D.J. Kominsky, S.P. Colgan. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus and Montana State Univ. 2:30 57.3 Cell Differentiation in the Murine Intestine Requires NADPH Oxidase 1. T. Darby, R. Jones. Emory Univ. 2:45 57.4 Hypoxia-Regulated Autophagic Pathways Mediate Epithelial Defense during Mucosal Inflammation. D. Kitzenberg, B. Saeedi, C. Kelly, K. Schwisow, E. Campbell, J. Lanis, V. Curtis, L. Glover. Univ. of Colorado AMC, Aurora and Emory Univ. Sch. of Med. 3:00 57.5 Markers of Hypoxia and Correlation with Disease Severity in Inflammatory Bowel Disease. K.D. Schwisow, S. Colson, M. Gerich, M. Lovell, A. Allshouse, A. Yeckes, B. Kessler, S. Keely, E. Hoffenberg, E. de Zoeten, S. Colgan. Univ. of Colorado, Children’s Hosp. Colorado, Univ. of Colorado Hosp. and Colorado Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Aurora. 3:15 57.6 Entamoeba histolytica Stimulates the Release of the Alarmin Molecule HMGB1 upon Contact with Macrophages. S. Begum, J. St-Pierre, F. Moreau, K. Chadee. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. 3:30 57.7 Endotoxin-Stimulated Hepatic Stellate Cells Increase Suppressive Potential of Regulatory T Cells via IDOMediated AhR Activation: Therapeutic Implications. S. Kumar, A. Dangi, C.R. Gandhi. Univ. of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. 3:45 57.8 Differential Regulation of Macrophage Glucose Metabolism by M-CSF and GM-CSF: Implications for 18F-FDG PET Imaging of Inflammation. S. Tavakoli, J.D. Short, K. Downs, N. Huynh Nga, R. Asmis. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio. 27 S A T PATHOLOGY/PHARMACOLOGYSATURDAY 4:00 57.9 CD43 Contributes to Mouse Th17 Cell Adhesion to Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1. F.E. Velazquez, A. Salvador, T. Nevers, P. Alcaide. Tufts Sackler Grad. Sch. and Tufts Med. Ctr. 4:15 57.10 FPR1 and Activation of Intestinal Fibroblasts. T.A. Reaves, M. Anderson-Thomas, A. Nillas, M. Lecher. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Col. of Charleston. 58. 59. ASIP OUTSTANDING INVESTIGATOR AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture Sat. 5:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Cancer Biology Neoplasia ASIP TRAINEE AND STUDENT WELCOME RECEPTION 5:00 Special Session Sat. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Foyer outside Rooms 1–5 ASIP Outstanding Investigator Award Lecture: Making Progress against Pancreatic Cancer: Where the Rubber Hits the Road. A. Maitra. MD Anderson Cancer Ctr. Pharmacology 60. SECURING NIH INTRAMURAL FELLOWSHIPS TO ENHANCE YOUR PHARMACOLOGY TRAINING 61. Symposium Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Pharmacology Education) (Sponsored by: The Division for Pharmacology Education) Sat. 12:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B (Cosponsored by: all Divisons) Cochaired: K. Karpa and J.P. Neiswinger Sat. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Pharmacology Education Cochaired: J. Clark and A. Reid Education Pharmacology Education Education Career Development 9:30Introduction. 9:35 Fellowship Opportunities at the NIH. A. Reid. NIMH, NIH. 10:00 NIMH: Opportunities for the Investigation and Treatment of Mental Illnesses Through Basic and Clinical Research. J. Clark. NIMH, NIH. 10:25 NIAID’s Global Health Research Challenge: Emerging, Persisting and Preventing Infectious Diseases. W. Fibison. NIAID, NIH. 10:50 An Overview of the NINDS Intramural Research Program from Basic to Clinical Neurosciences. K. Roche. NINDS, NIH. 11:15 NIDCD Research Training in the Hearing and Communication Sciences. E. Monzack. NIDCD, NIH. 11:40 Panel Discussion. Career Development 12:00 The What and Whys of IDPs for NIH-Supported Trainees. N. Desmond. NIMH, NIH. 12:30 Using Available Tools to Facilitate IDP Development. C. Fuhrmann. Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. 1:00 The Reality of IDP Implementation. P. S. Clifford. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. 1:30 How an IDP Jump-Started My Career. A. Klementowicz. UCSF. 2:00 Panel Discussion. 62. To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. GRADUATE STUDENT POSTDOCTORAL COLLOQUIUM Colloquium (Sponsored by: The ASPET Mentoring and Career Development Committee ) Sat. 2:45 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, San Diego Ballroom B Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? 28 TEACHING INSTITUTE: DEVELOPING MENTEES USING IDPS Chaired: L. Wecker Career Development Education 2:45 Mentoring Your Mentor: Key Skills for Effective Mentoring Relationships with Shared Responsibility. R. McGee. Northwestern Univ. Feinberg Sch. of Med. SATURDAYPHARMACOLOGY/PHYSIOLOGY 63. ASPET BUSINESS MEETING AND AWARDS PRESENTATION 64. ASPET-PHRMA FOUNDATION OPENING AND AWARDS RECEPTION Business Meeting Special Event Sat. 6:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB Sat. 7:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, East Mezzanine and Terrace Hear updates on Society activities and initiatives. Join us in recognizing excellence in pharmacology as we present the ASPET 2016 Scientific Achievement Awards, Travel Awards, and PhRMA Foundation Awards. The opening reception immediately follows the conclusion of the business meeting. ASPET members and pharmacology attendees are welcome to join us as we celebrate our awardees and the 50th Anniversary of the PhRMA Foundation. Physiology 65. KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE ION. REFRESHER COURSE ON IONIC HOMEOSTASIS AND SYSTEMS PHYSIOLOGY MICROCIRCULATION: PRESIDENT’S SYMPOSIUM: BLOOD CELLMICROVESSEL INTERACTIONS Symposium Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Education Committee) (Sponsored by: The Microcirculatory Society) Sat. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Sat. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: D.W. Rodenbaugh and K. Scrogin Chaired: R.E. Rumbaut Ion Transport Education Hypertension 8:00 Regulation of Sodium Homeostasis and Hypertension. J. Osborn. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. 9:00 Regulation of Potassium Homeostasis and Renal Disease. B. Palmer. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr. 10:00 Acid Base Disturbances and Regulation of Potassium. L. Hamm. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:00 Cardiac Ischemia: Ionic Currents and the ECG. R. Klabunde. Marian Univ. Col. of Osteo. Med. 66. 67. PRE-EB MEETING OF THE EPITHELIAL TRANSPORT GROUP AND YOUNG INVESTIGATORS SYMPOSIUM 9:30 9:35 Chair’s introduction. R. Rumbaut. Baylor Col. of Med. CD47 and Its Expanding Role in Innate and Adaptive Immune Responses. F. Lucinskas. Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch. 10:00 Integrin Activation in Rolling Neutrophils. K. Ley. La Jolla Inst. for Allergy and Immunol. 10:25 Contributions of Microvascular Inflammation to Wound Healing. A.R. Burns. Univ. of Houston. 10:50 In Vivo Imaging of Infection-Induced Cogulopathy in the Microcirculation. C.N. Jenne, R.P. Davis, B. McDonald. Univ. of Calgary, Canada and Univ. of British Columbia. (722.11) 11:10 Reduced Endothelial Basal Nitric Oxide Induces Leukocyte Adhesion through Src-Dependent Phosphorylation of Constitutive Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1. B. Lucke-Wold, A. Logsdon, X. Li, S. Xu, X. Lichong, C. Siedlecki, J. Huber, C. Rosen, P. He. West Virginia Univ. Sch. of Med. and Penn State Col. of Med. (723.11) Special Session (Sponsored by: APS Epithelial Transport Group) Sat. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: M. Levi 68. THIRD ANNUAL APS PHYSIOLOGICAL GENOMICS GROUP CONFERENCE Special Session (Sponsored by: APS Physiological Genomics Group) Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A 29 S A T PHYSIOLOGYSATURDAY 69. ADVANCED MICROSCOPY TECHNIQUES FOR THE STUDY OF PHYSIOLOGY 72. WATER AND ELECTROLYTE HOMEOSTASIS SECTION TRAINEE AWARD FINALISTS SESSION AND DATA DIURESIS Workshop 1:00 1:40 2:20 70. Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Award Session Chaired: G.R. Kolar and G. Yosten Supported by Data Sciences International and Juan Carlos Romero Fund Practical Application of Super Resolution Microscopy. P. Pellett. GE Healthcare. Correlative Light and Electron Microscopy. E. Wright. Emory Univ. Confocal Intravital Microscopy. S. Nourshargh. William Harvey Res. Inst. HAVING TROUBLE WITH YOUR IACUC? (Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis Section) Sat. 2:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Chaired: D. Ho, J. Reckelhoff and P. O’Connor Trainee Awards Finalists Competition Chaired: Dao Ho and Jane Reckelhoff. Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Animal Care and Experimentation Committee) Predoctoral Award Finalist Presentations 2:15 Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: J. Henegar Science Policy 1:00 1:30 2:00 2:30 71. What All PIs Should Know About their IACUC. J.R. Henegar. Univ. of Missouri. Balancing Institutional Risk and Compliance. J. Haywood. Michigan State Univ. How Offensive Is the Offense? And Other IACUC Debates. A. Comuzzie. Texas Biomed. Res. Inst. Ideas for Improving Animal Research Regulaotory Burden. B. Hansen. Univ. of South Florida. MICROCIRCULATION: SIGNAL INTEGRATION AND MICROCIRCULATORY BLOOD FLOW CONTROL: MAKING PARTS WHOLE USING A NETWORK APPROACH Symposium (Sponsored by: The Microcirculatory Society) Sat. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: D.N. Jackson and I. Lamb 1:00 Chair’s introduction. D. Jackson. Univ. of Western Ontario. 1:15 Distinct Modes of Excitation-Contraction Coupling Encode Arteries with Spatial Properties. D. Welsh. Univ. of Western Ontario. 1:45 Potassium Sensing by Capillary Kir Channels Regulates Cerebral Blood Flow. T. Longden. Univ. of Vermont. 2:15 Propagation of Capillary-Initiated Conducted Vasodilation in Skeletal Muscle – a Novel Paracrine Signaling Pathway. N.M. Novielli, C.L. Murrant. Univ. of Guelph, Canada. (945.17) 2:30 Distinct EC Coupling Mechanism Drives Spatial Control of Vascular Tone in Cerebral Arteries. A. Zechariah, B.O. Hald, N.G. Mazumdar, D.G. Welsh. Univ. of Western Ontario and Univ. of Copenhagen. (945.10) 2:45 Chair’s Closing Remarks and Open Forum Q&A. D. Jackson. Univ. of Western Ontario. 30 2:30 2:45 Chronic Flutamide Treatment Alters Intrarenal Renin Angiotensin System Expression in Intrauterine Growth Restricted Female Rats. J.H. Dasinger, S. Intapad, B.R. Rudsenske, B.T. Alexander. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. (1214.5) Flow-Induced Activation of NO Production Is Calciumand HDAC1-Dependent in Inner Medullary Collecting Duct Cells. R.S. Sedaka, K.A. Hyndman, J.S. Pollock. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (964.17) A high Fat Diet Increases Blood Pressure and Leads to a Renal Proinflammatory Immune Cell Profile in Female Dahl Salt-Sensitive Rats. L. Taylor, J. Musall, B. Baban, E.J. Belin de Chantemele, J. Sullivan. Georgia Regents Univ. (964.5) Postdoctoral Award Finalists Presentations (Sponsored by: Juan Carlos Romero Fund) 3:00 Estradiol Facilitates a More Rapid Natriuretic Response to a High Salt Diet in Female Rats. E.Y. Gohar, D.M. Pollock. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1216.8) 3:15 RhoBTB1, a Novel PPARγ Target Gene Regulates Vascular Function. M. Mukohda, S-R.C. Ibeawuchi, C. Hu, F.W. Quelle, C.D. Sigmund. Univ. of Iowa and California Inst. for Biomed. Res., La Jolla. (964.14) 3:30 Mycophenolate Mofetil Attenuates Hypertension in an Experimental Model of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus. E. Taylor, A. Strawder, M. Ryan. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. (964.4) 3:45 Mingle with Open Bar. Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.coreapps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. SATURDAYPHYSIOLOGY Data Diuresis Brief Presentations Supported by: Data Sciences International Chaired: P. O’Connor and A. Polichnowski 4:15 4:20 4:25 4:30 4:35 4:40 4:45 4:50 73. Blood Pressure Regulation under Low K+ Intake Depends on the H,K-ATPase Type 2. G. Crambert, A. Salhi, C. Lamouroux. Cordeliers Res. Ctr., INSERM U1138, CNRS, Paris. (1216.15) The Predominant Role of Kidney in Sex Difference in Ang II-Induced Hypertension. L. Wang, R. Chen, J. Zhang, S. Rong, S. Wang, J. Wei, K-P. Yip, R. Liu. Univ. of South Florida and Hannover Med. Sch., Germany. (963.4) Effect of a Dietary and Exercise Intervention during Pregnancy and Lactation on White Adipose Tissue Gene Profiles and Adiposity with Maternal Obesity. M. Symonds, I. Bloor, F. Galvez, E. Domfeh, B. Maicas, L. Poston, P. Taylor. Univ. of Nottingham, Fac. of Med., Granada and King’s Col. London. (1214.3) High Salt Activates Dendritic Cells to Promote Hypertension. J.D. Foss, N. Barbaro, L. Xiao, S. Dikalov, D.G. Harrison, A. Kirabo. Vanderbilt Univ. (1216.5) Preserved Survival of Renal Tubulus-Specific Sodium Hydrogen Exchanger Isoform 3 Knockout Mice in Response to Sodium Restriction. S. Chavez, S.B. Poulsen, M. Soleimani, R.A. Fenton, T. Rieg. UCSD and VA San Diego Healthcare Syst., Aarhus Univ., Denmark and Univ. of Cincinnati and VA Med. Ctr. (962.4) Chronic Insulin-Clamp Causes Postprandial Diuresis in Sprague Dawley Rats. D.L. Irsik, R. Alaisami, A.R. Washington, M.W. Brands. Georgia Regents Univ. (962.2) Potential Role of Renal Mineralocorticoid Receptor Increasing the Blood Pressure Sensitivity in Female Mice Exposed to Early Life Stress. M.O. Murphy, D. Cohn, A.S. Loria. Univ. of Kentucky. (1213.5) Mingle with Open Bar. DATA NCARNATION Theme: Clinical Correlations 3:05 3:10 3:15 3:20 Theme: Cell Signaling 3:35 3:40 3:45 3:50 4:05 4:10 Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: M. Santisteban and E. Lazartigues 3:00Introduction. Dysregulation of Cardiac cAMP in Nicotine Stimulated Sympathetic Neuronal-Myocyte Co-cultures from Hypertensive Rats: Are Sympathetic Neurons the Primary Driver of Autonomic Hypertension? H.E. Larsen, K. Lefkimmiatis, D.J. Paterson. Univ. of Oxford. (1006.7) Macrophage-Dependent Impairment of α2 Autoreceptor Inhibition of Ca2+ Currents in Sympathetic Neurons Contributes to Hypertension in DOCA-Salt Rats. R. Mui, R. Fernandes, J. Galligan. Michigan State Univ. (757.8) Reduced Bone Marrow Adrenergic Receptor Signaling Modulates PVN Inflammatory Factors. N. Ahmari, J.T. Schmidt, C.T. Martyniuk, J. Zubcevic. Univ. of Florida. (1237.6) Discussion and Break. Theme: Peripheral Autonomic Function Award Session (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) Intermittent Hypoxia Decreases Baroreflex Sensitivity in Healthy Humans. Z.M. Scruggs, L.P. Newhouse, M.J. Joyner, T.B. Curry, J.K. Limberg. Mayo Clin. (753.5) Sleep Apnea Worsens Muscle Vasoconstriction during Central and Peripheral Chemoreceptors Stimulation in Patients with Systolic Heart Failure. D.M.L. Lobo, P.F. Trevizan, E. Toschi-Dias, P.A. Oliveira, R.B. Piveta, C. Mady, E.A. Bocchi, D.R. Almeida, G. Lorenzi-Filho, H.R. Middlekauff, C.E. Negrão. Heart Inst., Univ. of São Paulo Med. Sch., Fed. Univ. of São Paulo and Geffen Sch. of Med. at UCLA. (755.6) Exaggerated Blood Pressure and Sympathetic Reactivity in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes. J.R. Vranish, S.W. Holwerda, D.M. Keller, P.J. Fadel. Univ. of Texas at Arlington and Univ. of Iowa. (1004.1) Discussion and Break. 4:15 4:20 Effect of Renal Denervation and Celiac Ganglionectomy on Mean Arterial Pressure in the Hypertensive Schlager (BPH/2J) Mice. M.M. Gauthier, C. Breitenstein, N. Asirvatham-Jeyaraj, J.W. Osborn. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. (1006.13) Possible Respiratory Modulation of Sympathetic Activity in Rats after Sino-aortic Denervation. M.R. Amorim, L.G. Bonagamba, G.M. Souza, D.J. Moraes, B.H. Machado. Sch. of Med. of Ribeirão Preto, Univ. of São Paulo. (996.4) Selective Beneficial Effects of Chronic Vagal Nerve Stimulation on Vascular Function in Stroke-Prone Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats on High-Salt Diet. E.E. Meyers, M.W. Chapleau, K. Rahmouni, H.M. Stauss. Univ. of Iowa and VA Med. Ctr. (1237.7) Discussion and Break. 31 S A T PHYSIOLOGYSATURDAY Theme: Novel Methodologies 4:35 4:40 4:45 4:50 74. Effects of Essential Oil on Fear Memory and the Immune Response: A Potential Alternative Therapy for Post-traumatic Stress Disorder. C. Moshfegh, A.P. Swiercz, L. Hopkins, P.J. Marvar. George Washington Univ. (1238.5) An Optogenetic Test for the Functional Specificity of Bulbospinal Sympathoexcitatory Neurons. N.H. Pracejus, D.G.S. Farmer, R.M. McAllen. The Florey Inst. of Neurosci. and Ment. Hlth., Parkville, Australia. (1233.7) Angiotensin Type 1a Receptors within the Paraventricular Nucleus of Hypothalamus Regulate Cardiovascular and Behavioral Responsiveness to Psychological Stress. L. Wang, A.D. de Kloet, J.A. Smith, H. Hiller, C. Sumners, M.K. Raizada, E.G. Krause. Univ. of Florida. (1238.4) Discussion and Wrap-up. SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT FOR SCIENCE: HOW TO WRITE TO LOCAL AND NATIONAL NEWS OUTLETS Symposium 76. Symposium (Sponsored by: The Microcirculatory Society) Sat. 3:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: J. Breslin 3:30 3:30 3:30 3:30 3:30 3:30 (Sponsored by: APS Communications Committee) Sat. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C 75. 3:15 3:45 4:15 4:45 32 ADVANCES IN MICROVASCULAR PERMEABILITY/GLYCOCALYX Chaired: B. Goodman PHYSIOLOGY IN PERSPECTIVE: THE WALTER B. CANNON MEMORIAL AWARD LECTURE Science Policy Lecture Panel Discussion. B. Yates and M. Aguilera. Univ. of Pittsburgh and Scripps Inst. of Oceanography, UCSD. NOVEL METHODS TO PERTURB GENES FOR PHYSIOLOGICAL EXAMINATION 77. Chair’s introduction. J. Breslin. Univ. of South Florida. Interactive Roles of ROS, NO, and RNS in the Regulation of Microvessel Permeability. P. He. Penn State Univ. HS-FGF2-FGFR1 Signaling Contributes to Pulmonary Endothelial Glycocalyx Reconstitution. E.P. Schmidt, Y. Yang, M. Suflita, F. Zhang, K. Dailey, S. Haeger, J. Ford, R. Linhardt. Univ. of Colorado, Aurora and Rensselaer Polytech Inst. (950.4) Hydrogen Sulfide Metabolism Regulates Endothelial Permeability. S. Yuan, S. Pardue, A.W. Orr, C.G. Kevil. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Shreveport. (950.12) Lymphatic Vascular Integrity Is Disrupted in a Mouse Model of Diabetes: Dual Regulation by Nitric Oxide. J.P. Scallan, M.A. Hill, M.J. Davis. Univ. of South Florida and Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. (950.9) Functional Significance of eNOS Traffic. W. Duran. Rutgers Univ. Sat. 5:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Workshop MICROCIRCULATORY SOCIETY POSTER DISCUSSION 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Special Session Chaired: B.T. Andresen and B. Joe (Sponsored by: The Microcirculatory Society) Cellular Genomic Editing. D. Hockemeyer. Univ. of California, Berkeley. Introduction to the RCAS/TVA System – A Tissue Specific Transgene Expression System. E. Holland. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Res. Ctr. Choosing the Right Genome Editing Technology: CRISPR, TARGATT™, or Homologous Recombination? R. Chen-Tsai. Applied StemCell Inc., Menlo Park, CA. Round Table Discussion. 78. Muscle-Immune Cell Crosstalk in the Genesis of Insulin Resistance. A. Klip. Hosp. for Sick Children, Toronto. Sat. 6:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: W.L. Murfee, A. Gonzalez and J. Song Light refreshments will be available SUNDAY, APRIL 3 Across Societies 79. NIH K AWARDS Poster/Platform Presenter Preparation Workshop and Practice Lab Seminar FASEB MARC Program will sponsor a Poster/Platform Presenter Preparation Workshop and Practice Lab beginning Saturday, April 2, to provide FASEB MARC poster/oral presentation travel award recipients and other interested EB2016 student/postdoc attendees with an opportunity to practice their presentations and obtain feedback from designated Workshop Mentors/Coaches. If you would like to participate in this workshop/practice lab, sign-up onsite at the Career Center beginning Saturday morning, April 2. First-come, firstserved. Limited space/session availability. Sun. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Exhibit Hall D NIH Grants Seminar Career Development This presentation, by Dr. Henry Khachaturian of NIGMS, NIH, will focus on the NIH’s new K99/00 Pathways to Independence Award (for postdoctoral scientists) and the K08 Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Award (for individuals with a health professional doctoral degree committed to a career in laboratory or field-based research). The interactive discussion will give attendees an opportunity to ask questions of and obtain insight from an NIH representative. 80. NIH FELLOWSHIP (F) AWARDS Seminar Sun. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Exhibit Hall D NIH Grants Seminar Career Development This presentation, by Dr. Henry Khachaturian of NIGMS, NIH, will focus on the NIH’s Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards (NRSA). The NRSA research training fellowship (F) awards are targeted to individuals with or seeking research doctoral degrees (Ph.D. and equivalent) and clinical doctoral degrees (M.D. and equivalent). Among the F awards discussed will be the F30, NRSA Individual Predoctoral MD/PhD or Other Dual-Doctoral Degree Fellowship Award, the F31 NRSA Individual Predoctoral Fellowship, the F31 NRSA Individual Predoctoral Fellowship to Promote Diversity in HealthRelated Research Award, the F32 NRSA Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship Award, and the NRSA Individual Senior Fellowship Award. The interactive discussion will give attendees an opportunity to ask questions of and obtain insight from an NIH representative on these and other awards available for pre- and postdoctoral fellows and senior investigators. Handouts and resource materials will be provided on-site. 81. CAREER DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS Workshop Sun. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Exhibit Hall D 9:00 Making Mistakes When Speaking: How to Handle Them. J. Blumenthal. Montgomery Col., MD. 9:30 Nailing the Job Talk & Interview Prep. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 9:30 Global Interview Skills: A Practice Workshop for International Candidates. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 10:00 Responsible Conduct of Research Part 1: Historical Perspectives: Past Controversies, Successes, and Present Challenges. S. Sodeke, T. Turner. Tuskegee Univ., Jackson State Univ. 10:30 Making the Case for Graduate School. H. Adams. H.G. Adams & Assocs. Inc., Norfolk, VA. 11:00 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 1: Finding & Applying for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 11:00 Ten Ways to Get Lucky in the Job Search. P. Clifford. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Marquette Univ. 11:00 Job Talk/Chalk Talk: Making the Grade. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 1:00 Identifying Your Options using ScienceCareers. org, LinkedIn & More. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 1:00 Networking with Strangers is Required for Your Future. J. Blumenthal. Montgomery Col., MD. 1:00 Responsible Conduct of Research Part 2: Best Practices: Mentoring, Collaboration, Peer Review, Data Management and Ownership. S. Sodeke, T. Turner. Tuskegee Univ., Jackson State Univ. 1:30 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 2: Interviewing for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 2:30 Talking About Yourself: How to Interview Well. N. Saul. UCSF. 2:30 Ten Tough Industrial Interview Questions (and Ten Pretty Good Responses). J. Tringali. Tringali & Assocs. Inc. 3:30 But I Have No Skills! J. Lombardo. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Marquette Univ. 4:00 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 3: Compensation Negotiation for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 4:00 Developing & Writing the Doctoral Dissertation Proposal. H. Adams. H.G. Adams & Assocs. Inc., Norfolk, VA. Career Development The following workshops will be held in the EB2016/FASEB Career Center. Access to the Career Center is FREE to all registered Experimental Biology 2016 meeting attendees. 33 S U N ANATOMYSUNDAY Anatomy 82. NEURAL STEM CELLS AND NEOCORTICAL DEVELOPMENT 84. Minisymposium Plenary Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 (Cosponsored by: Developmental Dynamics) Chaired: K. Kramer Sun. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Stem Cells/ Regeneration Chaired: B. Allman Tissue Bioengineering Neurobiology Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) Stem Cells/ Regeneration Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) This session is part of the Stem Cells Mini-Meeting 8:30 9:15 83. TISSUE GENERATION AND TRANSPLANTATION New Insights into Neurogenesis and Migration in the Developing Human Neocortex. A. Kriegstein. UCSF. Generation of Functionally Distinct Projection Neurons in the Mammalian Neocortex. U. Mueller. The Scripps Res. Inst. DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY AWARD HYBRID SYMPOSIUM This session is part of the Stem Cells Mini-Meeting 10:30 84.1 Tissue Engineering: Simple versus Complex Organs. L. Sampaio. Texas Heart Inst., Houston. 11:00 Bioinspired Matrices Orchestrate Stem Cell Engraftment through Vascular Integration. K. Healy. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 11:30 Title TBD. A. Sacco. Sanford Burnham Prebys Med. Discovery Inst. 85. Hybrid Symposium Education Roundtable Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 (Cosponsored by: Anatomical Sciences Education) Chaired: D. Hockemeyer Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Developmental Biology/Morphology H.W. Mossman Award Lecture in Developmental Biology featuring 2016 Young Investigator Award Recipient, Michael Jenkins. Nicholas Mignemi is competing as a finalist in the Postdoctoral Platform Presentation Award 10:30 83.1 Optical Tools to Assess Heart Development. M.W. Jenkins. Case Western Reserve Univ. 11:00 83.2 Cranial Neural Crest Migration Sculpts Endothelial Patterning in Avians with Anti-angiogenic Factors. M.C. McKinney, P. Kulesa. Stowers Inst. for Med. Res., Kansas City, MO. (1029.3) 11:15 83.3 Plasminogen Is Essential to Prevent Heterotypic Ossification following Traumatic Muscle Injury. N. Mignemi, R.C. Ihejirika, Y. Ihejirika, C. Wallace, W. Oeslner, C.E. Baker, J. Schoenecker. Vanderbilt Univ. 11:30 83.4 Regulating Skeletal Progenitor Cells at the Interface between Tendon and Bone. A.E. Merrill, R. Roberts. Univ. of So. California. 11:45 83.5 Genetic Tools for Study of the Hypothalamus and Thyroid in Zebrafish. D. Hutcheson, Y. Xie, R. Duncan, R. Dorsky. Univ. of Utah. ANATOMY EDUCATION ROUNDTABLE ANATOMICAL CONTENT: WHAT TO TEACH IN A MODERN MEDICAL CURRICULUM Cochaired: M. Bee and V. Lyons Education and Teaching In this session the collective wisdom of the group will be leveraged to determine essential content for histology, gross anatomy and neuroscience. Continental Breakfast will be provided, based on availability. 10:30 Anatomical Sciences in Medical Curriculum: Looking Backward and Forward. 10:45 Group Activities: Leveraging the Collective Wisdom of AAA. 11:45Conclusion. 86. AXIAL ANATOMY IN PRIMATES: LOCOMOTION, POSTURE AND EVOLUTION Symposium (Cosponsored by: The Anatomical Record) Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Chaired: C. Ward Evolution/Anthropology 2:00 86.1 Functional Morphology and Evolution of the Human Trunk Musculature – Old and New Features. N. Schilling. Friedrich Schiller Univ. Jena, Germany. 34 SUNDAYANATOMY 2:30 86.2 Determinants of Variation in Trunk Morphology in Anthropoid Primates. C.V. Ward, E.R. Middleton. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 3:00 86.3 Three-Dimensional Trunk Kinematics of Humans and Chimpanzees: New Insights on Early Hominin Bipedalism. N.E. Thompson, B. Demes, M.C. O’Neill. Stony Brook Univ., Univ. of Arizona Col. of Med., Phoenix. 3:15 86.4 Functional and Behavioral Consequences of Axial Stability in Primates and Other Mammals. M.C. Granatosky. Duke Univ. 89. 87. This session was funded in part by an AAA Three-Year Research Meetings Outreach Grant MANIPULATION OF SUBSTRATE PROPERTIES FOR IMPROVED CONSTRUCTION OF STEM CELL-BASED BIOMATERIALS Minisymposium Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Cochaired: E. Alsberg and D. Mills Stem Cells/ Regeneration Tissue Bioengineering This session is part of the Stem Cells Mini-Meeting CRANIAL SENSORY ORGANS: FROM PLACODES TO DISEASE Symposium Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Chaired: L. Taneyhill Neurobiology Cell Biology 2:00 89.1 In Search of Novel Genes in Branchio-oto-renal Spectrum Disorders. S.A. Moody. George Washington Univ. 2:30 89.2 Cranial Nerve Dysmorphogenesis in 22Q11 Deletion (DiGeorge) Syndrome. A-S. LaMantia, B.A. Karpinski, T.M. Maynard, S.A. Moody, D. Mendelowitz, X. Wang, A. Popratiloff, I. Zohn, N.H. Lee. George Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. & Hlth. Sci. and Children’s Natl. Med. Ctr. 3:00 89.3 Mechanisms of Otoconia Development and Clinical Translation. Y. Lundberg. Boys Town Natl. Res. Hosp., Omaha. 2:00 87.1 3D-Printing and Casting of Biological Constructs for Generating Stem Cell-Based Scaffolds. J.S. Alexander, Y. Wang, B. Ott, M. Al-Kofahi, D.K. Mills. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr. and Southwood H.S., Shreveport and Louisiana Tech Univ. 2:30 87.2 Dynamic Stiffness Reveals New Cardiac Phenotypes in Patient-Derived iPSCs. A.J. Engler. UCSD. 3:00 87.3 Development of Biologically Inspired 3D Printed Biomaterial Scaffolds for Improved Stem Cell Differentiation. L.G. Zhang. George Washington Univ. 90. 88. 4:00 90.1 Visualizing Microaggression in the Developing Embryo: Competition between the Neural Crest and Endothelial Cells. P. Kulesa. Stowers Inst., Kansas City, MO. 4:30 90.2 Contrast Enhanced Imaging Approaches for Studying Vertebrate Form and Function. C.M. Holliday. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 5:00 90.3 Insights into the Underwater Behavior, Species Interactions, and Biomechanics of Baleen Whales Using Suction-Cup Attached Video and Inertial Sensors. J. Goldbogen, D. Cade, J. Calambokidis, A. Stimpert, A. Friedlaender. Stanford Univ., Pacific Grove, Cascadia Res., Olympia, WA, Moss Landing Marine Labs., CA and Oregon State Univ. PROBING DEEPER: QUALITATIVE RESEARCH IN ANATOMY EDUCATION Symposium Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Chaired: M. Hankin Education and Teaching 2:00 88.1 Students’ Understandings of Their Ethical Obligations to Their Cadavers after Their First Anatomy Lab: A Qualitative Study. J. Fortunato, J. Wasserman, M. Hankin. Oakland Univ. William Beaumont Sch. of Med. and Univ. of Virginia Sch. of Med. 2:30 88.2 Qualitative Methods: An Overview for Anatomy Education Research. J.A. Wasserman. Oakland Univ. William Beaumont Univ. Sch. of Med. 3:00 88.3 Using Mixed Methods Research in Anatomy Education: The Relevancy, Challenges, and Benefits. E. Fillmore. Univ. of Buckingham Med. Sch., U.K. MODERN IMAGING APPROACHES TO STUDYING ANIMAL FORM AND FUNCTION Symposium Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Chaired: C. Holliday Evolution/Anthropology Developmental Biology/Morphology 35 S U N ANATOMYSUNDAY 91. CREATING STRUCTURED MICROENVIRONMENTS FOR REGULATING STEM CELL DIFFERENTIATION 93. Symposium Minisymposium Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Chaired: K. Jones Cochaired: L.G. Zhang and D. Mills Neurobiology Stem Cells/ Regeneration Tissue Bioengineering This session is part of the Stem Cells Mini-Meeting 4:00 91.1 Stem Cell Proliferation and Differentiation through Capped Clay Nanotubes. S.J. Karnik, D. Robinson. Louisiana Tech Univ. 4:30 91.2 Strategies for Inducing Spatially Defined Stem Cell Differentiation for Tissue Engineering Applications. E. Alsberg. Case Western Reserve Univ. 5:00 91.3 Microfluidic Systems for Stem Cell Studies. L. Tayebi. Marquette Univ. Sch. of Dent. 92. Cell Biology 4:00 TREM2 Dependent Microglia Functions in TBI and Brain Inflammation. M. Carson. Univ. of California, Riverside. 4:30 93.1 Redox Regulation of the M1/M2 Shift in Microglia: Programming the Deleterious Phenotype. M.L. Block. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. 5:00 93.2 Responses of Central Microglial Cells and Ganglionic Macrophages to Peripheral Injury and Disease. M. Kawaja. Queen’s Univ., Canada. 94. APPLIED 3D PRINTING IN ANATOMICAL AND MEDICAL EDUCATION AND RESEARCH Chaired: J. Bertram Education and Teaching 4:00 92.1 3D Printed Anatomical Teaching Material – A Genuine Alternative? P.G. McMenamin. Monash Univ., Australia. 4:30 92.2 3D Printing in Anatomical and Palaeontological Teaching and Research. J.W. Adams. Monash Univ., Australia. 5:00 92.3 Virtual Surgical Planning and Applications in Plastic and Craniomaxillofacial Surgery. S. Basel, J. Matsumoto, N. Lachman, U. Bite. Mayo Clin. AAA UNDERGRADUATE POSTER RECEPTION Poster Discussion Sun. 5:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, West Terrace Lobby Symposium Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 MICROGLIA FUNCTION AND ACTIVATION IN THE CNS 95. MARIAN DIAMOND DOCUMENTARY SCREENING AND RECEPTION Special Event Sun. 6:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Join us for a special 25-minute sneak peek of a documentary screening of, “My Love Affair with the Brain: The Life and Science of Marian Diamond.” Dr. Diamond is one of the founders of modern neuroscience and has revolutionized the way we think about how the brain ages. Light refreshments will be served and a Q&A session with the documentary producers will follow the screening. Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.core-apps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. 36 SUNDAYBIOCHEMISTRY Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 96. FASEB EXCELLENCE IN SCIENCE AWARD Award Lecture Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 8:00 Awardee introduction. 8:05 96.1 Quorum Sensing and Its Control. B.L. Bassler. Princeton Univ. and HHMI. 97. ASBMB PLENARY LECTURE Plenary Sun. 8:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 8:45 Awardee introduction. 8:50 97.1 From Protein Folding to Cognition: The Serendipitous Path of Discovery. P. Walter. UCSF, HHMI. 98. REGULATION OF GENE EXPRESSION BY O-GLCNAC Symposium Sun. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A Chaired: C.M. Szymanski Follow the conversation: #glyco 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 98.1 O-GlcNAcylation Links ChREBP to Glucose Sensing in Liver and Pancreatic β Cells. G. Filoulaud, F. Rayah-Benhamed, C. Guinez, B. Noblet, Y. Fardini, T. Issad, C. Postic. Univ. Paris Descartes. 10:15 Elevated O-GlcNAcylation Levels Improve Mitochondrial Function. E.P. Tan, R. Swerdlow, C. Slawson. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. (845.1) 10:30 98.3 Initiation and Elongation of RNA Polymerase II Are Regulated by Multiple O-GlcNAcylation Events. B.A. Lewis. NCI, NIH. 10:55 O-GlcNAcylation of the Human Kinome. X. Liu, G. Han, L. Wells, L. Graves, H. Zhu, J. Neiswinger, G.W. Hart. Johns Hopkins Univ., Univ. of Gerogia and Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. (845.2) 11:10 Dynamic Interactions of TATA-Box Binding Protein with Promoters Is Regulated by O-GlcNAcylation. S. Hardivillé, G. Han, J. Ma, P. Hu, P.S. Banerjee, G.W. Hart. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. (617.1) 11:25 98.5 Mutations in O-GlcNAc Transferase Linked to X-Linked Intellectual Disability. L. Wells. Univ. of Georgia 11:50 Discussion. 99. NUCLEAR ARCHITECTURE AND CHROMATIN ORGANIZATION Symposium Sun. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Chaired: J.W. Conaway Follow the conversation: #chromatin 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 99.1 The 3D Organization of the Mammalian Genome. B. Ren. UCSD 10:15 Chromatin Extrusion Explains Key Features of Loop and Domain Formation in Wild-Type and Engineered Genomes. A. Sanborn, S. Rao, S-C. Huang, N. Durand, M. Huntley, A. Jewett, I. Bochkov, D. Chinnappan, A. Cutkosky, J. Li, K. Geeting, A. Gnirke, A. Melnikov, D. McKenna, E. Stamenova, E. Lander, E.L. Aiden. Baylor Col. of Med., Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med. and Broad Inst. of MIT and Harvard. (588.1) 10:30 99.2 Long-Range Gene Regulation in the Context of Chromatin Domains. J. Dekker. Univ. of Massachusetts, Worcester. 10:55 Enhancer H3K4 Methyltransferase MLL4 Controls Cell Fate Transition. K. Ge. NIDDK, NIH. (802.1) 11:10 BRD4 Is a Histone Acetyltransferase That Evicts Nucleosomes from Chromatin. D.N. Ballachanda, C. Case-Borden, A. Gegonne, C.H. Hsu, Q. Chen, D. Meerzaman, A. Dey, K. Ozato, D. Singer. NCI, NIH, Bethesda and Rockville and NICHD, NIH. (802.5) 11:25 99.3 Complex Multi-enhancer Contacts Captured by Genome Architecture Mapping, a Novel Ligation-Free Approach. A. Pombo, R.A. Beagrie, A. Scialdone, M. Schueler, M. Chotalia, S.Q. Xie, D. Kraemer, I. de Santiago, J. Fraser, J. Dostie, L. Game, N. Dillon, P.A.W. Edwards, M. Nicodemi. Berlin Inst. for Med. Systs. Biol., Imperial Col. Sch. of Med., U.K., Univ. of Naples Federico II, McGill Univ. and Univ. of Cambridge. 11:50 Discussion. 100. WELCOME TO THE POST-ANTIBIOTIC ERA Symposium Sun. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C Chaired: J. Prescher Follow the conversation: #chembio 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 100.1 Chemical Probes for Histidine Kinase Profiling and Inhibitor Discovery. E. Carlson. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. 10:15 Acetylating Polymyxin Antibiotics: Clues toward Substrate Specificity of PA3944 Gcn5-Related N-Acetyltransferase of Unknown Function. M.L. Kuhn, L. Joe, B. Amsler, B. Zhang, K. Majorek, R. Yen, W. Wu, G. Gassner, T. Baird, W. Minor. San Francisco State Univ. and Univ. of Virginia. (615.1) 37 S U N BIOCHEMISTRYSUNDAY 10:30 100.2 The Ying and Yang of Antibiotic Discovery and Resistance. G. Wright. McMaster Univ., Canada. 10:55 Menaquinone Biosynthesis: An Antibacterial Target? J. Matarlo. Stony Brook Univ. (612.2) 11:10 Elucidating the Molecular Basis of Protein and Polymer Display in Pathogenic Bacteria for Novel Antivirulence Drug Development. M. Kattke, M. Sawaya, D. Cascio, A. Duong, M. Elliot, R. Clubb. UCLA and McMaster Univ., Canada. (613.3) 11:25 100.3 New Antibiotics for the Post-antibiotic Era. S. Mobashery. Univ. of Notre Dame. 11:50 Discussion. 101. PROTEOMICS/SYSTEMS BIOLOGY FOR HUMAN HEALTH AND MEDICINE Symposium Sun. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Chaired: L. Huang Follow the conversation: #proteomics 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 101.1 Spatiotemporal Organization of Signaling: From Plasma Membrane to Chromatin. A-C. Gingras. Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Res. Inst., Toronto and Univ. of Toronto. 10:15 Global Ubiquitylome Profiling for the Identification of Drug Targets in Cancer. N.D. Udeshi, J. Kronke, E. Fink, T. Svinkina, M. Schenone, B. Ebert, S.A. Carr. Broad Inst. of MIT and Harvard, Univ. Hosp. of Ulm, Germany and Brigham and Women’s Hosp. (819.6) 10:30 101.2 Human Proteomes – From Basic Science to Understanding Drug Action. B. Kuster. Technical Univ., Munich and Friesing, Germany. 10:55 Rapid and Reproducible Proteotype Acquisition from Biopsy Level Samples. T. Guo, R. Aebersold. ETH Zurich. (602.2) 11:10 Mechanism of Action Identified in 30 Days: A Systems Biology Approach. A. Vertes, A.R. Korte, C. LombardBanek, P. Nemes, L. Lida Parvin, Z.J. Sahab, B. Shrestha, S.A. Stopka, W. Yuan, D.I. Bunin, M. Knapp, I. Mason, D.M. Nishita, A. Poggio, C.L. Talcott, M. Yadav, B.M. Davis, A.I. Larriera, C.A. Morton, C.J. Sevinsky, M.I. Zavodszky, N.J. Morris, H.R. Anderson, M.J. Powell, T.T. Razunguzwa. George Washington Univ., SRI Intl., Menlo Park, GE Global Res., Niskayuna, NY and Protea Biosci. Inc., Morgantown, WV. (819.2) 11:25 101.3 Proteotyping for Drug Development: Proteomics Impacting Clinical Practice. J. Van Eyk, R. Holewinski, S. Wang, J. Kirk, D. Kass. Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr., Johns Hopkins Univ. and Loyola Univ. Chicago. 11:50 Discussion. 38 102. ALLOSTERIC CONTROL OF KINASE ACTIVITY Symposium Sun. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Chaired: S. Taylor Follow the conversation: #cellsignal 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 102.1 Dimer Induced Regulation of Protein Kinase Function. F. Sicheri. Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Res. Inst., Mount Sinai Hosp., Toronto. 10:15 Phosphorylation of Secreted Proteins by a New Family of Kinases. V.S. Tagliabracci, S. Wiley, J. Dixon. Univ. of Texas Southwestern and UCSD. (633.7) 10:30 102.2 How EGF and Insulin Activate Their Receptors. D. Leahy. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 10:55 Designing Allosteric Switches of Kinases. N.V. Dokholyan, O. Dagliyan, K. Hahn. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (633.6) 11:10 Protein Dynamics Defines Allostery in the Conserved EPK Core. L.G. Ahuja, A.P. Kornev, C. McClendon, G. Veglia, S.Taylor. UCSD and Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. (856.10) 11:25 102.3 Signaling in the Catalytic Subunit of Protein Kinase A via Hydrophobic Motifs. G. Veglia. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. 11:50 Discussion. 103. HEPATIC LIPID SIGNALING: NAFLD AND BEYOND Symposium (Sponsored by: ASBMB Minority Affairs Committee) Sun. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Chaired: D.D. Moore Follow the conversation: #liver 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 103.1 Regulation of Liver Energy Balance by Nuclear Receptors. D.D. Moore. Baylor Col. of Med. 10:15 Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Signaling in Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis. L.A. Cowart. Med. Univ. of South Carolina. (870.6) 10:30 103.2 Hedgehog Signaling in NAFLD. A.M. Diehl. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr. 10:55 FTY720/fingolimod Reduces Steatosis in a Murine Model of Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. T.D. Rohrbach, A. Asgharpour, D. Avni, S.C. Cazanave, P. Bedossa, A.J. Sanyal, S.D. Spiegel. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. and Univ. Paris-Denis Diderot. (870.7) 11:10 Dual Activation of Bile Acid Receptors FXR and TGR5 Plays a Protective Role in Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease and Atherosclerosis. K. Jadhav, Y. Xu, Y. Zhang. Northeast Ohio Med. Univ. (870.4) 11:25 103.3 JNK Signaling in Hepatic Disease. R.J. Davis. HHMI/Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. 11:50 Discussion. SUNDAYBIOCHEMISTRY 104. ADVANCING TEACHING AND LEARNING IN THE BIOCHEMISTRY/MOLECULAR BIOLOGY CLASSROOM 106. ASBMB INCENTIVIZING GREAT RESEARCH Public Policy Symposium (Sponsored by: ASBMB Public Affairs Advisory Committee) (Sponsored by: ASBMB Education and Professional Development Committee) Sun. 12:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Sun. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14A Chaired: C. Peterson Follow the conversation: #education 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 104.1 Take Your Medicine; It’s Good for You. Teaching Quantitative Principles to Biologists. M. Springer. Harvard Med. Sch. 10:15 Teaching a Broad Non-science Major Audience Using the Science of Food and Cooking. J.J. Provost, B. Kelly, K. Colabroy, M. Wallert. Univ. of San Diego, Gustavus Adolphus Col., MN, Muhlenberg Col., PA and Bemidji State Univ. (882.2) 10:30 104.2 The Collaborative Undergraduate Research Lab: Using Yeast Genetics to Create an Authentic Research Experience for Freshman. T. Johnson. HHMI, UCLA. 10:55 Is More Activity Always Better? A DepartmentWide Study of Relationships between Classroom Practices and Student Performance. M.K. Barker, L. Weir, L. McDonnell, N. Schimpf, T. Rodela, P. Schulte. Univ. of British Columbia, Kwantlen Polytech Univ., Canada and UCSD. (662.17) 11:10 Breast Cancer in the Age of Personalized Medicine: A CURE Design for Aspiring Physicians. P.A.G. Soneral. Bethel Univ. (662.18) 11:25 104.3 Using Threshold Concepts to Improve BMB Instruction – An Evidence-Based Approach. J. Loertscher, J. Lewis, V. Minderhout, X. Xu. Seattle Univ. and Univ. of South Florida. 11:50 Discussion. 105. ASBMB AWARD FOR EXEMPLARY CONTRIBUTIONS TO EDUCATION LECTURE Award Lecture (Sponsored by: ASBMB Education and Professional Development Committee) Sun. 12:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B Undergraduate Student Research Poster Competition Award Winners will be announced during this lecture. 12:30 Awardee introduction. 12:35 105.1 Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education in a Transforming Academy and a Molecular World. C. Brenner. Univ. of Iowa Carver Col. of Med. This symposium will focus on analyzing counterproductive pressures on scientists and how they can be managed to incentivize outstanding research. S U N 107. EARL AND THRESSA STADTMAN SCHOLAR AWARD LECTURE I Award Lecture Sun. 2:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 2:15 Awardee introduction. 2:20 107.1 CRISPR-Cas, the Prokaryotic Adaptive Immune System. L. Marraffini. The Rockefeller Univ. 108. RUTH KIRSCHSTEIN DIVERSITY IN SCIENCE AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture Sun. 2:40 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 2:40 Awardee introduction. 2:45 108.1 Chemical Genetic Analysis Activation. A. August. Cornell Univ. of Mast-Cell 109. AVANTI AWARD IN LIPIDS LECTURE Award Lecture (Sponsored by: Avanti Polar Lipids, Inc.) Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 3:15 Awardee introduction. 3:20 109.1 Mechanisms and Physiology of Fat Synthesis and Storage. R.V. Farese. Harvard Med. Sch. 110. TRANSLATIONAL SCIENTIST: INTEGRATING SCIENCE AND MEDICINE Symposium (Supported by Guest Society: Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine) Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A Cochaired: H.R. Gaskins and W.E. Zimmer New Approaches in Medical Training of Health Researchers M. J. Friedlander, Virginia Tech Carilion Res Inst Forging Interactions Between Academia, Industry and Clinical Health Care Providers M. Wood, AstraZeneca Neuroscience 39 BIOCHEMISTRYSUNDAY 111. REPLICATION: ALPHA TO OMEGA 113. REGULATION OF PROTEIN SYNTHESIS BY RNA Symposium Symposium Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Chaired: A. Smogorzewska Chaired: Y. Ye Follow the conversation: #DNA Follow the conversation: #proteins 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 111.1 Single-Molecule Studies of Eukaryotic DNA Replication. S.P. Bell, S. Ticau, L.J. Friedman, J. Gelles. MIT and Brandeis Univ. 4:30 Flexible Modes of Translocation by the Eukaryotic CMG Helicase Facilitate Removal or Bypass of DNA Blocks. L.D. Langston, M. O’Donnell. HHMI, Rockefeller Univ. (578.4) 4:45 111.2 Structural Mechanisms for Initiating DNA Replication. J. Berger. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 5:10 Function of Cdc45 in DNA Replication and in Response to Genotoxic Stress. A. DeBrot, C. Lancaster, M-A. Bjornsti. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and St Jude Children’s Res. Hosp. (798.2) 5:25 Breaking the Fourth Wall: Quaternary Organizations Forge a Link to the Novel Non-enzymatic Function of RNR-α. Y. Aye. Cornell Univ. and Weill Cornell Med., Ithaca. (793.1) 5:40 111.3 Replisome Disassembly at the Termination of Eukaryotic Replication Forks. A. Gambus. Univ. of Birmingham, U.K. 6:05 Discussion. 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 113.1 Regulation of the mRNA Reading Frame. C.M. Dunham, S. Sunita, J. Dunkle, T. Maehigashi. Emory Univ. Sch. of Med. 4:30 Translational Recoding in Human Disease. V.M. Advani, R.C. Kobylarz, J.D. Dinman. Univ. of Maryland College Park. (1065.1) 4:45 113.2 Structured RNAs That Manipulate the Translation Machinery. J.S. Kieft. Univ. of Colorado Med. Sch. 5:10 Coaxing a Viral RNA Out of Its Shell: How Does a Viral RNA Genome Initiate Contact with Its Host? R.W. Sportsman, C. Beren, B. Kartub, R. Garmann, C. Knobler, W. Gelbart. UCLA and Harvard Univ. Sch. of Engin. and Applied Sci. (599.3) 5:25 mRNA Quality Control Is Activated Due to Chromium (VI) Mediated Oxidative Damage. N. GarciaDoherty, A.L. Larson, M. Six, S.P. Segal. Winona State Univ. (599.1) 5:40 113.3 Ribosome-Based Quality Control of Chemically Damaged mRNA. H. Zaher, C.L. Simms, B.H. Hudson. Washington Univ. in St. Louis. 6:05 Discussion. 112. MECHANISTIC STUDIES OF METALLOENZYMES 114. OMICS APPROACHES TO TARGET DISCOVERY Symposium Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C Chaired: V. Bandarian Follow the conversation: #catalysis 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 112.1 DNA-Mediated Signaling by Proteins with IronSulfur Clusters. J. Barton. Caltech. 4:30 New Insight Into the Role of ATP in Iron Sulfur Cluster Scaffolding by the Mrp/Nbp35 Family of Cluster Scaffolds. D.L. Perlstein, J. Grossman. Boston Univ. (608.5) 4:45 112.2 Biosynthesis of the FeFe Hydrogenase Active Site. D.L.M. Suess, R.D. Britt. Univ. of California, Davis. 5:10 A Surprising Shift in the Biosynthesis of Marine Meroterpenoids. Z. Miles, S. Deithelm, J. George, B. Moore. UCSD and Univ. of Adelaide. (608.4) 5:25 New Function of Enzyme Involved in the Formation of a Carbon-Nitrogen Triple Bond. M. Kobayashi. Grad. Sch. of Life and Envrn. Sci., Univ. of Tsukuba. (1084.1) 5:40 112.3 Exploring the Mechanistic Diversity of Non-heme-Iron Enzymes by Freeze-Quench Mössbauer Spectroscopy. C. Krebs, J.M. Bollinger; Jr. Penn State. 6:05 Discussion. 40 Symposium Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Chaired: J. Sello Follow the conversation: #metabolism 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 114.1 Metabolomic Signatures of Antimycobacterial Drug Mechanisms of Action. K. Rhee. Weill Cornell Med. Col. 4:30 A Role for Underlying Glycan Structure in Influenza Binding: Extending the Species Specificity Paradigm. R.J. Woods, O.C. Grant, J.A. Hadden, H.M.K. Smith, W. Peng, R. De Vries, R. McBride, J.C. Paulson. Univ. of Georgia, Natl. Univ. of Ireland, Galway, Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and The Scripps Res. Inst. (1103.6) 4:45 114.2 Toward a Functional, ChemoProteomic Interrogation of Kinome and Nucleotide Binding Space. J.W. Kozarich. ActivX Biosciences, La Joll. 5:10 De Novo Synthesis from Tryptophan in the Absence of a QPRTase Homolog Contributes to NAD+ Biosynthesis in C. elegans. M.R. McReynolds, W. Wang, L. Holleran, W. Hanna-Rose. Penn State. (849.1) 5:25 Mitochondrial Protein Functions Revealed by Global Protein-Lipid-Metabolite Profiles. D.J. Pagliarini, J.A. Stefely, N. Kwiecien, A. Hebert, M. Veling, A. Richards, A. Ulbrich, A. Jochem, M. Rush, E. Freiburger, H. Marx, M. Westphall, J. Coon. Morgridge Inst. for Res. and Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. (1100.4) SUNDAYBIOCHEMISTRY 5:40 114.3 Lipidomics in Disease and Drug Discovery. E.A. Dennis. UCSD. 6:05 Discussion. 115. MEMBRANE CONTACT SITES AND LIPID TRAFFICKING Symposium Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Chaired: T. Walther Follow the conversation: #lipids 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 115.1 Broadband Connections within the Cell: How Mitochondria Talk to the Endomembrane. B. Kornman. ETH Zurich. 4:30 An EE-Golgi Tether Facilitates Ceramide Transfer Out of the ER and Alleviates Ceramide Toxicity. L-K. Liu, A. Toulmay, W. Prinz. NIDDK, NIH. (660.1) 4:45 115.2 Extended-Synaptotagmins as Lipid Transporters at ER-PM Contact Sites. K.M. Reinisch, C. Schauder, X. Wu, Y. Saheki, P. Narayanaswamy, F. Torta, M. Wenk, P. De Camilli. Yale Univ. Sch. of Med., Natl. Univ. of Singapore and HHMI, New Haven, CT. 5:10 Phosphatidylserine Production at Membrane Contacts Sites Enhances Its Transport Out of the Endoplasmic Reticulum. M. Kannan, S. Lahiri, L-K. Liu, W.A. Prinz. NIDDK, NIH and Univ. of Virginia. (660.2) 5:25 A Conserved Family of Proteins Facilitates Nascent Lipid Droplet Budding from the ER. V. Choudhary, N. Ojha, A. Golden, W.A. Prinz. NIDDK, NIH. (1132.1) 5:40 115.3 ER-Plasma Membrane Contact Sites Regulate Sterol Import in Yeast. A. Menon, Y.Y. Sere, J. Johansen, E. Quon, N. Chauhan, C.T. Beh. Weill Cornell Med. Col. and Simon Fraser Univ., Canada. 6:05 Discussion. 116. INTEGRATING COMPLEMENTARY SKILLS INTO GRADUATE AND POSTDOC TRAINING 4:30 Innovative Program That Broadens Career Development Training through Community Partnerships and Outreach. T.M. Evans. Grad. Sch. of Biomed., Sci., Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio. (663.1) 4:45 116.2 Lessons Learned from the Broadening Experiences in Scientific Training (BEST) Awards. P. Labosky. OSC, NIH. 5:10 Analysis of NIEHS Postdoctoral Alumni Career Outcomes. T.R.L. Collins, R. Gilliam, S. Peddada, H. Xu. NIEHS, NIH, Durham, NC. (883.2) 5:25 Changing Career Prospects Are Changing the Needs in Graduate and Postdoc Training. S.E. Feeney. Univ. of California, Davis. (663.3) 5:40 116.3 NIH/IRACDA Program – A Win for Both Postdocs and PUI Partner Institutions. M.A. Carroll, E.J. Catapane, M. Soto, G. Brewer. Medgar Evers Col./ CUNY, Brooklyn and Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Med. Sch., Piscataway. 6:05 Discussion. 118. CRISPR: POWER AND CHALLENGES Workshop Sun. 6:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Follow the conversation: #dna 6:30 118.1 CRISPR-Cas9: Power and Challenges. E. Charpentier. Max Planck Inst. for Infect. Biol., Berlin, Helmholtz Ctr. for Infect. Res., Germany, Umeå Univ., Sweden and Hannover Med. Sch., Germany. 6:30 118.2 The Asymmetric Interaction of Cas9 with Target DNA Can Promote High Efficiency Homology-Directed Genome Editing. J.E. Corn, C.D. Richardson, J. Ray, G. Curie, M. DeWitt. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 6:30 118.3 Globally Monitoring Protein Synthesis in Time and Space hrough Ribosome Profiling. J. Weissman. UCSF/HHMI. 119. WELCOME RECEPTION SPONSORED BY THE ASBMB MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Symposium Special Event (Sponsored by: ASBMB Education and Professional Development Committee) Sun. 7:30 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Marina Ballroom D Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14A Chaired: S.H. Oyewole A professional networking event featuring ASBMB Graduate Student Travel Award research posters. ASBMB members and biochemistry registrants welcome. Follow the conversation: #education 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 116.1 Individual Development Plans: Determining Your Strengths, Identifying Areas for Improvement, and Initiating Conversations about Your Career. Y.R. Seger. Ofc. of Publ. Affairs, FASEB. Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. 41 S U N NUTRITIONSUNDAY Nutrition 120. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE PROGRAM: BACK TO THE FUTURE? ANCIENT GRAINS AND SPROUTING FOR ENHANCED NUTRITION ASN Satellite (Organized and Sponsored by: The Kellogg Company) Sun. 6:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC For more information on ASN Sponsored Satellite Programs, please visit http://scientificsessions.nutrition.org/ satellitesessions/. 121. NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY RIS BUSINESS MEETING, MIXER AND MENTORING EVENT Sun. 7:00 am—Hilton San Diego Bayfront, Indigo C 122. OPTIMIZING THE AGING BRAIN THROUGH NUTRITION Symposium Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: S.N. Meydani Cochaired: N. Surzenko (Nutrition Across the Lifespan: From Pediatrics to Geriatrics 8:00 8:25 8:50 9:15 9:40 The Aging Brain: Current Knowledge and Future Possibilities. D. Steindler. Jean Mayer USDA HNRC on Aging at Tufts Univ. Nutrients, Cognitive Development and the Potential of Personalized Nutrition. S. Zeisel. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Diet and Cognitive Function: What Works and How Do we Measure It? A. Scholey. Swinburne Univ. Nutrients and the Aging Brain: Insights from Studies with Nutrients, Brain Injuiry and Imaging Techniques. A. Barbey. Beckman Inst. for Advanced Sci. and Technol. at the Univ. of Illinois. Panel Discussion. D. Klurfeld. USDA, Beltsville. Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday 9:00 AM–4:00 PM 42 123. DELIVERING NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS TO WOMEN DURING PREGNANCY: BEYOND INDIVIDUAL INTERVENTIONS TO COMPREHENSIVE ANTENATAL GUIDELINES AND CARE Symposium Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC (Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council) (Cosponsored by: L.M. De-Regil) Chaired: R.J. Stoltzfus Cochaired: L.M. De-Regil Global and Community Nutrition 8:00Introduction. R.J. Stoltzfus. Cornell Univ. 8:10 Nutrition in Antenatal Care: History and Current Guidance. E. Phillips. Independent Consultant. 8:35 Experiences, Options and Challenges of Delivering Exclusive Breastfeeding Counseling in Pregnancy. M. Mbuya. Zvitambo Inst. for Maternal Child Hlth. 9:00 Experiences, Options and Challenges of Delivering Micronutient Interventions in Pregnancy. K. Dickin. Cornell Univ. 9:25 An Integrative Research Agenda: Health Systems Strengthening and Integrating Nutrition into ANC. C. Taylor. Management Sci. for Hlth. 124. EXPERIMENTAL ANIMAL NUTRITION: ANIMAL MODELS FOR NUTRITION ACROSS PHYSIOLOGICAL STATES Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Experimental Animal Nutrition RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Chaired: C.L. Levesque Cochaired: K.M. Ajuwon 8:00 124.1 Enriching the Maternal Diet in Long Chain n-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Alters Lipid Metabolites and Adiposity in Broiler Chicks. R. Beckford, S. Howard, S. Das, A. Tester, S. Campagna, J. Whelan, J. Wilson, B. Voy. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville and Univ. of Georgia. 8:15 124.2 Maternal Vitamin A Supplementation Expands Adipose Progenitor Population through Promoting Vascular Development. B. Wang, X. Fu, S. Zhang, X. Liang, M. Zhu, M. Du. Washington State Univ. 8:30 124.3 Long-Term Leucine and BCAA Inclusion in a 30% Protein and Energy Restricted Diet Increases mTORC1 Signaling in Skeletal Muscle of Neonatal Pigs. R. Manjarin, D.A. Columbus, J. Solis, A. Suryawan, A.D. HernándezGarcía, H.V. Nguyen, M.L. Fiorotto, T. Davis. Baylor Col. of Med. and Cal Polytech State Univ., San Luis Obispo. SUNDAYNUTRITION 8:45 124.4 Resveratrol Consumption and RIP140 Knockout Mice Demonstrate a Novel Relationship between Increased Mitochondrial Content and Compromised Bone Mineral Mass, Microarchitecture, and Strength. P.M. Miotto, S. Frendo-Cumbo, S.M. Sacco, D.C. Wright, W.E. Ward, G.P. Holloway. Univ. of Guelph and Brock Univ., Canada. 9:00 124.5 Pigs Fed a Western Diet Develop Elevated Fasting Glucose and a Microbiome Analogous to Human Obesity. K. Hintze, L. Cox, M. Lefevre, S.C. Isom. Utah State Univ. 9:15 124.6 Soluble and Insoluble Fiber Differentially Impact Canine Fecal Microbiome and Circulating Metabolome. M.I. Jackson, D.E. Jewell. Hill’s Pet Nutr., Topeka. 9:30 124.7 Do Standard Laboratory Practices Lead to Obese Zebrafish Populations? S.A. Watts, L. Dennis, L.A. Fowler, M.B. Williams, Y. Yuan, R.J. Barry, S. Farmer, L.R. D’Abramo, M.L. Powell. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. 9:45 124.8 Effects of Food Matrix and Western Diet on Colorectal Cancer and Metabolism in C57BL/6 Mice. K. Hintze, T. Hisatome, S. Kellen, R. Ward, A. Benninghoff, M. Lefevre. Utah State Univ. 125. DBC: BIOACTIVE DIETARY PROTEINS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29A Chaired: E. deMejia 8:00 125.1 Identification of Glycoproteins on the Surface of Cow’s Milk Exosomes That Mediate the Uptake of Exosomes into Human Colon Carcinoma Caco-2 Cells. S. Sukreet, H. Zhang, J. Adamec, J. Cui, J. Zempleni. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 8:15 125.2 Replacing Pork and Chicken with Herring (Clupea harengus) Increases Plasma Glucosamine and Decreases Carbon Flux through the Citric Acid Cycle in Overweight Men and Women. A. Ross, A. Vincent, O. Savolainen, H. Lindqvist, M.V. Lind, A-S. Sandberg. Chalmers Univ. of Technol. and Gothenburg Univ., Sweden. 8:30 125.3 Long-Term Feeding of a Soy-Protein-Based Diet Improves Trabecular and Cortical Bone Outcomes in LowFit, Intact and Ovariectomized Female Rats. M.W. Richard, L.C. Ortinau, T.M. Zidon, P.S. Hinton, V. Vieira-Potter. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 8:45 125.4 Modulation of Cerebral Activity Induced by α-Casozepine, a Benzodiazepine-Like Peptide Derived from Bovine Casein. S. Benoit, C. Chaumontet, Cakir-Kiefer, D. Tomé, L. Miclo. AgroParisTech, INRA, Univ. Paris-Saclay and Univ. de Lorraine-Nancy, France. 9:00 125.5 Collagen Peptides Derived from Alaska Pollock Skin Protect against TNFα-Induced Dysfunction of Tight Junctions in Caco-2 Cells. Q. Chen, B. Li, I. Martin, J.B. Blumberg, C-Y.O. Chen. Ocean Univ. of China, USDA at Tufts Univ. and State Univ. of Campinas, Brazil. 9:15 125.6 Antidiabetic Effect of Black Bean Peptides through Reduction of Glucose Absorption and Modulation of SGLT1, GLUT2 and DPP-IV in In Vitro and In Vivo Models. L. Mojica, E.G. DE MEJIA, M. Menjivar, M. Granados-Silvestre. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana and UNAM, Mexico City. 9:30 125.7 Early Intervention with Dietary Fish Oil, Flax Oil and Soy Protein in Three Orthologous Rodent Models of Human Hereditary Polycystic Kidney Disease. J.G. Devassy, T. Yamaguchi, Md. Monirujjaman, M. Gabbs, M. Morrish, H.M. Aukema. Univ. of Manitoba, St Boniface Hosp. Res. Ctr. and Manitoba Inst. of Child Hlth., Winnipeg. 9:45 125.8 The Effect of Wheat Peptides on EthanolInduced Gastric Mucosal Damage in Rats. X. Yang, G. Sun, S. Wang. Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Southeast Univ., China. 126. OBESITY: CHRONIC DISEASE S U N Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Obesity RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29B Chaired: A. Brown 8:00 126.1 Echocardiography Evaluation as a Marker of Cardiovascular Risk on Obese Children and Adolescents. C.A. Nogueira-de-Almeida, S.H. Caixe, A.C.G.S. Benedeti, J. Garcia. Univ. of Ribeirão Preto and UNAERP/Fatesa, Ribeirão Preto, Brazil. 8:15 126.2 Effect of Salba-Chia (Salvia hispanica L), an Ancient Seed, in the Treatment of Overweight and Obese Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: A Double-Blind, Parallel, Randomized Controlled Trial. A.L. Jenkins, C. Brissette, E. Jovanovski, F. Au-Yeung, H.V.T. Ho, A. Zurbau, J. Sievenpiper, V. Vuksan. St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto, Univ. of Toronto and Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst.,Toronto. 8:30 126.3 A Systematic Examination of the Association between Parental and Child Obesity: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. Y. Wang, J. Min, J. Khuri, M. Li. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Hlth. Professions, Univ at Buffalo SUNY. 8:45 126.4 Therapeutic Potential of AICAR in Attenuating Obesity-Induced Metabolic, Liver and Kidney Disease. E. Borgeson, V.W. Borgeson, C. Godson, K. Sharma. Univ. of Gothenburg, Sweden, University Col. Dublin, Ireland and UCSD. 9:00 126.5 Berberine Ameliorates Hepatic Steatosis and Suppresses Liver and Adipose Tissue Inflammation in Obesity Mice Independent of AMPK. S-L. Woo, T. Guo, X. Guo, H. Li, J. Zheng, R. Botchlett, Y. Cai, X. Li, Q. Li, X. Xiao, Y. Huo, C. Wu. Texas A&M Univ., Hubei Hosp. of Chinese Med., Wuhan, The First Hosp. of CMU, China and Georgia Regents Univ. 9:15 126.6 Delta-Tocotrienol Regulates Lipid Metabolism in Livers of High Fat Fed Mice. L. Ramalingam, L. Allen, S. Scoggin, K. Gurvinder, M.D. Tomison, C-L. Shen, E. Chung, J. Dufour, N. Moustaid-Moussa. Texas Tech Univ. and Texas Tech Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 9:30 126.7 Secretory Factors Produced by Stromal Cultures of Human Omental Adipose Tissue Inhibit Adipose Differentiation. R.T. Pickering, M-J. Lee, M. Jager, M. Layne, S.K. Fried. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med. 9:45 126.8 Obesity Prevention by Calorie Restraint Using the Bathroom Scale Model Prevents Hypertension for Life in Nonhuman Primates. B.C. Hansen, E.H. Linden, J.D. Newcomb. Univ. of South Florida Morsani Col. of Med. 43 NUTRITIONSUNDAY 127. NUTRIENT-GENE INTERACTIONS: GENOMICS, PROTEOMICS, AND METABOLOMICS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Nutrient-Gene Interactions RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29C Chaired: T.T. Wang 8:00 127.1 Depletion of Dietary MicroRNAs from Cow’s Milk Causes an Increase of Purine Metabolites in Human Body Fluids and Mouse Livers. A.G. Aguilar Lozano, S. Baier, J. Adamec, M. Sadri, D. Giraud, J. Zempleni. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 8:15 127.2 Gene, Sex and Diet Interact to Control the Tissue Metabolome. A. Wells, W. Barrington, D. Threadgill, S. Dearth, S. Campagna, A. Saxton, B. Voy. Univ. of Tennessee and Texas A&M Univ. 8:30 127.3 A Genome-Wide Association Study of Plasma α2-Macroglobulin Concentrations in Young Adults. J. Jamnik, C. Borchers, A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto and Univ. of Victoria, Canada. 8:45 127.4 Genetic Influence on Xanthine Oxidase Activity and Arginine Metabolites in Hispanic Children. V.S. Voruganti, G. Chittoor, K. Haack, S. Laston, I. Vazquez-Vidal, N.R. Mehta, A.G. Comuzzie, S.A. Cole, N.F. Butte. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Kannapolis, Texas Biomed. Res. Inst., San Antonio, Univ. of Texas at Rio Grande Valley and Baylor Col. of Med. 9:00 127.5 Interaction between PhIP from Meat Intake and Polymorphism in Superoxide Dismutase 2 Gene Increases Risk of Oxidative Stress. A. Carvalho, J. Steluti, A.A. Carioca, A.P. Loureiro, G. Gattas, R. Fisberg, D. Marchioni. Univ. of São Paulo. 9:15 127.6 LCT Gene Variant -13910 C<T, Dairy Intake, and 25-Hydroxyvitamin D Plasma Levels: A Mendelian Randomization Study. O. Alharbi, A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto. 9:30 127.7 Genetic Variation in the Sucrase-Isomaltase (si) Gene Is Associated with Dietary Intake in a Young Adult Population. R. Sorkin, T. Wolever, A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto. 9:45 127.8 Association between LCT-13910 C>T Genotype and Plasma 25-Hydroxyvitamin D with Premenstrual Symptoms. A.C. Jarosz, O. Alharbi, A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto. 128. VITMIN: WATER AND FAT SOLUBLE VITAMINS AND CHRONIC DISEASE, MICRONUTRIENT BIOVAILABILITY AND ANTIOXIDANT FUNCTION Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Vitamins and Minerals RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29D Chaired: J. Finkelstein Cochaired: S. Ajabshir 8:00 128.1 The Role of Vitamin D in Obesity and Diabetes: Ca2+ Signaling, Insulin Secretion, Adipocyte Apoptosis, and Bone Mineralization. I.N. Sergeev. South Dakota State Univ. 44 8:15 128.2 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D Regulates Energy Substrate Metabolism to Reduce Triacylglycerol Accumulation in 3T3-L1 Adipocytes. B.M. Larrick, K-H. Kim, S.S. Donkin, D. Teegarden. Purdue Univ. 8:30 128.3 Body Mass Index Is a Strong Predictor of Low Serum 25(OH)D Levels in Multiethnic Obese Children in Western Massachusetts. S. Kannan, P. Visintainer, H.B. Ganguri, C. Wittcopp. So. Illinois Univ. Carbondale, Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med., Baystate Med. Ctr., Springfield, MA and Kronsys, Raleigh, NC. 8:45 128.4 Placental Megalin and Cubilin Expression Is Associated with Markers of Vitamin D Status but Not Fetal Bone Growth during Adolescent Pregnancy. C.M. Whisner, C.E. Thomas, K.O. O’Brien. Sch. of Nutr. and Hlth. Promotion, Arizona State Univ. and Cornell Univ. 9:00 128.5 Urinary α-CEHC Predicts α-Tocopherol Status in Healthy Adults and Those with Metabolic Syndrome. M.G. Traber, S.W. Leonard, E. Mah, G. Bobe, R.S. Bruno. Oregon State Univ., The Ohio State Univ. and Biofortis Clin. Res., Addison, IL. 9:15 128.6 Development of a Model for In Vitro Comparative Absorption of Magnesium from Five Magnesium Sources Commonly Used as Dietary Supplements. J.W. Hartle, S. Morgan, T. Poulsen. Albion, UT. 9:30 128.7 Assessing the Relationship of Vitamin D with Iron Status in Children with Inflammatory Bowel Disease. S. Syed, E.M. Smith, V. Tangpricha, S. Chesdachai, A. Kumar, J. Prince, T.R. Ziegler, P.S. Suchdev, S. Kugathasan. Emory Univ. 9:45 128.8 Effects of Whole Egg Consumption on Vitamin E Absorption from Co-consumed, Mixed-Vegetable Salad. J.E. Kim, M.G. Ferruzzi, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. 129. COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION: FOOD ENVIRONMENT Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30A Chaired: L. Jahns Cochaired: S. Colby 8:00 129.1 Assessment of Home Food Environment among Healthy Weight and Overweight/Obese School-Age Children. M.J. Nepper, W. Chai. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 8:15 129.2 The Impact of Neighborhood Food Environment on School Meal Participation Rates. N. Vaudrin, P. OhriVachaspati, J. Green, C. Lorts, M. Yedidia. Sch. of Nutr. And Hlth. Promotion, Arizona State Univ. and Rutgers Univ. 8:30 129.3 Availability and Price of Fruits and Vegetables at Food Retailers in Western Massachusetts Counties. Q. Jiang, J. Burdick, J. Chaiken, S. Walsh, N. Cohen. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. 8:45 129.4 It’s Not How Much Your Spend, It’s Where You Spend It: How Consumer Behavior Predicts Dietary Energy Density. A. Massedge, J.A. Vernarelli. Fairfield Univ. 9:00 129.5 A More Efficient Method of Assessing Corner Store Healthfulness. R. DeWeese, M. Todd, A. Karpyn, M. Yedidia, M. Kennedy, M. Bruening, C. Wharton, P. OhriVachaspati. Arizona State Univ., Univ. of Delaware and Rutgers Univ. SUNDAYNUTRITION 9:15 129.6 What Do Parents and Children Talk about While Grocery Shopping? A Content Analysis of Shopping Trips. E. Calloway, A. Pritchard, C. Roberts-Gray, S. Sweitzer, M. Briley. Gretchen Swanson Ctr. for Nutr., Omaha, Univ. of Texas at Austin and Third Coast Res., Galveston. 9:30 129.7 Comparison of Food Availability in School Stores in Seoul, South Korea before and after Implementation of Two National Food- and Nutrient-Based Policies. S.K. Choi, E.A. Frongillo, C.E. Blake, J.F. Thrasher. Arnold Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of South Carolina. 9:45 129.8 A Novel Approach for Determining the Environmental Impacts of Individual Food Choices in the United States. D. Rose, M. Heller, A. Willits-Smith, A.R. Mundorf, G. Keoleian. Tulane Univ. and Univ. of Michigan. 130. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: DIETARY FATTY ACIDS AND HEALTH Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Energy & Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B 8:00 130.1 DHA Is More Potent Than EPA in Attenuating Cardiometabolic Risk in Men and Women: A Randomized Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Crossover Trial. J. Allaire, P. Couture, A. Charest, M. Leclerc, J. Marin, M-C. Lépine, A. Tchernof, B. Lamarche. Univ. Laval and Univ. Inst. of Cardiol. and Pneumol. of Québec. 8:15 130.2 Assessing the Role of Saturated Fats in Adipose Tissue Inflammation. M. Morgan-Bathke, W. Faubion, M. Jensen. Mayo Clin. and Viterbo Univ., WI. 8:30 130.3 Effect of Omega-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids on Insulin Resistance Are Sex-Dependent: A Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. M.L. Garg, K. Abbott, R. Thota, S. Acharya, T.L. Burrows. Univ. of Newcastle, Wallsend and Callaghan and NSW Dept. of Hlth., New Lambton Hgts., Australia. 8:45 130.4 Short-Chain Fatty Acids, 4-Phenylbutyric Acid and R-Alpha-Lipoic Acid, Improve mTORC1-Driven Overproduction of apoB-Containing Triacylglyceride-Rich Lipoproteins. R. Moreau, J.L. Roberts, B. He, A. Erickson. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 9:00 130.5 Effects of Corn Oil, Compared to Extra Virgin Olive Oil, Intake on Lipoprotein and Subfraction Cholesterol Levels in Men and Women: Results from a Randomized, Controlled Feeding Study. K.C. Maki, A.L. Lawless, K.M. Kelley, V.N. Kaden, C.J. Geiger, O.M. Palacios, M.R. Dicklin. Midwest Ctr. for Metab. & Cardiovasc. Res., Glen Ellyn, IL, Biofortis Innovation Svcs./Merieux NutriSci., Addison, IL and Geiger & Assocs. LLC, Fort Bridger, WY. 9:15 130.6 Obesity and Dietary Fat Modulate HDL Function in Adolescents: Results from a Cross-Sectional Analysis and a Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Crossover Trial. A.M. McMorrow, M. O’Reilly, R.M. Connaughton, E. Carolan, D. O’Shea, F.E. Lithander, F.C. McGillicuddy, H.M. Roche. University Col. Dublin, St Vincent’s Univ. Hosp., Dublin and Univ. of Canberra. 9:30 130.7 Dietary Linoleic Acid Increases Linoleic- and Arachidonic Acid-Derived Bioactive Lipids, Despite Not Altering Tissue Fatty Acid Levels. S.M. Leng, H.M. Aukema. Univ. of Manitoba and CCARM, Winnipeg. 9:45 130.8 Effect of Plant Sources of Omega-3 PUFA on Mood Status in Healthy Subjects: A Crossover Feeding Trial. W.M. Young. Loma Linda Univ. 131. NUTRITION TRANSLATION: NUTRITION AND FOOD SCIENCE FOR PUBLIC POLICY, PRACTICE AND THE CONSUMER Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Nutrition Translation RIS) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Chaired: L. Sanders Cochaired: E. Glynn 8:00 131.1 Does the Left Hand Know What the Right Hand Is Doing? Part I: Alignment between the AFRI Foundational Function and Efficacy of Nutrients Program and the 2010 Dietary Guidelines. M.M. Koeninga, K. Krishnan, C. Perez, D.N. Chester. Natl. Inst. of Food and Agr., Washington, DC and Texas A&M, Bryan. 8:15 131.2 Advancing Systematic Review Methodology to Better Inform Food and Nutrition Policy. T.L. Psota, M. Spill, J. Spahn, D. Gungor, K. Johns, P. Nadaud, Y.P. Wong, E. Essery Stoody, C. Rihane. USDA, Alexandria, VA. 8:30 131.3 Adherence to the 2015 Dietary Guidelines for Americans and Risk of Healthy and Unhealthy Obesity among Canadian Adults. M. Jessri, W. Lou, M. L’Abbe. Dalla Lana Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Toronto. 8:45 131.4 Foods Consumed from Non-school Cafeterias and Vending Machines: NHANES 2006-2012. S.J. Onufrak. Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent. 9:00 131.5 Children Are Eating Savory Snack Foods: What We Eat in America, NHANES 2011-2012. D.G. Rhodes, J.C. Clemens, M.A. Hymes, A.J. Moshfegh. USDA, Beltsville, MD. 9:15 131.6 Nutrient Profiling for the reformulation of Pizza: Modelled Impact on Nutritional Intake in the U.S. Adult Population. G. Masset, A. Vlassopoulos, U. Lehmann. Nestlé Res. Ctr., Lausanne. 9:30 131.7 Are Foods of Higher Nutritional Quality More Expensive Than Their Less Healthy Counterparts? An Analysis of Canadian Packaged Foods. M-E. Labonté, S. Noorhosseini, J. Bernstein, M. Ahmed, M. L’Abbé. Univ. of Toronto. 9:45 131.8 Mapping Inflammation and Cancer-Modifying Regions in Broccoli Genome. W. Bussler, J. Alley, H. Chandler, C. Thetford, G. Yousef, A. Brown, D. Esposito, M.A. Lila, S. Komarnytsky. North Carolina State Univ., Kannapolis and Raleigh, Iowa State Univ. and Catawba Col., NC. 132. INNOVATIONS IN UNDERGRADUATE, GRADUATE AND MEDICAL NUTRITION EDUCATION Minisymposium Assoc. of Nutrition Departments and Programs Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30D Chaired: M.L. Dunn 8:00 132.1 Spicing Up Introductory Nutrition. D.A. Levitsky. Cornell Univ. 8:15 132.2 University Nutrition Programs– Training Students for Careers beyond Dietetics: Reflections from an Established, Emerging, and New Program. H.J. Willis, M.L. Stewart, D.E. Smith. St. Catherine Univ., Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa and Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul. 45 S U N NUTRITIONSUNDAY 8:30 132.3 Managing the Growing Classroom: Opportunities for Postdoctoral Teaching Fellows. J.E.H. Nevins, A.L. Wilkinson. Cornell Univ. 8:45 132.4 Reinforcing Nutrition and Core Science Fundamentals through a Multi-semester Research Project. W.A. Clark, M.E. Johnson. East Tennessee State Univ. 9:00 132.5 Development and Evaluation of the Transdisciplinary Obesity Prevention Research Sciences Program. D. Teegarden, J. Bowers, A. Hammons, L. Destefano, G. Garcia, B. Koester, L. Parker, A. Childress, B. Fiese. Purdue Univ., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and California State Univ., Fresno. 9:15 132.6 Innovations in Course Design to Facilitate Understanding, Retention, and Application of Regulation of Macronutrient Metabolism. A.Thalacker-Mercer, R. Vanderlan. Cornell Univ. 9:30 132.7 The Impact of Linking Immigrants with Nutrition Knowledge Initiative on Improving Cultural Competency Skills among Nutrition and Dietetic Students in Canada. H. Vatanparast, C. Henry, S. Mulhall. Univ. of Saskatchewan. 9:45 132.8 A New Model for Incorporating Nutrition Into the Medical School Curriculum. M. Yakub, G. Al-Eyd, H. Atamna, D. Atapattu, L. Castro, J. Estrada, S. Lakhan, F. Nausheen, T. Seki, A. Tenore, A. Velji, R. Suskind. California Univ. of Sci. and Med., Col. of Med. 133. OPENING SESSION AND DISCUSSION: SCIENTIFIC RIGOR IN THE NUTRITION RESEARCH LANDSCAPE 268. INTERNATIONAL FORUM – TAIWAN 10:30 Metabolomics and the Physiology of Exercise and Insulin Resistance. S. Adams. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. 11:00 The Sphingolipidome and Insulin Resistance: Perspectives Gained from Studying the Overweight Dairy Cow Transitioning From Gestation to Lactation. J. McFadden. West Virginia Univ. 11:30 Genes, Exercise and Angiogenesis: Implications for the Metabolome. M. Olfert. West Virginia Sch. of Med. 12:00 Metabolic Processes and Physiological Parameters Involved with the Ischemia/Reperfusion Protective Phenotype in Hibernators. L. Bogren. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, Aurora. 12:15 Depletion of Dietary MicroRNAs from Cow’s Milk Causes an Increase of Purine Metabolites in Human Body Fluids and Mouse Livers. A.G. Aguilar Lozano, S. Baier, J. Adamec, M. Sadri, D. Giraud, J. Zempleni. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. (127.1) International Forum (Supported by The Nutrition Society of Taiwan ) (Organized and Sponsored by: The Nutrition Society of Taiwan) Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB Chaired: F-Y. Tang Cochaired: E-P.I. Chiang This session will introduce the research interests and the national nutrition survey of B vitamins in Taiwan. In addition, the organizers will provide a platform for the exchange of information and the promotion of international collaboration and cooperation in nutrition research for scientists, dieticians, education professionals, investigators and industry. 8:30 Thiamin and Riboflavin Status in Taiwan and our Coping Strategy. F.L. Yang. Fu Jen Catholic Univ., Taiwan. 8:50 Vitamin B-6 and Homocysteine with Inflammation and Oxidative Stress in Certain Diseases. Y-C. Huang. Chung Shan Med. Univ. 9:10 1-Carbon Metabolic Kinetics in Human Disease Models. E-P. Chiang. Natl. Chung Hsing Univ. 9:30 Taiwan Folate Nutrition in Cancer Co-therapeutic Medicine: From Basic Research to Public Health and Clinical Application. R-F. Huang. Fu Jen Catholic Univ., Taiwan. 9:50Discussion. 46 Special Session (Sponsored by: ASN, Canadian Nutrition Society, ILSI North American and the Institute of Medicine.) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: P.J. Stover 134. OMICS APPLICATIONS IN METABOLIC PHYSIOLOGY Symposium (Cosponsored by: The American Physiological Society) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: S.H. Adams Cochaired: M. Olfert Cellular and Molecular Nutrition 135. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE PROGRAM: DIETARY PROTEIN: CURRENT PERSPECTIVES ASN Satellite (Organized and Sponsored by: PepsiCo) Sun. 12:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC For more information on ASN Sponsored Satellite Programs, please visit http://scientificsessions.nutrition.org/ satellitesessions/. SUNDAYNUTRITION 136. NUTRIENT-GENE INTERACTION RIS BUSINESS MEETING AND SCIENTIFIC DISCUSSION: BIOMARKERS DEFINED RIS Forum 140. FOOD SYSTEMS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH: ASSESSMENT, IMPACT AND IMPLICATIONS OF MEETING FRUIT AND VEGETABLE CONSUMPTION RECOMMENDATIONS ON ENVIRONMENTAL, ECONOMIC AND AGRICULTURAL SUSTAINABILITY (Sponsored by: Nutrient-Gene Interaction RIS) Symposium Sun. 12:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: T.T. Wang Chaired: J.W. Finley 137. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE PROGRAM: NEW FRONTIERS IN FIBERS: INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGY AND EMERGING RESEARCH ON GUT MICROBIOME AND BONE HEALTH ASN Satellite (Organized and Sponsored by: Tate & Lyle) Sun. 12:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB For more information on ASN Sponsored Satellite Programs, please visit http://scientificsessions.nutrition.org/ satellitesessions/. 138. VITAMINS AND MINERALS RIS BUSINESS MEETING AND OUTSTANDING RESEARCHER SHOWCASE RIS Forum (Sponsored by: Vitamins and Minerals RIS) Sun. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28DE Global and Community Nutrition 3:00 The Challenge of Feeding Nine Billion. D. Dimick. Natl. Geographic Soc. 3:20 Modelling the Impact of Increasing Fruit and Vegetable Consumption on the U.S. Agricultural System. E. Marshall. USDA Economic Res. Svc. 3:40 Climate Change and Water Resource Impacts on US Fruits and Vegetables. C. Rosenzweig. NASA Goddard Inst. for Space Studies. 4:00 Changing Consumption/Demand for Vegetables with Breeding/Decreasing Post-harvest Loss. J. Mein. Monsanto. 4:20 Achieving Sustainable Nutrition Security: The Essential Role of Partnerships. D. Gustafson. ILSI Res. Fndn. 141. HERITABLE FACTORS AND COMPLEX DISEASES: USING GENETIC EPIDEMIOLOGY TO DRAW INFERENCES ABOUT NUTRITIONDISEASE RELATIONSHIPS Chaired: L. Tussing-Humphreys Symposium Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC 139. ROBERT SUSKIND AND LESLIE LEWINTERSUSKIND PEDIATRIC NUTRITION LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD Chaired: K. Kordas Cochaired: A.E. Millen Award Lecture Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Nutrition Education: Have We Finally Found the Way to Prepare Tomorrow’s Physicians? R.M. Suskind S U N Cochaired: J.R. Mein Nutritional Epidemiology 3:00 Observational Studies in Nutrition: Limitations & Need for Alternatives. K. Kordas. Univ. of Bristol. 3:25 Genes and Nutrition in the Post-GWAS Era. H. OchsBalcom. Univ. at Buffalo SUNY. 3:50 Mendelian Randomization: Principles and Applications in Nutritional Sciences. C. Engelman. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 4:15 Limitations to Mendelian Randomization: Threats to Causal Inference and Ways to Overcome Them. N. Davies. Univ. of Bristol. 4:40 What Can Epigenomie-wide Assocation Studies (EWAS) Tell Us About the Link between Nutrition and Health? M. Suderman. Univ. of Bristol. 47 NUTRITIONSUNDAY 142. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM RIS BUSINESS MEETING AND HOT TOPICS SEMINAR Minisymposium RIS Forum (Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS) (Sponsored by: Energy and Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29A Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC Chaired: V.J. Vieira-Potter 143. EXPERIMENTAL ANIMAL NUTRITION RIS BUSINESS MEETING AND HOT TOPIC PRESENTATION RIS Forum (Sponsored by: Experimental Animal Nutrition RIS) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Chaired: K.M. Ajuwon 144. TRANSDISCIPLINARY TRAINING IN CHILDHOOD OBESITY PREVENTION: APPROACHES, SUCCESSES AND CHALLENGES Symposium Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB Chaired: S.M. Donovan Cochaired: G.L. Jensen Nutrition Across the Lifespan: From Pediatrics to Geriatrics Education 3:00Illinois Transdisciplinary Obesity Prevention Program (I-TOPP). S. Donovan. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 3:20 Childhood Obesity Prevention Training (COPT). B. Rolls. Penn State 3:40 Innovation and Collaboration: Creating a Transdisciplinary Childhood Obesity Prevention (TOP) Graduate Education Certificate Program. J. Meendering. South Dakota State Univ. 4:00 Sanos Y Fuertes: Creating Culturally Relevant Programs for the University and Community. B. Rios-Ellis. California State Univ., Monterey Bay. 4:20 Trainee Perspective – I-TOPP (University of Illinois). K. Robinson. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 4:40 Trainee Perspective – COPT (Penn State). S. Kling. Penn State 5:00 Panel Discussion. 48 145. DBC: METABOLISM AND BIOAVAILABILITY OF DIETARY BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS Chaired: R. Bruno Cochaired: S. Sang 3:00 145.1 Biotransformation of 5-Demethyltangeretin in Mice: Generation of Anti-cancer Metabolites. X. Wu, Y. Sun, M. Wang, Z. Gao, M. Song, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. 3:15 145.2 Quantification of Javamide-I and -II in Twelve Coffee Drinks and Their Effects on Sirtuin1/2/3 Enzymes and p53-Acetylation in THP-1 Cells. J. Park. USDA, Beltsville, MD. 3:30 145.3 The Metabolic Fate of Isotopically-Labeled Trimethylamine-N-Oxide in Humans. S. Taesuwan, C.E. Cho, O.V. Malysheva, E. Bender, J. Yan, A. Thalacker-Mercer, M.A. Caudill. Cornell Univ. 3:45 145.4 Nutrimetabolomics Fingerprinting to Identify Biomarkers of Whole Grain Wheat Intake. S. Sang, Y. Zhu, W. Sha, P. Wang. North Carolina A&T State Univ., Kannapolis and Univ. of North Carolina at Charlotte. 4:00 145.5 Phenolic Recovery and Bioaccessibility from Milled and Finished Whole Grain Oat Products. M. Li, K. Koecher, L. Hansen-TechCenter, M.G. Ferruzzi. Purdue Univ. and General Mills Inc., MN. 4:15 145.6 Major Furocoumarins in Grapefruit Are Detectable in Plasma following Consumption of Grapefruit and Grapefruit Juice. M. Moser, T.M. Vance, T. Mali, S.G. Lee, C. Perkins, A. Provatas, A. Qureshi, O.K. Chun, E. Cho. Univ. of Connecticut, North Carolina A&T State Univ. and Warren Alpert Med. Sch. of Brown Univ. 4:30 145.7 Gastrointestinal Biotransformation of Resveratrol in Mice. F. Li, Y. Sun, M. Song, X. Wu, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusett Amherst and Sch. of Pharm., Ocean Univ. of China. 4:45 145.8 Plasma Plant Sterol and Plant Sterol Intake in Plant-Based Diets. K. Jaceldo-Siegl, D. Lütjohann, R. Sirirat, E. Haddad. Loma Linda Univ. and Univ. Clins. of Bonn, Germany. 146. OBESITY: OBESITY, GUT MICROBIOME AND MACRONUTRIENTS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Obesity RIS) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29B Chaired: F. Greenway 3:00 146.1 Soy Positively Impacts Cecal Microbiota of Ovariectomized Rats Selectively Bred for Low Aerobic Capacity. T-W. Liu, T.M. Zidon, R.J. Welly, Y-M. Park, S.L. Britton, L.G. Koch, J. Padilla, V.J. Vieira-Potter, K.S. Swanson. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, Univ. of Missour-Columbiai and Univ. of Michigan. SUNDAYNUTRITION 3:15 146.2 Associations between Physical Activity and the Intestinal Microbiome of College Freshmen. C.M. Whisner, M. Bruening. Sch. of Nutr. and Hlth. Promotion, Arizona State Univ. 3:30 146.3 Gut Microbiota Metabolites in Infancy: Associations with Breastfeeding and Childhood Overweight. S. Bridgman, P. Koleva, R. Mandal, M. Azad, C. Field, A. Haqq, A. Becker, S. Turvey, P. Mandhane, P. Subbarao, M. Sears, D. Wishart, A. Kozyrskyj. Univ. of Alberta, Univ. of Manitoba, Univ. of British Columbia, Univ. of Toronto and McMaster Univ., Canada. 3:45 146.4 Relationship between Human Gut Microbiota and Interleukin 6 Levels in Overweight and Obese Adults. D. Cooper, E.B. Kim, M. Marco, B. Rust, L. Welch, W. Horn, R. Martin, N. Keim. Univ. of California, Davis, USDA, Davis and Seoul Natl. Univ. 4:00 146.5 Depressive Like Behavior and Changes in the Gut Microflora Are associated with a High Fat Diet in Male Sprague Dawley Rats. G. Chompre, M.L. Cruz, S. Cruz, Y. Yamamura, C. Appleyard. Pontifical Catholic Univ. of Puerto Rico and Ponce Hlth. Sci. Univ. Med. Sch. & Ponce Res. Inst. 4:15 146.6 Obesity-Prone High-Fat Fed Rats Reduce Caloric Intake and Adiposity and Gain More Fat-Free Mass When Allowed to Separate Protein from Carbohydrate/Fat Intake. D. Tomé, D. Azzout-Marniche, T. Chalvon-Demersay, G. Pimentel, C. Chaumontet, N. Nadkarni, J. Piedcoq, G. Fromentin, C. Gaudichon, P.C. Even. AgroParisTech, INRA, Univ.Paris Saclay. 4:30 146.7 Impact of Free-Living Nutrition Intervention on Microbiome in College Students at Risk for Disease: FRUVEDomic Pilot Study. O.A. Famodu, C.F. Cuff, A. Cockburn, M.T. Downes, P.J. Murray, J.W. McFadden, S.E. Colby, J.S. Morrell, I.M. Olfert, M.D. Olfert. West Virginia Univ., Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville and Univ. of New Hampshire. 4:45 146.8 Effects of an Almond-Enriched Energy Restricted Diet on Body Composition, Visceral Adipose Tissue and Blood Pressure in Obese Adults. J. Dhillon, R. Mattes. Purdue Univ. 147. DIET AND CANCER: ANIMAL AND MOLECULAR STUDIES Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Diet and Cancer RIS) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29C Chaired: J-R. Zhou Cochaired: S. Wang 3:00 147.1 Dietary Tomato Reduces Castration-Resistant Prostate Cancer Burden in the TRAMP Model. J.W. Smith, J.L. Rowles III, R.J. Miller, S.K. Clinton, W.D. O’Brien; Jr., J.W. Erdman; Jr. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and The Ohio State Univ. 3:15 147.2 The Effect of Oil Palm Phenolics on Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma in Transgenic Mouse Model. N.H. Razalli, P. Gowthaman, N. Saadat, S. Vemuri, A. Goja, R. Sambanthamurthi, S.V. Gupta. Wayne State Univ. and Malaysian Palm Oil Bd., Kajang. 3:30 147.3 Dried Plums Modify Fecal Short Chain Fatty Acid Concentrations and Gene Expression in a Rat Model of Colon Carcinogenesis. D.V. Seidel, K.K. Hicks, S.S. Taddeo, M.A. Azcarate-Peril, R.J. Carroll, N.D. Turner. Texas A&M Univ. and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 3:45 147.4 Apiaceous and Cruciferous Vegetables Fed in the Post-initiation Stage Reduce Colonic Precancerous Lesions and the Cancer Stem Cell Marker DCLK1, and Alter the miRNA Expression Profile in 1,2-Dimethylhydrazine-Treated Rats. S. Kim, S.P. Trudo, D.D. Gallaher. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul and Univ. of Arkansas Sch. of Human Envrn. Sci. 4:00 147.5 Through Metabolic Reprogramming Walnut May Mitigate the Stemness of Colon Cancer Stem Cells. S.W. Choi, J. Choi, J. Kim, S. Friso, Y. Kim. CHA Univ.,South Korea, Univ. of Verona Sch. of Med. and Ewha Womans Univ., South Korea. 4:15 147.6 The Role of Intra-abdominal Adipose Tissue in Cancer. J. Bernard, B. Bullard. Michigan State Univ. 4:30 147.7 Microenvironment Folate Stress Promotes Warburg-Metabolic Switched-Cancer Stem Cell Signaling Network and Stemness Features to Mediate Invasion and Metastasis of Lung Cancers. W-J. Chen, R-F.S. Huang. FuJen Catholic Univ., Taiwan. 4:45 147.8 Cranberry Extract Initiates Intrinsic Apoptosis in HL-60 Cells by Increasing Bad Activity through the Inhibition of Akt Phosphorylation. R. Mansouri, S.S. Percival. Univ. of Florida. 148. VITMIN: ZINC AND SELENIUM Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Vitamins and Minerals RIS) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29D Chaired: A. Grider Cochaired: D. Ekoue 3:00 148.1 Zinc-Induced Upregulation of Metallothionein2A Is Predicted by Gene Expression of Zinc Transporters in Healthy Adults. A. Chu, M. Foster, S. Ward, K. Zaman, D. Hancock, P. Petocz, S. Samman. Univ. of Otago, New Zealand, Univ. of Sydney and Macqurie Univ., Australia. 3:15 148.2 Zinc and ZIP14 (Slc39a14) Are Required for Adaptation to ER Stress in Mouse Liver. M-H. Kim, T.B. Aydemir, R.J. Cousins. Univ. of Florida. 3:30 148.3 Chronic Zinc Deficiency Alters Chick (Gallus gallus) Gut Microbiota Structure and Function. E. Tako, O. Koren. USDA, Cornell Univ. and Fac. of Med., Bar-Ilan Univ., Israel. 3:45 148.4 Serum Zinc and Hemoglobin Concentrations in Persons with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Infection: The Positive Living with HIV Study. K. Poudel-Tandukar. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. 4:00 148.5 Novel Role of Glutathione Peroxidase-1 in Liver and Muscle Protein Metabolism of Mice. L. Tao, Z.P. Zhao, X.G. Lei. Cornell Univ. 4:15 148.6 Removal of Glutathione Peroxidase 4 in Mouse Liver Leads to Early Lethality and Vitamin E Can Compensate for Its Loss. B.A. Carlson, R. Tobe, E. Yefremova, P.A. Tsuji, V.J. Hoffmann, U. Schweizer, V.N. Gladyshev, D.L. Hatfield, M. Conrad. NCI, NIH, Ritsumeikan Univ., Japan, Helmholtz Ctr. Munich, Towson Univ., OD, NIH, Rheinische FriedrichWilhelms-Univ. Bonn and Harvard Med. Sch. 4:30 148.7 Selenium (Se) Homeostasis in Chicken Central Nervous System Involves Selenoprotein Expression from Insufficient to Excess Se. J. Li, X. Jiang, C. Cao, C. Zhang, X. Li, W. Li. Col. of Vet. Med., Northeast Agr. Univ., China. 49 S U N NUTRITIONSUNDAY 4:45 148.8 Soy Protein Diet Preserves Skilled Ladder Rung Walking Performance after Stroke Better Than Isoflavones Alone in Adult and Aged Male Rats. R.A. Sunde, R.M. Taylor, J-L. Li. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison and Northeast Agr. Univ., China. 149. COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION: FOOD SECURITY AND ITS CONNECTIONS TO NUTRITION AND HEALTH SECTION I Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30A Chaired: H.A. Eicher-Miller Cochaired: L. Cordeiro 3:00 149.1 Differential Associations of Food Insecurity Risk on Dietary Intake-Frequency among Parents and Their Adolescent Children. E. Calloway, T. Smith, C. Pinard, A. Oh, L. Nebeling, E. Hennessy, A. Yaroch. Gretchen Swanson Ctr. for Nutr., Omaha and NCI, NIH. 3:15 149.2 Women’s Empowerment and Food Security Status: A Global Comparative Study of Women Living in Rural and Urban Areas. K. Sinclair, D. Ahmadigheidari, D. Dallmann, H. Melgar-Quiñonez. McGill Univ., Ste. Anne de Bellevue, QC. 3:30 149.3 Altered Daily Activities and Shame Resulting from Children Experiencing Food Insecurity in Rural South Carolina and Oregon. E.A. Frongillo, J. Bernal, E. Adams, E. Massey, T. Rosemond, C.E. Blake. Univ. of South Carolina, Univ. Simón Bolívar, Caracas and Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. 3:45 149.4 Marginal Food Insecurity Is Associated with Increased Sodium and Decreased Fruit Consumption in Mothers and Toddlers from Low-Income Households. M. Spiker, K. Hurley, Y. Wang, R. Arbaiza, M. Black. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. 4:00 149.5 The Role of Television during Family Meals: Enable or Disrupter of Communication. C.E. Blake, T.N. Rosemond, J. Bernal, E.A. Frongillo. Univ. of South Carolina and Univ. Simón Bolívar. 4:15 149.6 Strong Interpersonal Relationships Buffer the Impact of Chaos on Quality of Family Meal Interactions in Food-Insecure Households. T.N. Rosemond, C. Blake, J. Bernal, M.P. Burke, E.A. Frongillo. Univ. of South Carolina, Univ. Simon Bolivar, Venezuela and USDA, Alexandria, VA. 4:30 149.7 Food Insecurity’s Association with Gestational Weight Gain Varies by Pre-pregnancy Weight and Parity. E. Metallinos-Katsaras, E. Siu, R. Colchamiro. Simmons Col. and Massachusetts Department of Publ. Hlth., Boston. 4:45 149.8 High Household Food Insecurity Impacts Dietary Patterns in Rural and Urban American Indian Families with Young Children. E. Tomayko, K. Mosso, K. Cronin, R. Prince, A. Adams. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 50 150. GLOBAL NUTRITION: IMPACT OF NUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTATION AND PREDICTORS OF ADHERENCE Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B Chaired: L.M. Neufeld Cochaired: S. Young 3:00 150.1 Maternal Lipid-Based Nutrient Supplements Did Not Reduce Depressive Symptoms during Pregnancy and Lactation in Rural Bangladesh. S.L. Matias, M.K. Mridha, S.A. Khan, S. Hussain, Z. Siddiqui, S. Vosti, C.D. Arnold, K.G. Dewey. Univ. of California, Davis, ICDDR and Save the Children, Dhaka, Bangladesh. 3:15 150.2 Individual and Structural Environmental Influences on Utilization of Iron and Folic Acid Supplementation among Pregnant Women in Harare, Zimbabwe. C.B. Tinago, L. Annang Ingram, C.E. Blake, E.A. Frongillo. Univ. of South Carolina. 3:30 150.3 Social Support Enhances Adherence to Antenatal Calcium and Iron-Folic Acid Supplements: Acceptability and Impact of Adherence Partners. S. Martin, M. Omotayo, R. Stoltzfus, K. Dickin. Cornell Univ. 3:45 150.4 High Prevalence of Low Urinary Iodine among Pregnant and Lactating Women of Bangladesh Does Not Respond to Daily Lipid-Based Nutrient Supplement Containing 250 µg Iodine. M.K. Mridha, S.L. Matias, S.A. Khan, R.R. Paul, Z. Siddiqui, B. Ullah, S. Hussain, R.T. Young, C.D. Arnold, K.G. Dewey. Univ. of California, Davis, ICDDR,B, Care Bangladesh and Save the Children, Dhaka, Bangladesh. 4:00 150.5. Physical Activity and Work Productivity in Response to Iron and Iodine Double-Fortified Salt Trial in Indian Tea Estate Workers. M.M. Blakstad, J.E.H. Nevins, S. Venkatramanan, E.M. Przybyszewski, J.D. Haas. Cornell Univ. and McGill Univ., Ste. Anne de Bellevue. 4:15 150.6 Are We Done? Predicting the Impact of Supplement Use and Mandatory and Voluntary Folic Acid Fortification on the Risk of Neural Tube Defects in the United States. K.S. Crider, O. Devine, Y.P. Qi, S.C. Tinker, R.J. Berry. Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent. and Cater Consulting, Atlanta. 4:30 150.7 Effect of Short-Term Maternal Supplementation with Small Amounts of Vitamin A or Beta-Carotene on Breast Milk Retinol Concentrations among Lactating Filipino Women. R. Engle-Stone, A. Osei, M.F.D. Reario, A. Hall, J.E. Arsenault, N. Haselow, G. Lietz, K.H. Brown, M.J. Haskell. Univ. of California, Davis, Helen Keller Intl., NY, Newcastle Univ., U.K. and Bill & Melinda Gates Fndn., Seattle. 4:45 150.8 A Comprehensive Nutrition Program Improved Nutritional Status among Children Aged 6 to <24 Months in Rural Malawi. Y. Kang, K. Hurley, A.B. Monclus, J. RuelBergeron, R. Oemcke, L.S.F. Wu, M. Mitra, J. Phuka, P. Christian. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Col. of Med., Univ. of Malawi. SUNDAYNUTRITION 151. MATERNAL, PERINATAL AND PEDIATRIC: MEETING THE NUTRITIONAL NEEDS OF PEDIATRIC POPULATIONS 152. NUTRITION EDUCATION: DEVELOPING HEALTHY EATING AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY BEHAVIORS ACROSS THE LIFESPAN Minisymposium Minisymposium Maternal, Perinatal and Pediatric RIS (Sponsored by: Nutrition Education and Behavioral Science RIS) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Chaired: B. Olson Cochaired: J.T. Smilowitz 3:00 151.1 Choline Intake during Pregnancy and Genetic Polymorphisms Influence Choline Metabolism in Chinese Preterms Receiving Total Parenteral Nutrition Therapy. J. Zhu. Sch. of Med., Shanghai Jiao Tong Univ. 3:15 151.2 Early Weight Gain, Linear Growth, and Midchildhood Blood Pressure. W. Perng, S.L. Rifas-Shiman, M.S. Kramer, L.K. Haugaard, E. Oken, M.W. Gillman, M.B. Belfort. Univ. of Michigan Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Harvard Med. Sch./ Harvard Pilgrim Hlth. Care Inst., McGill Univ. Fac. of Med., Univ. of Copenhagen, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hosps., Copenhagen, Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Brigham and Women’s Hosp. 3:30 151.3 Lean Mass Accretion Associates with Vitamin D Intake: A 6 Month Randomized Controlled Trial in 2-8 Year Olds Using Fortified Foods. N.R. Brett, C.A. Parks, P. Lavery, S. Agellon, C.A. Vanstone, J.L. Maguire, F. Rauch, H.A. Weiler. Sch. of Dietetics and Human Nutr., McGill Univ., Li Ka Shing Inst. of St. Michael’s Hosp., Univ. of Toronto and Shriners Hosp. for Children, McGill Univ. 3:45 151.4 Erythrocyte Omega-3 Long Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Are Associated with Lumbar Spine but Not Whole Body Bone Mineral Density in Healthy Children. C.A. Parks, N.R. Brett, S. Agellon, P. Lavery, C.A. Vanstone, J.L. Maguire, F. Rauch, H.A. Weiler. Sch. of Dietetics and Human Nutr., McGill Univ., Li Ka Shing Knowledge Inst. of St. Michael’s Hosp., Univ. of Toronto and McGill Univ., Montreal. 4:00 151.5 Standing by Human Milk through Thick and Thin: The Effect of Thickeners on Human Milk Viscosity. J.K. Koo, L. Bode, J.H. Kim. UCSD/Rady Children’s Hosp. of San Diego. 4:15 151.6 Maternal Plasma Folate, Vitamin B12 Levels and Multivitamin Supplementation during Pregnancy and Risk of Autism Spectrum Disorder in the Boston Birth Cohort. R. Raghavan, M.D. Fallin, X. Wang. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 4:30 151.7 Novel Tool for Discrimination of Feeding Intolerance and Necrotizing Enterocolitis Risk in the Preterm Infant. J. Naberhuis, C. Wetzel, K. Tappenden. Baylor Col. of Med., USDA, Houston, Carle Fndn. Hosp., Urbana and Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 4:45 151.8 Dietary Intakes of Formula-Fed Infants Consuming a Meat- or Dairy-Based Complementary Diet: A Semi-controlled Feeding Trial. M. Tang, K.E. Griese, N.F. Krebs. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30D Chaired: R. Scherr Cochaired: J.L. Kaar 3:00 152.1 Nutrition Messages in Picture Book Fiction for 4 to 8 Year Old Children. O.A. Matvienko. Univ. of Northern Iowa. 3:15 152.2 Perceived Barriers to Physical Activity during Pregnancy among Participants of the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children in Southern California. M. Koleilat, N. Vargas, G. Kodjebacheva. California State Univ., Fullerton and Univ. of Michigan-Flint. 3:30 152.3 Behavioral and Sociodemographic Correlates of Overall Diet Quality Over 4 Years in a National Cohort of U.S. Emerging Adults. L.M. Lipsky, T.R. Nansel, D. Haynie, D. Liu, K. Li, C. Pratt, R.J. Iannotti, B. Simons-Morton. NICHD, NIH, Col.. of Hlth. and Human Sci., Colorado State Univ., NHLBI, NIH and CDM Gp., Bethesda. 3:45 152.4 Does Healthcare Provider Advice Matter for Gestational Weight Gain? N.P. Deputy, A.J. Sharma, S.Y. Kim. Emory Univ. and Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent. 4:00 152.5 No Time for Family Meals – What’s a Family to Do? A.W. Watts, J. Berge, K. Loth, N. Larson, D. NeumarkSztainer. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. 4:15 152.6 If You’re Happy and You Know It: Associations between Emotion, Social Context, and Food Choices in College Freshmen. J. Ashurst, I. van Woerden, M. Bruening. Arizona State Univ. 4:30 152.7 Physical Activity Level, Modeling, and Importance to Mothers of Preschool Children. J.T. MartinBiggers, V. Quick, J. Worobey, C. Byrd-Bredbenner. Rutgers Univ. 4:45 152.8 Perceptions on Weight Management for Survivors of Pediatric ALL from Parents and Pediatric Oncology Professionals: A Mixed Methods Study. W. Chang, S. Folta, R. Hill, M. Kelly, S. Meagher, E. Danahy, P. Bowman, F.F. Zhang. Tufts Univ., Boston, Smith Col., Cook Children’s Med. Ctr., Fort Worth and Tufts Med. Ctr. 51 S U N NUTRITIONSUNDAY 153. INTERNATIONAL FORUM – KOREA: HEALTH AND FUNCTIONAL FOODS: WHERE WE ARE AND WHERE WE GO (Organized and Sponsored by: The Korean Nutrition Society) An interest on health and functional foods is rapidly emerging along with expanding elderly populations. This session will review progress in the field of health and functional foods and share current knowledge on the mechanisms of actions on specifically chosen bioactive components in the aspects of gut, liver and adipose tissue health with Korean researchers working in both Korea and USA. Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28DE 3:00 International Forum Chaired: Y-S. Cha Cochaired: Y. Park Effect of Sasa Quelpaertensis Leaf Extracts on Intestinal Inflammation and Colon Cancer Stemness. Y. Kim. Ewha Womans Univ. 3:25 Role of Piceatannol in Adipose Lipolysis and Obesity. K-H. Kim. Purdue Univ. 3:50 A Novel Role of Astaxanthin in the Modulation of Histone Deacetylase 9 for the Prevention of Liver Fibrosis. J-Y. Lee. Univ. of Connecticut. 4:15Discussion. Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook 52 and Twitter. SUNDAYPATHOLOGY Pathology 154. COMMITTEE FOR CAREER DEVELOPMENT AND DIVERSITY WORKSHOP AND BREAKFAST: CAREER-CHOICE OPPORTUNITIES IN SCIENCE 156. HCS SYMPOSIUM: THE 3D BRAIN: FROM DIFFUSION MRI TO ULTRASTRUCTURE Symposium Workshop (Sponsored by: the ASIP Immunohistochemistry & Microscopy Scientific Interest Group and The Histochemical Society ) (Sponsored by: the ASIP Committee for Career Development & Diversity ) Sun. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Sun. 7:00 am—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Temecula Chaired: C. Kolarcik Cochaired: M. Barroso Cochaired: J. Arboleda-Velasquez Neurobiology Career Development 7:00Introduction. C. Kolarcik. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 7:10 Molecular Diagnostics/Clinical Chemistry. G. Tsongalis. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Med. Ctr. 7:30 Scientific Publishing. A. Cox. The American Journal of Pathology. 7:50 Science Administration (Non-profits, Government, For-profits). M. Sobel. American Society for Investigative Pathology. 8:10 Science Public Policy. Y. Seger. Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology. 8:30Technology/Entrepreneur/Start-Ups. C. Parkos. Univ. of Michigan. 8:50 Closing Remarks. J. Arboleda-Velasquez. Schepens Eye Research Inst. 155. AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR MATRIX BIOLOGY LECTURE Lecture (Sponsored by: ASIP and the American Society for Matrix Biology) Imaging, Immunohistochemistry and Microscopy Neuropathology 8:30 9:30 Diffusion MRI of the Brain Connectome: Problems and Possibilities. V. Wedeen. Harvard Univ. High-resolution Structural and Molecular Imaging of the Brain. K. Chung. MIT. 157. JOURNAL OF HISTOCHEMISTRY & CYTOCHEMISTRY LECTURE Lecture Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Chaired: S. Hewitt Imaging, Immunohistochemistry and Microscopy 10:30 Multiscale Optical Imaging of the Living Brain. E. Hillman. Columbia Univ. 158. SCVP SYMPOSIUM: CYTOKINE SIGNALING IN THE HEART Sun. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Symposium Cancer Biology 8:30 S U N Chaired: D. Rosene Matrix Pathobiology (Sponsored by: ASIP and the Society for Cardiovascular Pathology ) Neoplasia Sun. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Chaired: J.R. Stone The Matricellular Protein Thrombospondin 1 in the Myeloma Microenvironment. J. Murphy-Ullrich. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. Cochaired: J. Homeister Inflammation/Immunity Cardiac Pathobiology Cell and Tissue Injury 8:30 9:15 10:00 The Role of Cardiac Innate Immunity in Cardiac Injury. M. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Role of TGF-beta Signaling in Cardiac Remodeling. N. Frangogiannis. Albert Einstein Med. Ctr. NLRP3 in Inflammasome Inhibition in Acute Myocardial Injury. S.Toldo. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. Med. Ctr. 53 PATHOLOGYSUNDAY 10:45 Inflammatory Cytokines Induce a Novel Cardioprotective Zing Finger Protein, MCPIP. P. Kolattukudy. Univ. of Central Florida. 159. LIVER PATHOBIOLOGY WORKSHOP: LIVER INJURY, INFLAMMATION, AND TUMORIGENESIS: IMPLICATIONS IN CANCER PREVENTION AND TREATMENT 10:30 160.5 Surface Topography during Neural Stem Cell Differentiation Regulates Cell Migration and Cell Morphology. C. Czeisler, A. Short, B. Stocker, J. Cronin, J. Lannutti, J. Winter, J.J. Otero. The Ohio State Univ. 161. XVITH ANNUAL ASIP/AAA CAREER DEVELOPMENT AND MENTORING PROGRAM AND LUNCH: HOW TO NETWORK EFFICIENTLY AND CHOOSE A CAREER PATH Workshop Special Session (Supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Elsevier) (Sponsored by: the ASIP Committee for Career Development & Diversity and the American Association of Anatomists) Sun. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: S.P.S. Monga Cochaired: X. Chen Sun. 11:45 am—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Presidio 1 Cancer Biology Chaired: D. Bielenberg Liver Pathobiology Cochaired: J. Jones-Triche Neoplasia Career Development 8:30 9:00 9:30 Hepatic Ploidy. A. Duncan. Univ. of Pittsburgh. Hepatic Fibrosis and Cancer. B. Schnabl. UCSD. FXR/HNF4a and Cancer. U. Apte. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 10:00 Progenitors and Cancer. E. Seki. UCSD. 10:30 Modeling Human HCC in MIce. S.P. Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 11:00Cholangiocarcinoma. T. Wu. Tulane Univ. Hlth. Sci.s Ctr. 160. EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX Minisymposium Sun. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Chaired: W. Stetler-Stevenson - Junior Faculty Cochaired: R. Iozzo Matrix Pathobiology Neoplasia 9:30 160.1 Twist1 Phosphorylation Contributes to Pulmonary Fibrosis through Angiopoietin-Tie2 Signaling. A. Mammoto, A. Jiang, E. Jiang, T. Mammoto. Boston Children’s Hosp. 9:45 160.2 Extracellular Vesicles Isolated from Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells Promote Resolution of Pulmonary Fibrosis. T.P. Shentu, S. Wong, C. Espinoza, M. CernelcKohan, J. Hagood. UCSD and Rady Hosp. of San Diego. 10:00 160.3 Matrix Metalloproteinase-28 Activates Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription 1 to Induce Macrophage M1 Polarization. M.L. Lindsey, P.L. Cannon, E.R. Flynn, M. Jung, R.P. Iyer, K.Y. DeLeon-Pennell, Y. Ma. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. 10:15 160.4 Stromal Cell-Derived Extracellular Matrix Stimulates Mesenchymal Stem Cell Proliferation and SSEA4 Expression When Used as Supplement in Cell Growth Medium. R. Zamilpa, I. Flores, M.M. Navarro, S. Griffey. StemBioSys Inc. and Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio. 54 11:45Introduction. D. Bielenberg. Harvard Med. Sch., Children’s Hosp. 11:50 Tips and Tools for Effective Networking. L. McManus. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 12:10 Speed Networking Format. J. Jones-Triche. Univ. of Michigan. Speed Networking 12:15 Table 1: Technology/Entrepreneur/Start-Ups. C. Parkos. Univ. of Michigan Med. Sch. 12:15 Table 2: Scientific Editor. A. Cox. ASIP. 12:15 Table 3: Science Administration. M. Sobel. ASIP. 12:15 Table 4: Public Policy. Y. Seger. FASEB Publ. Affairs. 12:15 Table 5: Molecular Diagnostics/Clinical Chemistry. G. Tsongalis. Dartmouth Med. Sch. 12:15 Table 6: Scientific Consulting. C. Yates. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 12:15 Table 7: Biotechnology. C. Austin, S. Pirie-Shephard. Genentech, Pfizer. 12:15 Table 8: Government Positions. E. Unger. CDC. 12:15 Table 9: Teaching/Academic Administration. V. Holloway. DeVry, Inc. 162. HOST PATHOGEN INTERACTIONS Symposium Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Chaired: D.A. Milner, Jr. Cochaired: A. Nusrat Epithelial and Mucosal Pathobiology Microbiome Immunopathology 2:00Bacteria. A. Neish. Emory Univ. 2:45Bacteria. P. Dorrestein. UCSD. 3:30Virus. K. Cadwell. NYU Sch. of Med. SUNDAYPATHOLOGY 4:15 162.1 Giardia duodenalis Directly Depletes Mucins in Intestinal Goblet Cells. C.B. Amat, J-P. Motta, K. Chadee, A.G. Buret. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. 163. MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR FOUNDATIONS OF GLIAL ONCOGENESIS: HINTS FOR PREVENTION AND THERAPY Symposium Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: W. Tourtellotte Cochaired: E. Whitley Neurobiology Neuropathology Neoplasia 2:00 Hide and Seek: A Surprising Role for Extrachromosomal EGFR Mutations in Glioblastoma Pathogenesis. P. Mischel. UCSD. 2:45 Neuronal Activity Promotes Glioma Growth. H. Venkatesh. Stanford Sch. of Med. 3:30 Targeting Developmental Pathways in Glioblastoma. S. Kesari. UCSD. 4:15 Therapeutic Hypothesis Testing With Patient Derived Brain Tumor Xenograft Models. C. James. Northwestern Univ. Feinberg Sch. of Med. 164. CELL INJURY WORKSHOP: PROTEOTOXICITY AND CELL INJURY Workshop 165. ENDOTHELIAL CELL BIOLOGY Minisymposium Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A (Sponsored by: the ASIP Cell Injury Scientific Interest Group) Chaired: R. Mitchell Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Cochaired: A. Adam Chaired: M. Willis Vascular Biology Cochaired: C.C. Yates Cell and Tissue Injury Neuropathology 2:00 Charleston. (57.10) Th1 Effector T Cells Induce Cardiac Fibroblasts Transition to Myofibroblasts and Contribute to Pressure Overload-Induced Cardiac Fibrosis. T. Nevers, A.M. Salvador, F. Velazquez, M. Aronovitz, R. Blanton, P. Alcaide. Tufts Med. Ctr. and Tufts Univ. (306.7) 4:10Dimethyl Fumarate Ameliorates Pulmonary Hypertension In Vivo and Prevents Fibrosis via βTRCP-Mediated Degradation of β-Catenin and TAZ. A. Grzegorzewska, R. Han, F. Seta, L. Stawski, C. Feghali-Bostwick, J. Browning, M. Trojanowska. Boston Univ. and Med. Univ. of South Carolina. (50.2) 4:20 Mechanisms Underlying the Induction of a Profibrotic Epithelial Phenotype during Renal Fibrosis. J. Folke Bialik, M. Rozycki, P. Speight, Z.M. Miranda, S.G. Szeto, D.A. Yuen, Q. Dan, K. Szászi, S.F. Pedersen, A. Kapus. St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto, Univ. of Copenhagen and Univ. of Toronto. (445.6) 4:30 Absence of Mast Cells in an Experimental Model of Pulmonary and Cardiac Fibrosis, the CUX-1 Mice. N.A. Reddy, F. Raza, A. Said, S. Livingston, D. Jacobsen, D. Kearns, R. Baybutt, G. Van Den Heuvel, A. Molteni, S. Hamidpour. Univ. of Missouri Kansas City, Wheaton Col., IL and Western Michigan Univ. (50.10) 4:40 TMPRSS4: A Novel Serine Protease Involved in IPF Development? A.M. Valero, J. Cisneros, R. Ramírez, M. Gaxiola, C. Becerril, A. Pardo, M. Selman. Fac. of Sci, Natl. Autonomous Univ. of Mexico and INER, Mexico City. (50.8) 4:00 Proteotoxicity and Cell Injury. M. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 2:10 The Interplay Between Autophagy and the UbiquitinProteasome System in Cardiac Proteotoxicity. X. Wang. Univ. of South Dakota. 2:40 Role of Amylin in Neuron Proteotoxicity. F. Despa. Univ. of Kentucky. 3:10 Proteotoxicity and the Role of the Unfolded Protein Response. L. Wiseman. The Scripps Res. Inst. 3:40 Inhibiting Cardiac Fibrosis in Myocardial Infarction by CXCL10 Agonist Peptide. L. Espinoza, J. Jaynes, R. Bodnar, M.S. Willis, C.C. Yates. St. Mary’s Univ., TX, Tuskegee Univ., Univ. of Pittsburgh Sch. of Med., Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sch. of Med. and Univ. of Pittsburgh Sch. of Nursing. (1178.1) 3:50 FPR1 and Activation of Intestinal Fibroblasts. T.A. Reaves, M. Anderson-Thomas, A. Nillas, M. Lecher. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Col. of 2:00 165.1 Knockdown of Mechanosensitive miRNA Cluster—miR-106b~25 Decreases Endothelial Proliferation and Prevents Atherosclerosis in ApoE-/- Mice. S. Kumar, H. Jo. Emory Univ. 2:15 165.2 Dietary Nitrate Supresses Leukocyte Recruitment and Activation in Apolipoprotein E Knockout Mice. R.S. Khambata, S.M. Ghosh, K.S. Rathod, T. Thevathasan, A. Ahluwalia. Barts and The London Sch. of Med. and Dent., Queen Mary Univ. of London. 2:30 165.3 The Critical Role of SENP1-Mediated GATA2 DeSUMOylation in Graft Arteriosclerosis by Promoting Endothelial Activation. C. Qiu, Y. Wang, X. Zhu, L. Song, H. Zhang, L. Qin, G. Tellides, W. Min, L. Yu. Zhejiang Univ. Col. of Life Sci., China and Yale Univ. Sch. of Med. 2:45 165.4 Neuropilin 2 Deficiency Prolongs Skin Inflammation and Edema. D.R. Bielenberg, P. Mucka, N. Levonyak, E. Geretti, B.M.M. Zwaans, X. Li, I. Adini, M. Klagsbrun, R.M. Adam. Harvard Med. Sch., Boston Children’s Hosp. 3:00 165.5 Sepsis-Associated Proteinase 3 Induces Endothelial Permeability. E.K. Patterson, G. Cepinskas, K. Inoue, D.D. Fraser. Lawson Hlth. Res. Inst., London, ON and Western Univ., Canada. 55 S U N PATHOLOGYSUNDAY 3:15 165.6 STAT3 Regulates Endothelial Permeability Downstream of the Pro-inflammatory Cytokines IL6 and TNF-α. H. Alsaffar, N. Martino, P. Vincent, A. Adam, A. Lowery. Albany Med. Col. 3:30 165.7 Platelets Direct Leukocytes to Their Sites of Extravasation. G. Zuchtriegel, B. Uhl, D. Puhr-Westerheide, M. Pörnbacher, K. Lauber, F. Krombach, C.A. Reichel. Ludwig Maximilian Univ. of Munich. 3:45 165.8 Microvascular Endothelial Cells Can Exhibit Autophagy In Vivo: Role in Neutrophil Transendothelial Cell Migration? C.M. Pickworth, R. Beal, N. Reglero, L. Lintermans, B. Colom, M-B. Voisin, M. Golding, S. Nourshargh. Barts and The London Sch. of Med. and Dent., Queen Mary Univ. of London. 4:00 165.9 OxLDL Exerts a Biphasic Effect on Endothelial Function: A Role for Oxidised Lipids in Angiogenesis and Inflammation. M. Olding, M.R. Ardern-Jones, E. Healy, T.M. Millar. Univ. of Southampton. 4:15 165.10 JAM-C Deficiency Primes Endothelial Cells for a Pro-inflammatory State. N. Reglero, R. Beal, C. Cabrera, C. Pickworth, M. Golding, J. Whiteford, T. Nightingale, B. Imhof, M.R. Barnes, S. Nourshargh. Barts and London Sch. of Med. and Dent., Queen Mary Univ. of London and Ctr. Med. Univ., Univ. of Geneva. 4:30 165.11 Cell-Type Specific Mechanisms Regulate Rhythmic Leukocyte Migration to Tissues. W. He, K. Kraus, D. Druzd, A. de Juan, L. Ince, C-S. Chen, C. Scheiermann. Ludwig Maximilians Univ., Munich. 4:45 165.12 Leukocytes Exhibit Discrete Rhythms in Their Recruitment Patterns to Arteries and Veins. A. de Juan, D. Druzd, G. Zuchtriegel, K. Kraus, C. Reichel, C. Scheiermann. Walter Brendel Ctr. of Exptl. Med. and Ludwig Maximilians Univ., Munich. 166. ASIP ROUS-WHIPPLE AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture Sun. 5:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Cancer Biology Neoplasia 5:00 ASIP Rous-Whipple Award Lecture: The Microscope as a Tool for Disease Discovery: A Voyage through the Eyes of a Hematopathologist. E. Jaffe. Hematopathology Section, Laboratory of Path, CCR, NCI. 167. THE HISTOCHEMICAL SOCIETY MEMBER AWARDS PRESENTATION, BUSINESS MEETING AND RECEPTION Business Meeting (Supported by The Histochemical Society) Sun. 6:00 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Temecula Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday 9:00 AM–4:00 PM 56 SUNDAYPHARMACOLOGY Pharmacology 168. JULIUS AXELROD AWARD IN PHARMACOLOGY LECTURE: THERAPIES OF BRAIN DISEASES, PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE 170. ADVANCES IN TOXICOGENETICS OF METALS Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Toxicology) Award Lecture (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Behavioral Pharmacology, Cancer Pharmacology, and Molecular Pharmacology) Sun. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB Neurobiology The Julius Axelrod Award is presented annually for significant contributions to understanding the biochemical mechanisms underlying the pharmacological actions of drugs and for contributions to mentoring other pharmacologists. The Award was established in 1991 to honor the memory of the eminent American pharmacologist who shaped the fields of neuroscience, drug metabolism, and biochemistry and who served as a mentor for numerous eminent pharmacologists around the world. 8:30Introduction. 8:35 Therapies of Brain Diseases, Past, Present and Future. J. Rossier. Neurosci. Paris Seine. 169. JULIUS AXELROD SYMPOSIUM: NEW VISTAS ON DRUG AND GENE THERAPIES OF COGNITIVE DEFICITS IN DOWN SYNDROME, AUTISM, LEUCODYSTROPHIES AND ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE Symposium S U N Sun. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Cochaired: J. Kim amd T. Maher Toxicology Cancer Biology Neurobiology 9:30 Influence of Brain Iron Overload on Behavioral and Neurochemical Toxicity. J. Kim. Northeastern Univ. 10:00 Neurobehavioral Effects of Lead (Pb) and Manganese Individually and in Combination in DevelopmentallyExposed Rats. T. Maher. MCPHS Univ. 10:30 A Novel Molecular Mechanism of Arsenic in Modulating Autophagy and Nrf2 Stress Responses. D. Zhang. Univ. of Arizona. 11:00 Mechanisms of Cisplatin Nephrotoxicity. N.S. Pabla. The Ohio State Univ. 11:30 Ferroportin Deficiency Impairs Manganese Metabolism in Flatiron Mice. M. Wessling-Resnick. Harvard T.H. Chan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. (Supported by the John V. Croker Fund) Sun. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB Chaired: J. Rossier 171. NEWLY RECOGNIZED GPCRS IN HEALTH, DISEASE AND AS THERAPEUTIC TARGETS Symposium Neurobiology 9:30 9:40 10:05 10:30 10:55 11:20 11:35 11:50 Comments on the 1986 Seminal Paper: Benzodiazepine Inverse Agonists Improved Performances in Learning and Memory Tasks. J. Rossier. Neurosci. Paris Seine. Treating Cognitive Deficits in a Mouse Model of Down Syndrome Using GABA-A Alpha 5 Inverse Agonists. M.C. Potier. Inst. Cerveau et de la Moelle Epinière, Paris. Alpha 5 Benzodiazepine Inverse Agonists Clinical Studies for the Treatment of Cognitive Deficits in Down Syndrome Patients. M. Rafii. Univ. of California, San Diego. The Diuretic Bumetanide Improves Social Processing in Individuals with Autism. N. Hadjikhani. Harvard Med. Sch., Boston. Gene Therapy Strategy for Alzheimer’s Disease: The Cholesterol Connection. N. Cartier. INSERM Mircen CEA, Fontenay-aux-Roses, France. Correcting Memory Deficits in Fragile X Syndrome by Targeting Rac1/PAK1 Signaling. L. Martinez, M.V. Tejada-Simon. Univ. of Houston. (707.8) Chronic Antagonism of p38α MAPK Normalizes Serotonin Clearance, Serotonin Receptor Hypersensitivity and Social Behavior Deficits in a Genetic Murine Model of Autism Spectrum Disorder. M.J. Robson, M.A. Quinlan, J. Veenstra-VanderWeele, D.M. Watterson, R.D. Blakely Vanderbilt Univ., Columbia Univ. and Northwestern Univ., Chicago. (707.9) Panel Discussion. (Sponsored by: The Division for Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Cardiovascular Pharmacology, and Neuropharmacology ) Sun. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Cochaired: R. Corriden and P.A. Insel Translational and Clinical Pharmacology Cancer Biology Neurobiology 9:30 GPCRs and the Druggable Genome. B. Roth. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sch. of Med. 10:00 Chemosensory GPCRs as Targets for Endogenous Ligands. J. Pluznick. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 10:30 GPCRs as Regulators of Neutrophil Function. R. Corriden. UCSD. 11:00 Orphan GPCRs and Psychiatric Disorders: GPR88. B. Kieffer. McGill Univ. 11:30 The Extent of Vascular Remodeling Is Dependent on the Balance between ERα and GPER(GPR30). R. Gros, Q. Ding, Y. Hussain, J. Chorazyczewski, G. Pickering, R.D. Feldman. Western Univ. and Memorial Univ. of Newfoundland, Canada. (1189.1) 57 PHARMACOLOGYSUNDAY 11:45 Identification of a First-In-Class Adhesion G ProteinCoupled Receptor Orthosteric Antagonist. H. Stoveken, A. Smrcka, G.G. Tall. Univ. of Rochester Med. Ctr. (709.5) 172. DRUGS OF ABUSE AND ANTIRETROVIRALS: INTERACTIONS AND TOXICITIES Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Metabolism) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Neuropharmacology, Toxicology, Pharmacology Education, and Molecular Pharmacology) Sun. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Cochaired: S. Kumar and K. Jordan-Sciutto 10:15 The Role of the Ubiquitin-Proteasome System in Neurodegenerative Disease. H.L. Paulson. Univ. of Michigan Hlth. Syst. 10:45 Clinical Development of MDM2 E3 Ligase Antagonists in Cancer Treatment. G.L. Nichols. Roche Pharma Res. and Early Develop. 11:15 Targeting Degradation of Regulator of G Protein Signaling Proteins in Therapeutics. B. Sjogren. Michigan State Univ. 11:45 Ubiquitin Plays an Atypical Role in GPCR-Induced p38 MAP Kinase Activation on Endosomes. N. Grimsey, R. Narala, B. Aguilar, C. Rada, T. Smith, A. Soohoo, M. Puthenveedu, V. Nizet, J.J. Trejo. UCSD. (1266.2) 174. UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH: CULTIVATING THE NEXT GENERATION OF RESEARCHERS THROUGH SURF AND BEYOND Drug Metabolism Symposium Neurobiology Sun. 9:30 am—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, San Diego Ballroom B 9:30 Antiretroviral Drugs Induce Oxidative Stress and Neuronal Damage in the Central Nervous System. K. Jordan-Sciutto. Univ. of Pennsylvania. 9:55 Drug-Drug Interactions in HIV-Infected Patients Who Have Other Comorbid Conditions. W. Royal. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. 10:20 Differential Drug Interactions Between Antiretroviral Drugs and Methamphetamine in Human and Rhesus Monkey. A. Kumar. Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City. 10:45 Interactions of HIV and Drugs of Abuse: The Importance of Glia, Neural Progenitors, and Host Genetic Factors. P. Knapp. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. 11:10 Drug Interactions and Toxicity between ART and Alcohol in Monocytes and Astrocytes: Implications with HIV Pathogenesis. S. Kumar. Univ. of Tennessee Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 11:35 Tobacco Smoking and HIV Pathogenesis: Potential Role of Cytochrome P450 Pathway. P.S.S. Rao. Univ. of Findlay. 173. EMERGING ROLES FOR THE UBIQUITINPROTEASOME SYSTEM IN THERAPEUTICS Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Discovery and Development) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Neuropharmacology, and Cancer Pharmacology ) Sun. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Cochaired: B. Sjogren and H.L. Paulson Drug Discovery and Development Cancer Biology Neurobiology 9:30Introduction. 9:35 The Ubiquitin-Proteasome System in Health and Disease. R. Deshaies. HHMI and Caltech. 58 Cochaired: C. Fry, C.M. Davis and L. Aleksunes Education 9:30 9:45 Introduction and Overview. C. Fry. ASPET. Faculty Perspectives on Undergraduate Research: Strategies, Successes, and Challenges. S. Tsirka. Stony Brook Univ. Med. Sch. K. Murnane. Mercer Univ. L. Aleksunes. Rutgers Univ. 10:30 Student Perspectives on Undergraduate Research: Benefits, Challenges, and Next Steps. M. Little. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. C. Fearce. Spelman Col. N. Arabian. Univ. of Southern California. 11:15 Interactive Table Discussions. 175. GOODMAN AND GILMAN AWARD IN RECEPTOR PHARMACOLOGY LECTURE Award Lecture Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB The Louis S. Goodman and Alfred Gilman Award in Receptor Pharmacology was established in 1980 to recognize and stimulate outstanding research in pharmacology of biological receptors, leading to a better understanding of the mechanisms of biological processes and providing the basis for the discovery of drugs useful in the treatment of diseases. 2:00Introduction. 2:05 Towards an Atomic-Level Understanding of Psychoactive Drug Actions. Bryan Roth. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. SUNDAYPHARMACOLOGY 176. ASPET PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM: PRECISION MEDICINE IN ANTI-CANCER PHARMACOLOGY Symposium Symposium (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Cancer Pharmacology, Cardiovascular Pharmacology, and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Metabolism) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB Cochaired: K.E. Thummel and S.P. Cole Cancer Biology 3:00 3:10 3:45 4:20 4:55 Overview of Precision Medicine. K. Thummel. Univ. of Washington. Pharmacogenomics: A Foundation of Precision Medicine for Leukemia. W.E. Evans. St Jude Children’s Res. Hosp. Genome-Wide Studies of Chemotherapeutic-Associated Toxicities. M.E. Dolan. Univ. of Chicago. Use of Tumor Genomics to Customize Drug Treatment in Women with Triple Negative Breast Cancer. C.A. Blau. Univ. of Washington. Breast Cancer Pharmacogenomics: Application of PDX Model. L. Wang. Mayo Clin. 177. CANNABINOID SIGNALING IN PAIN AND ADDICTION: TRANSLATING PRECLINICAL BASIC RESEARCH TO THE CLINIC Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Neuropharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Behavioral Pharmacology, Molecular Pharmacology, Drug Discovery and Development, and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Cochaired: D. Morgan and J. Guindon Neuropharmacology Neurobiology 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 178. DOSE SELECTION USING PHYSIOLOGICALLY BASED MODELING Allosteric Modulators of Cannabinoid Receptor Function. K. Mackie. Indiana Univ. Cannabidiol as an Anti-inflammatory/Analgesic and Potential Anti-addictive Treatment. E. Russo. Phytecs. Endocannabinoids in Circulation and Pain. C. Hillard. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. Insights into the Mechanisms of Tolerance for Cannabinoid Drugs. J. Guindon. Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. Role of the Endocannabinoid System in Addiction. R. Maldonado. Univ. Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona. (Cosponsored by: The Division for Pharmacology Education) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Chaired: J. Wahlstrom Drug Metabolism 3:00Introduction. 3:05 Translation of Preclinical Information to Clinical Dose Selection Using PBPK Approaches. H. Jones. Pfizer Worldwide R&D. 3:35 Mechanistic Insights to the Prediction of Nonlinear Pharmacokinetics. J. Wahlstrom. Amgen, Inc. 4:05 Modeling and Simulation to Support Pediatric Drug Development. A. Edginton. Univ. of Waterloo. 4:35 Predicting the Effects of Cytokine Modulation on Pharmacokinetics Using PBPK. Y. Xu. Amgen, Inc. 5:05 Simulating Biodistribution and Pharmacokinetics for Protein Therapeutics Using PBPK. P. Glassman. Univ. at Buffalo. 179. SEX DIFFERENCES IN CARDIOVASCULAR AND RENAL PHARMACOLOGY Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Cardiovascular Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Division for Molecular Pharmacology) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Cochaired: S.H. Lindsey and E.Y. Gohar Cardiovascular Pharmacology 3:00Introduction. 3:05 Sex-Specific Immune Mechanisms in Vascular Disease. K. Sandberg. Georgetown Univ. Med. Ctr. 3:30 Double-Edged Sword: Sex Hormones in Renal Health. M. Zimmerman. Tulane Univ. 3:55 Sexual Dimorphism in Nicotine Interaction with Baroreflex Control of Heart Rate. M. El-Mas. Alexandria Univ., Egypt. 4:20 Sex Hormones and Vascular Protection: Clinical Implications. F. Hage. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. 4:45 Sex Specific Differences in Key Signaling Pathways Involved in Sympathetic Nervous System Control within the Dorsal Medulla of Adult Sheep with Fetal Betamethasone Exposure. A.S. Hendricks, D.I. Diz, H.A. Shaltout, M.C. Chappell. Wake Forest Sch. of Med. (716.5) 5:00 Sex-Based Differences in the Aortic Function of UCDT2DM Rats: A Novel Rat Model of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. F. Akther, S. Shaligram, M.D. Karimi, J.L. Graham, K.L. Stanhope, P.J. Havel, R. Rahimian. Sch. of Pharm., Univ. of Pacific and Univ. of California, Davis. (716.1) 59 S U N PHARMACOLOGYSUNDAY 5:15 The Effects of Sex and Genotype on the Population Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics Modeling and Simulation of Low Dose Epinephrine and Cardiac Output. A.R. Eugene, M. Joyner. Mayo Clin. (716.4) Division Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Pharmacology Education) Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, San Diego Ballroom B 180. FROM LIGANDS TO SIGNALING: RECENT ADVANCES IN ADHESION GPCR PHARMACOLOGY AND BIOLOGY Cochaired: M.A. Simmons and R. Theobald, Jr. Pharmacology Education Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Molecular Pharmacology) Education (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Drug Discovery and Development, Neuropharmacology, Cancer Pharmacology, and Cardiovascular Pharmacology ) Participants are encouraged to bring their laptops to this workshop. Attendees will work through exercises in small groups with the authors of the revised POPs (patient-oriented problemsolving system) serving as facilitators. Sun. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A 3:00 Cochaired: X. Piao and R.A. Hall Molecular Pharmacology Cancer Biology Neurobiology 3:00 3:25 3:50 4:15 4:40 5:05 Signaling and Regulation of the BAI Subfamily of Adhesion GPCRs. R. Hall. Emory Univ. Sch. of Med. Structural Organization of the Extracellular Domains of Adhesion GPCRs. D. Arac-Ozkan. Univ. of Chicago. Adhesion GPCRs are Turned on by Tethered Ligands. T. Schöneberg. Univ. Leipzig. Adhesion GPCR Activation by Tethered Agonist Decryption and Small Molecule Antagonism. G. Tall. Univ. of Rochester Med. Ctr. In Vivo Small Molecule Screens Define Modulators of Adhesion GPCR Signaling. S. Petersen. Washington Univ. - St. Louis. GPR56 and its Ligand in Oligodendrocyte Development and Myelination. X. Piao. Boston Children’s Hospital. 181. DIVISION FOR PHARMACOLOGY EDUCATION SYMPOSIUM: MEET THE NEW POPS – THEY’LL FLIP YOUR TEACHING 3:15 5:15 A Brief History of the POPS and Presentation of Their Current Structure. M. Simmons. Univ. of Maryland Eastern Shore. Facilitated Exercises: Treatment of Essential Hypertension. M. Simmons. Univ. of Maryland Eastern Shore. Treatment of Cardiac Arrhythmias. J. Yun. Northeast Ohio Med. Univ. Drug Treatment of Heart Failure. R. Rockhold. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. Therapy of Diabetes Mellitus. J. Reuben. Univ. of South Carolina Sch. of Med. Greenville. Treatment of Psychosis. G. Athauda. Florida Intl. Univ. Drug Overdose Toxicity. R. Theobald, Jr. A.T. Still Univ. - Kirksville Col. of Osteo. Med. Summary and Discussion. R. Theobald, Jr. A.T. Still Univ. - Kirksville Col. of Osteo. Med. 182. STUDENT/POSTDOC POSTER COMPETITION Poster Award Competition Sun. 6:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20BC ASPET Divisions award prizes to undergraduates, graduate students, and postdocs making the best poster presentations at this event. Join us to view the top student/posdoc posters. Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.core-apps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. 60 SUNDAYPHYSIOLOGY Physiology 183. APS PRESIDENT’S SYMPOSIUM SERIES PHYSIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS RESPONSIVE TO BEHAVIORAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES PHYSIOLOGICAL PROCESSES UNDERLYING ORGAN INJURY IN ALCOHOL ABUSE 9:30 9:45 Symposium Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Chaired: G. Murray and F.M. Souza Regulation of Protein Synthesis in Cardiac and Skeletal Muscle. C. Lang. Penn State Col. Med. 11:00 Adipose Tissue as a Target for Excess Alcohol Consumption. L. Nagy. Cleveland Clin. Fndn. 11:30 Liver Mitochondrial Stress and Energy Metabolism. S. Bailey. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. 12:00 Role of the Endocannabinoid System in Mediating the Neural Adaptations to Alcohol. L. Parsons. Scripps Res. Inst. 185. MICROBIOME IN CARDIOPULMONARY DISEASES: FROM ASSOCIATION TO CAUSATION Symposium 10:30 184. ADVANCES IN RENAL PHYSIOLOGY I Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: V. Shenoy and J. Pluznick Microbiome 8:00 8:30 9:00 (Sponsored by: APS Renal Section) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Essential Involvement of Purinergic Signaling in Calcium Handling in the Podocytes of Type 2 Diabetic Rats. D. Ilatovskaya, O. Palygin, A. Lowing, V. Levchenko, J. Lazar, A. Staruschenko. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (740.4) Protective Role of AMPK in Sepsis Associated AKI. Y. Li, N. Nourbakhsh, E. Hall, M. Hepokoski, H. Pham, J. Thomas, P. Singh. UCSD and VA San Diego Healthcare Syst. (1217.18) 9:30 Non-Lethal inhibition of a Gut Microbial Pathway for the Treatment of Cardiovascular Disease. S. Hazen. Cleveland Clinic. Impact of Microbial Alterations on Salt Sensitive Hypertension. B. Joe. Univ. of Toledo. Gut Microbiota-Derived Signals and Blood Pressure Regulation. N. Natarajan. Johns Hopkins Univ. Gut Microbial Dysbiosis in Pulmonary Hypertension: Impact and Opportunities. V. Shenoy. Univ. of Florida. Chaired: P.R. Grimm and P.S. Caceres Ion Transport 8:00 8:15 8:30 8:45 9:00 9:15 Targeted Knockin of Constitutively Active SPAK in the Early Distal Convoluted Tubule (DCT1) Causes Hyperkalemic Hypertension. P.R. Grimm, R. Coleman, E. Delpire, P.A. Welling. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. and Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Sch. (967.10) Role of the Novel Kinase TNIK on NKCC2 Surface Expression, Phosphorylation and Na Reabsorption in the Thick Ascending Limb. P.S. Caceres, P.A. Ortiz. Henry Ford Hosp. and Wayne State Univ. (967.12) Knockout of Na-Glucose Transporter SGLT1 Lowers GFR and Kidney Weight in Non-diabetic and Akita Diabetic Mice. P. Song, Y. Fu, A. Onishi, H. Qiu, H. Koepsell, V. Vallon. UCSD and VA San Diego Healthcare Syst., Central South Univ., China and Inst. of Anat. and Cell Biol., Würzburg, Germany. (740.21) T Cell Infiltration in Kidney Induces Salt-Retention via NCC Up-Regulation. S. Mu, Y. Liu. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. (966.4) The cGMP/PKG Signaling Pathway Underlies the Inhibitory Effect of Sildenafil Citrate on NHE3 Activity in Rat Renal Proximal Tubules. P.M.C. dos Santos, T.D. Pessoa, G. Malnic. Univ. of São Paulo. (967.14) Internalization of Angiotensinogen in Renal Proximal Tubules: Evidence for Mitochondrial Trafficking. B. Wilson, N. Cruz-Diaz, Y. Su, J.C. Rose, M.C. Chappell. Wake Forest Sch. of Med. (967.5) 186. MUSCLE DYSFUNCTION IN DIABETES: CAUSE(S) OR EFFECT(S)? Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Muscle Biology Group) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: J. Brozinick 8:00 8:15 Chair’s Introduction. Alterations in Muscle Metabolism from Exercise Trained Diabetic Humans. J. Zierath. Karolinska Univ. 8:30 Improved Insulin-Mediated Glucose Oxidation in Cultured Human Myotubes following Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Surgery. K. Zou, J.M. Hinkley, S. Park, D. Zheng, G.L. Dohm, J.A. Houmard. East Carolina Univ. (770.4) 8:45 Higher Cell Growth/Viability Accompanied by Reduced Myosin Heavy Chain Expression in Skeletal Muscle Cells Derived from Severely Obese Type 2 Diabetic Humans. K.D. Turner, K. Zou, M. Hinkley, S. Park, D. Zheng, J. Houmard. East Carolina Univ. (770.5) 9:00 The Role of Ankrd2 in Obesity-Induced Inflammation and Insulin Resistance. A.M. Hernandez-Carretero, N. Weber, N.Y.T. Doan, O. Osborn. UCSD and Pomona Col., CA. (770.3) 61 S U N PHYSIOLOGYSUNDAY 9:15 9:30 Obesity Distinctly Influences Cardiac Function and Molecular Responses to Ischemia-Reperfusion and GLP-1 Receptor Agonism. D.J. Sassoon, A.G. Goodwill, J.N. Noblet, A.M. Conteh, B.P. Herring, J. McClintick, J.D. Tune, K.J. Mather. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. (770.1) Myostatin Inhibition as an Adjuvant Therapy in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus. T.J. Hawke, S. Coleman, I. Rebalka, D. D’Souza, N. Deodhare. McMaster Univ., Canada. (770.2) 187. NCAR YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARDS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: R. Ramchandra and R. Sabharwal Neurobiology Neurophysiology 8:00 Sympathetic Overactivity: The Missing Link in Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease? C. Young. George Washington Univ. 8:30 Norepinephrine-Mediated Suppression of T-Lymphocyte Activation Is Regulated by Mitochondrial Redox Mechanisms. A.J. Case, M.C. Zimmerman. Univ. of Nebraska Med. Ctr. (757.1) 8:45 Central Anti-inflammatory and Neuronal Effects of Butyrate in Wistar Kyoto and Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats. T. Yang, V. Rodriguez, L. ColonPerez, T. Redler, M. Febo, C. Sumners, J. Zubcevic. Univ. of Florida. (757.2) 9:00 Renal Nerves, Renal Inflammation and Hypertension in Deoxycorticosterone Acetate-Salt Hypertension: Who Is in the Driver’s Seat? C.T. Banek, J.D. Foss, D.A. Van Helden, N. Asirvatham-Jeyaraj, J.W. Osborn. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis and Vanderbilt Univ. (757.3) 9:15 Renal Function in Normotensive Sheep in the First Fourteen Weeks after Catheter-Based Renal Denervation. L.C. Booth, Z. McArdle, S.T. Yao, S. Malone, Y. Lankadeva, J. Kosaka, M. Schlaich, C.N. May. Florey Inst. of Neurosci. and Ment. Hlth. and IDI Heart & Diabetes Inst., Melbourne. (757.4) 9:30 Neuronal Activation of ADAM17 by AT1A Receptors Contributes to Neurogenic Hypertension. J. Xu, S. Sriramula, E. Lazartigues. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. (757.5) 9:45 Prostaglandin E2 and Its EP3 Receptors Contribute to Dendritic Cell and Memory T Cell Activation in Mice with L-NAME/High Salt-Induced Hypertension. L. Xiao, H.A. Itani, M.P. Kraemer, R.M. Breyer, D.G. Harrison. Vanderbilt Univ. (757.6) 188. NEURAL AND HORMONAL MODULATION OF FLUID BALANCE AND ION HOMEOSTASIS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis Section) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: C. Banek and H. Lob 8:00 Vasopressin Receptor Regulation in Maintaining Potassium Homeostasis in a Sus scrofa Model of Hemorrhagic Shock. C.F.T. Uyehara, L.N. Kajiura, L-A.M. Murata, S.A. Wong, W.M. Ichimura, C.A. Hernandez, J. Sarkar, M.R. Rowland. Tripler Army Med. Ctr., HI. (962.1) 8:15 High Salt Activation of Collecting Duct-Derived Nitric Oxide Synthase Suppresses the Renin-AngiotensinAldosterone System. J.S. Pollock, D.M. Pollock, C. Dugas, K.A. Hyndman. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (962.5) 8:30 Salt and Angiotensin II Treatment Induces Fluid Congestion and Heart Failure with Increased Mortality in Balb/C Mice but Not in C57BL/6J. S.T. Joensson, M. Becriovic-Agic, M. Hulström. Uppsala Univ. (962.6) 8:45 Chronic Vagus Nerve Stimulation Attenuates Renal Inflammation in Autoimmune-Induced Hypertension. G.S. Pham, A.S. Fairley, C.I. Maloy, K.W. Mathis. Univ. of North Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. (962.7) 9:00 The Neuroimmune Axis in Hypertension. D. Harrison. Vanderbilt Univ. 9:30 Renal Denervation Normalizes Blood Pressure and Improves Glucose Metabolism in Obese Genetically Hypertensive Schlager Mice. N. Asirvatham-Jeyaraj, C.T. Banek, R. Han, M. Razzoli, B.J. Burbach, A. Bartolomucci, Y. Shimizu, J.W. Osborn. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. (962.9) 9:45 Renal Afferent Nerve Modulation of Sodium Homeostasis and Blood Pressure: A Sodium Sensitive Mechanism Countering the Development of Salt-Sensitive Hypertension? R.D. Wainford, K.R. Walsh, C.Y. Carmichael. Boston Univ. (962.3) 189. NEW INSIGHTS INTO EXERCISE AND INSULIN SENSITIVITY Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Endocrinology and Metabolism Section) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: E. Richter and G. McConell Metabolism and Metabolic Disease Skeletal Muscle Physiology 8:00 8:30 62 Introduction and Role of Rac1 in insulin Sensitivity After Exercise. E. Richter. Univ. of Copenhagen. The Role of AMPK in Insulin Sensitivity after Exercise. J. Wojtaszewski. Univ. of Copenhagen. SUNDAYPHYSIOLOGY 9:00 9:30 The Role of Skeletal Muscle Microvascular Flow in Contraction and Insulin-Stimulated Glucose Uptake. M. Keske. Menzies Inst. for Med. Res., Univ. of Tasmania. The Role of Nitric Oxide in the Insulin Sensitizing Effects of Exercise. G. McConell. Victoria Univ. 190. PHYSIOLOGICAL AND PATHOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF HYPERTROPHIC CARDIOMYOPATHY Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Chaired: S. Steinberg and S. Sadayappan Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure 8:00 Cardiac Remodeling by Redox-Activated Protein Kinase C-delta. S. Steinberg. Columbia Univ. 8:30 The Importance of the Ubiquitin Proteasome System in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Associated with Troponin Mutations. A. Gomes. Univ. of California, Davis. 9:00Ca2+ Sensitizing TroponinT Mutations Alter Coronary Perfusion and Cardiac Energetics. S. Huke. Vanderbilt Univ. 9:30 Molecular Mechanism of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Populations of South Asian Descendants. S. Sadayappan. Loyola Univ. Chicago. 191. STANDING ON THE EDGE: TRANSFORMATIONAL TEACHING AND LEARNING BEYOND THE CLASSROOM WALLS Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Teaching of Physiology Section) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: A.R. Crecelius and J.C. Taylor Education 8:00 8:30 8:50 9:10 9:30 Always a Teacher, Always a Student. M. Joyner. Mayo Clin. Speaking English, Speaking Science: Undergraduates Show Language Learners the PhUn of Physiology. P. Halpin. Univ. of New Hampshire Manchester. Experiential Learning in Exotic Locations A. Bunker. Morningside Col., IA. Citizen Science: Public Participation in the Research Process. N. Garneau. Denver Museum of Nature and Sci. Panel Discussion. 192. TRAINEE HIGHLIGHTS IN PHYSIOLOGICAL GENOMICS Featured Topic Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: A. Kriegel and H. Cai 8:00 Deficiency in the Anti-aging Gene Klotho Promotes Aortic Valve Fibrosis through AMPKα-Mediated Activation of RUNX2. J. Chen, Y. Lin, Z. Sun. Univ. of Oklahoma Hlth. Sci. Ctr. (1260.7) 8:15 Exercise Training in the Metabolic Syndrome Improves Perivascular Adipose Gene Expression. E. DeVallance, K. Branyan, K. Lemaster, R. Skinner, S. Brooks, W. Sheets, R. Bryner, J. Frisbee, P. Chantler. West Virginia Univ. (771.9) 8:30 Phosphorylation of α-Actinin-4 at Serine 159 Mimics the Biochemical and Cellular Effects of Human Kidney Disease Mutations. D. Feng, R. Krishnan, L. Stella, M. Schenone, C.R. Hartigan, M.R. Pollak. Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr. and Havard Med. Sch., Univ. of Rome Tor Vergata and Broad Inst. of Harvard and MIT. (771.1) 8:45 MiR9 Is Increased in Rheumatoid Arthritis Monocytes and Regulates Monocyte Migration. J. Gaudette, W.A. Stinson, D.A. Fox, M.A. Amin, B.J. Rabquer. Albion Col. and Univ. of Michigan. (1028.11) 9:00 Fruit and Vegetable Intervention Lowers Circulating Ceramide Levels and Improves Estimated Insulin Sensitivity in Young Adults at Risk of Developing Metabolic Syndrome: A FRUVEDomic Pilot Study. A.T. Mathews, O.A. Famodu, M.D. Olfert, P.J. Murray, C.F. Cuff, M.T. Downes, N.J. Haughey, S.E. Colby, I.M. Olfert, J.W. McFadden. West Virginia Univ., John Hopkins Univ. and Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville. (1260.3) 9:15 The MicroRNA let-7f Regulates Expression of the Voltage-Gated Mechanosensitive Ion Channel NaV1.5 in Human Gastrointestinal Smooth Muscle. A. Mazzone, P.R. Strege, C.E. Bernard, R.R. Cima, D.W. Larson, E.J. Dozois, Y. Hayashi, T. Ordog, S.J. Gibbons, A. Beyder, G. Farrugia. Mayo Clin. (1028.10) 9:30 Altered DNA-Damage/BRD4 Signaling Pathways in the Lungs of Patients with Pulmonary Hypertension Can Propagate to the Coronary Vasculature and Induce Coronary Artery Disease. J. Meloche, V. Nadeau, E. Tremblay, F. Potus, S. Chabot, E. Charbonneau, S. Provencher, S. Bonnet. Laval Univ., Canada. (1260.9) 9:45 Deletion of the Prorenin Receptor in the Collecting Duct Impairs Renal Function and Attenuates Blood Pressure in Chronic Angiotensin II-Infused Mice. V. Reverte Ribo, V.R. Gogulamudi, A.A. Gonzalez, C.B. Rosales, M.R. Gallaty, A. Castillo, A. Ichiara, L.G. Navar, M.C. Prieto. Tulane Univ., Pontifical Catholic Univ.of Valparaíso, Chile and Kumamoto Univ., Japan. (1260.1) 63 S U N PHYSIOLOGYSUNDAY 193. TRANSLATIONAL PHYSIOLOGY SHOWCASE: FOCUS ON THE EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL ABUSE, BEHAVIOR, DIET, NUTRITION, AND EXTREME ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS ON PHYSIOLOGY Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Translational Physiology Interest Group) Sun. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Chaired: C.N. Young and B.T. Bikman 8:00 Introduction to talks and format. 9:06 9:13 9:19 Topics in Extreme Environmental Conditions 9:27 Topics in Alcohol Abuse 8:03 Downregulation of Hepatic ecto-5′-Nucleotidase (CD73) in a Mouse Model of Alcoholic Liver Injury and in Patients with Alcoholic Steatohepatitis. M.L. Richardson, H.H. Willcockson, G. Odena, R. Bataller, N. Snider. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (1249.7) 8:10 In Utero Exposure to Alcohol Alters Reactivity of Cerebral Arterioles. S.G. Cananzi, W.G. Mayhan. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Shreveport. (953.14) 8:17 Claudin-5 Decreases Alveolar Barrier Function in Alcoholic Lung Syndrome by Displacing Claudin-18 from Tight Junctions. B.L. Schlingmann, S. Dorsainvil White, S. Molina, K.S. Lynn, C.T. Capaldo, M. Koval. Emory Univ., Sch. of Med. Emory Univ. (1264.6) 8:24 Tolerance to Alcohol-Stimulated Glutamate Receptor Phosphorylation in the Central Amygdala and Prefrontal Cortex after Chronic Nicotine Exposure. M.A. McGinn, C.A. Itoga, R.I. Paulsen, J.E. Reppel, M.A. Farooq, N.W. Gilpin, S. Edwards. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. (992.5) 8:30 Round Table Discussion. Topics in Behavior, Diet and Nutrition 8:38 8:45 8:52 8:59 64 Distribution Pattern of Dietary Protein Intake Does Not Affect Anabolic Response, Lean Body Mass, Muscle Strength or Function Over 8 Weeks in Older AdultsI-Y. Kim, S. Schutzler, G. Azhar, R. Wolfe, A. Ferrando. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. (1016.2) Dietary Nitrate (NO3-)-Induced Increases in Skeletal Muscle Contractile Function: High versus Low Responders. A.R. Coggan, D. Mikhalvkova, K. Mahmood, I. Bole, J. Leibowitz, A. Kadkhodayan, S. Park, D. Thomas, D. Thies, L.R. Peterson. Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. (1245.28) Maternal Protein Intake as a Determinant of the Total Number of Motor Units and Muscle Fibres in Mice. A. Vasilaki, I. Giakoumaki, N. Pollock, K. GoljanekWhysall, A. McArdle, A.A. Sayer. Univ. of Liverpool and Newcastle Univ. (1009.10) Metabolic Dysfunction Induced by Prenatal Exposure to Bisphenol-A and Diethyl Hexyl Phthalate: Exacerbation by High Fat Diet. C.K. Hahn-Townsend, P.A. Varde, P.S. MohanKumar, S.M. MohanKumar. Univ. of Georgia and Michigan State Univ. (1293.6) Exposure to a Diet High in Saturated-Fat during Prenatal and Post-weaning Brain Development Alters Hippocampal Gene Expression and Behavioral Indices for Anxiety and Depression. K.C. Page, M.E. Winkelmann, E.K. Anday. Bucknell Univ. and Drexel Univ. Col. of Med. (749.7) Enhanced Dietary Fructose Rapidly Induces SaltSensitive Hypertension in Rats. K.L. Gordish, P.A. Ortiz, J.L. Garvin, W.H. Beierwaltes. Henry Ford Hosp. and Case Western Reserve Univ. (1216.1) Round Table Discussion. 9:34 9:41 9:48 9:54 Maternal Chronic Intermittent Hypoxia during Gestation Programs Hypercholesterolemia in the Offspring. J. Ciriello, W. Iqbal, D. Hardy. Univ. of Western Ontario. (1247.14) Chronic Heat Preconditioning Enhances Skeletal Muscle Function during Hypoxia and Reoxygenation. L. Zuo, W.J. Roberts, B.K. Pannell. The Ohio State Univ. and Oakland Univ., MI. (1245.17) Kidney Injury Marker-1: A Potential Point-of-Care Biomarker of Heat Stress. G.N. Audet, J.A. Ward, S.M. Dineen, S.N. Cheuvront, L.R. Leon. U.S. Army Res. Inst. of Envrn. Med., Natick, MA. (1243.3) Control of Lung Ventilation after Extended Disuse Caused by Overwintering Submergence in the Bullfrog. J. Santin, L. Hartzler. Wright State Univ. (760.24) Round Table Discussion. 194. BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN PRE-CLINICAL AND CLINICAL EVIDENCE: TREATING CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES WITH AUTONOMIC MODULATION THERAPIES Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: S. Ruble and K. Sunagawa Neurobiology Hypertension Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure 10:30 Deep Brain Stimulation for Hypertension. A. Green. Oxford Univ. 11:00 Carotid Sinus Stimulation for Hypertension. J. Tank. Hannover Med. Sch., Germany. 11:30 Vagal Nerve Stimulation for the Treatment and Prevention of Heart Failure. K. Saku. Kyushu Univ., Japan. 12:00 Vagal Nerve Stimulation for Arrhythmias. A. Talkachova. Univ. of Minnesota. SUNDAYPHYSIOLOGY 195. CLAUDE BERNARD DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS TEACHING OF PHYSIOLOGY SECTION 197. MACROPHAGES: A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD IN INFLAMMATORY TISSUE INJURY Symposium Lecture (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) (Sponsored by: APS Teaching of Physiology Section) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Chaired: D. Mehta and F.R. D’Alessio Education An Evolution in Student-Centered Teaching. B. Goodman. Univ. of South Dakota Sanford Sch. of Med. 196. EPITHELIAL PHYSIOLOGY AND TRANSPORT I Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Epithelial Transport Group) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: J. Bomberger and N. Bradbury Microbiome Ion Transport Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium Hans Ussing Lecture. CFTR Cl Channels and Cystic Fibrosis. B. Stanton. Dartmouth Univ. 11:15 Inducible Renal Tubule-Specific Insulin Receptor Knockout Mice Have Decreased NCC-Mediated Sodium Reabsorption and Reduced Sensitivity to Mineralocorticoid-Induced Hypertension in Obesity and Insulin Resistance. J.M. Nizar, E.M. Walczak, W. Dong, L. Bankir, V. Bhalla. Stanford Univ. and Cordeliers Res. Ctr., INSERM, Paris. (968.1) 11:30 Salt-Losing Nephropathy in Mice with a Null Mutation of Clcnkb. A. Grill, I.M. Schiessl, A. Hammer, H. Castrop. Inst. of Physiol, Regensburg, Germany. (968.2) 11:45 Down-Regulation of Kir4.1 Eliminates the Basolateral K Conductance in the Distal Convoluted Tubule and Inhibits NCC Activity. X-T. Su, M-X. Wang, P. Wu, J.A. McCormick, D.E. Ellison, W-H. Wang. New York Med. Col. and Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. (968.3) 12:00 Tight Junction Protein Abundance Is Altered in Metformin-Treated Airway Epithelial Cells. K.K. Kalsi, J.P. Garnett, E.H. Baker, D.L. Baines. St. George’s Univ. of London and Newcastle Univ., U.K. (968.4) 12:15 Hydrocortisone Affects the Transport Phenotype of Differentiated Normal Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells. N. Zaidman, A. Panoskaltsis-Mortari, S.M. O’Grady. Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis and St. Paul. (968.5) Inflammation/Immunity 10:30 Macrophage Plasticity and Lung inflammation. B. Moore. Univ. of Michigan Med. Sch. 10:55 Engulfment of Pathogens and Their Ligands by Phagocytosis and Macropinocytosis. S. Grinstein. Univ. of Toronto. 11:20Communication between Macrophages and Alveolar Barrier Regulates Lung inflammation. J. Bhattacharya. Columbia Univ. Col. of P&S. 11:45 Macrophage Reprogramming Accelerates Ali Resolution and Lung Repair. N. Aggarwal. Johns Hopkins Univ. 12:10 S1P-Generating Macrophages and Lung Vascular Barrier Regulation. D. Mehta. Univ. of Illinois Sch. of Med. 198. METABOLIC SYNDROME AND THE PATHWAY OF DRUG DEVELOPMENT: FROM BENCH TO BEDSIDE 10:30 Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Physiologists in Industry Committee) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: M.R. Zahner and D.C. Cornelius Metabolism and Metabolic Disease 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 The Potent Effects of Bariatric Surgery as a Platform for Developing New Therapies for Obesity and Diabetes. R. Seeley. Univ. of Michigan. Signaling without Barriers: Integrated Roles for individual Peptide Neurotransmitters in the Regulation of Cardiovascular, Metabolic and Neuroendocrine Systems. A. Furguson. Queens Univ. Sch. of Med. Bridging Cardiovascular Safety Pharmacology into the Clinical Realm. H. Vargas. Amgen. Clinical Trials: Navigating the Clinical Phases from FIH to Post-marketing and the Regulatory Processes to Market a Product. C. Mesner. Pfizer, Inc. 199. MICROBIOTA OR NUTRITION AND HOST CELL SIGNALING Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology Section) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: R. Worrell and M. Butterworth Microbiome 10:30 Coxiella burnetii Infection of Host Cells Involves PKC Substrate MARCKS. S. Whitlock, C.J. Funk. John Brown Univ. (744.3) 65 S U N PHYSIOLOGYSUNDAY 10:45 Mechanism of Action of Lactobacillus reuteri ATCC PTA 6475 in Colon Epithelial Cells. N.D. Rios-Arce, R.A. Britton, L. McCabe, N. Parameswaran. Michigan State Univ. and Baylor Col. of Med. (744.5) 11:00 Comparative Analysis of Biotransformation of transResveratrol in Worms, Flies, Mice and Humans. S.E. Kulling, S.T. Soukup, F. Rieck, B. Spanier, C. Schulze, S. Piegholdt, G. Rechkemmer, A.E. Wagner, A. Bub, G. Rimbach, H. Daniel. Max Rubner Inst., Karlsruhe, TU München and Univ. of Kiel, Germany. (744.2) 11:15 Indigenous Bacteria from the Gut Microbiota Regulate Host Serorotonin Biosynthesis. E. Hsiao. California Inst. of Technology. 11:45 Interplay between Nutrition and Environment in Altering the Gut Microbiome and Susceptibility to Type 2 Diabetes. M. Schaid, J. Neuman, J. Wisinski, A. Reuter, E. Laundre, R. Fenske, M. Kimple. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. (744.1) 12:00 EriC2 Regulates Histamine Production Machinery via an Ion Transport-Dependent Mechanism in Lactobacillus reuteri. A. Hall, M. Engevik, J. Versalovic. Baylor Col. of Med. and Texas Children’s Hosp. (744.6) 12:15 Renal Olfactory Receptor 90 Responds to Fungal Metabolites. V.L. Halperin Kuhns, J.L. Pluznick. Johns Hopkins Univ. (744.4) 200. OMICS APPLICATIONS IN METABOLIC PHYSIOLOGY Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Physiological Genomics Group and The American Society for Nutrition) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: M. Olfert and S. Adams 10:30 Metabolomics and the Physiology of Exercise and Insulin Resistance. S. Adams. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. 11:00 The Sphingolipidome and Insulin Resistance: Perspectives Gained from Studying the Overweight Dairy Cow Transitioning From Gestation to Lactation. J. McFadden. West Virginia Univ. 11:30 Genes, Exercise and Angiogenesis: Implications for the Metabolome. M. Olfert. West Virginia Sch. of Med. 12:00 Metabolic Processes and Physiological Parameters Involved with the Ischemia/Reperfusion Protective Phenotype in Hibernators. L.K. Bogren, A. D’alessandro, T.G. Nemkov, K.C. Hansen, S.L. Martin. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, Aurora. (1260.2) 12:15 Depletion of Dietary microRNAs from Cow’s Milk Causes an Increase of Purine Metabolites in Human Body Fluids and Mouse Livers. A. Aguilar Lozano. Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln. 201. RENAL SECTION YOUNG INVESTIGATOR SYMPOSIUM: NOVEL SIGNALING AND TRANSPORT MECHANISMS IN THE COLLECTING DUCT Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Renal Section) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: M.C. Prieto-Carrasquero and J. Peti-Peterdi 10:30 Renal Section Young Investigator Award Lecture. M. Prieto. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:00 Lack of the Prorenin Receptor in the Collecting Duct Blunts the ENaC Responses to Chronic Angiotensin II. A.A. Gonzalez, V. Reverte-Ribo, A. Katsurada, C.B. Rosales, M. Galatty, M. McLellan, O. Gentile, L.C. Veiras, D.M. Seth, A. Ichihara, A.A. Mc Donough, M. Mamenko, O.M. Pochynyuk, L.G. Navar, M.C. Prieto. Pontifical Catholic Univ. of Valparaíso, Chile, Tulane Univ., Tokyo Women’s Med. Univ., Keck Sch. of Med. of USC and Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at Houston. (741.1) 11:15 High K+ Intake Attenuates ARPKD Progression by Activation of TRPV4-Mediated Ca2+ Signaling in Cyst Cells. M. Mamenko, V. Tomilin, O. Zaika, O. Pochynyuk. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at Houston. (741.10) 11:30 EHD4 Deletion Results in a Urine Concentrating Defect in Mice. S.S. Rahman, A.E.J. Moffitt, M. Storck, H. Band, E.I. Boesen. Univ. of Nebraska Med. Ctr. (741.7) 11:45 ENaC in Renal Cortical Collecting Duct Principal Cells Is Stimulated by Increasing Intracellular Ca2+ in the Basal Compartment of the Cell via a Process Involving Src but Not CAMK II. T.L. Thai, L. Yu, M.M. Wu, L.I. Galarza-Paez, B.J. Duke, O. Al-Khalili, H. Ma, D.C. Eaton. Emory Univ. (741.3) 12:00 Lack of Adenylyl Cyclase 6 Induces Alkalosis and Enhances Urinary Acidification. S.B. Poulsen, R.A. Fenton, T. Rieg. Aarhus Univ., Denmark, VA San Diego Healthcare Syst. and UCSD. (741.6) 12:15. (Pro)Renin Receptor Mediates Antidiuretic Action of Vasopressin/Prostaglandin EP4 Subtype. T. Yang, X. Lu, K. Peng, F. Wang. Univ of Utah. (741.5) Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. 66 SUNDAYPHYSIOLOGY 202. THE SPINAL CONTROL OF MOTOR OUTPUT: FROM NEURAL CIRCUITS TO MECHANICS Symposium 204. HUGH DAVSON DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS CELL AND MOLECULAR PHYSIOLOGY SECTION (Sponsored by: APS Central Nervous System Section) Lecture Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B (Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology Section) Chaired: A. Frigon and T.R. Nichols Sun. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Neurobiology Inflammation/Immunity Neurophysiology 10:30 Start and Stop: A Matter of Excitation. O. Kiehn. Karolinska Inst. 11:00 Reverse Engineering of Motor Output to Identify the Synaptic Organization of Motor Commands. C. Heckman. Northwestern Univ. 11:30 The Spinal Control of Left-Right Coordination from Simple to Extreme Conditions. A. Frigon. Univ. of Sherbrooke. 12:00 Locomotor CPG and Speed-Dependent Gait Control: Insights from Computational Modeling. I. Rybak. Drexel Univ. Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure GPCRomics: Discovering New Ways Cells Communicate with One Another and the Outside World. P. Insel. UCSD. 205. CHEMICAL CONTROL OF AUTONOMIC FUNCTION IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Hypoxia Group) Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: H. Forster and C. Muere 203. WIGGERS AWARD FEATURED TOPIC Oxidative Stress Featured Topic Neurobiology (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Sun. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: G. Meininger 10:30 Tandem Regulation of Vascular Smooth Muscle Contraction with Adhesion. G. Meininger. Univ. of Missouri, Columbia. 11:00 Mechanisms for Aortic Stiffness and Consequent Cardiovascular Disease with Aging. K. Morgan. Boston Univ. 11:30 Smooth Muscle Cell Mineralocorticoid Receptors in Vascular Fibrosis and Aging. I. Jaffe. Tufts Med. Ctr., Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med. 12:00 Coronary Microvascular Smooth Muscle-Endothelial Cell Communication and Notch 3 Signaling in Type 2 Diabetes. P.E. McCallinhart, O.E. Clark, M. Kanai, B. Lilly, A.J. Trask. Nationwide Children’s Hosp. and The Ohio State Univ. Col. of Med. (730.3) 12:15 A Splice Variant of Smooth Muscle Myosin Phosphatase Regulatory Subunit Tunes Arterial Reactivity and Suppresses Response to Salt Loading. J. Reho, D. Kenchegowda, L.D. Asico, S. Fisher. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. (730.1) Hypertension 3:15 Lahiri-Cherniack Lecture Human Adaptability to Hypoxia: A Mixed Blessing. J. Dempsey. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 4:00 The Effect of Obese Levels of Leptin on Peripheral Chemoreception. R.L. Pye, A. Roy, R.J.A. Wilson, C.N. Wyatt. Wright State Univ. and Univ. of Calgary, Canada. (983.1) 4:15 Characterization of Ectonucleotidase Expression in the Rat Carotid Body: Potential Regulation by Hypoxia? S. Salman, C. Vollmer, C.A. Nurse. McMaster Univ., Canada. (983.2) 4:30 Early Postnatal Exposure to Intermittent Hypoxia Results in Significant Alterations in White Matter Integrity in a Rat Pup Model of Apnea of Prematurity. R. Darnall, X. Chen, C. Sirieix, L. Xia, B. Gimi. Dartmouth Geisel Sch. of Med. (983.3) 4:45 Chronic Intermittent Hypoxia Suppresses Adult Neurogenesis and Disrupts Synaptic Plasticity in the Dentate Gyrus of the Hippocampus through a Pro-oxidant State. C.M. Pagan, M.A. Khuu, A.Z. Christakis, J-M. Ramirez, A.J. Garcia III. Seattle Children’s Res. Inst. and Univ. of Washington. (983.4) 5:00 An Acute Sustained Hypoxic Stress Is Sufficient to Cause Respiratory Muscle Weakness in the Mouse. A.J. O’Leary, K.D. O’Halloran. Univiversity Col. Cork, Ireland. (983.5) 67 S U N PHYSIOLOGYSUNDAY 206. COMPARATIVE AND EVOLUTIONARY PHYSIOLOGY TRAINEE-DRIVEN FEATURED TOPIC Featured Topic 207. EARLY LIFE STRESS AND SEX-SPECIFIC MANIFESTATIONS OF CARDIO-RESPIRATORY DYSFUNCTION: INSIGHT FROM MICROGLIAL CELLS Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology Section) Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: C. Baldy and J.H. Dasinger Chaired: D. Warren and C. Ivy 3:15 Ecologically-Relevant Temperatures and Stress in Desert Pupfish. A. McKenna, K. McKenna, S. Hillyard, F. van Breukelen. Univ. of Nevada, Las Vegas. (1229.4) 3:30 Spinal Oxygen Sensors in Larval Amphibians. I.J. Evanger, M.D. Reed, R.J.A. Wilson, M. Dutschmann, B.E. Taylor, M.B. Harris. Univ. of Alaska Fairbanks, Univ. of Calgary, Canada and Univ. of Melbourne. (1230.2) 3:45 Relative Blood Flow and Cardiac Output in Embryos of the Snapping Turtle Chelydra serpentina (Reptilia; Chelonia). M.R. Sartori, Z.F. Kohl, A.S. Abe, E.W. Taylor, D.A. Crossley II. São Paulo State Univ., Rio Claro, Univ. of North Texas and Univ. of Birmingham, U.K. (1230.6) 4:00 Benefits of Being Small? The Scaling of Flight Performance in Stingless Bees and Size-Dependent Scaling of Insect Flight Metabolism. M. Duell, J.F. Harrison. Sch. of Life Sci., Arizona State Univ. (760.14) 4:15 Amino Acids as Fates of Anoxia-Induced Lactate Loads in the Painted Turtle. C.A. Hill, K.E. Yarasheski, D.E. Warren. Saint Louis Univ. and Sch. of Med., Washington Univ. St. Louis. (760.19) 4:30 Elevated Carbon Monoxide Production in Marine Mammals. M.S. Tift, J. St. Leger, T. Leuker, P.J. Ponganis. Scripps Instn. of Oceanography and SeaWorld, La Jolla. (760.26) 4:45 Deiodinase Type 3 Methylation Increases in Response to Thyroid Stimulating Hormone in a Fasting Adapted Mammal. B. Martinez, N. Gemmell, D.E. Crocker, R.M. Ortiz. Univ. of California Merced, Univ. of Otago, New Zealand and Sonoma State Univ. (760.28) 5:00 Respiratory Adaptations to High-Altitude Hypoxia in Deer Mice (Peromyscus maniculatus). C. Ivy, G. Scott. McMaster Univ., Canada. (1230.3) Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday 9:00 AM–4:00 PM 68 Sex Differences Exercise, Aging, and Disease Hypertension 3:15 Do Sex Differences in Microglia in the Brain Impact Somatic Functions? M. McCarthy. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. 3:45 Sex Differences in Hypertension: Menopause, T Lymphocytes and Inflammation. H. Brooks. Univ. of Arizona. 4:15 The Impact of Sex and Age on the Developmental Programming of Blood Pressure. B. Alexander. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. 4:45 Neonatal Stress and Sex-Specific Disruption of Respiratory Control Development: The Potential Role of Microglia. R. Kinkead. Laval Univ. 208. EMERGING MECHANISMS OF THERMOREGULATION AND METABOLIC CONTROL Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: T.L. Clanton and M. Periasamy Environmental Stress Metabolism and Metabolic Disease 3:15 Hot and Sweet: Human Brown Fat beyond Thermoregulation. P. Lee. Garvin Inst. Med. Res., Darlington, NSW, Australia. 3:45 Muscle Beyond Contraction, Its Role in Thermogenesis and Metabolism. M. Periasamy. Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Inst. 4:15 Which TRP Channels Drive Cold-Defense Responses in Rodents? A. Romanovsky. St. Joseph’s Hosp. and Arizona State Univ. 4:45 Exercise and Neurodegeneration; Potential Therapeutic Role for FNsDC5/irisin. C. Wrann. Dana Farber Inst., Harvard Univ. Med. Sch. SUNDAYPHYSIOLOGY 209. INTERMITTENT HYPOXIA: RESPIRATORY AND CARDIOVASCULAR CONTROL AND BEYOND 4:15 4:45 Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C 212. SEX DISPARITIES IN CARDIOVASCULAR FUNCTION AND REMODELING Chaired: I.C. Solomon and D. Fields 3:15 3:45 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 Intermittent Hypoxia: A Low Risk Research Tool with Therapeutic Value in Humans. J. Mateika. Wayne State Univ. Modulation of Lower Urinary Tract (LUT) Function by Acute Intermittent Hypoxia. W. Collins III. Stony Brook Univ. Hypoxia Hits below the Diaphragm: Effect of Acute Hypoxia on the Micturition Reflex. M. Catege, I.C. Solomon, W.F. Collins. Stony Brook Univ. (986.1) Pretreatment with Ampakine CX717 Enhances LongTerm Facilitation of Inspiratory Hypoglossal (XII) Bursting, but Only When Initial Burst Output Is Low. S. Turner, M. Elmallah, A. Hoyt, J. Greer, D. Fuller. Univ. of Florida and Univ. of Alberta. (986.3) Antioxidant and Angiotensin AT1 Receptor Antagonist Treatment Reduced the Hypertension Induced by Chronic Intermittent Hypoxia in Rats, but Had Different Effects on Endothelial Dysfunction. R. Iturriaga, B. Krause, P. Casanello, A.C.R. Dias, P. Arias, R. Del Rio. Pontifical Catholic Univ. of Chile. (986.4) Chronic Intermittent Hypoxia Altered Stability of Rhythm Generation but Increased Robustness of Respiratory Network. T. Dashevskiy, A.J. Garcia III, J-M. Ramirez. Seattle Children’s Res. Inst. and Univ. of Washington. (986.5) 210. MICROCIRCULATORY SOCIETY LANDIS AWARD LECTURE Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section and AJP: Heart and Circulatory Physiology) Chaired: S. Goulopoulou Sex Differences 3:15 3:45 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 (Sponsored by: The Microcirculatory Society) Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 How does Blood Flow Know Where to Go? S. Segal. Univ. of Missouri, Columbia. Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) Symposium 3:15 3:45 Sex-Based Differences in Non-Genomic Vascular Signaling. M. Hamblin. Tulane Univ. Inflammation and Extracellular Matrix Differences in Male and Female Aging in Mice. Y. Ma. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. Gender Differences in Cardiomyocyte Adhesion Cause Heart Failure. G.L. Brower, Y. Du, E. Plante, J.A. Stewart; Jr., J.S. Janicki. Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Univ. of South Carolina, Univ. of Montreal and Mississippi State Univ. (738.11) Obesity-Associated Impairments in Autonomic Control of Blood Pressure and Heart Rate Are Sex-Specific. T. Bruder-Nascimento, O.J. Ekeledo, R. Anderson, H.B. Le, E.J. Belin de Chantemele. Med. Col. of Georgia at Augusta Univ. (738.5) Sex-Specific Transcriptomic Regulation in the Diseased Human Heart. G. Kararigas, H. Summer, I. Baczko, S. Golz, V. Regitz-Zagrosek. Charité Univ. Hosp., Berlin, Bayer Hlth.Care, Wuppertal, Germany and Univ. of Szeged, Hungary. (738.9) Hypertension and Type II Diabetes Are Not Associated with Visceral Inflammation or Vascular Remodeling/ fibrosis in Obese Women. R. Fernandes, G.D. Fink, J.J. Galligan, S.W. Watts, C. Pereira-Hicks, R.E. Watson, H. Xu. Michigan State Univ. (738.6) 213. THE BRAIN-GUT AXIS: MICROBIOME IN NEURAL AND METABOLIC DISEASES 211. ORAI/STIM1 PHYSIOLOGY AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 (Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology Section) Chaired: J. Zubcevic and M.K. Raizada Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Neurobiology Chaired: S. Muallem and E. Delpire Hypertension Ion Transport Microbiome Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure Orai/STIM1 Function and Cancer. N. Prevarskaya. Univ. of Sci. and Tech. of Lille, France. Orai/STIM1 Function in the Immune System. S. Feske. New York Univ. Sch. of Med. S U N Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Lecture The Other Orai Channels in Smooth Muscle Function. M. Trebak. Albany Medical Col. Gating Orai1/STIM1 by PIP2 Microdomains and Pancreatic Function. S. Muallem. NIDCR, NIH. 3:15 The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis in Health and Disease. J. Cryan. University Col. Cork, Ireland. 3:45 The Gut Microbiota and the Vagal Afferent Pathway - From Bugs to Brain. H. Raybould. Univ. of California Davis. 4:15 Gut Microbiome Influences Blood Brain Barrier Permeability in Mice. S. Pettersson. Karolinska Inst. 69 PHYSIOLOGYSUNDAY 4:45 Gut Dysbiosis is Linked to Hypertension. M. Santisteban. Univ. of Florida. 214. WEH NEW INVESTIGATOR AWARD LECTURE 216. ERNEST H. STARLING DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS WATER AND ELECTROLYTE HOMEOSTASIS SECTION Lecture Lecture Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Blood Pressure and Fluid Volume Regulation in Pregnancy. E. George. Univ. of Mississippi. 215. WHAT DO BOTH MITOCHONDRIAL PROTEIN TURNOVER AND MITOCHONDRIAL FUNCTION TELL US ABOUT EXERCISE AND AGING? Sun. 4:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Time to Re-think Sodium Homeostasis? D. Pollock. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. 216A.APS UNDERGRADUATE POSTER SESSION AND BRUCE AWARDS Poster Discussion Sun. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Sails Pavilion Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) 217. MICROCIRCULATORY SOCIETY BUSINESS MEETING AND RECEPTION Sun. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Business Meeting Chaired: B. Miller (Supported by Microcirculatory Society) Skeletal Muscle Physiology Sun. 4:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Exercise, Aging, and Disease 3:15 What Does Mitochondrial Protein Turnover Tell Us about Exercise and Aging? K. Hamilton. Colorado State Univ. 3:45 What Does Mitochondrial Function Tell Us about Exercise and Aging? R. Boushel. Swedish Sch. of Sport and Hlth. Sci., Stockholm. 4:15 Effect of Partial Denervation Mitochondrial ROS Generation in Skeletal Muscle. N. Pollock, C.A. Staunton, A.Vasilaki, A. McArdle, M. Jackson. Univ. of Liverpool. (764.1) 4:30 Exercise Training Induced Regulation of Muscle Mitochondrial Dynamics. D.K. Fix, J.P. Hardee, S. Gao, K.L. Hetzler, J.A. Carson. Univ. of South Carolina. (764.2) 4:45 Parkin-Mediated Mitophagy in Skeletal Muscle with Aging and Exercise. C. Chen, D. Hood. Sch. of Kinesiol. and Hlth. Sci., York Univ., Canada. (764.3) 5:00 Anabolic Response to Exercise Is Not Limited in Older Adults Despite Lower Mitochondrial Respiratory Capacity Compared to Young. I. Lanza, A. Lalia, S. Dasari, M. Robinson, H. Abid, D. Morse, K. Klaus. Mayo Clin. (764.4) 218. HENRY PICKERING BOWDITCH AWARD LECTURE Lecture Sun. 5:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Sodium-Sensing Central to Salt-Sensitive Hypertension. S. Stocker. Penn State Col. of Med. Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.core-apps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. 70 MONDAY, APRIL 4 Across Societies 219. NIH K AWARDS Seminar Mon. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Exhibit Hall D NIH Grants Seminar Career Development This presentation, by Dr. Henry Khachaturian of NIGMS, NIH, will focus on the NIH’s new K99/00 Pathways to Independence Award (for postdoctoral scientists) and the K08 Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Award (for individuals with a health professional doctoral degree committed to a career in laboratory or field-based research). The interactive discussion will give attendees an opportunity to ask questions of and obtain insight from an NIH representative. 220. NIH FELLOWSHIP (F) AWARDS Seminar Mon. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Exhibit Hall D NIH Grants Seminar Career Development This presentation, by Dr. Henry Khachaturian of NIGMS, NIH, will focus on the NIH’s Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Awards (NRSA). The NRSA research training fellowship (F) awards are targeted to individuals with or seeking research doctoral degrees (Ph.D. and equivalent) and clinical doctoral degrees (M.D. and equivalent). Among the F awards discussed will be the F30, NRSA Individual Predoctoral MD/PhD or Other Dual-Doctoral Degree Fellowship Award, the F31 NRSA Individual Predoctoral Fellowship, the F31 NRSA Individual Predoctoral Fellowship to Promote Diversity in HealthRelated Research Award, the F32 NRSA Individual Postdoctoral Fellowship Award, and the NRSA Individual Senior Fellowship Award. The interactive discussion will give attendees an opportunity to ask questions of and obtain insight from an NIH representative on these and other awards available for pre- and postdoctoral fellows and senior investigators. Handouts and resource materials will be provided on-site. 9:00 Job Search in Academia & Industry. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 9:00 Building Your Skills, Networking & Information Interview. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 9:00 Goal Setting, Prioritizing, Time & Stress Management. H. Adams. H.G. Adams & Assocs. Inc., Norfolk, VA. 9:00 Responsible Conduct of Research Part 3: Best Practices: Publication Practices & Authorship, Conflicts of Interest, and Research. S. Sodeke, T. Turner. Tuskegee Univ., Jackson State Univ. 10:30 One Package: Your Resume, Interview and Job. J. Blumenthal. Montgomery Col., MD. 10:30 How to Choose Your Ideal Career. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 10:30 Selling Yourself to the Life Sciences Industry. J. Tringali. Tringali & Assocs. Inc. 11:00 Developing Your Core Message/ “Elevator Pitch”. J. Lombardo. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Marquette Univ. 1:00 Translating Your Credentials on Paper (CV=>Resume) & In Person. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 1:00 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 1: Finding & Applying for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 1:00 Successful Behaviors for Winning an Interview. J. Blumenthal. Montgomery Col., MD. 1:00 Responsible Conduct of Research Part 1: Historical Perspectives: Past Controversies, Successes, and Present Challenges. S. Sodeke, T. Turner. Tuskegee Univ., Jackson State Univ. 2:15 Beyond the Bench: Preparing for Your Career Transition in the Life Sciences. J. Tringali. Tringali & Assocs. Inc. 2:30 Handshakes, Eye Contact, Small Talk: How to Successfully Network at a Conference. N. Saul. UCSF. 2:30 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 2: Interviewing for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 3:30 The Strategic Postdoc: How to Find & Leverage Your Postdoc Experience. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 3:30 Overcoming Communication Barriers in the Grad Research Lab. H. Adams. H.G. Adams & Assocs. Inc., Norfolk, VA. 4:00 Transforming Your CV/Cover Letter for Industry Positions. N. Saul. UCSF. 4:00 Attitudes and Behaviors: How are you Perceived? J. Blumenthal. Montgomery Col., MD. 71 M O N ANATOMYMONDAY Anatomy 222. MECHANOTRANSDUCTION IN DISEASE Minisymposium Minisymposium (In collaboration with The Biomedical Engineering Society) (In collaboration with The Biomedical Engineering Society) Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Cochaired: S. Simon and G. Schmid-Schoenbein Chaired: S. Li Tissue Bioengineering Tissue Bioengineering Stem Cells/ Regeneration Cardiovascular Biology This session is part of the Tissue Mechanics & Morphogenesis Mini-Meeting 8:30 222.1 The Epigenomic Code in Hemodynamic Regulation of Cell Phenotypes in Atherosusceptible Endothelium. P.F. Davies. Univ. of Pennsylvania. 9:00 222.2 Dysfunctional Mechanosensing of Extracellular Matrix in Thoracic Aortic Disease. J.D. Humphrey. Yale Univ. 9:30 222.3 Mechanical Signaling in EpithelialMesenchymal Transition. A. Engler, J. Yang, M. Ondeck, S. Wei. UCSD. 223. THE FATE OF THE CHONDROCYTE IN DEVELOPMENT, REGENERATION, AND DISEASE Symposium Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Chaired: R. Marcucio Developmental Biology/Morphology Stem Cells/ Regeneration Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) 10:30 223.1 Transdifferentiation of Chondrocytes to Osteoblasts during Bone Fracture Healing. R. Marcucio, D. Hu, F. Yang, C. Bahney, T. Miclau. UCSF and Orthopaed. Trauma Inst., San Francisco. 11:00 223.2 Genetic Control of Hypertrophic Chondrocyte to Osteoblast Differentiation in Development and Skeletal Disorders. K. Cheah, T. Au, S. Wynn, T. Tan, R. Yip, D. Chan. Sch. of Biomed. Sci., The Univ. of Hong Kong and Univ. of Melbourne. 11:30 223.3 Direct Transformation of Chondrocytes into Bone Cells: Outside of the Box. J. Feng. Texas A&M Univ. Baylor Col. of Dent. 72 224. MECHANICS OF THE CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) This session is part of the Tissue Mechanics & Morphogenesis Mini-Meeting 10:30 224.1 Systems Mechanobiology and Multiscale Modeling of Ventricular Hypertrophy and Failure. A.D. McCulloch, K. Buchholz, P.Tan, S. Dewan, J. Saucerman, J.H. Omens, V. Nigam. UCSD and Univ. of Virginia. 11:00 224.2 Cardiac Mechanics, Hemodynamics, and Embryonic Heart Development. S. Rugonyi. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. 11:30 224.3 Integrating Light-Sheet and Hemodynamic Forces to Elucidate Cardiac Development, Injury and Repair. T. Hsiai. UCLA. 225. ANATOMY EDUCATION PLATFORM 1 Platform Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Cochaired: M. Hortsch and C. Krebs Education and Teaching Adapting the Anatomical Sciences to Changing Curricula: Ideas, Tools and Validation 10:30 225.1 The Effectiveness of Self-Paced Activities for Anatomy Instruction in a Case-Based Medical Curriculum. B. Szymik, D.W. Hesse. GRU/UGA Med. Partnership. 10:45 225.2 No Longer a Novelty: Formalizing UltrasoundBased Activities in Gross Anatomy through Objective Structural Practical Examination. T.R. Blankers, N. Lachman, A. Bhagra, W. Pawlina. Mayo Med. Sch. and Mayo Clin. Col. of Med. 11:00 225.3 X-perience – an Interactive Viewing Platform Displaying Radiographic Profiles of Cadavers for Educational Purposes. E. Nic an Riogh, G.F. Perry, J.F..X. Jones, A. Tattersall, M. Heduan, R.H. Stern, P. MacMahon, N. Giannotti, M. Davis. University Col. Dublin Sch. of Med., Mount Sinai Hosp., NY and Mater Misericordiae Univ. Hosp., Dublin. (568.23) 11:15 225.4 Microscopic Anatomy and Pathology Laboratories: Design of an e-Learning Atlas as an Evolving Response to Interdisciplinary Medical Curricular Needs. R.A. Jurjus, J. Wade, V. Moktan, M.S. Davis, A. Mills, G. Butera, J. Krum, P. Latham. George Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:30 225.5 Emphasizing the Importance of Qualitative Research in Anatomy Education: A “How-to-Guide” on Case Study Design, Implementation, and Data Analysis. C.J. Traser. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. MONDAYANATOMY 11:45 225.6 Divide and Conquer: On Demand Anatomy in the Medical School Curriculum. M. Rosenberg, R. Hartley. Univ. of New Mexico Sch. of Med. 226. CELL BIOLOGY AWARD HYBRID Hybrid Symposium Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B 3:20 227.5 Phantageusia: The Presence of Taste Distortions Inhibited by Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation. R.I. Henkin, M. Abdelmeguid, A.B. Knoppel, S.J. Potolicchio. The Taste and Smell Clin., Washington, DC and George Washington Univ. Med. Ctr. 228. MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF TISSUE DYNAMICS Chaired: A. Lysakowski Minisymposium Cell Biology Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Chaired: J.A. Guttman R.R. Bensley Award Lecture in Cell Biology featuring 2016 Young Investigator Award Recipient, Andrew Holland. Dan Georgess is competing as a finalist in the Postdoctoral Platform Presentation Award and Sahithi Pamarthy is competing as a finalist in the Langman Graduate Platform Presentation Award 10:30 226.1 Deciphering How Cells Count: Molecular Control of Centrosome Copy Number. A. Holland, T. Moyer, B. Lambrus, M. Levine, K. Clutario, P. Scott, V. Daggubati. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:00 226.2 The Nature of Nurture: Investigating the Role of Notch Signaling and Vacuolar ATPase in Mammary Gland Development. S. Pamarthy, L. Mao, G.K. Katara, M.K. Jaiswal, A. Kulshrestha, A. Gilman-Sachs, K.D. Beaman. Rosalind Franklin Univ. of Med. and Sci. 11:15 226.3 Twist1 Triggers PKD1 Expression to Promote Metastatic Dissemination in Breast Cancer. D. Georgess, O.K. Sirka, N.M. Neumann, E.R. Shamir, A.J. Ewald. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:30 226.4 Cyclophilin A Is Crucial for Listeria and Salmonella Invasion and Cell-to-Cell Spreading. A. Dhanda, K. Warren, J. Guttman. Simon Fraser Univ., Canada. 11:45 226.5 Initiation of Smell in Congenital Smell Loss. R.I. Henkin, M. Abdelmeguid, A.B. Knoppel. The Taste and Smell Clin., Washington, DC. Tissue Bioengineering Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) This session is part of the Tissue Mechanics & Morphogenesis Mini-Meeting 2:00 228.1 Molecular Asymmetries in Actin Dynamics Drive Left-Right Organogenesis. L.A. Trinh, E. Koo, V. Trivedi, M. Bagnat, S.E. Fraser. Univ. of So. California, Caltech and Duke Univ. 2:30 228.2 Molecular Engineering for Imaging and Reprogramming in Live Cells. P.Y. Wang, J. Sun, L. Lei. UCSD and Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 3:00 Three-Dimensional Quantitative Delineation of Spatially Heterogeneous Metastasis Landscape. S. Zhang. Univ. of Notre Dame. 229. EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH STUDENT PLATFORM AWARDS SESSION Award Competition Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Chaired: J. Mussell 227. CLINICAL APPROACH IN MORPHOLOGICAL RESEARCH Hybrid Symposium (Cosponsored by: Brazilian Society of Anatomy) Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Education and Teaching Student and Postdoc award finalists present oral presentations to compete for the Education Platform Award 2:00 Chaired: V.P.S. Fazan Neurobiology 2:15 Developmental Biology/Morphology 2:00 227.1 Experimental Evidence of a Hypertensive Neuropathy: Is It a New Disease?. V.S. Fazan. Univ. of São Paulo. 2:40 227.2 Aortic Depressor Nerve Morphology in Developing Spontaneously Hypertenvie Rats. M.M. Amorim, J.A. Castania, H.C. Salgado, V.P.S. Fazan. Sch. of Med. of Ribeirão Preto, Brazil 2:50 227.3 Transcutaneous Vagus and Trigeminal Nerve Stimulation for Neuropsychiatric Disorders: Underscoring Anatomical Landmarks and Connections. M.D. Barros, A. Trevizol, I. Sato, B.M. Liquidato, Q. Cordeiro, P. Shiozawa. Santa Casa de São Paulo Sch. of Med. Sci. 3:10 227.4 Fos-Immunoreactive Neurons in Rat Intrinsic Cardiac Ganglia after Pericardial Capsaicin Injection. T. Wang, K.E. Miller. Oklahoma State Univ. Ctr. for Hlth. Sci. 2:30 2:45 Examination of the Roles of Learning Style and Learning Strategy on the Academic Performance of First Year Medical Students. C.T. Nichols, A.C. Edmondson. Med. Col. of Georgia at Augusta Univ. (569.5) The Influence of Spatial Ability on Medical Student Performance in the Basic Sciences. A. Willis, A. Edmondson, C. Martin. Med. Col. of Georgia at Augusta Univ., Augusta Univ. and Univ. of Western Ontario. (570.5) Preliminary Results of a National Survey on the Integration of Anatomical Variations in Medical School Curricula. C. Goldberg, D. Royer. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. (369.6) Problem Sets Allow for Multiple Competency Acquisition in First Year Neuroscience Course. M.D. Lameka, W.G. Pearson, A.C. Edmondson. Med. Col. of Georgia at Augusta Univ. (569.13) 73 M O N ANATOMYMONDAY 3:00 3:15 Gross Anatomy Dissection Improves Exam Scores Amongst Medical and Allied Health Students. R.J. Anders, A.C. Edmondson, C.M. Martin, K. Wheeler. Med. Col. of Georgia - Augusta Univ. and Western Univ., Canada. (567.8) A Cadaveric Procedural Anatomy Course Enhances Operative Competence. G. Sharma, M.A. Aycart, T. van Houten, D.S. Smink, R. Askari, J.D. Gates. Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch. (567.7) 230. THE WIDE WORLD OF CORONARY ANOMALIES: INSIGHT FROM THE CLINIC AND THE LABORATORY 232. TISSUE CONTRACTILITY AND MORPHOGENESIS Minisymposium Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Chaired: A. Czirok Symposium Tissue Bioengineering Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Stem Cells/ Regeneration Chaired: M. Watanabe Cardiovascular Biology Cell Biology 2:00 Chair’s Introduction. 2:05 230.1 Non-invasive Evaluation of Anomalous Aortic Origin of Coronary Arteries and Surgical Management. R. Ashwath, D. Prasad. Case Western Reserve Univ. 2:30 230.2 Newer Concepts in Coronary Artery Anomalies, Based on Accurate In Vivo Imaging (IVUS). P.E. Angelini, C.E. Uribe. Texas Heart Inst., Houston. 3:00 230.3 CXCL12 and Vascular Maturation of the Coronary System during Heart Development. S. Cavallero, H. Shen, C. Yi, R.K. Subramanyan, H. Sucov. Univ. of So. California Keck Sch. of Med. (554.5) 231. MORPHOLOGICAL SCIENCES AWARD HYBRID Hybrid Symposium Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Chaired: R. Daneman Developmental Biology/Morphology Evolution/Anthropology Morphological Sciences Award Lecture featuring 2016 Young Investigator Award Recipient, Casey Holliday. Colin Moore, Gillian Corbo and John Merlo are competing as finalists in the Langman Graduate Platform Presentation Award 4:00 231.1 Exploring Cranial Functional Morphology and Evolution through the Jaws of Alligators. C.M. Holliday. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 4:30 231.2 Ontogenetic Cranial and Postcranial Regional Variation in Bone Strength: Comparisons in Two Archaeological Populations. E.M. Garofalo, M.A. Holmes. Univ. of Arizona Col. of Med. and Sch. of Med., Duke Univ. (779.18) 4:45 231.3 Functional Anatomy of the Palmaris Brevis: Grasping for Answers. C.W. Moore, C.L. Rice. Sch. of Kinesiol. Aad Schulich Sch. of Med. and Dent., Univ. of Western Ontario. 5:00 231.4 The Anterolateral Ligament and the Lateral Meniscus’ Synergistic Contribution to Rotational Knee Stability. G.G. Corbo,T. Lording,T. Burkhart, M. Johnson, A. Getgood. Western Univ., Canada and Melbourne Orthopaed. Gp., Windsor, Australia. 74 5:15 231.5 Onset and Progression of Facet Joint Articular Cartilage Degeneration following Lumbar Spinal Hypomobility. J.A. Merlo, C. Lawson, J.A. McDowell, A.N. Benckendorf, G.D. Cramer, J.W. Little. Saint Louis Univ. Sch. of Med. and Doisy Col. of Hlth. Sci. and Natl. Univ. of Hlth. Sci., IL. This session is part of the Tissue Mechanics & Morphogenesis Mini-Meeting 4:00 232.1 Self-Organizing Actomyosin Patterns on the Cell Cortex at Epithelial Cell-Cell Junctions. Z. Neufeld. Univ. of Queensland, Australia. 4:30 232.2 Let There Be Force: Modeling Cell-ECM Interactions during Cancer Invasion. Y. Jiang. Georgia State Univ. 5:00 232.3 The Role of Cell Contractility in Epithelial Morphogenesis. C.M. Nelson, V.D. Varner. Princeton Univ. 233. MACROPHAGES: WHAT ARE WE “SEEING” AND WHAT ARE WE MISSING? Symposium Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Chaired: B. Singh Cell Biology 4:00 233.1 A New Look at the Alveolar Macrophage. J. Bhattacharya. Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. 4:30 233.2 Imaging the Role of Macrophage in Infection and Sterile Injury in Liver. P. Kubes, Z. Zeng, C. Jenne. Univ. of Calgary, Canada 5:00 233.3 Intravital Microscopy Identifies Macrophages As Effector Cells for Monoclonal Antibody Therapy of Cancer. M. van Egmond. VU Univ. Med. Ctr., Amsterdam. 234. AAA MEMBERS MEETING Business Meeting Mon. 5:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 All AAA Members are encouraged to attend (formerly called the AAA Business Meeting) 235. GRADUATE STUDENT/POSTDOC POSTER RECEPTION Poster Discussion Mon. 6:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, West Terrace Lobby MONDAYBIOCHEMISTRY Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 236. ASBMB PLENARY LECTURE Award Lecture Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 8:00 Awardee introduction. 8:05 236.1 Illuminating Biology at the Nanoscale with Single-Molecule and Super-Resolution Imaging. X. Zhuang. Harvard Univ., HHMI. 237. ASBMB PLENARY LECTURE Plenary Mon. 8:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 8:45 Awardee introduction. 8:50 237.1 Functionalizing the Unannotated Mitochondrial Proteome. J.P. Rutter. HHMI, Univ. of Utah. 238. ALICE AND C.C. WANG AWARD IN MOLECULAR PARASITOLOGY SYMPOSIUM Award Lecture Mon. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A 9:45 Awardee introduction. 9:50 238.1 Translating the Trypanosome Surface. M.A.J. Ferguson, M.L.S. Güther. Sch. of Life Sci., Univ. of Dundee, U.K. 10:30 238.2 Tracking the In Vivo Dynamics of Antigenic Variation in Trypanosoma brucei. M. Mugnier, G.A.M. Cross, F.N. Papavasiliou. The Rockefeller Univ. 11:00 238.3 Carbon Metabolism of Parasitic Protozoa: Strategies for Surviving in Intracellular Niches. M. McConville, E. Saunders, F. Sernee, M. Blume, J. Kloehn, J. Ralton. Univ. of Melbourne. 11:30 238.4 A Clinical Candidate Targeting Dihydroorotate Dehydrogenase for the Treatment of Malaria with Blood and Liver Stage Activity. M.A. Phillips, S.A. Charman, P.K. Rathod, J. Burrows, T. Rueckle. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr., Monash Inst. of Pharmaceut. Sci., Australia, Univ. of Washington and Meds. for Malaria Venture, Geneva. 239. REGULATION OF RECOMBINATION Symposium Mon. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Chaired: C. Kisker Follow the conversation: #DNA 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 239.1 Regulation of Homologous Recombination: Robustness through Reversibility. W-D. Heyer. Univ. of California, Davis. 10:15 Live Cell Interrogation of dCas9:sgRNA Dynamics off and at the Target. T. Pederson. Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. (571.1) 10:30 239.2 Dissecting the Role of the Rad51 Paralogs during Double-Strand Break Repair. K. Bernstein, T.B. McClendon, M.R. Sullivan, S.K. Godin, W. Gaines, P. Sung, J. Yanowitz. Univ. of Pittsburgh Sch. of Med. and Yale Univ. 10:55 Estrogen Induces RAD51C Expression and Localization to Sites of DNA Damage. M.K. Holz. Yeshiva Univ., NY. (799.1) 11:10 Interactomic and Enzymatic Analyses of Distinct Affinity Isolated Human Retrotransposon Intermediates. J. LaCava, K.R. Molloy, D. Fenyö, M.S. Taylor, B.T. Chait, J.D. Boeke, M.P. Rout. The Rockefeller Univ.,NYU Sch. of Med. and Massachusetts Gen. Hosp. (801.1) 11:25 239.3 The Role of Mammalian Polymerase Theta in DNA Repair. A. Sfeir. NYU Sch. of Med. 11:50 Discussion. 240. ENZYME DYNAMICS AND ENZYME MOTIONS Symposium Mon. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C Follow the conversation: #catalysis 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 240.1 Observations on the Cellular Dynamics of a Metabolic Complex, the Purinosome. S. Benkovic, C.Y. Chan, D. Kim, A. Pedley, X. Zhuang. Penn State and Harvard/ HHMI, Cambridge. 10:15 Large Scale Structural Rearrangement Provides Dual Control Over the Catalytic and Membrane Binding Activity of a Bacterial Serine Hydrolase. R.J. Johnson, M. Smith, W. Hart. Butler Univ. (833.6) 10:30 240.2 NMR Relaxation Dispersion. P. Loria. Yale Univ. 10:55 Conservative Substitutions of Buried Amino Acid Residues Distant from the Active Site of Horse Liver Alcohol Dehydrogenase Have Small Effects on Structure, Catalysis and Dynamics. B.V. Plapp, K. Shanmuganatham, R.S. Wallace, A.T-I. Lee. Univ. of Iowa. (833.5) 11:10 Control of Enzyme Function through Loop Dynamics. C.N. Chi, B. Vogeli, S. Bibow. ETH, Zurich. (835.2) 11:25 240.3 Separated at Birth, the Evolution of Kinase Dynamics over a Few Billion Years. D. Kern. HHMI, Brandeis Univ. 11:50 Discussion. 241. BUILDING MOLECULAR MACHINERY Symposium Mon. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Chaired: C.M. Dunham Follow the conversation: #proteins 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 241.1 Molecular Switches in Proteasome Assembly: Tales of the Tails and Chaperones. S. Park. Univ. of Colorado Boulder. 10:15 Functional Cooperativity between the Trigger Factor Chaperone and the ClpXP Degradation System. W.A. Houry. Univ. of Toronto. (811.6) 75 M O N BIOCHEMISTRYMONDAY 10:30 241.2 Quality Control of Nuclear Pore Complex Biogenesis. P. Lusk, B. Webster, J. Jaeger, D. Thaller. Yale Sch. of Med. and Univ. of California Berkeley. 10:55 Illuminating the Proteasome: Fluorescence Assays for Investigating the Kinetics of Proteasome Substrate Processing. J.A. Bard, E. Jonsson, A. Martin. Univ. of California, Berkeley. (597.2) 11:10 Translocating Loop-Substrate Interactions Mediate Subunit Coordination and Regulate the Mechanochemical Coupling and Power Production in a AAA+ Protease Machine. P. Rodriguez, L. Ramirez, F. Kim, C. Bustamante, A. Martin. Univ. of California, Berkeley. (595.2) 11:25 241.3 Quality Control in 40S Ribosome Maturation. K. Karbstein. The Scripps Res. Inst. 11:50 Discussion. 10:30 243.2 Transcriptional Control of Lipid Homeostasis. P. Totonoz. UCLA. 10:55 HPV16-E7 Oncoprotein Enhances CeramideMediated Lethal Mitophagy by Regulating the Rb/E2F5/Drp1 Signaling Axis. R. Thomas, N. Oleinik, B. Ogretmen. Med. Univ. of South Carolina. (872.6) 11:10 Cysteinyl Leukotriene 2 Receptor Enhances Angiogenesis, Vascular Permeability and Tumor Metastasis. E. Duah, V. Kondeti, N. Al-Azzam, R. Adapala, P. Patil, C. Thodeti, S. Paruchuri. Univ. of Akron and Northeast Ohio Med. Univ. (872.4) 11:25 243.3 The Phase of Fat: Mechanisms and Physiology of Lipid Synthesis and Storage. R.V. Farese, T. Walther. Harvard Univ., Boston. 11:50 Discussion. 242. MECHANISTICALLY-INFORMED DRUG DESIGN 244. BIOCHEMISTRY AND TODAY’S PREMED STUDENT Symposium Mon. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Symposium Chaired: J.W. Kozarich (Sponsored by: ASBMB Education and Professional Development Committee) Follow the conversation: #metabolism 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 242.1 trans-Translation as a Target for Novel Antibiotics. K. Keiler. Penn State 10:15 Novel Small Molecule, WZB117, Competitively Inhibit GLUT1-Mediated Glucose Transport to Halt Cancer Growth. O. Ojelabi, J. DeZutter, K. Lloyd, A. Carruthers. Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. (1099.1) 10:30 242.2 Identifying Vulnerable Steps in the Coenzyme A Biosynthesis Pathway of M. tuberculosis. V. Mizrahi, J. Evans, C. Trujillo, H. Eoh, S. Ehrt, D. Schnappinger, H. Boshoff, K. Rhee, C.E. Barry III. Univ. of Cape Town, Weill Cornell Med. Col. and NIAID, NIH. 10:55 Differential Regulation of mTORC1 by Amino Acids. J.L. Jewell, K-L. Guan. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr. and UCSD. (1099.18) 11:10 Potent Lipidated Antagonists to ProteaseActivated Receptor 2. S. Boitano, J. Hoffman, A. Flynn, C.L. Sherwood, Z. Zhang, R. Patek, T.J. Price, J. Vagner. Univ. of Arizona and Univ. of Texas at Dallas, Richardson. (848.6) 11:25 242.4 Rational Optimization of Natural-Born Mechanism-Based Inhibitors of the 20S Proteasomes in Humans and Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J. Sello. Brown Univ. 11:50 Discussion. 243. LIPID SIGNALING Symposium Mon. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14A Chaired: E. Hodis Follow the conversation: #education 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 244.1 MCAT2015: A New Focus on Biochemistry. S.H. Oyewole. Trinity Washington Univ., Alexandria, VA. 10:15 Creating an Outcomes-Based Biochemistry Major from ASBMB and ACS Major Guidelines That Reflects MCAT Needs. J.K. Bell, T.J. Dwyer, C.M. Loer, M.S. Lowery, J.J. Provost. Univ. of San Diego. (887.2) 10:30 244.2 Transformation in Biomedical Science Education for Future Physicians. S. Lieberman. Univ. of Texas Med. Br. Sch. of Med. 10:55 Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry Curriculum for the New MCAT. Y. Dobrydneva, L. Schwartz. George Washington Sch. of Med. and Hlth. Sci. (887.1) 11:10 Integration of Biochemistry and Problem Solving-Based Pedagogy throughout the Chemistry Curriculum in Support of Learning Outcomes Articulated by the Association. of American Medical Colleges., the ASBMB and the American Chem. Soc. H.V. Jakubowski, K. Graham, E. McIntee, C. Schaller. Col. St. Benedict/St. John’s Univ., MN. (662.12) 11:25 244.3 A Description of the First Year of the New MCAT® Exam. M. Kroopnick. Assn. of American Med. Cols., Washington, DC. 11:50 Discussion. Mon. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Chaired: G.M. Carman Follow the conversation: #lipids 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 243.1 Sphingosine-1-Phosphate: A Bridge from Bench to Clinic. S. Spiegel. VCU Sch. of Med. 10:15 Tracking Diacylglycerol Pools in Budding Yeast. S. Ganesan, M.L. Sosa Ponce, V. Zaremberg. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. (872.3) 76 245. ASBMB ACCREDITATION WORKSHOP Workshop Mon. 12:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14A Learn the characteristics undergraduate program. of an ASBMB-accredited MONDAYBIOCHEMISTRY 246. TELL YOUR SCIENCE AS A STORY Special Session (Sponsored by: ASBMB Public Outreach Committee) Mon. 12:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A 247. MILDRED COHN AWARD IN BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture Mon. 2:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 2:15 Awardee introduction. 2:20 247.1 Molecular Visualization of the Eukaryotic Transcription Initiation Process Using Cryo-EM. E. Nogales, R. Louder, Y. He. Univ. of California, Berkeley, HHMI, Lawrence Berkeley Natl. Lab. and Northwestern Univ. 248. EARL AND THRESSA STADTMAN SCHOLAR AWARD LECTURE II Award Lecture Mon. 2:50 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 2:50 Awardee introduction. 2:55 248.1 Molecular Choreography of an Antibiotic Assembly Line. S. Dutta, J.R. Whicher, D.A. Hansen, W.A. Hale, J.A. Chemler, G.R. Congdon, A.R. Narayan, K. Håkansson, D.H. Sherman, J.L. Smith, G. Skiniotis. Univ. of Michigan. 249. SICKLE CELL DISEASE SEVERITY Symposium (Guest Society: Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Cochaired: S.R. Goodman and B.S. Pace Clinical severity in sickle cell disease: definitions and prognostication C. Quinn. Rheological Abnormalities of Pediatric Hemoglobin SC Patients V. Sheehan. Genetic Basis of HbF Variability in Sickle Cell Anemia; A Global Perspective M. Steinberg. Is Hydroxyurea Efficacious in Both Severe and Non-Severe Sickle Cell Disease?” Clinical severity in sickle cell disease: definitions and prognostication W. Wang. 3:20 250.1 Symmetry and Computational Methods in the Design of Self-Assembling Protein Materials. T.O. Yeates. UCLA. 251. ENZYMOLOGY OF GLYCOSYL-TRANSFERASES AND HYDROLASES Symposium Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A Chaired: D. Vocadlo Follow the conversation: #glyco 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 251.1 Insights on Mammalian Glycosylation Enzymes from High-Throughput Expression Studies. K. Moremen, L. Meng, F. Forouhar, S. Wang, R. Kadirvelraj, H. Moniz, A. Ramiah, Z. Gao, J. Seetharaman, S. Milaninia, G. Galay, M. Stuart, J. Steel, J. Labaer, Z. Wood, L. Tong, D. Jarvis. Univ. of Georgia, Columbia Univ., Univ. of Wyoming and Arizona State Univ. 4:30 Regulation of Notch Signaling by O-Glucosylation: Notch-Modifying XylosyltransferaseSubstrate Complexes Support an SNi-Like Retaining Mechanism. R.S. Haltiwanger, H. Yu, M. Takeuchi, J. LeBarron, J. Kantharia, E. London, H. Bakker, H. Li, H. Takeuchi. Univ. of Georgia, Brookhaven Natl. Lab., NY, Stony Brook Univ. and Hannover Med. Sch., Germany. (624.3) 4:45 251.2 Mechanistic and Structural Insights into a Human Carbohydrate Degrading Enzyme. T. Gloster, M. Alteen, V. Oehler, L. Yang, I. Wilson, D. Vocadlo. Univ. of St. Andrews, U.K., Simon Fraser Univ., Canada and Univ. of Natural Resources and Life Scis., Vienna, Austria. 5:10 Structure and Biosynthesis of Complex N-Glycan Cores and Antennae in Nematodes. I.B.H. Wilson, S. Yan, K. Paschinger. Univ. of Nat. Resources and Life Sci., Vienna. (843.4) 5:25 Defects in Protein O-Mannosylation Result in Abnormal Muscle Contractions and Aberrant Neural Sensory Feedback in Drosophila. V. Panin, R. Baker, N. Nakamura, D. Lyalin. Texas A&M Univ. (846.1) 5:40 251.5 Piecing Together New Insight into Glycosidases: Structure and Imaging. G. Davies. Univ. of York. 6:05 Discussion. 252.TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATORY MECHANISMS Symposium Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Chaired: S. Lauberth Follow the conversation: #chromatin 250. DELANO AWARD FOR COMPUTATIONAL BIOSCIENCES LECTURE Award Lecture Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 3:15 Awardee introduction. 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 252.1 Impeding the Formation of Transcription Initiation Complex. J-M. Egly. IGBMC, CNRS, INSERM, Univ. of Strasbourg, Illkirch. 4:30 Mechanistic Study of ERCC6/CSB Enzymatic Regulation, and Its Roles in Transcription Elongation, and Chromatin Remodeling. D. Wang. UCSD. (803.8) 77 M O N BIOCHEMISTRYMONDAY 4:45 252.2 Transcription and the Maintenance of Genome Stability. J.Q. Svejstrup, L. Williamson, M. Saponaro, S. Boeing, R. Mitter, G. Kelly. The Francis Crick Inst., South Mimms and London, U.K. 5:10 Steroid Receptors Can Activate Unique FoxA1 Binding Patterns through a Highly Dynamic Mechanism Associated with a Fast DNA Residence Time. E.E. Swinstead, T.B. Miranda, V. Paakinaho, S. Baek, M. Hawkins, T. Karpova, D. Ball, D. Mazza, L.D. Lavis, T. Morisaki, L. Grøntved, D.M. Presman, G.L. Hager. NCI, NIH, Univ. Vita Salute San Raffaele, Milan, HHMI, Ashburn, VA and Univ. of So. Denmark. (585.5) 5:25 DNA Breaks and Damage Response Signaling Are Coupled with RNA Polymerase II Promoter-Proximal Pause Release and Required for Effective Transcriptional Elongation. H. Bunch. Harvard Med. Sch., Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr. (589.1) 5:40 252.3 Elongin and the Elongin A Ubiquitin Ligase Complex in Transcription and the Response to DNA Damage. J.W. Conaway, J.C. Weems, B.D. Slaughter, J.R. Unruh, R.C. Conaway. Stowers Inst. for Med. Res. and Univ. of Kansas Med. Sch. 6:05 Discussion. 253. THE GREENING OF CHEMICAL BIOLOGY Symposium Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C Chaired: M. Burkart Follow the conversation: #chembio 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 253.1 Chemical Biology and Endomembrane Trafficking in Plants. G.R. Hicks, C. Zhang, W. Van de Ven, R. Li, N. Raikhel. Univ. of California, Riverside. 4:30 Molecular Cloning and Expression of a Putative Oleate Hydratase Isozyme from Nocardia cholesterolicum NRRL 5767. J-K. Huang, H.B. Alhmadi, D.R. Vanderway, C.A. Hoerner, L. Wen. Western Illinois Univ. (838.1) 4:45 253.2 Alkaloid Biosynthesis in Plants. S. O’Connor. John Innes Ctr., Norwich, U.K. 5:10 Digging into Rice Diterpenoid Biosynthesis. R. Peters. Iowa State Univ. (1146.1) 5:25 Structural Basis of Distinct Salicylic Acid Glucosylation in Arabidopsis Thaliana by Two Homologous Enzymes: Implications for Plant Stress Response. A.M. George Thompson, C.V. Iancu, J. Dean, J-y. Choe. Rosalind Franklin Univ. and DePaul Univ. (1142.3) 5:40 253.3 Molecular Controls in Plant Hormone Signaling. J. Jez. Washington Univ. in St. Louis. 6:05 Discussion. 254. ASBMB YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Presented in session, “Systems Biology of Cellular Networks”. Refer to session 255 for additional details. 4:00 Awardee introduction. 4:00 254.1 Adaptations to Mitochondrial Dysfunction via Inter-Organelle Communication. C.M. Haynes. Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr. 78 255. SYSTEMS BIOLOGY OF CELLULAR NETWORKS Symposium Mon. 4:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Chaired: A. Osterman Follow the conversation: #proteomics 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 ASBMB Young Investigator Award Introduction and Presentation. 4:10 Adaptations to Mitochondrial Dysfunction via Inter-Organelle Communication. C.M. Haynes. Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr. (254.1) 4:35 255.3 Integrative Pathway Mapping. A. Sali. UCSF. 5:00 GRNmap and GRNsight: Open Source Software for Dynamical Systems Modeling and Visualization of Medium-Scale Gene Regulatory Networks. K.D. Dahlquist, B.G. Fitzpatrick, J.D.N. Dionisio, N.A. Anguiano, J.S. Carrillo, M.V. Hong, K.M. Horstmann, K.C. Jackson, K.G. Johnson, T.A. Morris, T.A.M. Roque, M. Samdarshi, A. Varshneya, N.E. Williams, K.W. Wyllie. Loyola Marymount Univ., CA and Spelman Col., GA. (819.16) 5:15 255.2 The Cancer Cell Map Initiative. T. Ideker. UCSD. 5:40 255.1 Network Analytics: Evolutionary Compression, Diffusion and the Action Equation for Mutations. O. Lichtarge. Baylor Col. of Med. 6:05 Discussion. 256. SIGNALING IN TIME AND SPACE Symposium Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Chaired: D.J. Leahy Follow the conversation: #cellsignal 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 256.1 Endocytosis Separates EGF Receptors from Endogenous Fluorescently Labeled HRas and Prevents Receptor Signaling to MAP Kinases in Endosomes. A. Sorkin, I. Pinilla-Macua. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 4:30 Super-Resolution Imaging of the HER Family of Receptor Tyrosine Kinases. B. van Lengerich, E. Puchner, B. Huang, N. Jura. UCSF and Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. (857.4) 4:45 256.2 New Mode of EGF Receptor Transactivation: Regulated Ligand Delivery. R.J. Coffey, Z. Cao, B. Singh. Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr. and DVA Nashville, TN. 5:10 Three-Dimensional Quantification of the Spatiotemporal Co-evolution of Vascular and Neuronal Networks within Intact Eyes. J. Singh, D. Shepherd, G. Seedorf, J. Brzezinski Univ. of Colorado Denver and Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med., Aurora. (857.1) 5:25 An Optogenetic Toolkit for Spatial and Temporal Control of the cAMP Dependent Protein Kinase. C.P. OBanion, R. Hughes, M. Priestman, D. Lawrence. Univ. of North Carolina Chapel Hill. (857.2) 5:40 256.3 Spatial Correlation of Constitutive HER2 Activities with Cell Membrane Deformation. I. Chung. HHMI, Ashburn, VA and Genentech, South San Francisco. 6:05 Discussion. MONDAYBIOCHEMISTRY 257. NAFLD: GENETIC DETERMINANTS AND EXTRAHEPATIC COMPLICATIONS Symposium (Sponsored by: ASBMB Minority Affairs Committee) Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Chaired: T. Sumter Follow the conversation: #liver 5:10 Dietary Docosahexaenoic Acid Halts Progression of Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis, but Does Not Promote Fibrosis Remission in Ldlr-/- mice. K.A. Lytle, C. Wong, D. Jump. Oregon State Univ. (870.2) 4:45 Genetic and Environmental Risk Factors for Progression of NASH R. Loomba, UCSD. 5:25 Regulation of AMPK and Hepatic Metabolism by Folic Acid Supplementation in Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. V. Sid, N. Wu, L. Sarna, Y. Shang, J. House, Y.L. Siow, K. O. Univ. of Manitoba, St. Boniface Hosp. Res. Ctr. and Agr. and Agri-Food Canada, Winnipeg. (870.3) 4:30 Obesity Intensifies Hepatotoxicity by Asparaginase in Mice Deleted for GCN2 but Not ATF4. I.A. Nikonorova, E.T. Mirek, Y. Wang, J.L. Dixon, T.G. Anthony. Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey. (1126.1) 5:40 257.1 The Early Origins of NAFLD in Humans and Non-human Primates. J.E. Friedman. Univ.of Colorado Denver. 4:05 257.2 Mitochondrial Protonophores for Treatment of NAFLD/NASH and Type 2 Diabetes. G.I. Shulman. HHMI/Yale Univ. Sch. of Med. 6:05Discussion. 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 258. MOLECULAR VISUALIZATION IS YOUR FRIEND 4:30 Combining Molecular Visualization with Bench Methods in a Hypothesis-Driven Undergraduate Biochemistry Lab Course. P.A. Craig, J.L. Mills, C. Daubner, M.J. Pikaart. Sch. of Chem. & Mat. Sci., Rochester Inst. of Technol., Sch. of Sci., Engin. and Technol., St. Mary’s Univ., San Antonio and Hope Col., MI. (666.2) 4:45 258.2 Visualizing the Invisible: From Questions to Conversations to Understanding. T. Herman. Milwaukee Sch. of Engin. 5:10 Molecular Visualization in the Classroom: Learning Goals and Competencies. D.R. Dries, P.A. Craig, D.M. Dean, L. Listenberger, W.R.P. Novak, M.A. Franzen. Juniata Col., PA, Rochester Inst. of Technol., Univ. of Saint Joseph, CT, St. Olaf Col., MN, Wabash Col., IN and Milwaukee Sch. of Engin. (666.1) 5:25 Reviving “Byron’s Bender”: Hands-On Molecular Visual and Tactile Learning at the Most Basic Level. J.T. Hazzard, A. Issaian. Univ. of Arizona and Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. (666.6) 5:40 258.3 Creating Stop-Motion Animations to Learn Molecular Biology Dynamics. C. Peterson, P. Ngo. Suffolk Univ. 6:05 Discussion. 259. ORGANIZING A SUCCESSFUL ASBMB STUDENT CHAPTER Special Session (Sponsored by: ASBMB Education and Professional Development Committee) Mon. 6:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14A 260. ASBMB GAME NIGHT Special Event Mon. 6:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Symposium (Sponsored by: ASBMB Education and Professional Development Committee) Join the ASBMB for an evening of networking and sciencethemed trivia with fellow graduate students and postdoc members and biochem attendees. Mon. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14A Chaired: M.A. Carroll 261. ASBMB WIKI EDIT-A-THON Follow the conversation: #education Workshop 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 258.1 Proteopedia: The 3D Wiki-Encyclopedia of Protein and Nucleic Acid Structures. E. Hodis, J. Prilusky, J. Sussman. Harvard Univ., MIT, Broad Inst., Cambridge, MA, Dana-Farber Cancer Inst. and Weizmann Inst. of Sci., Israel. (Sponsored by: Simons Foundation) Mon. 6:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14B Come join ASBMB and the Simons Foundation at our Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon, where we will tackle molecular biology and biochemistry Wikipedia articles that are in dire need of renovation and teach you the basics of Wikipedia editing. Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday | 9:00 AM–4:00 PM 79 M O N NUTRITIONMONDAY Nutrition 262. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE PROGRAM: FOOD FOR THE BRAIN: LEARNING HOW WHAT WE EAT AFFECTS COGNITION AND MAY PREVENT OR DELAY DEMENTIA 266. REGULATION OF HEALTH AND DISEASE BY SULFUR AMINO ACID METABOLISM Symposium ASN Satellite Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC (Organized and Sponsored by: the California Walnut Commission) Chaired: T.G. Anthony Cochaired: J.W. Miller Mon. 6:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC For more information on ASN Sponsored Satellite Programs, please visit http://scientificsessions.nutrition.org /satellitesessions/. Cellular and Molecular Nutrition 8:00 8:25 263. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE PROGRAM: LOW CALORIE SWEETENER AND OBESITY: SOLUTION OR PART OF THE PROBLEM 8:50 ASN Satellite (Organized and Supported by: Tate and Lyle) Mon. 6:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB 264. AGING AND CHRONIC DISEASE RIS BUSINESS MEETING RIS Forum (Sponsored by: Aging and Chronic Disease RIS) Mon. 7:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28DE Chaired: C. Castaneda-Sceppa 265. RED AND PROCESSED MEATS AND HEALTH: CONTROVERSIES FOR DIETARY GUIDANCE Symposium Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: W.W. Campbell Cochaired: F.B. Hu Clinical and Translational Nutrition 8:00 Red and Processed Meats in the American Diet: How Much Do We Really Eat? K. Belk. Colorado State Univ. 8:20 Red Meat Intake and Dietary Patterns for Cardiometabolic Health. F. Hu. Harvard Univ. 8:55 Red Meat Intake and Dietary Patterns for Cancer Prevention. M. McCullough. American Cancer Society. 9:30 Dietary Guidance and the Future of Red Meats. W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. 80 9:15 H2S in Health and Disease. R. Banerjee. Univ. of Michigan. Endogenous Hydrogen Sulfide Production is Essential for Dietary Restriction Benefits. J. Mitchell. Harvard T.H. Chan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. Influence of Vitamin B6 Status on the In vivo Function of the Transsulfuration Pathway in Sulfur Amino Acid Metabolism and Hydrogen Sulfide Production. J. Gregory. Univ. of Florida. Cysteine and Obesity: Does Cysteine Link Amino Acid and Lipid Metabolism? H. Refsum. Univ. of Oslo Inst. of Basic Med. Sci. 267. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: LIPID AND FATTY ACID METABOLISM AND TRANSPORT Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Energy & Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Chaired: M. Jacome-Sosa Cochaired: J.M. Ellis 8:00 267.1 Supplementation with Dietary EPA/DHA Influences Red Blood Cell Fatty Acid Desaturase Estimates and Reflects Tissue Changes in Fatty Acids in Systemic Organs. E.A. Davidson, C.A. Pickens, J. Fenton. Michigan State Univ. 8:15 267.2 Lipid Emulsions, Rich in n-3 or n-9 Fatty Acids, Reverse the Progression of Parenteral Nutrition-Induced Hepatic Steatosis in Mice. K-H. Huang, P.B. Smith, A.D. Patterson, A.C. Ross. Penn State 8:30 267.3 Effects of Hormone Therapy on the Association between Erythrocyte Levels of n-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids and Depression in Postmenopausal Women. Y. Jin, Y. Park. Hanyang Univ., South Korea. 8:45 267.4 A 22 bp FADS2 Insertion-Deletion Polymorphism Influences Arachidonic Acid Status. K.S.D. Kothapalli, M.S. Gadgil, S.E. Carlson, K.O. O’Brien, K. Ye, J.Y. Zhang, H.G. Park, K. Ojukwu, J. Zou, S.S. Hyon, K.S. Joshi, A. Keinan, J.T. Brenna. Cornell Univ., Univ. of Pune, India and Univ. of Kansas. 9:00 267.5 Dietary α-Linolenic Acid-Rich Flax Oil Elevates Renal and Hepatic Docsosahexaenoic Acid-Derived Bioactive Lipids. J.G. Devassy, T. Yamaguchi, N. Ibrahim, M. Gabbs, T. Winter, A. Ravandi, H.M. Aukema. Univ. of Manitoba and St. Boniface Hosp. Res. Ctr., Winnipeg. MONDAYNUTRITION 9:15 267.6 Programming Effects of Infant Diet on Cholesterol/Bile Acid Synthesis and Absorption in Piglets. K.E. Mercer, M.E. Diaz-Rubio, S. Bhattacharyya, N. Sharma, L. Yeruva. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. and Arkansas Children’s Nutr. Ctr. 9:30 267.7 Development of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver in Superoxide Dismutase-1 Knockout Mice Was Associated with Altered Expression of Hepatic Fibroblast Growth Factor-21. D. Chakraborty, X.G. Lei. Cornell Univ. 9:45 267.8 Adipocyte-Specific Ablation of Long-Chain Acyl-CoA Synthetase-4 in Mice Protects against DietInduced Obesity-Associated Decreases in White Adipocyte Oxygen Consumption and Whole Body Energy Expenditure. E.A. Killion, D. Kong, A.S. Greenberg. USDA at Tufts Univ. and Tufts Univ. Sackler Sch. of Grad. Biomed. Sci. 268. INTERNATIONAL FORUM—TAIWAN Moved to Sunday following session 132. 269. DBC: ANTI-INFLAMMATORY DIETARY BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29A Chaired: N. Ford 8:00 269.1 Anti-inflammatory and Anti-cancer Effects of the Colonic Metabolites of Polymethoxyflavone. M. Wang, X. Wu, M. Song, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. 8:15 269.2 Green Tea Extract Lowers NFκB-Mediated Inflammation during Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis in Mice Fed a High-Fat Diet Consistent with Reduced Toll-Like Receptor-4 Signaling. J. Li, C. Chitchumroonchokchai, J.B. Kim, M.V. Moller, R.S. Bruno. The Ohio State Univ. 8:30 269.3 Dietary Sphingomyelin Attenuates Inflammation and Metabolic Dysfunction in Diet-Induced Obese Mice. G.H. Norris, C.M. Porter, C. Jiang, C. Blesso. Univ. of Connecticut. 8:45 269.4 Tannase-Treated Grape Pomace Attenuates IL-1β-Induced Inflammation in Caco-2 Cells. I. Martin, G. Macedo, J. Blumberg, C-Y.O. Chen. USDA at Tufts Univ. and State Univ. of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil 9:00 269.5 Gamma Tocotrienol Suppresses NLRP3 Inflammasome by Dual Mechanism of A20-Mediated Priming Inhibition and AMPK/Autophagy Axis Activation. Y. Kim, S. Chung. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 9:15 269.6 Docosahexaenoic Acid Inhibits CeruleinInduced Cytokine Expression by Activating Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor γ in Pancreatic Acinar Cells. E.A. Song, J.W. Lim, H. Kim. Col. of Human Ecol., Yonsei Univ., South Korea. 9:30 269.7 Periodontal Symptoms and Inflammation following Non-surgical Treatment and 4 Months of Fish Oil Supplementation. A. Coates, T. Fitzsimmons, B. Chee, B. Park, K. Kapellas, P. Howe, R. Lee, S. Ivanovski. Univ. of South Australia, Univ. of Adelaide, Univ. of Newcastle and Sch. of Dent. and Oral Hlth., Griffith Univ., Australia. 9:45 269.8 Anti-inflammatory Properties of Tangeretin, 5-Demethyltangeretin and Their Primary Metabolites. S. Guo, X. Wu, J. Zheng, P. Dong, P. Qiu, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and Univ. of Jinan, China. 270. OBESITY: CHILDHOOD OBESITY MANAGEMENT Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Obesity RIS) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29B Chaired: M. Cope 8:00 270.1 Does Milk Portion Size or Energy Density Affect Preschool Children’s Lunch Intake? S.M.R. Kling, L.S. Roe, B.J. Rolls. Penn State 8:15 270.2 Effects of a Higher versus Lower Protein Diet on Weight Loss in Teenagers: Results from a Randomized Controlled Trial. J.W. Apolzan, D.S. Hsia, C.K. Martin. Pennington Biomed., Baton Rouge. 8:30 270.3 Orbitofrontal Cortex Response to Food Portion Size Is Linked with Obesogenic Appetitive Profile in Children. L.K. English, S.N. Fearnbach, M. Lasschuijt, S.J. Wilson, M. Tanofsky-Kraff, B.J. Rolls, K.L. Keller. Penn State, Wageningen Univ., Netherlands and Uniformed Svcs. Univ. of Hlth. Sci., Bethesda. 8:45 270.4 A Randomized, Controlled, Parallel Study to Assess the Effects of Soy Protein on Body Composition and General Health Parameters in Healthy Children. M. Braun, C. Cook, R. Mukherjea, D. Liska. DuPont Nutr. & Hlth., St. Louis and Mérieux NutriSci., Addison, IL. 9:00 270.5 Network Social Support for Healthy and Obesogenic Behavior Influences Children’s Dietary Intake and Weight Change during Family-Based Behavioral Obesity Treatment. K.N. Balantekin, J.F. Hayes, R.P. Kolko, R.I. Stein, B.E. Saelens, R.R. Welch, M.G. Perri, K.B. Schechtman, L.H. Epstein, D.E. Wilfley. Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., Univ. of Pittsburgh, Seattle Children’s Hosp., Univ. of Florida and Univ. at Buffalo. 9:15 270.6 Beverage Consumption among Advantest Adolescents in the Teen FAD Study. M. Nezami, J. Sabate, L. Beeson, G. Segovia-Siapco. Loma Linda Univ. 9:30 270.7 A Father’s Response to Having a Child Who Is Overweight/Obese. F.L. Battisti, H.E. Battisti. SUNY Broome, Binghamton and Marywood Univ., PA. 9:45 270.8 Initial Results from a Real-World Pediatric Specialty Weight Management Clinic in a Safety-Net Hospital. C.M. Lenders, K.D. Plourde, A.J. Manders, K. Ireland. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med., Boston Med. Ctr. and Boston Univ. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 81 M O N NUTRITIONMONDAY 271. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: METABOLIC PHENOTYPING, METABOLOMICS AND BIOMARKERS 272. VITMIN: B VITAMINS AND ONECARBON METABOLISM Minisymposium Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Vitamins and Minerals RIS) (Sponsored by: Energy & Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29D Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29C Chaired: M.R. Panasevich 8:00 271.1 Determination of CYP1A2 Activity in the U.S. Population by Use of Caffeine Metabolite Ratios in Spot Urine Samples: NHANES 2009–2010. M.E. Rybak, M.R. Sternberg, C-I. Pao, C.M. Pfeiffer. Ctr. for Dis. Control and Prevent. 8:15 271.2 Fasting Plasma Metabolomics Reveal Specific Dietary Patterns in Sow-Fed Neonatal Piglets Compared to Soy- or Dairy-Based Formula Feeding. B.D. Piccolo, M.E. Diaz-Rubio, K.E. Mercer, L. Yeruva. Arkansas Children’s Nutr. Ctr. and Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. 8:30 271.3 Impact of Vitamin D Status and High-Dose Vitamin D3 Administration on the Plasma Metabolome in Critically Ill Adults. K. Perry-Walker, D.I. Walker, J.A. Alvarez, J.E. Han, J.L. Jones, L. Hao, S. Li, K. Uppal, V.T. Tran, L. Brown, V. Tangpricha, G.S. Martin, D.P. Jones, T.R. Ziegler. Med. Col. of Georgia and Emory Univ. 8:45 271.4 Effects of HMB and Beta-Alanine Cosupplementation and Running Wheel Activity on Skeletal Muscle Morphometry and Metabolomics in Aged Rats. S.M. Garvey, J. Desai. Abbott Nutr., Columbus, OH and Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 9:00 271.5 Ablation of BCO2 Leads to Increased Susceptibility to High Fat Diet-Induced Metabolic Disorders in Mice. L. Wu, X. Guo, A. Davis, T.P. Soh, S. Clarke, E. Lucas, B. Smith, W. Wang, D. Medeiros, D. Lin. Oklahoma State Univ., Kansas State Univ. and Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City. 9:15 271.6 Altered Fatty Acid Metabolism Remodels the Hypothalamic Metabolome to Stimulate Feeding Behavior in BCO2 Knockout Mice. X. Guo, L. Wu, T. Soh, W. Chowanadisai, S. Clarke, E. Lucas, B. Smith, W. Wang, D. Medeiros, D. Lin. Oklahoma State Univ., Kansas State Univ. and Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City. 9:30 271.7 Obesity Is Associated with Distinct Changes in the Human Plasma Phospholipidome. C.A. Pickens, D. Jones, J.I. Fenton. Michigan State Univ. 9:45 271.8 Use of Plasma Metabolomics at Diagnosis to Identify Metabolic Pathways Associated with Pulmonary Tuberculosis Clearance: A Pilot Study. E. Chong, J.K. Frediani, J.A. Alvarez, V. Tangpricha, H.M. Blumberg, D.P. Jones, T. Yu, T.R. Ziegler. Emory Univ. 8:00 272.1 Maternal Choline Supplementation Modulates Maternal and Fetal Choline Metabolism and Downregulates Inflammatory Gene Expression in a Mouse Model of Placental Insufficiency. J.H. King, S.T. Kwan, J. Yan, X. Jiang, V.G. Fomin, M.S. Roberson, M.A. Caudill. Cornell Univ. and Brooklyn Col. 8:15 272.2 Increased Circulating Trimethylamine N-Oxide, a Gut-Flora-Dependent Metabolite of Choline and Betaine in Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Is Associated with High Serum Bile Acids. H-l. Zhu, X-y. Tan, Y. Liu, X-l. Chen. Sun Yat-sen Univ., China. 8:30 272.3 Vitamin B12 and Placental Expression of Transcobalamin in Pregnant Adolescents. A.J. Layden, K.O. O’Brien, E.K. Pressman, T.R. Kent, J.L. Finkelstein. Cornell Univ., Univ. of Rochester Med. Ctr. and St. John’s Res. Inst., Bangalore. 8:45 272.4 Dietary Glycine Alters One-Carbon Metabolic Kinetics In Vivo. Y-H. Huang, E-P.I. Chiang. Natl. Chung Hsing Univ., Taiwan. 9:00 272.5 Maternal Choline Supplementation Influences Placental Glucose Uptake and Metabolism in a Manner Dependent on Fetal Sex. S.T. Kwan, J.H. King, J. Yan, X. Jiang, J.S. Hutzler, M.S. Roberson, M.A. Caudill. Cornell Univ. and Brooklyn Col. 9:15 272.6 Cholesterol Homeostasis Alters One Carbon Metabolism In Vitro and In Vivo. H-A.S. Ko, Y-T.I. Wu, N-L.S. Sou, E-P. Chiang. Natl. Chung Hsing Univ., Taiwan. 9:30 272.7 One-Carbon Metabolic Kinetics in Human Disease Models. E.I. Chiang, Y-C. Wang, M-T. Wu, Y-J. Lin, H-A. Ko, Y-H. Huang, N-L. Sou, Y-M. Chen, F-Y. Tang. Natl. Chung Hsing Univ., Kao-Hsiung Med. Univ. and China Med. Univ., Taiwan. 9:45 272.8 Vitamin B12 Deficiency Defined Using Total Cobalamin, Holo-transcobalamin II, and an Algorithm of Both Total Cobalamin and Holo-transcobalamin II in Vegetarians, Vegans, and Omnivores. T. Arnold, J. Knurick, C. Johnston. Arizona State Univ. and Univ. of Nevada Las Vegas. Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.core-apps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. 82 MONDAYNUTRITION 273. COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION: FOOD SECURITY AND ITS CONNECTIONS TO NUTRITION AND HEALTH SECTION II 274. GLOBAL NUTRITION: NUTRITIONSENSITIVE PROGRAMS Minisymposium Minisymposium Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B (Sponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS) Chaired: M. Ruel Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30A Chaired: J. Nelson-Peterman 8:00 273.1 Ethnic Differences in Cumulative Exposure to Food Insecurity and Risk of Childhood Asthma. L.D. Mangini, Y. Dong, M.D. Hayward, M.R. Forman. The Univ. of Texas at Austin. 8:15 273.2 Perceived Benefits of Livestock Ownership among Female Smallholder Farmers of Mixed HIV Status in Nyanza Province, Kenya. A. Maranga, S.E. Dumas`, P.E. Mbullo, P. Wekesa, M. Onono, S.L. Young. Cornell Univ. and Kenya Med. Res. Inst. (KEMRI), Nairobi. 8:30 273.3 Food Insecurity Is Associated with Faster Cognitive Decline: Boston Puerto Rican Health Study. J. Wong, T. Scott, P. Wilde, Y. Li, K.L. Tucker, X. Gao. Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Tufts Med. Ctr., Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy, Tufts Univ., Univ. of South Florida, Univ. of Massachusetts Lowell and Penn State. 8:45 273.4 Food Insecurity Is Associated with Depression and Stress among a Cohort of Pregnant Kenyan Women of Mixed HIV Status. I. Tsai, N.R. Krumdieck, S. Collins, E.M. Widen, P. Wekesa, M. Onono, S.L. Young. Cornell Univ., Weill Cornell Med., Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. and Kenya Med. Res. Inst., Kisumu. 9:00 273.5 Food Insecurity Status and Mortality in Ontario, Canada. C. Gundersen, V. Tarasuk, J. Cheng, C. de Oliveira, P. Kurdyak, N. Dachner. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, Univ. of Toronto and Ctr. for Addiction and Ment.l Hlth., Toronto. 9:15 273.6 Are Monthly Food Insecurity Assessments Necessary? A Longitudinal Analysis in Rural Zambia. M. Na, B.L. Caswell, S.A. Talegawkar, A. Palmer. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and George Washington Univ. 9:30 273.7 Food Insecurity and Young Child BMI Status in the U.S. Affiliated Pacific Region: Findings from the Children’s Healthy Living Program. F. Li, R. Novotny, L.R. Wilkens, M.K. Fialkowski, R.R.T. Guerrero, P. Coleman, A. Bersamin, T. Fleming, J. Deenik. Univ. of Hawaii, Univ. of Guam, No. Marianas Col., Univ. of Alaska Fairbanks and American Samoa Community Col., Pago Pago. 9:45 273.8 Household Food Insecurity Access Scale and Household Food Insecurity Access Prevalence as Predictor of Stunted Child and Overweight/Obese Mother in Urban Indonesia. T. Mahmudiono, D.R. Andrias, T.S. Nindya, H. Megatsari, R. Rosenkranz. Kansas State Univ. and Univ. Airlangga, Indonesia Cochaired: S. Sinharoy 8:00 274.1 Access and Adoption of Nutrition Specific and Nutrition Sensitive Messages in Ethiopia: A Qualitative Gendered Comparison. M. Min-Barron. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy, Boston. 8:15 274.2 An Integrated Agriculture and Nutrition Program in Burkina Faso Has Positive Intra-household Spillover Effects on Maternal and Child Nutritional Status, but No Sustained Long-Term Improvements in Household Welfare. L. Bliznashka, D.K. Olney, M.T. Ruel, R. Rawat, E. Becquey, O. Birba. IFPRI, Washington, DC. 8:30 274.3 Nutrition Sensitivity in Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme: Tracing the Movement of an Idea in Ethiopia’s Development Landscape. A.M. Warren, E.A. Frongillo, S. Gillespie. Univ. of South Carolina, IFPRI, Washington, DC and Transform Nutr., Brighton, U.K. 8:45 274.4 The Effects of a Nutrition-Sensitive Agricultural Intervention on Social Support, Food Security and Maternal Self-Efficacy in Complementary Feeding. D. Toure, R. Rawat, R.J. Stoltzfus, D. Harvey, M. Mwanamwenge, D.L. Pelletier. Cornell Univ., IFPRI, Dakar and Concern, Zambia. 9:00 274.5 An Integrated Nutrition-Sensitive Health and Agriculture Intervention to Increase Egg Consumption among Infants and Young Children in Upper Manya Krobo, Ghana. A. Atuobi-Yeboah, G.S. Marquis, E. Colecraft, R. Kanlisi, R. Aryeetey, M. Klevor. Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Ghana, McGill Univ., St. Anne de Bellevue and Heifer Ghana. 9:15 274.6 Household Food Insecurity and Hunger in Selected Ethiopian Agricultural Communities: Examination of Supply and Demand Factors. G.A. Zello, G. Ersino, C.J. Henry, N. Regassa. Col. of Pharm. & Nutr., Univ. of Saskatchewan and Hawassa Univ., Ethiopia. 9:30 274.7 Global Dietary Data Availability: Results of a Systematic Worldwide Search for Data on Dietary Intakes of 55 Foods and Nutrients. G. Singh, M. Shulkin, K. Morrish, A. Tahira, D. Marsden, D. Mozaffarian. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. & Policy, Tufts Univ. 9:45 274.8 Large-Scale Television Campaign Associated with Higher Prevalence of Exclusive Breastfeeding in Vietnam. T.T. Nguyen, S. Alayón, P.H. Nguyen, A. Jimerson, N. Hajeebhoy, J. Baker, E.A. Frongillo. FHI 360, Hanoi, FHI 360, Save the Children and IFPRI, Washington, DC and Univ. of South Carolina. 83 M O N NUTRITIONMONDAY 275. MATERNAL, PERINATAL AND PEDIATRIC: MAMMARY GLAND FUNCTION AND EFFECTS OF MILK COMPONENTS ON INFANT HEALTH Minisymposium Minisymposium Maternal, Perinatal and Pediatric RIS (Sponsored by: Nutrition Education and Behavioral Science RIS) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30D Chaired: S. Kelleher Chaired: A.R. Mobley Cochaired: S. Lee Cochaired: A. Bersamin 8:00 275.1 ZnT2-Mediated Zn Transport Is Required for Vesicle Acidification and Milk Secretion during Lactation. S. Lee, O.C. Rivera, S.L. Kelleher. Penn State Hershey Col. of Med. 8:15 275.2 The Effect of Genetic Variation on the Human Milk Proteome. D.G. Lemay, K.L. Beck, E. Kwok, B.S. Phinney, I. Korf. Univ. of California, Davis. 8:30 275.3 Effects of Metformin Exposure during Lactation on Mouse Offspring Metabolic Health and Maternal Lactation Characteristics. B. Gregg, J. Brill, N. Botezatu, M.R. Smith. Univ. of Michigan. 8:45 275.4 Mammary Gland Structure and Functional Changes in Mouse Model of Chronic Gestational Alcohol Exposure. R.M. Amos-Kroohs, A.A. Cheng, R.D. Clugston, T-N. Huang, C-L. Yen, W.S. Blaner, S.M. Smith. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison and Columbia Univ. 9:00 275.5 Acidic Human Milk Oligosaccharides Vary across Populations and over Lactation. D.S. Newburg, C. Chen, A. Cline, A.L. Morrow. Boston Col. and Cincinnati Childrens Hosp. Med. Ctr. 9:15 275.6 Role of Human Milk Oligosaccharides in Fetoplacental Endothelial Function in Gestational Diabetes Mellitus. E. Jantscher-Krenn, J. Aigner, U. Lam, M. van Poppel, L. Bode, G. Desoye. Med. Univ. of Graz, Univ. of Graz, Austria and UCSD. 9:30 275.7 Term Infant Formula Supplemented with Human Milk Oligosaccharides (2’Fucosyllactose and Lacto-Nneotetraose) Shifts Stool Microbiota and Metabolic Signatures Closer to That of Breastfed Infants. P. Steenhout, P. Sperisen, F-P. Martin, N. Sprenger, S. Wernimont, S. Pecquet, B. Berger. Nestlé Hlth. Sci., Vevey, Nestlé Inst. of Hlth. Sci., Lausanne, Nestlé Res. Ctr., Lausanne, and Nestlé Nutr., King of Prussia and Vevey, Switzerland. 9:45 275.8 Unlike Adipokines, Insulin Concentrations in Human Milk Surpass Those in Maternal Circulation, Are Higher among Overweight Women, and Are Associated with Maternal Insulin Resistance. B.E. Young, C. Westcott, C. ChartierLogan, T. Hernandez, L. Barbour, J. Friedman, N.F. Krebs. Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med. 84 276. NUTRITION EDUCATION: CHILDHOOD OBESITY PREVENTION 8:00 276.1 Cardiac Kids Club Improves Nutrition Knowledge, Dietary Intake, and Fitness among 4th & 5th Graders. M. Beck, M. Spence, K. Clay, C. Perry-Burst, S. Colby, K. Kavanagh. Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville and Knox County Schs. 8:15 276.2 Association of Fathers’ Income and Education Level with Childhood Obesity Risk Factors in Preschool Age Children. R.L. Vollmer, A. Kari, J.S. Foster, A.R. Mobley. Illinois State Univ. and Univ. of Connecticut. 8:30 276.3 Assessment of Circannual Variation in Relative Weight among Children in Wisconsin Using Electronic Health Records. S. Bhutani, D. Schoeller, J. Kloke, L. Hanrahan. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison 8:45 276.4 Parental Intention to Engage in Healthier Beverage Practices: Effects of Gain-versus Loss-Framed Messages. A. Zahid, M. Reicks. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul. 9:00 276.5 Impact of the Shaping Healthy Choices Program on Students’ Lunchtime Fruit and Vegetable Consumption: A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Multicomponent SchoolBased Nutrition Intervention. J.C. Taylor, R.E. Scherr, J.D. Linnell, G. Feenstra, M. Dharmar, S. Zidenberg-Cherr. Univ. of California, Davis and Univ. of California Davis Hlth. Syst., Sacramento. 9:15 276.6 Caregivers’ Estimations of 4-7-y-Old Children’s Food Neophobia and Eating Temperament and Observations of Children’s Food Refusals. S.L. Johnson, W.J. Gavin, P. Davies, B. Taylor, R.E. Boles, L.L. Bellows. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus and Colorado State Univ. 9:30 276.7 Television Food Advertisement Exposure and FTO Genotype in Relation to Excess Consumption in Children. D. Gilbert-Diamond, J. Emond, R.K. Lansigan, K. Rapuano, W. Kelley, T. Heatherton, J. Sargent. Geisel Sch. of Med. at Dartmouth and Dartmouth Col. 9:45 276.8 Using a Humanoid Robot along with a Registered Dietitian in an After-School Program to Promote Healthy Eating Habits and Physical Activity in School-Aged Children. N. Mikati, M. Eltoukhy, F. Huffman. Florida Intl. Univ. and Univ. of Miami. MONDAYNUTRITION 277. THE PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM: SYSTEMS APPROACHES IN NUTRITION Special Session Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D 281. DIETARY BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS RIS BUSINESS MEETING AND HOT TOPIC: PROCESSING EFFECTS ON BIOACTIVE FOOD COMPONENTS AND THE IMPACT ON TRANSLATING LABORATORY STUDIES TO HUMAN HEALTH OUTCOMES Chaired: P.J. Stover RIS Forum Cellular and Molecular Nutrition Mon. 12:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC 10:30 Achieving Precision Nutrition in Public Health, Dietary Guidance and Food Systems: Mathematical and Computational Approaches from Complexity Systems. R. Hammond. Brookings Inst. 10:50 Small Data and mHealth. D. Estrin. Cornell Tech. 11:10 100K Wellness Project: The First-ever Broadly Integrative Approach to Scientific Wellness. N. Price. Inst. for Syst. Biol. 11:30 Metabolomics Approaches to Classifying Patient Populations and Identifying Responders and Nonresponders to Nutrition Interventions. K. Hiller. Luxembourg Ctr. for Syst. Biomed. 11:50 Panel Discussion. 278. E.V. MCCOLLUM INTERNATIONAL LECTURESHIP IN NUTRITION Chaired: J.D. Lambert 282. DIET AND CANCER RIS BUSINESS MEETING AND HOT TOPIC: RED MEAT, PROCESSED MEAT, AND CANCER: WHAT’S NEXT? RIS Forum Mon. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB Chaired: E. Cho 283. MATERNAL, PERINATAL AND PEDIATRIC RIS/ ISRHML BUSINESS MEETING AND LUNCHEON RIS Forum Award Lecture Maternal, Perinatal and Pediatric RIS Mon. 1:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D (Cosponsored by: The International Society for Research in Human Milk and Lactation (ISRHML)) 1:45 R.J. Stoltzfus. Cornell Univ 279. NUTRITION TRANSLATION RIS BUSINESS MEETING, KEYNOTE PRESENTATION AND NETWORKING EVENT RIS Forum Mon. 12:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28DE Chaired: S. Kelleher 284. HEALTH RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DIETARY SUGARS: WHY CAN’T WE ALL AGREE? (Sponsored by: Nutrition Translation RIS) Symposium Mon. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: M. Braun Chaired: D.M. Bier 280. MEDICAL NUTRITION COUNCIL BUSINESS MEETING RIS Forum Cochaired: D.M. Klurfeld Clinical and Translational Nutrition 3:00 (Sponsored by: Medical Nutrition Council) Mon. 1:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Chaired: C.W. Bales 3:18 3:36 3:54 4:12 4:30 Science Basis Used to Develop Recommendations Regarding Dietary Sugars: Challenges of Using Available Sugars Data for Recommendations. J. Sievenpiper. Univ. of Toronto. Metrics Used by the 2015 DGAC to Develop Dietary Recommendations Regarding Sugars in the Diet. M. Neuhouser. Fred Hutchinson Cancer Res. Ctr. Metrics Used to Develop Dietary Recommendations Regarding Sugars in Diet. T. Nicklas. Baylor Univ. Strength of Dental Caries Evidence Used to Formulate Recommendations for Dietary Sugars Intake. D. Zero. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Dent. DevelopmentofScientificallyValidHealthRecommendations Regarding Dietary Sugars in the Current Regulatory Environment. B. Schneeman. USAID. Panel Discussion. 85 M O N NUTRITIONMONDAY 285. POSTPRANDIAL INFLAMMATION: ENDOTOXIN OR FREE FATTY ACIDS? Symposium Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC Chaired: D.H. Hwang Cochaired: K.L. Fritsche Cellular and Molecular Nutrition 3:00 Postprandial Inflammation: Overview. P. Calder. Univ. of Southampton. 3:25 High Fat Diet-induced Postprandial Endotoxemia. M-C. Michalski. INRA. 3:50 Plasma Free Fatty Acids: Major Determinant for Postprandial Inflammation. D. Hwang. Western Human Nutri. Res. Ctr. (ARS/USDA), UC-Davis. 4:15 Methodological Challenges Associated with and Possible Solutions to Measuring Endotoxin in Plasma/ Sera Samples. K. Fritsche. Univ. of Missouri. 286. MAKING YOUR SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERIES KNOWN: BEST PRACTICES FOR EFFECTIVE AND CREDIBLE COMMUNICATION Symposium Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC 3:15 287.2 Gene Expression of Vitamin D Regulatory Enzymes in Renal Tissue of Growing Pigs Is Modulated by Maternal Dietary Vitamin D Concentrations. L. Amundson, T. Crenshaw. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 3:30 287.3 Consequences of Maternal Iron-Deficiency: Fetal Anemia, and Hypoxia in Select Tissues of the Conceptus. A. Woodman, Y. Mansour, S. Bourque. Univ. of Alberta. 3:45 287.4 Dysfunction of Insulin-Like Growth Factor Signaling in Skeletal Muscles of Low Birth Weight Neonatal Pigs. Y. Chen, H. Zhu, S.R. McCauley, K.R. Oliver, K.A. Tinnesz, S.W. El-Kadi. VPI and State Univ. 4:00 287.5 Metabolic Phenotype and Increased Adiposity in a Mouse Model of Chronic Gestational Alcohol Exposure. R.M. Amos-Kroohs, D.W. Nelson, C-L.E. Yen, S.M. Smith. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 4:15 287.6 Postnatal Changes in Low Birth Weight Piglets Fed a High-Energy Diet. S.R. McCauley, Y. Chen, K.R. Oliver, R.P. Rhoads, S. El-Kadi. VPI and State Univ. 4:30 287.7 Effects of DHA and Choline Supplementation on Developmental Outcomes of the Typically Developing and Fetal Alcohol Exposed Rat Pup. L.G. Canipe III, T.W. Jackson, C.L. Cheatham. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Kannapolis. 4:45 287.8 Gestational Exposure to Maternal Obesity Influences β3-Adrenergic Agonist-Induced Beiging of White Adipose Tissue in Offspring. K. Shankar, P. Kang, Y. Zhong, K.M. Thakali, U.D. Wankhade. Arkansas Children’s Nutr. Ctr., Little Rock. 288. INTERNATIONAL FORUM – CHINA Chaired: M. Braun International Forum Cochaired: M.N. Lesser (Organized and Sponsored by: the Chinese Nutrition Society and North American Chinese Society for Nutrition) Education 3:00 3:30 4:40 Time in the Public Eye: Maintaining Credibility While Using Your Voice. K. Sollid, A. Brown, C. Weaver, J. Hill, A. Beaudreault. IFIC, Univ. Alabama at Birmingham, Purdue Univ., Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, Univ. of California-Davis. Beyond the Bench: Communicating Science through Stories. J. Storlie. Storlietelling LLC. Using Your Voice Now: Next Steps and Future Directions. A.C. Ross. Pennsylvania State Univ. 287. EXPERIMENTAL ANIMAL NUTRITION: ANIMAL MODELS OF FETAL NUTRITION, PROGRAMMING AND NEONATAL DEVELOPMENT Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Experimental Animal Nutrition RIS) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Chaired: R.N. Dilger Cochaired: S. Jacobi 3:00 287.1 Maternal High-Fructose in Pregnancy Adversely Affects Morphological Aspects of the Placenta. A. Song, S. Astbury, A. Hoedl, N. Coursen, W. Dixon, D. Hemmings, R. Bell. Univ. of Alberta. 86 Mon. 3:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB Chaired: C. Wu Cochaired: C. Guo 3:30 CNS – NACSN Collaboration: Training Programs. Y. Wang. Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY 3:40 CNS – NACSN Collaboration: Research Enhancement. H. Mo. Georgia State Univ. 3:50 Introduction of the First International Nutrition Congresses. C. Guo. Chinese Nutr. Society 4:00 Introduction of Chinese Dietary Reference Intakes. Y. Cheng. Chinese Nutr. Society 4:15 Nutrition and Global Health. TBD. North American Chinese Society for Nutr. 4:30 S-Adenosyl-homocyeteine as An Intermediate Metabolite of Methinion and Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Diseases. W. Ling. Chinese Nutr. Society 4:45 Optimal Pregnant Weight Gain and Dietary Status of Women in A Urban Population from Eastern Jiangsu of China. Z. Wang. Chinese Nutr. Society, Nanjing Med. Univ. MONDAYNUTRITION 289. DBC: HUMAN INTERVENTION STUDIES WITH DIETARY BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS Minisymposium 290. NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY: EPIDEMIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ADDRESSING DIET AND HEALTH OUTCOMES (Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS) Minisymposium Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29A (Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS) Chaired: A.P. Neilson Cochaired: A. BASU 3:00 289.1 Green Tea Extract and Catechol-OMethyltransferase (COMT) Genotype Modify Fasting Serum Insulin and Plasma Adiponectin Concentrations in a Randomized Controlled Trial of Overweight and Obese Postmenopausal Women. A. Dostal, H. Samavat, L. Espejo, A. Arikawa, N.R. Stendell-Hollis, M.S. Kurzer. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul, Univ. of North Florida and Central Washington Univ. 3:15 289.2 Systematic Review of Anthocyanins and Markers of Cardiovascular Disease. T.C. Wallace, M. Slavin, C.L. Frankenfeld. George Mason Univ. 3:30 289.3 Green Tea Extract Supplementation Modifies Circulating Lipids In Postmenopausal Women: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Clinical Trial. H. Samavat, A. Rose, A. Dostal, R. Wang, A. Wu, J-M. Yuan, M. Kurzer. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul, Univ. of Pittsburgh Cancer Inst., Univ. of So. California Keck Sch. of Med. and Univ. of Pittsburgh Grad. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 3:45 289.4 Changes in Dietary Profiles, Markers of Cardiometabolic Health and Cognitive Function following 12 Weeks of Peanut Consumption. A. Coates, J. Barbour, J. Buckley, J. Bryan, P. Howe. Univ. of South Australia and Univ. of Newcastle, Australia. 4:00 289.5 The Effect of Oat Beta-Glucan on Clinical Lipid Markers for Cardiovascular Disease Risk Reduction: A Systematic Review & Meta-analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. H.V.T. Ho, J.L. Sievenpiper, A.L. Zurbau, S. Blanco Mejia, E. Jovanovski, F. Au Yeung, A.L. Jenkins, V. Vuksan. St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto. 4:15 289.6 Effect of 3 Probiotic Strains on Bile Acids and Glucose Metabolism in Healthy Adults: A Randomized, DoubleBlind Placebo-Controlled Crossover Study. T. Culpepper, C.C. Rowe, C. Nieves, S-A. Girard, M. Christman, S. Chung, T.A. Thompkins, B. Langkamp-Henken. Univ. of Florida, Lallemand Hlth. Solutions, Montreal, MCC Stat. Consulting LLC, Gainesville and Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 4:30 289.7 Probiotic Lacidofil® STRONG Mitigates the Antibiotic-Induced Alteration of the Fecal MicroRNA Signature in Healthy Humans. A. Taibi, E.M. Comelli, S-A. Girard, T.A. Tompkins. Univ. of Toronto, Ctr. for Child Nutr. and Hlth., Toronto and Lallemand Hlth. Solutions, Monreal. 4:45 289.8 Preclinical and Clinical Trials for Investigating the Effect of A1 versus A2 Beta-Casein Containing Diet on Glutathione Antioxidant Status. M.S. Trivedi, R. Deth, Y. Zhang. Nova Southeastern Univ. and Northeastern Univ. Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29B Chaired: L. Troy Cochaired: A.E. Millen 3:00 290.1 Prospective Relations between Red Blood Cell n-6 and n-3 Fatty Acid Composition and Cognitive Function among Older Puerto Rican Adults. S.J. Bigornia, T.M. Scott, W.S. Harris, K.L. Tucker. Univ. of Massachusetts Lowell, USDA at Tufts Univ. and Sanford Sch. of Med., Univ. of South Dakota. 3:15 290.2 Plasma PLP Concentration and Depressive Symptomatology in Older Latino Adults: A Longitudinal Analysis with Time-Varying Covariates. S.P. Arevalo, T.E. Scott, L.M. Falcon, K.L. Tucker. Univ. of Massachusetts Lowell and Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med. 3:30 290.3 A Folate, Vitamin B12 and HomocysteineRelated Dietary Pattern and Risk of Subclinical Atherosclerosis: Findings from the MRC National Survey of Health and Development. J. Maddock, G.L. Ambrosini, S. Ray, NSHD Study Team. MRC Human Nutr. Res., Univ. of Cambridge, Univ. of Western Australia Sch. of Popul. Hlth. and Univ. Col. London. 3:45 290.4 Plasma trans Palmitoleic Acid and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors in Youth with Type 1 Diabetes: SEARCH Nutrition Ancillary Study. N.S. The, I.B. King, J.L. Crandell, S. Couch, B. Tzeel, A.D. Liese, D. Dabelea, E. Mayer-Davis. Furman Univ., Univ. of New Mexico, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Univ. of Cincinnati Col. of Allied Hlth., Univ. of South Carolina and Univ. of Colorado Denver, Aurora. 4:00 290.5 Protein Intake and Risk of Hip Fractures in Post-Menopausal Women and Men Over 50 Years. T. Fung, W. Willett, D. Feskanich. Simmons Col., Harvard T.H. Chan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Channing Div. of Network Med., Boston. 4:15 290.6 Vitamin D and Ovarian Reserve and Fecundability among Women with Proven Fecundity. S.L. Mumford, R. Silver, L.A. Sjaarda, N. Galai, J. Stanford, A. Lynch, L. Lesher, N. Perkins, J. Wactawski-Wende, R. Garbose, K. Kim, K. Michels, E. Schisterman. NICHD, NIH, Rockville, MD, Univ. of Utah, Univ. of Haifa, Univ. of Colorado Aurora, Univ. at Buffalo and Johns Hopkins Univ. 4:30 290.7 Calibrated Total Sugars Intake and Risk of Type 2 Diabetes in the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study. N. Tasevska, M. Pettinger, V. Kipnis, D. Midthune, L. Tinker, N. Potischman, M. Neuhouser, J. Beasley, L. Van Horn, B. Howard, S. Liu, J. Manson, J. Shikany, C. Thomson, R. Prentice. Arizona State Univ., Fred Hutchinson Cancer Res. Ctr., NCI, NIH, Albert Einstein Col. of Med., Northwestern Univ., Chicago, Medstar Hlth. Res. Inst., Hyattsville, MD, Brown Univ., Harvard Med. Sch., Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and Univ. of Arizona. 4:45 290.8 Eating Episodes and Low Calorie Sweetener Intake in the U.S. Adult Population: NHANES 20072012. B.P. Marriott, K.J. Hunt, A.M. Malek, D. Greenberg, J. St. Peter. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and PepsiCo, NY 87 M O N NUTRITIONMONDAY 291. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: OBESITY AND THE METABOLIC SYNDROME (CO-SPONSOR: OBESITY RIS) 292. VITMIN: MICRONUTRIENT INTERVENTION AND TRACE ELEMENT TRANSPORT AND HOMEOSTASIS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Minisymposium Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Energy & Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) (Sponsored by: Vitamins and Minerals RIS) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29C Mon. 3:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29D Chaired: B. Piccolo Chaired: N. Gletsu-Miller Cochaired: E. Reverri Cochaired: J.K. Urbanek 3:00 291.1 Protection against Insulin Resistance in Obesity Is Accompanied by Low Rates of Systemic Fatty Acid Mobilization and Attenuated Markers of Fibrosis and Inflammation in Adipose Tissue. D.W. Van Pelt, A.Y. Wang, J.F. Horowitz. Univ. of Michigan. 3:15 291.2 High-Fat Diet-Induced Obesity Suppresses Adaptive Thermogenesis via Toll-Like Receptor 4-Mediated Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress. M. Okla, W. Wang, S. Chung. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 3:30 291.3 A High Fat Diet Containing Fish Oil Reduces Weight Gain and Metabolic Syndrome Associated with Glucocorticoid Therapy. M. van der Merwe, L. Beech, S. Godwin, R. Buddington, K. Ringwald-Smith. Sch. of Hlth. Studies, Univ. of Memphis and St Jude Children’s Res. Hosp. 3:45 291.4 Effect of Caloric Restriction and Dietary Composition on Liver Triglyceride Content in Subjects with Abdominal Obesity: The Wageningen Belly Fat Study. M. Mensink, S. Schutte, I. Chatindiara, D. Esser, E. Siebelink, L. Afman. Wageningen Univ., Netherlands. 4:00 291.5 Intake of Genistein and Daidzein Ameliorates Adiposity and Metabolic Syndrome in High Fat Fed C57BL/6JMice. T. Luo, O. Miranda, A. Adamson, N.F. Shay. Oregon State Univ. 4:15 291.6 High Phosphorus Diet Mitigates Impairments in Lipid and Glucose Metabolism Associated with Diet-Induced Obesity in Male Sprague Dawley Rats. M. Bassil, N. Zeeni, N. Farran, O. Obeid. Lebanese American Univ. and American Univ. of Beirut. 4:30 291.7 A Short-Term Transition from a High-Fat Diet to a Normal-Fat Diet before Pregnancy Exacerbates Female Mouse Offspring Obesity. L. Xie, Q. Fu, P. Olson, K. Zhang. Univ. of North Dakota and Wuhan, China. 4:45 291.8 Disparities in the Incidence of Hypertension in Youth. C. Koebnick, M.F. Daley, Y.D. Mohan, K. Reynolds, X. Li, M.A. Sidell, A.H. Porter, J. Handler, S.R. Daniels, B.D. Kuizon. Kaiser Permanente So. California, Pasadena, Kaiser Permanente Colorado, Denver, Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Med. Ctr., Kaiser Permanente Anaheim Med. Ctr. and Children’s Hosp. Colorado, Aurora. 3:00 292.1 Lack of Intestinal Divalent Metal-Ion Transporter 1 Perturbs Copper Homeostasis in Mice. X. Wang, S. Flores, J-H. Ha, C. Doguer, J.F. Collins. Univ. of Florida. 3:15 292.2 Responses of Total and Bioavailable 25-Hydroxyvitamin D and Factors Modifying the Responses: A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Trial of Vitamin D3 Supplementation in an Asian Population. X. Lin, P. Yao, L. Sun, H. Li. Shanghai Insts. for Biol. Sci., CAS. 3:30 292.3 Hepcidin Attenuates Zinc Efflux in Caco-2 Cells. S.R. Hennigar, J.P. McClung. U.S. Army Res. Inst. of Envrn. Med., Natick, MA. 3:45 292.4 High Dietary Iron Intake Impairs Growth and Causes Copper Deficiency in Sprague-Dawley Rats. J-H. Ha, C. Doguer, S. Zhao, X. Wang, S.R. Flores, J.F. Collins. Univ. of Florida. 4:00 292.5 Iron Status and Regulation in High-Risk Pregnant African American Women. L. Welke. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. 4:15 292.6 The Ferroxidase Hephaestin Is Required for Optimal Iron Absorption in Weanling Mice, but Is Dispensable for Enhanced Iron Absorption in Adults. C. Doguer, J-H. Ha, M. Alla, J.F. Collins. Univ. of Florida 4:30 292.7 Trace Element Distribution in Flatiron Mice, a Genetic Model of Human Ferroportin Disease. Y.A. Seo, M. Wessling-Resnick. Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 4:45 292.8 Impact of Milk-Based Micronutrient Supplementation on Zinc, Iron, and Vitamin A Deficiencies in School Children in Quito, Ecuador. D. Guevara, S. Reyes, D. Anarumba, M. López, S. Cevallos, E. Montenegro, N. Flores, M. Fornasini, M.E. Baldeon. Univ. de las Americas, Ecuador 293. AGING: NUTRITION AND CARDIOMETABOLIC HEALTH Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Aging and Chronic Disease RIS) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30A Chaired: C.C. Tangney Cochaired: K. Starr 3:00 293.1 Effects of Polyphenolic-Rich Dark Chocolate and Almonds on Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Overweight and Obese Adults. Y. Lee, C. Berryman, S. West, C-Y.O. Chen, J. Blumberg, A. Preston, K. Lapsley, J. Fleming, P. KrisEtherton. Penn State, USDA at Tufts Univ., Hershey Co., PA and Almond Bd. of California, Modesto. 3:15 293.2 Incorporation of Almonds in a CholesterolLowering Diet Improves Non-ABCA1-Mediated Cholesterol Efflux in Normal Weight Adults. C.E. Berryman, J.A. Fleming, P.M. Kris-Etherton. Penn State 88 MONDAYNUTRITION 3:30 293.3 Daily Almond Consumption Reduces Fasting Total, LDL and non-HDL Cholesterol and Body Fat Mass in Healthy Young Korean Subjects: A Randomized Controlled Trial. H. Park, Y. Liu, Y. Song, H-S. Kim. ICAN Nutr. Educ. and Res., Seoul and Sookmyung Women’s Univ., South Korea. 3:45 293.4 Effect of a 1-Year Walnut Supplementation on Blood Lipids among Older Individuals: Findings from the Walnuts and Healthy Aging Study. E. Ros, S. Rajaram, A. Sala-Vila, M. Serra-Mir, C. Valls-Pedret, M. Cofán, I. Roth, M. Doménech, T. Freitas, C. Calvo, E. Haddad, J. Sabaté. Hosp. Clin., Barcelona and Loma Linda Univ. 4:00 293.5 Adherence to a Mediterranean Diet, and Effects on Cardiometabolic Health in Older Australian:; Results from the MedIterranean Diet for Cognition and Cardiovascular Health in the Elderly (MedLey) Trial. C.R. Davis, J. Bryan, C. Wilson, J. Hodgson, R. Woodman, K. Murphy. Univ. of South Australia, Sch. of Med., Flinders Univ. and Univ. of Western Australia. 4:15 293.6 Validation of a Sodium Screener in Two Samples. C.C. Tangney, H.C. Rasmussen, J. Rusch, O. Moss, L.A. Cerwinske, C. Richards, M. Li, B.M. Appelhans. Rush Univ. Med. Ctr. 4:30 293.7 Ldlr-/- Mice Lacking PEMT Have Elevated Plasma Trimethylamine-Oxide Levels but Are Protected from High Fat Diet-Induced Atherosclerosis. R. Jacobs, Y. Zia, A. Rajabi, S. Mi, K-A. Leonard, Y-Y. Zhao, C. Field, J. Curtis, J. van der Veen. Univ. of Alberta. 4:45 293.8 Inactive Matrix Gla Protein Is Associated with Arterial Stiffness and Vascular Endothelial Function in AfricanAmerican Hemodialysis Patients. M.E. Fain, J. Nguyen, G.K. Kapuku, W.D. Paulson, J.J. White, Y. Dong, N.K. Pollock. Med. Col. of Georgia, Georgia Regents Univ. 294. GLOBAL NUTRITION: IMPROVING INFANT FEEDING PRACTICES OF VULNERABLE POPULATIONS 3:30 294.3 Complementary Feeding Is Positively Related with Family Care, Care for Women, and Improved Water and Sanitation among Populations. S. Basnet, E.A. Frongillo, S. Kulkarni, F. de Castro. Univ. of South Carolina and Mexico Natl. Inst. of Publ. Hlth., Cuernavaca. 3:45 294.4 Differences in Child Feeding and Handwashing Practices within the Context of a Randomized Controlled Trial of Nutrition, Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Interventions among Low-Income Bangladeshi Mothers. K. Jannat, S.P. Luby, L. Unicomb, K.K. Das, E. Leontsini, M. Rahman, P. Winch, C. Stewart. icddr, Bangladesh, Stanford Univ., Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Univ. of California Davis. 4:00 294.5 Food Sources of Total Energy, Total Sugars and Added Sugars among Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers Living in Mexico: Findings from the 2012 Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey. D. Deming, M. Afeiche, K. Reidy, A. Eldridge, S. Villalpando-Carrión. Nestlé Nutr. Global R&D, NJ, Nestle Res. Ctr., Lausanne, Children’s Hosp. of Mexico and Nestlé Infant Nutr., Mexico City. 4:15 294.6 Snacking Starts Early and Is Prevalent among Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers in Mexico. D. Deming, M. Afeiche, K. Reidy, A. Eldridge, S. Villalpando-Carrión. Nestlé Nutr. Global R&D, Floral Park, NJ, Nestle Res. Ctr., Lausanne, Children’s Hosp. of Mexico, Natl. Inst. of Hlth., Mexico City and Nestlé Infant Nutr., Mexico City. 4:30 294.7 Household Food Insecurity and Complementary Feeding in Malawi. E. Faerber, J. Weiss, E. Kedera, A. Webb Girard. Emory Univ. and Concern Worldwide/US, New York, NY. 4:45 Conclusion. 295. MATERNAL, PERINATAL AND PEDIATRIC: EARLY CHILDHOOD NUTRITION Minisymposium Maternal, Perinatal and Pediatric RIS Minisymposium Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C (Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council) Chaired: D. Sela (Cosponsored by: Maternal, Perinatal and Pediatric RIS) Cochaired: E. Jantscher-Krenn Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B Chaired: M.E. Bentley Cochaired: S. Syed 3:00 294.1 Modeling Pathways from a Behavior Change Communications Intervention to Complementary Feeding Outcomes: A Proof of Concept Study. A. Zongrone, P. Menon, G. Pelto, J-P. Habicht, K.M. Rasmussen, M. Constas, A. Khaled, K.K. Saha, R.J. Stoltzfus. IFPRI, Washington, DC, Cornell Univ. and BRAC Univ., Bangladesh. 3:15 294.2 A Large-Scale Behavior Change Initiative to Improve Infant and Young Child Feeding Had Positive Impact on Language and Motor Development in Bangladesh. E. Frongillo, P. Nguyen, K. Saha, T. Sanghvi, K. Afsana, R. Haque, J. Baker, M. Ruel, R. Rawat, P. Menon. Univ. of South Carolina, IFPRI and FHI360, Washington, DC and BRAC, Bangladesh. 3:00 295.1 From Carrots to Peas and Parsnips: Programming Flexibility through Guided Multisensory Exploration in an Early Childhood Environment. S. Kannan, H.B. Ganguri, Z. Qamar, U. Lakshmanan, C. Wittcopp. So. Illinois Univ. Carbondale, Kronsys, Raleigh, Texas A&M Univ. and Baystate Med. Ctr., Springfield, MA. 3:15 295.2 INSIGHT Study Parenting Intervention to Prevent Childhood Obesity Improves Patterns of Dietary Exposures in Infants. E.E. Hohman, J.S. Savage, I.M. Paul, L.L. Birch. Penn State, Penn State Col. of Med. and Univ. of Georgia. 3:30 295.3 Parental Knowledge, Perceptions and Consumption of Milk and Alternatives Relates to Intakes of Young Children 2-8 Years of Age. N.R. Brett, C.A. Vanstone, J.L. Maguire, F. Rauch, H.A. Weiler. Sch. of Dietet. and Human Nutr., McGill Univ., Li Ka Shing Inst. of St. Michael’s Hosp., Univ. of Toronto and Shriners Hosp. for Children, Montreal. 3:45 295.4 Preschool Children’s Food Involvement Is Related to Fruit and Vegetable Intake. J.M. Jarick, B.H. Fiese. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 89 M O N NUTRITIONMONDAY 4:00 295.5 Effects of Omega-3 Supplementation during Pregnancy and Youth on Neurodevelopment and Cognition in Childhood: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. M.L. Shulkin, L. Pimpin, D. Bellinger, S. Kranz, C. Duggan, W. Fawzi, D. Mozaffarian. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy, Tufts Univ., Boston Children’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch. and Harvard T.H. Chan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 4:15 295.6 Infant Feeding Practices in a Diverse Group of Women: The Healthy Start Study. J.L. Kaar, K.A. Sauder, T.L. Crume, A.L.B. Shapiro, A.P. Starling, D. Dabelea. Sch. of Med. and Colorado Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Colorado, Aurora. 4:30 295.7 The Early Life Predictors of a Dietary Pattern Linked with Greater Metabolic Risk in Adolescence and Tracking of Its Food Components. G. Appannah, G.K. Pot, W.H. Oddy, S.A. Jebb, G.L. Ambrosini. Univ. Putra Malaysia, MRC Human Nutr. Res., Cambridge, Sch. of Med., King’s Col. London, VU Univ. Amsterdam Fac. of Earth and Life Sci., Univ. of Western Australia and Univ. of Oxford 4:45 295.8 Iron Status Predicts EEG Measures of Brain Function during a Memory Task in 4-6 Month Old Infants and May Reveal Associations between Early Iron Status and Memory Behavior. J.E.H. Nevins, S.S. Robertson, R.L. Canfield, J.D. Haas. Cornell Univ. 4:15 296.6 Feeding a Maternal Diet Enriched in Docosahexaenoic Acid to Lactating Dams Improves the Ex Vivo Tolerance Response to Egg Protein in Suckled Pups. C. Richard, E.D. Lewis, S. Goruk, C.J. Field. Univ. of Alberta. 4:30 296.7 Effects of a Randomized, Controlled Trial of Daily Vitamin D3 Supplementation during Pregnancy on Regulatory Immunity and Inflammation. M. Zerofsky, B. Jacoby, T.L. Pedersen, C.B. Stephensen. USDA, Davis and UC Davis Med. Ctr., Sacramento. 4:45 296.8 Effect of a Diet Rich in Whole Grains on Gut Microbiota, and Immune and Inflammatory Markers of Healthy Adults. S.M. Vanegas, M. Meydani, J.B. Barnett, A. Kane, B. Goldin, D. Wu, J.P. Karl, C. Brown, P. Vangay, D. Knights, L. Li, S.S. Jonnalagadda, M. Thomas, E. Satlzman, S.N. Meydani. USDA and Sch. of Med., Tufts Univ., Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis and General Mills, Minneapolis. 297. JOINT EVENT: COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH AND, NUTRITION EDUCATION AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE RIS BUSINESS MEETING AND SPEED NETWORKING SESSION RIS Forum (Sponsored by: Nutrition Education and Behavioral Science RIS) 296. NUTRITION IMMUNOLOGY, INFECTION AND INFLAMMATION Minisymposium (Cosponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS) (Sponsored by: Nutritional Immunology RIS) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28DE Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30D Chaired: A.R. Mobley Chaired: E.A. Karlsson Cochaired: S. Colby Cochaired: S. Comstock 3:00 296.1 Formula Diet-Driven Microbial Diversity and Immunological Consequence in Small Intestine of Neonatal Porcine Model. V.L. Yeruva, N. Spencer, A.K. Bowlin, S.V. Chintapalli, K. Shankar, L. Hennings, M.A. Cleves, M. Saraf, T.M. Badger, M.J. Ronis. Arkansas Children’s Nutr. Ctr. and LSU, New Orleans. 3:15 296.2 Anemia and Iron Status Are Predictors of Gut Microbiome Composition and Metabolites in Infants and Children in Rural Kenya. D. Paganini, T. Jaeggi, C. Cercamondi, P. Kujinga, D. Moretti, M. Zimmermann. ETH Zurich and Wageningen Univ., Netherlands. 3:30 296.3 Offspring Immune Development Is Dependent on the Amount and Form of Choline in the Maternal Diet during Suckling. E.D. Lewis, C. Richard, S. Goruk, N. Dellschaft, J.M. Curtis, R.L. Jacobs, C.J. Field. Univ. of Alberta. 3:45 296.4 The Impact of Environmental Enteropathy and Systemic Inflammation on Infant Growth Failure. C. Naylor, M. Lu, J.A. Ma, A.M. Prentice, W.A. Petri. MRC Unit, The Gambia, Univ. of Virginia and London Sch. of Hyg. and Trop. Med. 4:00 296.5 Monounsaturated Fatty Acids Impede Inflammation Partially through Activation of AMPK. C.L. Lyons, O.F. Finucane, A.M. Murphy, A.A. Cooke, B. Viollet, P.M. Vieira, W. Oldham, B.B. Kahn, H.M. Roche. Conway Inst. of Biomolec. and Biomed. Res., Dublin, Inst. Cochin, INSERM, Paris, Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr., Harvard Med. Sch. and Brigham and Women’s Hosp. 90 GLOBAL NURITION COUNCIL BUSINESS MEETING AND KELLOGG PRIZE FOR INTERNATIONAL NUTRITION RESEARCH LECTURE Mon. 6:30 pm—Hilton San Diego Bayfront, Indigo AE M.E. Bentley. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. MONDAYPATHOLOGY Pathology 298. ASIP 2016 TOWN HALL MEETING Special Session Mon. 7:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Back By Popular Demand...The ASIP 2016 Town Hall Meeting! Join us for breakfast on Monday, April 4, 2016 from 7:00 am until 8:00 am to discuss present and future ASIP benefits, opportunities available to our members to become more involved in the Society, and ideas for the future. The ASIP Town Hall Meeting is a chance for you to meet with ASIP’s Director of Membership, Membership Committee Chair, and other ASIP Leadership and to express your thoughts, ideas, and opinions. Is there a member benefit you would like for us to offer? Are you interested in working more closely with the ASIP Leadership? Why not share your comments and suggestions over a cup of coffee. Make plans now to join the discussion…registration is NOT required! 11:15 300.2 Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors Attenuate Angiogenesis and Lymphangiogenesis by Impairing Receptor Tyrosine Kinases Signaling in Endothelial Cells. L. Song, X. Zhu, C. Qiu, L. Qin, S.A. Chow, L. Yu. Zhejiang Univ., China, Yale Univ. Sch. of Med., UCLA. 301. ACVP SYMPOSIUM: ILLUMINATING PATHOBIOLOGY: IMAGING ACROSS SCALE Symposium (Sponsored by: the ASIP Veterinary and Comparative Pathology Scientific Interest Group and the American College of Veterinary Pathologists) Chaired: R. Sullivan Cochaired: S. Fossey and R. Johnson Imaging, Immunohistochemistry and Microscopy 299. ASIP COTRAN EARLY CAREER INVESTIGATOR AWARD LECTURE Veterinary and Comparative Pathology Breast Cancer Award Lecture Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Metabolism and Metabolic Disease Cell and Tissue Injury ASIP Cotran Early Career Investigator Award Lecture: How Metabolism Regulates Retinal Function: Implications for Prevention of Disease. M. SaintGeniez. Schepens Eye Research Inst. 300. BLOOD VESSEL CLUB™: ANGIOGENSIS IN ORGAN DEVELOPMENT AND FUNCTION Symposium Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 M O N Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A 8:30 Multiscale Imaging of Cellular Microenvironments. K. Eliceiri. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 9:05 Living Imaging of the Mouse Bone Marrow by Intravital Microscopy. C. Lin. Harvard Univ. 9:40 In Vivo Metabolic Imaging to Discern Tumor and Stromal Cells in the Breast Tumor Microenvironment. J. Szulczewski. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 10:15 Manual Pathology Scoring – The Gold-Standard Paradox. F. Aeffner. Flagship Biosciences Inc., Westminster, CO. 10:50 Translational Imaging Techniques. M. Rosol. Novartis AG. 302. SIPMET SYMPOSIUM: SEX STEROID HORMONES ACTION IN METABOLISM, DIFFERENTIATION, AND DAMAGE RESPONSE Chaired: D. Bielenberg Symposium Cochaired: K. Moulton (Sponsored by: ASIP and the Società Italiana di Patologia e Medicina Traslazionale /Italian Society of Pathology and Translational Medicine) Vascular Biology 8:30 ASIP Cotran Early Career Investigator Award Lecture: How Metabolism Regulates Retinal Function: Implications for Prevention of Disease. M. Saint-Geniez. Schepens Eye Research Inst. 9:30 Molecular Regulation of Vascular Permeability. C. Kuo. Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med. 10:15 Notch Signaling in Arteriovenous Differentiation and Disease. R. Wang. UCSF. 11:00 300.1 Endothelial Follistatin-Like 1 Regulates the Maturation of the Pulmonary Vasculature by Modulating BMP/ Smad Signaling. N.P. Tania, H. Maarsingh, S.T. Bos, A. Mattiotti, S. Prakash, W.Timens, M. Schmidt, M. van den Hoff, R. Gosens. Univ. of Groningen, Palm Beach Atlantic Univ., Academic Med. Ctr., Amsterdam and Univ. Med. Ctr. Groningen, Netherlands. Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: A. Migliaccio Cochaired: A. Rogers Metabolism and Metabolic Disease Cell and Tissue Injury 8:30 9:15 New Insights into Estrogen Signaling. M. Baker. UCSD. Hormonal Regulation of Sex-Specific Liver Diseases. A. Rogers. Tufts Univ. 10:00 Cross-Talk between Androgen Receptor and NGF Receptor (Trka) in Neuronal Cells. A. Migliaccio. State Univ. of Naples. 10:45 Androgen Signaling in Skeletal Muscle. D. Metzger. IGBMC, Illkirch, France. 91 PATHOLOGYMONDAY 303. STOWELL SYMPOSIUM/TRENDS IN EXPERIMENTAL PATHOLOGY: THE SCIENCE OF HEALTH DISPARITIES: NEW PARADIGMS, APPROACHES AND IMPACT ON DISEASE PREVENTION 8:30 9:15 10:00 10:45 Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: S. Colgan Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Cochaired: V. Spindler Chaired: K. Gardner Transporters/Channels/Barriers Cochaired: C. Yates Cell and Tissue Injury Metabolism and Metabolic Disease Epithelial and Mucosal Pathobiology KEYNOTE LECTURE: What Creates Health Disparities? P. Braveman. UCSF. Epigenetics in Cancer Health Disparities. C. Yates. Tuskegee Univ. Can Genome Sciences Help Increase Our Understanding of the Role of Biology in Cancer Health Disparities? Towards Improvements in Clinical Management of Cancer Through Precision Medicine. J. Carpten. Translational Genomics Res. Inst., Phoenix. Analysis of Tumor Biology to Advance Cancer Health Disparity Research. S. Ambs. NCI, NIH. Symposium (Supported by an unrestricted educational grant from Friends for an Earlier Breast Cancer Test) (Sponsored by: earlier.org) Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Chaired: W.B. Coleman Cancer Biology Neoplasia Identification of Drivers of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer. J. Reis-Filho. Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr. 2:55 Target Discovery through Next-Gen Sequencing of Triple-Negative Breast Cancer. G. Tsongalis. Dartmouth-Hitchcock Med. Ctr. 3:50 Exploitation of Molecular Features to Personalize Therapeutic Approaches in Triple-Negative Breast Cancer. C. Anders. Univ. of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Ctr. 92 Minisymposium Symposium 304. ASIP PRESIDENTIAL SYMPOSIUM: MOLECULAR PATHOGENESIS OF TRIPLENEGATIVE BREAST CANCER: IMPLICATIONS FOR PREVENTION AND THERAPY 2:00 305. EPITHELIAL JUNCTIONS, CELL MIGRATION AND TISSUE REPAIR 2:00 305.1 Loss of Dsg2 Promotes Tumorigenesis in Pancreatic Cancer Cells through ERK Activation. K. Huetz, J. Waschke, V. Spindler. Ludwig Maximilians Univ. Munich 2:15 305.2 Central Role for Intestinal Epithelial IL-10R1 Signaling in Barrier Restitution. J.M. Lanis, E.E. Alexeev, D.J. Kao, D.A. Kitzenberg, K.D. Schwisow, D.J. Kominsky, S.P. Colgan. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus and Montana State Univ. 2:30 305.3 Redundant Role of Catenins in Maintaining Tight Junctional Integrity. T. Pradhan-Sundd, L. Zhou, A. Jiang, J.O. Russell, S. Singh, M. Poddar, S. Ranganathan, K. Nejak-Bowen, S. Singh Pal Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 2:45 305.4 Keratin Filaments Regulate Binding Properties of the Desmosomal Adhesion Molecule Desmoglein 3. F. Vielmuth, F. Loschke, T.M. Magin, J. Waschke, V. Spindler. Ludwig Maximilians Univ. Munich and Univ. of Leipzig. 3:00 305.5 Vesicle Fusion Protein, YKT6, Is a Novel Regulator of Epithelial Cell-Matrix Adhesion and Migration. A. Ivanov, N. Naydenov, S. Joshi, A. Feygin. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. 3:15 305.6 Intestinal Epithelial Cell Expression of CD47 Facilitates Proliferation, Neutrophil Transmigration, and Wound Healing In Vivo. M. Reed, A-C. Luissint, A. Nusrat, C.A. Parkos. Univ. of Michigan. 3:30 305.7 The Specialized Pro-resolving Lipid Mediator Resolvin E1 Promotes Intestinal Mucosal Wound Repair. M. Quiros, H. Nishio, G. Leoni, R. Agarwal, G. Bernal, C. Gerner-Smith, C. Gerner-Smith, R. Colas, K. Graham, C. Serhan, A. Garcia, C. Parkos, A. Nusrat. Univ. of Michigan, Inst. for Cardiovasc. Prevent., Munich, Georgia Tech, Emory Univ. and Harvard Univ. 3:45 305.8 Cortactin Is Required to Maintain Intestinal Epithelial Barrier Homeostasis. A.F. Citalán-Madrid, A. GarcíaPonce, H. Vargas-Robles, A. Betanzos, P. Nava, K. Rottner, R. Menningen, M. Schnoor. CINVESTAV-IPN, Mexico City, Tech Univ. Braunschweig and Univ. Hosp. Münster, Germany. 4:00 305.9 Sympathetic Signaling Regulates Cardiomyocyte Cohesion via the Plaque Protein Plakoglobin. C. Schinner, A. Schlipp, V. Rötzer, F. Vielmuth, A. Messoudi, A. Horn, V. Spindler, J. Waschke. Ludwig Maximilians Univ. Munich. 4:15 305.10 Role of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor on Colonic Goblet Cell Differentiation and Function during Mucosal Healing. A.K. Whitney, K.D. Schwisow, A.J. Bayless, L. Golden-Mason, G. Mehta, K.A. Kuhn, S.P. Colgan, E.L. Campbell. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. MONDAYPATHOLOGY 4:30 305.11 Transgenic Up-Regulation of Claudin-6 Decreases Diesel Particulate Matter-Induced Pulmonary Inflammation. J. Bodine, J. Gassman, D.C. Milner, A. Lewis, T. Dunaway, K. Egbert, C. Christiansen, A. Christiansen, T. Monson, D. Broberg, J. Arroyo, P.R. Reynolds. Brigham Young Univ. 4:45 305.12 Altered Inflammatory Responses in Tobacco Smoke-Exposed Mice That Over-Express the Tight Junctional Protein Claudin-6. J.B. Lewis, J. Bodine, D. Milner, A. Lewis, T. Dunaway, K. Egbert, S. Albright, B. Merrill, T. Monson, M. Watson, N. Burstedt, Q. Smith, J. Gassman, T. Jergensen, B. Chavarria, D. Broberg, D. Thomas, J. Arroyo, P.R. Reynolds. Brigham Young Univ. 306. MECHANISMS OF MYOCARDIAL FAILURE AND FIBROSIS Minisymposium Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Chaired: J. Schisler Cochaired: T. Nevers Cardiac Pathobiology 2:00 Introduction. 2:10 306.1 The Role of miR-378*, miR-218 and miR-351 in Cardiac Hypertrophy. S. Sadiq, F.J. Charchar, T. Crowley, L. Delbridge, S. Harrap, P. Lewandowski. Sch. of Med., Deakin Univ., Federation Univ. and Univ. of Melbourne, Australia. 2:25 306.2 Resolution Agonist 15-epi-Lipoxin A4 Directs FPR2 to Expedite Healing Phase Post-myocardial Infarction. V. Kain, F. Liu, V. Kozlovskaya, K.A. Ingle, S. Khedkar, S.D. Prabhu, E. Kharlampieva, G.V. Halade. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and Chembio Discovery Solutions, Boston. 2:40 306.3 Nebulized Delivery of the MAPKAP Kinase 2 Peptide Inhibitor MMI-0100 Protects against Ischemia-Induced Systolic Dysfunction. D. Brown, B. Cooley, M. Quintana, C. Landers, M.S. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Moerae Matrix, NJ. 2:55 306.4 Activation of TRPVv1 by 12(S)-HpETE and 20-HETE Releases CGRP and Protects the Heart against the Cardiac Dysfunction Caused by LPS. J. Chen, A.J.P. Hamers, M. Finsterbusch, C. Thiemermann, A. Ahluwalia. Barts and The London Sch. of Med. and Dent., Queen Mary Univ. of London. 3:10 306.5 Pharmacological Inhibition of p38/MAPK Improves Cardiac Function in Cardiac-Specific Bag3-P209L Transgenic Mice. S.C. Eaton, S. Takayama, T.N. Sidorova, K.T. Murray, M.S. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Boston Univ. and Vanderbilt Univ. 3:25 306.6 Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 1 Regulates Left Ventricular Leukocyte Recruitment, Cardiac Remodeling and Function in Pressure Overload-Induced Heart Failure. A.M. Salvador, T. Nevers, M. Aronovitz, B. Wang, I. Jaffe, R. Blanton, P. Alcaide. Tufts Med. Ctr. 3:40 306.7 Th1 Effector T Cells Induce Cardiac Fibroblasts Transition to Myofibroblasts and Contribute to Pressure Overload-Induced Cardiac Fibrosis. T. Nevers, A.M. Salvador, F. Velazquez, M. Aronovitz, R. Blanton, P. Alcaide. Tufts Med. Ctr. and Tufts Univ. 3:55 306.8 Fenofibrate Induces Cardiac Fibrosis in Mice Lacking the Co-chaperone and E3-Ubiquitin Ligase CHIP. S. Ravi, M.S. Willis, P. Lockyer, C. Patterson, J.C. Schisler. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 4:10 306.9 Prostaglandin E2 Inhibits Monocyte Chemotactic Protein 5 Production and Secretion in Mouse Cardiac Fibroblasts via EP4 Receptor. T.D. Bryson, D. Szandzik, P. Harding. Henry Ford Hlth. Syst. and Wayne State Univ. Sch. of Med. 307. SUGAR, SUGAR, AWWW, HONEY, HONEY... PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF DIABETES, OBESITY AND METABOLIC COMPLICATIONS Minisymposium Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Chaired: K. Lenhart Cochaired: M.S. Willis Metabolism and Metabolic Disease 2:00 Introduction. 2:05 307.1 High Glucose Culture Medium Downregulates Production of Human β-Defensin-2 in Human Amniotic Epithelial Cells. D. Szukiewicz, H. Alkhalayla, M. Pyzlak, G. Szewczyk. Med. Univ. of Warsaw. 2:20 307.2 Insulin Signaling Regulation of Sortilin 1 and Glut4 Storage Vesicle Formation in NIH 3T3-L1 Adipocytes and Mouse Adipose Tissue. J. Li, D. Matye, Y. Wang, T. Li. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 2:35 307.3 Serum miRNAs as Potential Biomarkers for Early Prediction of Type 1 Diabetes. C. Yin, M. Weiland, J. Li, R. She, L. Zhou, Q. Mi. Henry Ford Hlth. Syst. 2:50 307.4 Insulin Treatment Increases Myocardial Ceramide Accumulation and Disrupts Cardiometabolic Function. A.E. Hodson, T.S. Tippetts, B.T. Bikman. Brigham Young Univ. 3:05 307.5 Mitochondrial Fission Is Necessary for CeramideInduced Metabolic Disruption. B.T. Bikman. Brigham Young Univ. 3:20 307.6 Pancreatic Trypsin and Insulin Receptor Cleavage in High Fat Diet Rats. A.S. Courelli, R. Mazor, G.W. Schmid-Schonbein. UCSD. 3:35 307.7 Loss of CHIP Expression Perturbs Glucose Homeostasis and Leads to Type II Diabetes through Defects in Microtubule Polymerization and Glucose Transporter Localization. K.C. Lenhart, H. McDonough, S.M. Ronnebaum, J. An, C.B. Newgard, M.S. Willis, C. Patterson, J.C. Schisler. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke Univ. 3:50 307.8 The Role of the Duffy Antigen Receptor for Chemokines in Metabolic Disease. T.W. Benson, T. Chatterjee, J. Joseph, O. Popoola, M. Crowe, N. Yiew, D. Unruh, D. Weintraub, A. Pillai, J. Williams, J. Mintz, B. Stansfield, D. Stepp, J. Brittain, V. Bogdanov, N. Weintraub. Med. Col. of Georgia at Augusta Univ. and Univ. of Cincinnati. 4:05 307.9 Augmented Adipocyte Browning and Mitochondrial Function in Periadrenal Fat but Not Subcutaneous Fat in Pheochromocytoma Patients. G.R. Davies, L. Vergnes, M. Yeh, A. Harari, M. Livhits, J. Huang, M. Symonds, K. Reue, H. Sacks. Univ. of Nottingham, UCLA and VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare. 4:20 307.10 Inhibition of Adipocyte and Preadipocyte Fusion Reduces Abdominal Adipose Tissue Mass in Obese Mice. X. Yuan, X. Xu, N. Li, W.L. Dewey, P-L. Li, F. Zhang. Med. Col. of Virginia, VCU. 4:35Discussion. 93 M O N PATHOLOGY/PHARMACOLOGYMONDAY 308. ASIP MEMBERSHIP BUSINESS MEETING AND AWARDS PRESENTATION 309. ASIP AWARDS RECEPTION Special Session Business Meeting Mon. 6:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Foyer Mon. 5:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Pharmacology 310. JOHN J. ABEL AWARD IN PHARMACOLOGY LECTURE 312. WNT SIGNALING: FROM DISEASE MECHANISMS TO THERAPEUTIC INTERVENTIONS Award Lecture Symposium Mon. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB (Sponsored by: The Division for Molecular Pharmacology) The John J. Abel Award in Pharmacology, named after the founder of ASPET, was established in 1946 to stimulate fundamental research in pharmacology and experimental therapeutics by young investigators. 8:30Introduction. 8:35 Epithelial-Mesenchymal Plasticity Metastasis. J. Yang. UCSD. in (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Cardiovascular Pharmacology, Cancer Pharmacology, Translational and Clinical Pharmacology, and Drug Discovery and Development ) Carcinoma Mon. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Cochaired: R. Gosens and W.M. Blankesteijn 311. HEAR IT FROM THE EDITORS: NAVIGATING THE COURSE THROUGH JOURNAL SUBMISSION AND PUBLICATION Molecular Pharmacology Cancer Biology Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) Symposium 9:30 (Cosponsored by: All ASPET Divisions) Mon. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB Cochaired: M. Vore and E.T. Morgan Career Development 9:30 How to Choose a Journal for Your Manuscript? M. Vore. Univ. of Kentucky. 9:50 How to Write a Competitive Manuscript. M. Jarvis. AbbVie, Inc. 10:10 Communicating Experimental Design and Analysis Considerations. E.T. Morgan. Emory Univ. 10:30 The Peer-Review Process: Rejection, Revision, and Acceptance. S. Traynelis. Emory Univ. 10:50Authorship, Accountability and Ethics. R. Dodenhoff. ASPET. 11:10 Panel Discussion. Moderator: D. Sibley. ASPET Board of Publications Trustees. Evolution of Wnt Signaling: From Developmental Biology Towards Therapeutic Application. W.M. Blankesteijn. Cardiovasc. Res. Inst. Maastricht. 9:40 Receptor-Ligand Selectivity of Wnt/Frizzled Signaling. G. Schulte. Karolinska Inst. 10:05 Wnt Signal Transduction Pathways in Stem Cells and Cancer. X. He. Boston Children’s Hosp. 10:30 Wnt Signaling in Respiratory Diseases. M. Königshoff. CPC Großhadern, Germany. 10:55 Targeting Wnt Signaling in Cardiovascular Diseases. A. Deb. UCLA. 11:20 Tankyrases Are Druggable Targets for the Treatment of Metabolic Disorders. O. Obianom, W. Yang, F. Xue, Y. Shu. Univ. of Maryland Baltimore. (1189.5) 11:33 A Novel Activator of Canonical Wnt Signaling. J. Baruah, K.K. Wary, R. Hitzman, J. Zhang. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. (931.14) 11:46 Structure-Activity Relationship of Peptide Inhibitors of the Wnt/Frizzled Interaction. W.M. Blankesteijn, K.C.M. Hermans, A.I. Fernandez-Llamazares, N. Kriek, P. Timmerman. Maastricht Univ. and Pepscan Therapeut. Netherlands. (931.13) Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday | 9:00 AM–4:00 PM 94 MONDAYPHARMACOLOGY 313. SUBSTRATE MODULATION OF ORGANIC ANION AND CATION TRANSPORTERS Symposium 315. PHARMACOMETABOLOMICS ENABLING TOOLS FOR SYSTEMS PHARMACOLOGY AND PRECISION MEDICINE Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Metabolism) (Sponsored by: The Division for Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Division for Molecular Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology and Cardiovascular Pharmacology ) Mon. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Cochaired: B. Hagenbuch and J. Lampe Mon. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Drug Metabolism Cochaired: R. Kaddurah-Daouk and R. Weinshilboum Transporters/Channels/Barriers 9:30Introduction. 9:40 Substrate and Inhibitor Modulation of Hepatic OCT1 Transport. J. Lampe. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 10:10 Substrate-Dependent Ligand Interaction with MATE Transporters. S. Wright. Univ. of Arizona. 10:40 Substrate-Dependent Modulation of OATP1B1 and OATP1B3. B. Hagenbuch. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 11:10 Substrate Modulation of Drug Transporters: An Industry Perspective. C. Lee. Ardea Biosciences. 11:40 Organic Cation Transporters in Drug Interactions with Methamphetamine and Metabolites. D.J. Wagner, J. Wang. Univ. of Washington. (935.6) 314. A PHARMACOKINETICS PRIMER: FROM EQUATIONS TO APPLICATION Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Pharmacology Education) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Drug Discovery and Development, Drug Metabolism, Cardiovascular Pharmacology, and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology ) Mon. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14B Chaired: R. Mehvar Pharmacology Education Education This conceptual, less-mathematical pharmacokinetics primer is designed for a general audience with a background in Pharmacology or Biomedical Sciences, who use or plan to use pharmacokinetics in their research or as part of their instructional responsibilities. In part one, designed for both researchers and educators, fundamental concepts behind the major pharmacokinetic parameters, including their estimation and application will be discussed. Part two will be a more handson session, utilizing simulations and other exercises, which will be more useful to pharmacology educators. Seating at handson tables is on a first-come basis. 9:30 Fundamental Concepts in Pharmacokinetics: Applications in Research and Education. R. Mehvar. Chapman Univ. 11:00 Active Learning Exercises in Pharmacokinetics Using Simulations and Other Resources. D. Brocks, R. Mehvar. Univ. of Alberta and Chapman Univ. Translational and Clinical Pharmacology Microbiome 9:30 Pharmacometabolomics Enabling Tools for Systems Pharmacology and Precision Medicine. R. KaddurahDaouk. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr. 10:00 Pharmacometabolomics Informs and Compliments Pharmacogenomics. R. Weinshilboum. Mayo Clin. 10:30 Gut Microbiome and Host Metabolic Interactions – Implications for Drug Metabolism and Drug-Induced Toxicity. W. Jia. Univ. of Hawaii Cancer Ctr. 11:00 Integrating Multiple Omics Reveals Novel Signatures Associated with Thiazide Diuretics Blood Pressure Response. M. Shahin. Univ. of Florida. 11:20 Stable Isotope Resolved Metabolomics on Fresh Human Tissues as a Preclinical Drug Testing Platform. A.N. Lane. Univ. of Kentucky. 11:50 Question and Answer Period. 316. BEYOND TRADITIONAL ASSESSMENTS OF PAIN: IMPLICATIONS FOR DRUG DISCOVERY OF NOVEL PAIN THERAPEUTICS Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Behavioral Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Neuropharmacology, and Drug Discovery and Development ) Mon. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Cochaired: C.A. Paronis and H. Neelakantan Behavioral Pharmacology Neurobiology 9:30 Analgesic Medication Development: Finding the Appropriate Assay to Identify New Therapeutics. R.P. Yezierski. Univ. of Florida. 10:00 Novel Methods of Assessing Nociception and Antinocieption in Nonhuman Primates. B. Kangas. Harvard Med. Sch., McLean Hosp. 10:30 Pharmacological Responses in Spontaneous Pain. J. Mogil. McGill Univ. 11:00 Depression of Home Cage Wheel Running: A Novel Method to Assess Spontaneous Migraine Pain. R. Kandasamy, J.J. Calsbeek, M.M. Morgan. Washington State Univ. (928.4) 11:15 Distinguishing Nonopioid Mediators of Pain Responses. A. Hohmann. Indiana Univ. 95 M O N PHARMACOLOGYMONDAY 11:45 Neuropathic Pain Unmasks Delta Opioid ReceptorMediated Analgesia. E.W. Ong, S.V. Holdridge, K.A. Sutherland, S.A. Armstrong, A.M.W. Taylor, L. Xue, C.M. Cahill. Queen’s Univ., Canada, Univ. of California, Irvine and UCLA. (928.1) 319. DIVERSITY 3.0: FROM FAIRNESS TO EXCELLENCE Lecture (Sponsored by: The ASPET Mentoring and Career Development Committee) 317. BERNARD B. BRODIE AWARD IN DRUG METABOLISM LECTURE Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Education Award Lecture Career Development (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Metabolism) Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Drug Metabolism The Bernard B. Brodie Award in Drug Metabolism has been established to honor the fundamental contributions of Bernard B. Brodie in the field of drug metabolism and disposition. The Award is presented biennially to recognize outstanding original research contributions in drug metabolism and disposition, particularly those having a major impact on future research in the field. 2:00Introduction. 2:05 Phenobarbital Induction of Drug Metabolism and Beyond. M. Negishi. NIEHS, NIH. This talk will describe the needed evolution from thinking about diversity as competing with excellence to being a core driver and marker of excellence. Through vivid narrative and illustrative examples from other industries, be prepared and open to a new vision on how we harness diversity and its necessary inclusion to advance our profession. Participants from all EB disciplines are welcome. 2:00 320. NOVEL PLATELET THERAPIES: ATTACKING THEM FROM THE INSIDE AND OUT Symposium 318. P.B. DEWS LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD FOR RESEARCH IN BEHAVIORAL PHARMACOLOGY LECTURE (Sponsored by: The Division for Cardiovascular Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Division for Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) Award Lecture 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16AB (Sponsored by: The Division for Behavioral Pharmacology) Chaired: M. Nieman Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Cardiovascular Pharmacology Behavioral Pharmacology The ASPET Division for Behavioral Pharmacology sponsors the P. B. Dews Award for Research in Behavioral Pharmacology to recognize outstanding lifetime achievements in research, teaching, and professional service in the field of behavioral pharmacology and to honor Dr. Peter Dews for his seminal contributions to the development of behavioral pharmacology as a discipline. 2:00Introduction. 2:05 Behavioral Mechanisms of Drug Action: Peter Dews’s Legacy. T. Thompson. Univ. of Minnesota. Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. 96 Diversity 3.0: From Fairness to Excellence. M.A. Nivet. Assn. of Amer. Med. Cols. 3:00 The Neighborhood Matters: How Interactions Within the Membrane Influence Therapeutic Response. M. Nieman. Case Western Reserve Univ. 3:30 Characterization of Function Blocking Antibodies Targeting Platelets. Z. Karim. Western Univ. of Hlth. Scis. 4:00 Targeting G-protein Coupled Receptors from the Inside with Small Molecules. R. Flaumenhaft. Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr. 4:30 Platelet-Inspired Synthetic Hemostats: Mimicking Platelet Functions on Engineered Biomaterial Systems to Treat Bleeding. A.S. Gupta. Case Western Reserve Univ. 5:00 Nanogel Drug Carriers Presenting Platelet GPIbα Mimic and Enhance Platelet Adhesion. J.W. Myerson, I. Johnston, J. Wu, R. McClintock, Z. Ruggeri, M. Poncz, V. Muzykantov. Univ. of Pennsylvania and The Scripps Res. Inst. (943.2) 5:15 Loss of Serotonin Transporter Function Alters ADPMediated αIIbβ3 Activation through Disregulation of 5HT2A Receptor. K.H. Oliver, H. Hamm, A.M.D. Carneiro. Vanderbilt Univ. (943.10) MONDAYPHARMACOLOGY 321. DIVISION FOR BEHAVIORAL PHARMACOLOGY SYMPOSIUM: QUANTITATIVE PHARMACOLOGICAL ANALYSIS OF IN VIVO DATA AND ITS IMPLICATIONS IN CNS DRUG DISCOVERY 3:45 4:00 Division Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Behavioral Pharmacology) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Cochaired: J-X. Li and L. Gerak Behavioral Pharmacology 3:00 Understanding the Actions of GABAA Receptor Modulators In Vivo Using Schild Analyses in Rhesus Monkeys. L. Gerak. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio. 3:30 Comparison of Heroin- and Δ9-TetrahydrocannabinolInduced Antinociception and Physical Dependence in Monkeys. H. Ding, N. Kiguchi, S. Kishioka, M-C. Ko. Wake Forest Sch. of Med. and Wakayama Med. Univ., Japan. (703.5) 4:00 Combining Imidazoline I2 Receptor Ligands and Opioids for Pain Management: A Composite Additive Curve Analysis. J. Li. Univ. at Buffalo. 4:30 Predicting Additivity: Abuse-Related Effects of “BathSalt” Mixtures. G. Collins. South Texas Veterans Hlth. Care Syst. - Audie L. Murphy VA Hosp. 5:00 PK/PD Modeling of Opioid Modulation: Application in the Development of a Novel Treatment for Depression. R. Turncliff. Alkermes, Inc. 4:15 4:30 5:00 323. DIVISION FOR MOLECULAR PHARMACOLOGY POSTDOCTORAL SCIENTIST AWARD FINALISTS Division Oral Session (Sponsored by: The Division for Molecular Pharmacology) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Molecular Pharmacology 3:00 322. DIVISION FOR DRUG METABOLISM JAMES GILLETTE AWARD AND PLATFORM SESSION Division Oral Session 3:30 (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Metabolism) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Cochaired: E.E. Scott and T.J. Carlson 4:00 Drug Metabolism 3:00 Predicting Fetal Exposure to Drugs throughout Pregnancy Using a PBPK Model. Z. Zhang, M.Z. Imperial, G.I. Patilea-Vrana, J. Wedagedera, G. Lu, J.D. Unadkat. Univ. of Washington and Simcyp Ltd (a Certara Co.), Sheffield, U.K. (712.6) 3:15 Implications of In Vitro System Conditions for CYP2C9 and CYP3A4: Impact of pH on Clearance and Enzyme Inhibition. L.R.A. Rougee, M.A. Mohutsky, D.W. Bedwell, K.J. Ruterbories, S.D. Hall. Eli Lilly and Co. (934.8) 3:30 Effect of Ethanol on the Metabolism of Antiretroviral Drugs Elvitegravir and Darunavir in the Presence and Absence of Their Pharmacoenhancers in Microsomes. N.M. Midde, M.A. Rahman, C. Rathi, J. Li, B. Meibohm, W. Li, S. Kumar. Univ. of Tennessee Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Memphis and East China Univ. of Sci. and Technol., Shanghai. (934.4) SULT4A1 Deletion in Zebrafish Alters Expression of Genes Implicated in Neurological Disorders. P.L. Garcia, F.L. Crittenden, C.N. Falany. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1196.4) Induction of CYP2A6 by Metronidazole in Primary Human Hepatocytes. S. Stancil, C. Vyhlidal, G. Kearns, S. Leeder, R.E. Pearce. Children’s Mercy Hosp. and Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City and Arkansas Children’s Hosp. Res. Inst., Little Rock. (934.9) Endogenous Substrates for Tumor-Specific Human Cytochrome P450 CYP2W1. Y. Zhao, P. Ortiz de Montellano. UCSF. (934.7) Dose of Phenobarbital and Age of Treatment at Early Life are Two Key Factors for the Persistent Induction of Cytochrome P450 Enzymes in Adult Mouse Liver. Y. Chen Tien. Univ. of Connecticut Sch. of Pharm. Modulation of P-Glycoprotein at the Human BloodBrain Barrier by Quinidine or Rifampin Treatment: A Positron Emission Tomography Imaging Study. L. Liu. Merck, Inc. 4:30 β-Adrenergic Receptors Regulate Innate Immune Responses through β-Arrestin Dependent Pathways. L.A. Grisanti, J. Gorsky, A.A. Repas, E. Gao, R.L. Carter, J.E. Rabinowitz, J.L. Benovic, W.J. Koch, D.G. Tilley. Temple Univ. Sch. of Med. (1202.6) Structural and Functional Characterization of the Metastatic RhoGEF P-Rex1 and Its Regulation by PtdIns(3,4,5)P3: Towards Inhibitory Small Molecule Development. J.N. Cash, E.M. Davis, J.J.G. Tesmer. Univ. of Michigan. (1190.5) Structurally Diverse Positive Allosteric Modulators of the D1 Dopamine Receptor Potentiate G-Protein and β-Arrestin-Mediated Signaling. K.D. Luderman, J.L. Conroy, R.B. Free, N.T. Southall, M. Ferrer, J. Aubé, K.J. Frankowski, D.R. Sibley. NINDS, NIH, NCATS, NIH, Rockville and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (931.9) Keynote Speaker. Signaling by G Proteins and Phospholipase C: Yes it’s still exciting!! A.V. Smrcka. Univ. of Rochester Sch. of Med. and Dentistry. 97 M O N PHARMACOLOGYMONDAY 324. DIVISION FOR TRANSLATIONAL AND CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY: YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARDS PLATFORM SESSION Division Oral Session (Sponsored by: The Division for Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) Mon. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Chaired: B.T. Green Translational and Clinical Pharmacology 3:00Introduction. B.T. Green. USDA, ARS. 3:15 Immunogenetic Role of G Protein Signaling Modulator 3 in the Pathogenesis of Rheumatoid Arthritis. B.J. Gall, A.B. Schroer, J.D. Gross, P. Stoilov, V. Setola, C.M. Watkins, D.P. Siderovski. West Virginia Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Sch. of Med. (1202.5) 3:35 Systems Pharmacology Approach to Identify Potential Therapeutic Small-Molecules for Treatment of Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy. B.A. McGregor, J.A. Porter, E.A. Feldman, J. Hur. Univ. of North Dakota and Univ. of Michigan. (1270.1) 3:55 Doxorubicin Acutely Inhibits Lymph Flow in Rat Mesenteric Lymph Vessels. A.J. Stolarz, T.W. Fletcher, J.C. Marecki, M. Sarimollaoglu, E. Galanzha, V. Zharov, S. Klimberg, N.J. Rusch. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. (1201.2) 4:15 Preclinical Evaluation of Flt3 Ligand to Improve T Cell Adaptive Immune Response during Sepsis. N.K. Patil, J.K. Bohannon, L. Luan, Y. Guo, E.R. Sherwood. Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr. (1202.3) 4:35 Microbiota-Derived Metabolites Associated with Metabolic Improvements after Gastric Bypass Surgery and Their Effects on Intestinal Cells In Vitro. M. Jennis, J.R. Mabus, C.R. Cavanaugh, G. Leo, J. Lenhard, P.J. Hornby. Janssen, Spring House, PA. (720.3) 4:55Awards. 325. DIVISION FOR TRANSLATIONAL AND CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY: EARLY CAREER FACULTY SHOWCASE Division Oral Session (Sponsored by: The Division for Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) Mon. 5:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Translational and Clinical Pharmacology 5:30 Structure-Based Ligand Discovery for Nutrient Transporters. A. Schlessinger. Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai. (LB486) 5:45 Novel Mechanisms Regulating Platelet and Pancreatic Beta Cell Function in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. J. Wisinski, A. Reuter, M. Kimple. Univ. of WisconsinMadison. (1270.7) Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.core-apps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. 98 MONDAYPHYSIOLOGY Physiology 326. APS PRESIDENT’S SYMPOSIUM SERIES PHYSIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS RESPONSIVE TO BEHAVIORAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES 328. CARL LUDWIG DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS NEURAL CONTROL AND AUTONOMIC REGULATION SECTION Lecture DIETARY INFLUENCES ON PHYSIOLOGICAL CONTROL MECHANISMS — HOW MUCH, WHEN AND WHAT Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Neurobiology Symposium Hypertension Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Neurophysiology Chaired: J. Anthony Metabolism and Metabolic Disease Diet, Nutrition and Metabolism, and Development 10:30 Amino Acid Deprivation and Nutritional Stress. T. Anthony. Rutgers, The State Univ. of New Jersey. 11:00 Cardiovascular, Renal and Metabolic Consequences of High Salt Diets. A. McDonough. Keck Sch. of Med., USC. 11:30 Metabolic Consequences of High Fructose Diet. R. Johnson. Univ. of Colorado Denver. 12:00 Timing of Meals: When Is as Critical as What and How Much. F. Turek. Northwestern Univ. 327. ACHIEVING MASTERY USING NONSTANDARDIZED ASSESSMENT METHODS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Teaching of Physiology Section) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: L. Golden Education 8:00 Collaborative Testing Improves Performance on Long Answer Questions, and Maintains LongTerm Retention of Course Material. K.L. Ritchie, R. Rajakaruna, G. Newton. Univ. of Guelph, Canada. (776.7) 8:20 Promoting Motivationally and Educationally Productive Behaviors with Collaborative Testing. R.N. Cortright, H. Lujan, L.A. Johnson, S.E. DiCarlo. East Carolina Univ. and Wayne State Univ. (776.6) 8:40 Developing Online Guided Self-Assessments in Cardiovascular Physiology for Medical School. T.A. Pressley, J.C. Fowler. Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. (776.20) 9:00Discussion. 9:10 Undergraduate Collaborative Writing in STEM: How Learning to Write Authentically in the Discipline Can Promote Mastery. E.M. Waters, W.M. Schlegel. Indiana Univ. Bloomington. (553.1) 9:30 In Final Examinations, Quality of Essay Plan Correlates with the Essay Mark. P. Langton. Sch. of Physiol., Pharmacol. and Neurosci., Univ. of Bristol, U.K. (776.5) 9:50Discussion. Neurogenic Hypertension and the Secrets of Respiration. B. Machado. Sch. of Med. Ribeirao Preto-USP, Brazil. 328A. RESPIRATORY-SYMPATHETIC COUPLING IN CARDIOVASCULAR DYSFUNCTIONS Minisymposium Mon. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Chaired: B.H. Machado 9:00 Are C1 Neurons Involved in the Sympathetic Overactivity Induced by Chronic Intermittent Hypoxia? D.J.A. Moraes, L.G.H. Bonagamba, J.F.R. Paton, B.H. Machado. Sch. of Med. of Ribeirão Preto, Univ. of São Paulo and Sch. of Physiol. and Pharmacol., Univ. of Bristol, U.K. (1006.9) 9:15 Increased Respiratory-Sympathetic Coupling via C1 Neurons Contributes to the Development of Hypertension in the Spontaneously Hypertensive Rat. C. Menuet, N. Jancovski, J.K. Bassi, A.A. Connelly, A.M. Allen. The Univ. of Melbourne (1006.8) 9:30 Enhanced Carotid Body Chemoreflex Function Drives Respiratorysympathetic Coupling in Systolic Heart Failure. R. Del Rio, N.J. Marcus, H.D. Schultz. Univ. Autónoma de Chile, Santiago, Des Moines Univ. and Univ. of Nebraska Med. Ctr. (LB725) 9:45 Active expiration and sympathetic excitation during hypercapnia require glutamatergic neurotransmission in the retrotrapezoid nucleus. E.V. Lemes and D.B. Zoccal. Department of Physiology and Pathology, Sch. of Dent. of Araraquara, São Paulo State Univ., Araraquara, SP, Brazil. (757.7) 99 M O N PHYSIOLOGYMONDAY 329. CEREBROVASCULAR DYSFUNCTION AND REACTIVE NITROGEN SPECIES Featured Topic 330. COOPERATION BETWEEN ADAPTIVE AND INNATE IMMUNITY IN CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Featured Topic Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: P. Katakam and J. Pollock Chaired: K. DeLeon-Pennell and L. de Castro Bras Oxidative Stress Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure Neurobiology Inflammation/Immunity Neurophysiology 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 Role of Peroxynitrite in Vasoconstriction of Brain Parenchymal Arterioles during Postischemic Reperfusion. M. Cipolla. Univ. of Vermont. Peroxynitrite-Mediated Impairment of Cerebrovascular Function and Neovascularization in Diabetes. A. Ergul. Medical Col. of Georgia. Critical Role of Telomerase in Regulating Cerebral Vascular Function and Redox Environment. K. AitAissa, J. Hockenberry, D.D. Gutterman, A. Geurts, A.M. Beyer. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (953.5) Role of Cerebrovascular Endothelial Dysfunction and Oxidative/Nitrative Stress in Impaired Functional Hyperemia: Implications for Age-Related Vascular Cognitive Impairment. S. Tarantini, P.J. Toth, A. Davila, M.N. Valcarcel-Ares, Z. Tucsek, B. Varamini, P. Ballabh, W.E. Sonntag, J.A. Baur, A. Csiszar, Z. Ungvari. Univ. of Oklahoma Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Univ. of Pecs, Hungary, Univ. of Pennsylvania, Biola Univ. and New York Med. Col. (953.1) Impaired Myogenic Response of MCA Elevates Transmission of Pressure to Penetrating Arterioles and Contributes to Cerebral Vascular Disease in Aging Hypertensive FHH Rats. F. Fan, M. Pabbidi, R.C.S. Lin, Y. Ge, E.P. Gomez-Sanchez, G.K. Rajkowska, M. Moulana, E. Gonzalez-fernandez, J. Sims, M.R. Elliott, I.A. Paul, A.P. Alexander, T.H. Mosley, D.R. Harder, R.J. Roman. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. and Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (953.7) Novel Splice Variant of nNOS in Cerebrovascular Endothelial Cells Contributes to Superoxide and Peroxynitrite Generation. V.N. Sure, I. Merdzo, V.M. Abraham, N.P. Jain, G. Unis, T.P. Baker, N.R. Peterson, A.O. Gordon, A.L. Chen, I. Rutkai, D.W. Busija, P.V.G. Katakam. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. (953.3) 8:00 8:15 8:30 9:00 9:15 9:45 331. HYPERTENSION: DEVELOPING CONCEPTS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis Section) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: P. O’Connor and D. Ho 8:00 8:30 8:45 100 Inhibition of Neutrophil Chemotaxis by N-AcetylSeryl-Aspartyl-Lysyl-Proline and Thymosin β4. P. Nakagawa, J. Xu, G. Bordcoch, B. Janic, O.A. Carretero. Henry Ford Hosp. (1207.5) T Cell Deletion of Serum and Glucocorticoid-Regulated Kinase 1 Attenuates Hypertension and End-Organ Inflammation. A.E. Norlander, M. Saleh, A. Pandey, H. Itani, J. Wu, B. Dale, D.G. Harrison, M. Madhur. Vanderbilt Univ. (1216.6) Role of Lymphocytes after Myocardial infarction. S. Frantz. Univ. Hosp. Wurzburg, Germany. Non-resolving Chemokine Response Dysregulates Cardiosplenic and Cardiorenal Network following Myocardial Infarction in Aging. G.V. Halade, V. Kain, K. Ingle, L.M. Black. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1208.1) Regulation of the Inflammatory Response in Cardiac Repair. N. Frangogiannis. Albert Einstein Coll. of Medicine. Activated Immune Cells Exacerbate Angiotensin IIInduced Hypertension and Renal Damage in the Dahl Salt-Sensitive Rat. B.M. Wade, D. Mattson. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (964.3) The Role of Renal Pericytes in the Physiological and Pathophysiological Regulation of Medullary Blood Flow. C. Peppiatt-Wildman. Medway Sch. of Pharmacy, Univ. of Kent and Greenwich. RhoBTB1, a Novel PPARγ Target Gene Regulates Vascular Function. M. Mukohda, S-R.C. Ibeawuchi, C. Hu, F.W. Quelle, C.D. Sigmund. Univ. of Iowa and California Inst. for Biomed. Res., La Jolla. (964.14) ACE2 Deletion Is Associated with Increased ADAM17 and Reduced Inhibitory Currents to Pre-sympathetic Hypothalamic Neurons. S. Mukerjee, J. Xu, S. Sriramula, H. Gao, A. Zsombok, E. Lazartigues. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans and Tulane Univ. (964.16) MONDAYPHYSIOLOGY 9:00 Leptin-Mediated Increases in Sympathetic Tone Decreases Alpha(1D)-Adrenergic Receptor Expression in Arteries and Adrenals. M. Newell, M. Momtahan, S. Kennard, E.J. Belin de Chantemele Med. Col. of Georgia at Augusta Univ. (964.15) 9:15 Endothelial-Derived ET-1 Contributes to the Pressor Response Elicited by Acute Behavioral Stress. B.M. Fox, A.S. Loria, K.A. Hyndman, R. Johns, C. Jin, D.M. Pollock, M. Yanagisawa, J.S. Pollock. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, Univ. of Kentucky, Georgia Regents Univ. and Univ. of Tsukuba, Japan. (964.10) 9:30 The Role of Gαi2 Proteins in the Regulation of PVN Neuronal Activation in Response to Isotonic Volume Expansion in Conscious Rats. C.Y. Carmichael, N.M. Patel, R.E. Wipfler, R.D. Wainford. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med. (964.13) 9:45 Hemodynamic Mechanisms of Renal Injury in Dahl SS Rats Fed a High Salt Diet. A. Polichnowski, K. Griffin, P. Sethupathi, M. Picken, J. Long, G. Williamson, A. Bidani. Hines VA Hosp. and Loyola Univ.-Chicago and Illinois Inst. of Technol. (964.7) 332. INNATE IMMUNE FUNCTIONS OF EPITHELIAL CELLS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology Section) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: M. Frey Inflammation/Immunity Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium 8:00 8:30 8:45 9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 Paneth Cells as Mediators of Homeostasis in the Small intestine. C. Bevins. Univ. of California, Davis Sch. of Med. Loss of PTPN2 in Intestinal Epithelial Cells Upregulates a Novel STAT-Dependent Mechanism of Claudin-2 Expression. M. Krishnan, D.F. McCole. Univ. of California, Riverside. (1017.1) ErbB3 Negatively Regulates Homeostatic Paneth Cell Numbers. D. Almohazey, J.J. Hsieh, C.V. Vossler, M.R. Frey. Children’s Hosp. Los Angeles, Univ. of So. California. (1017.2) Stressor-Enhanced Infectious Colitis Is Due to Aberrant Colonic Epithelial Cell Signaling. A. Mackos, M.T. Bailey. Nationwide Children’s Hosp. Res. Inst. and The Ohio State Univ. (1017.3) Intestinal Mucus Acts Is a Maturation Factor for Dendritic Cells. M.A. Engevik, R.S. Fultz, B.P. Ganesh, J. Versalovic. Baylor Col. of Med. (1017.4) The Effect of JAK-Inhibitor Tofacitinib on Intestinal Epithelial Barrier Function. A. Sayoc, M. Krishnan, D.F. McCole. Univ. of California, Riverside. (1017.5) Intestinal Epithelial IL-15 Overexpression Enhances γδ T Cell Mucosal Surveillance. K.L. Edelblum, B. Jabri, J.R. Turner. Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch. and Univ. of Chicago. (1017.6) 333. METABOLIC CONSEQUENCES OF EXERCISE Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Endocrinology and Metabolism Section) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: J. Steiner and G.L.C. Yosten Skeletal Muscle Physiology Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome 8:00 Exercise Potentiates Metabolic Adaptations through Autophagy Activation. A. Vainshtein. York Univ. 8:30 Impact of Specific Exercise Training Programs on Muscle Mitochondrial Biology in Aging and in Insulin Resistant States. K. Sreekumaran Nair. Mayo Clin. 9:00HIF-1α Regulates a Single Bout of Exercise-Induced Hepatic Expression of Glucose and Lipid Metabolism Related Genes. B. Luo, D. Xiang, P. Chen, Y. Hu Second Military Med. Univ., Shanghai, Shanghai Univ. of Sport and Naval Med. Res. Inst., Shanghai. (1014.1) 9:15 Exercise Mitigates Cognitive Functions through Mitochondrial Remodeling in Type-2 Diabetes. A. Kalani, P. Chaturvedi, L.J. Winchester, S.C. Tyagi, N. Tyagi. Univ. of Louisville. (1014.2) 9:30 Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass Surgery Enhances Contraction-Mediated Glucose Metabolism in Primary Human Myotubes. J.M. Hinkley, K. Zou, S. Park, K. Turner, D. Zheng, J.A. Houmard. East Carolina Univ. (1014.3) 9:45 Defective Autophagy Causes a Maladaptive Cardiac Phenotype to Exercise That Leads to Premature Death and FGF21-Mediated Protection against Obesity and Insulin Resistance. V.A. Lira, A. Kronemberger, J.A. Call, H.M. Caster, R.O. Pereira, R.C. Laker, M. Zhang, Z. Yan. Carver Col. of Med., Univ. of Iowa, Univ. of Georgia and Univ. of Virginia. (1014.4) 334. MODULATORY INFLUENCE OF EXERCISE ON PHYSIOLOGICAL FUNCTION WITH AGING Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: D.R. Seals and F. Booth Skeletal Muscle Physiology Exercise, Aging, and Disease Sex Differences 8:00 Exercise, Physical Function and Mobility with Aging. R. Fielding. USDA at Tufts Univ. 8:30 Effects of Exercise and Gonadal Aging on Body Composition and Bone Density. W. Kohrt. Univ. of Colorado, Denver Anschutz Med. Campus. 9:00 Exercise, Oxidative Stress, Inflammation and Vascular Aging. D. Seals. Univ. of Colorado, Boulder. 9:30 Exercise, Functional Connectivity and Cognitive Performance with Aging. M. Voss. Univ. of Iowa. 101 M O N PHYSIOLOGYMONDAY 335. NOVEL INSIGHTS IN VASCULAR DISEASE IN METABOLIC SYNDROME Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) 8:15 8:30 Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: D. Weber and D. Stepp Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome 8:45 Metabolism and Metabolic Disease 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 Improving Vascular Health in Obesity: Can We Bottle Exercise? D. Stepp. Georgia Regents Univ. Deregulated Apoptosis and Proliferation are Key Components of Impaired Coronary Collateral Growth in the Metabolic Syndrome. P. Rocic. New York Med. Col. Role of Perivascular Adipose Tissue in the Progression of Coronary Vascular Dysfunction and Disease. J. Tune. Indiana Univ. Vascular Smooth Muscle Phenotype Plays A Critical Role in Abnormal Coronary Artery Remodeling in Metabolic Syndrome. S. Gupte. New York Med. Col. 9:00 9:15 9:30 336. PUBLISHING 101: HOW TO GET YOUR WORK PUBLISHED AND AVOID ETHICAL MINEFIELDS Symposium 9:45 (Sponsored by: APS Publications Committee) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Chaired: C.D. Sigmund and R. Scheman Career Development 338. AVIAN OSMOREGULATION: UNIQUE SOLUTIONS, UNANSWERED QUESTIONS 8:00 Choosing A Journal, Authorship and Peer Review. C. Sigmund. Univ. of Iowa. 8:30 Ethical Minefields I: Plagiarism and Data Duplication. K. Barrett. UCSD. 9:00 Ethical Minefields Ii: Image Manipulation. C. Bennett. APS. 9:30 Meet the Editors Panel. B. Joe, N. Bunnett. Univ. of Toledo Col. of Med., Monash Inst. of Pharmaceut. Sci. Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology Section) Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: K. Sweazea and D. Goldstein Ion Transport 337. SEX DIFFERENCES IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Environmental Stress Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Trainee Advisory Committee) Mon. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Chaired: D. Ilatovskaya and C. Banek Sex Differences 8:00 Differential Effects of Menopausal Hormone Formulations on Plasma Orexin A Levels in Women of the Kronos Early Estrogen Prevention Study. D. Cintron, J. Beckman, J. Muthuvel, V. Miller. Mayo Clin., Univ. of Puerto Rico-Med. Sci. Campus, San Juan and St. Olaf Col., MN. (1248.1) 102 Thyroid Hormone Deficiency Disrupts Respiratory Control Development and Responses to Hypoxia in Newborn Rat. J-P. Rousseau, R. Kinkead. Univ. Laval, Québec. (773.9) Sympathetic Vasoconstriction Is Attenuated in Young Women during Hypoxia and Cold Pressor Test. A.J. Ross, M.D. Muller, J.C. Luck, J. Cui, L.I. Sinoway. Hershey Heart and Vasc. Inst., Penn State Col. of Med. (1001.2) Pericytes Improve Motor Recovery after Spinal Cord Injury in Both Sexes. J.N. Mayo, S.E. Bearden. Univ. of Melbourne and Idaho State Univ. (1210.3) Heightened Anaphylaxis Reaction in Female Mice Is Associated with Increased Synthesis of Mast Cell Secretory Granule-Associated Immune Mediators. E. Mackey, S. D’Costa, C. Pohl, S. Ayyadurai, S. Laster, A.J. Moeser. North Carolina State Univ., GI Stress Biol. Lab., East Lansing, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Michigan State Univ. (1023.1) Estradiol Facilitates a More Rapid Natriuretic Response to a High Salt Diet in Female Rats. E.Y. Gohar, D.M. Pollock. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1216.8) Sexual Dimorphic Expression of Renal Claudins, Water Channels and Transporters Accounts for the Downstream Shift in Salt and Volume Reabsorption Along the Nephron in Female versus Male Rats. L.C. Veiras, L. Pei, A.S.L. Yu, A.A. McDonough. Keck Sch. of Med., Univ. of So. California and Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. (967.29) Mitochondria-eNOS-Estrogen Axis Provides Pathway to Protection against Stroke. I. Rutkai, S.V. Wunnava, I. Merdzo, P.V. Katakam, D.W. Busija. Tulane Univ. (953.9) 10:30 The Past, Present, and Future of Avian Osmoregulation Research. E. Braun. Univ. of Arizona. 11:00 Countercurrent Urine Concentration and Role of Aquaporins in Avian Kidneys. H. Nishimura. Univ. of Tennessee, Memphis. 11:30 The Integration of Gastrointestinal and Renal Function in Nectar-Feeding Birds. T.J. McWhorter. Sch. of Animal & Vet. Sci., Univ. of Adelaide. (976.3) 11:45 Avian Osmoregulation in Flight: Unique Metabolic Adaptations Present Novel Challenges. A.R. Gerson, C. Guglielmo. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and Univ. of Western Ontario. (976.1) 12:00 Water Balance in Desert Birds – Challenges in a Rapidly Warming Environment. B.O. Wolf. Univ. of New Mexico. (976.4) MONDAYPHYSIOLOGY 12:15 Preliminary Examination of a Role for Insulin in the Regulation of Glucose Excretion in Mourning Doves (Zenaida macroura). K.L. Sweazea, E.J. Braun. Arizona State Univ. and Univ. of Arizona. (976.2) 339. CELL SIGNALING: PROTEINS, PATHWAYS, AND MECHANISMS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: C. Waters Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology Section) Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: M. Rao Inflammation/Immunity 10:30 340. ENVIRONMENTAL EXPOSURES, OXIDATIVE STRESS, AND LUNG DISEASE Loss of the Inhibitory G-Protein, Gz, Protects against Type I Diabetes-Like Hyperglycemia by Stimulating Islet Signaling Pathways That Promote Beta-Cell Function and Survival. R.J. Fenske, M.T. Cadena, A.L. Brill, N.A. Truchan, M.E. Kimple. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison and William S. Middleton Mem. Veterans Hosp. (969.28) 10:45 Chenodeoxycholic Acid Initiates Distinct Signaling Mechanisms to Stimulate Cl- Transport in Intestinal and Non-intestinal Epithelial Cells. J. Domingue, A. George, M. Ao, M. Bijvelds, H. de Jonge, J. Sarathy, M.C. Rao. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam and Benedictine Univ., IL. (969.25) 11:00 Enhancement of Neutrophil Antimicrobial Activity by the Breast Cancer Drug Tamoxifen. R. Flores, P.A. Insel, V. Nizet, R. Corriden. UCSD. (969.14) 11:15 Danger Signaling, IL-33 Secretion, and Allergic inflammation following Airway Exposure to Fungal Allergens. S. O’Grady. Univ. of Minnesota, St. Paul. 11:45A-Kinase Anchoring Proteins Coordinate the Contractile Phenotype of Airway Smooth Muscle. W.J. Poppinga, B. Han, C.R. Elzinga, A.J. Halayko, H. Meurs, M. Schmidt. Univ. of Groningen and Univ. Med. Ctr. Groningen, Netherlands and Univ. of Manitoba. (969.29) 12:00 Mutation in the PPARγ Ligand Binding Domain Impairs the AntiiInflammatory Action of PPARγ. M. Mukohda, P. Ketsawatsomkron, M. Stump, X. Liu, D.F. Guo, K. Rahmouni, F.W. Quelle, C.D. Sigmund. Univ. of Iowa and Nortis Inc., Seattle. (969.12) 12:15 N-Cadherin Adhesion Modulates RhoGTPase Signaling to Promote Endothelial Barrier Integrity. K.J. Kruse, F. Huang, S. Ying, S. Vogel, A. Malik, Y. Komarova. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. (969.33) 10:30 Molecular Mechanisms Linking Air Pollution and Asthma Development in infants. S. Cormier. Univ. of Tennessee Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 11:00 Protective Role of Ergothioneine from Tobacco SmokeInduced Oxidative Stress In Vitro and In Vivo. C. Ehrhardt, M.A. Selo, C.G. Clerkin, B.N. Talbot, J.J. Walsh, N. Nakamichi, Y. Kato, J.B. Lewis, P.R. Reynolds, S. Nickel. Sch. of Pharm. and Pharmaceut. Sci., Trinity Col. Dublin, Kufa Univ., Iraq, Kanazawa Univ., Japan and Brigham Young Univ. (982.1) 11:15 Mechanisms Involved in the Antioxidant Properties of Azithromycin in Lung Epithelial Cells Stimulated with Cigarette Smoke Extract. S. Cuevas, Y. Yang, I. Armando, P.A. Jose. George Washington Univ. and Univ. of Texas, Galveston. (982.2) 11:30 Inter-strain Variation in Mouse Mitochondrial Genome and Effects of Oxidative Stress. K.C. Verhein, A. Burkholder, J.L. Nichols, Z. McCaw, J. Marzec, V. Panduri, W. Gladwell, N. Reeves, J. Malphurs, G. Solomon, T. Wiltshire, D. Fargo, D. Bell, B. Van Houten, S.R. Kleeberger. NIEHS, NIH, Research Triangle Park, Eschelman Sch. of Pharm., Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Univ. of Pittsburgh. (982.3) 11:45Investigation of the Cardiotonic Steroids, Marinobufagenin and Resibufogenin, in the Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. M.M.K. Abbas, Q. Chen, A. Das, J. Oliver, W. Jiang, B. Moorthy, B. Patel, K. Morin, J. Puschett. Texas A&M Col. of Vet. Med. and Biosci., Texas Children’s Hosp., Baylor Col. of Med. and Univ. of Texas-Houston and Mem.Hermann Hosp., Houston. (982.4) 12:00 Alveolar Acid Injury Causes Endothelial Mitochondrial Depolarization. R.F. Hough, G.A. Gusarova, M.N. Islam, J. Bhattacharya. Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. (982.5) 12:15 Alterations in the Expression of Profilin1/pVASP-S157 and Cofilin1/pVASP-S239 in Perinatal Inflammation/ Neonatal Hyperoxia-Induced Lung Injury. M. Ali, K.M. Heyob, L.K. Rogers. Nationwide Children’s Hosp. and The Ohio State Univ. (982.6) Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday | 9:00 AM–4:00 PM 103 M O N PHYSIOLOGYMONDAY 341. EPITHELIAL PHYSIOLOGY AND TRANSPORT II Featured Topic 343. HYDRATION PHYSIOLOGY: FROM CELLS TO SYSTEMS AND CLINICAL HEALTH OUTCOMES (Sponsored by: APS Epithelial Transport Group) Symposium Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A (Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis Section) Chaired: K. Hamilton and M. Helms Ion Transport Hypertension Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium 10:30 Steven C. Hebert Lecture. Salt Transport in the Kidney and Lung: Transport Pathways Designed by Committee. D. Eaton. Emory Univ. 11:15 The Mineralocorticoid Receptor (MR) Regulates ENaC but Not NCC in Mice with Random MR Deletion. J. Czogalla, T. Vohra, D. Penton Ribas, M. Kirschmann, M. Carrel, J. Loffing. Univ. of Zürich and Swiss NCCR Kidney.CH, Zürich. (1223.1) 11:30 Ankyrin G Alters ENaC Membrane Delivery to Increase Na+ Transport in the Distal Kidney Nephron. C.A. Klemens, L. Kightlinger, X. Liu, R. Edinger, M.B. Butterworth. Univ. of Pittsburgh. (1223.2) 11:45 Interleukin-6 Transactivation of the Mineralocorticoid Receptor. B.M. Wynne, T.A. Kronk, O. Al-Khalili, R. Mallick, B. Ko, D.C. Eaton, R.S. Hoover. Emory Univ., Univ. of Chicago and Atlanta VA Med. Ctr., Decatur. (1223.3) 12:00ASIC1a/α-ENaC Hybrid Channels Contribute to Alveolar Fluid Clearance. P. Trac, M.M. Greenlee, O. AlKhalili, D.C. Eaton. Emory Univ. (1223.4) 12:15 Regulation of ENaC by Specific Palmitoyltransferases. A. Mukherjee, Z. Wong, P.A. Poland, N. Montalbetti, M. Butterworth, M. Fukata, T.R. Kleyman, R.P. Hughey. Univ. of Pittsburgh and Natl. Inst. for Physiol. Sci., Okazaki, Japan. (1223.5) 342. EXERCISE AND CANCER: FROM CARDIOVASCULAR OUTCOMES TO THE TUMOR MICROENVIRONMENT Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: B.J. Behnke and L. Jones Exercise, Aging, and Disease Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: L.E. Armstrong Transporters/Channels/Barriers 10:30 Cell Physiology and Water Balance. F. Lang. Univ. of Tübingen. 10:55 Water, Vasopressin and the Kidney. L. Bankir. INSERM, Chatillon, France. 11:20 Dehydration-Induced Renal Injury: A FructokinaseMediated Disease? M. Garcia. Univ. of Colorado Denver, Anschutz Med. Campus. 11:45 Vasopressin from Regulator to Disease Predictor. O. Melander. Lund Univ., Sweden. 12:10 Defining and Assessing Hydration through Relevant Biomarkers. E. Perrier. Danone Nutricia Res., Palaiseau, France. 344. NEUROIMMUNE CROSSTALK IN THE GUT Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology Section) Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: B.D. Gulbransen and A.E. Lomax Neurobiology Inflammation/Immunity Microbiome 10:30 Modulation of the Intestinal Immune System by the Nervous System. G. Boeckxstaens. Univ. Hosp. Leuven, Catholic Univ. Leuven, Belgium. 11:00 Plasticity of the Autonomic Nervous System in Response to Gastrointestinal inflammation. A. Lomax. Queen’s Univ., Canada. 11:30 Neuro-Endocrine-Immune Pathways Contribute to the Pathophysiology of Irritable Bowel Syndrome. D. O’Malley. University Col. Cork. 12:00 The Role of Enteric Glial Cells as a Bridge between Intestinal Immune and Nervous Systems. B. Gulbransen. Michigan State Univ. Cancer Biology 10:30 Accelerated Cardiovascular Disease in Cancer Patients and the Cardioprotective Role of Exercise. J. Scott. NASA Johnson Space Ctr. 11:00 Cancer as a Model of Accelerated Physiological Aging. L. Jones. Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr. 11:30 Tumor Vascular (Dys) Function and Hemodynamics during Exercise. B. Behnke. Kansas State Univ. 12:00Exercise Based Modulation of the Tumor Microenvironment – Impact on Anticancer Therapies. D. Siemann. Univ. of Florida Hlth. Cancer Ctr. 104 Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. MONDAYPHYSIOLOGY 345. NOVEL MECHANISMS OF GENE REGULATION IN THE KIDNEY Symposium 348. EDWARD F. ADOLPH DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS ENVIRONMENTAL AND EXERCISE PHYSIOLOGY SECTION Lecture (Sponsored by: APS Renal Section) Mon. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Oxidative Stress Chaired: M. Gumz and R. Hoover Transporters/Channels/Barriers 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 Circadian Clock Protein-Mediated Regulation of Renal Sodium Transport. M. Gumz. Univ. of Florida. Medullary Class1 Histone Deacetylase Enzymes and Fluid-Electrolyte Balance. K. Hyndman. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. miRNA, Fibrosis and the Proximal Tubule. I. Armando. George Washington Univ. The Role of KLF15 as a Transcriptional Regulator of Podocyte Differentiation. S. Mallipattu. Stony Brook Univ. Sch. of Med. 346. SOLOMON A. BERSON DISTINGUISHED LECTURE OF THE APS ENDOCRINOLOGY AND METABOLISM SECTION Lecture Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome Metabolism and Metabolic Disease Cellular Mechanisms of Insulin Resistance: Implications for Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes, and the Metabolic Syndrome. G. Shulman. HHMI, Yale Univ. Sch. of Med. 347. THYROID HORMONE MODULATION OF CARDIAC FUNCTION AND REMODELING: BENCH TO BEDSIDE Symposium Mon. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Chaired: M. Portman and A.M. Gerdes Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure 10:30 Thyroid Hormone and Heart Failure. A. Gerdes. New York Inst. of Technol. 11:00 Posttranslational Regulation of Thyroid Hormone Receptors during Cardiac Hypertrophy and Remodeling. M. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina. 11:30 Thyroid Hormone Regulation of Postnatal Cardiomyocyte Proliferation. A. Husain. Emory Univ. 12:00 Triiodothyronine Supplementation Modulates Cardiac Metabolism and Improves Clinical Outcomes during Stress-Induced Sick Euthyroid Syndrome. M. Portman. Seattle Children’s Hosp. and Univ. of Washington. Exercise: Teaching Myocytes New Tricks. S. Powers. Univ. of Florida. 349. CARDIOPULMONARY EFFECTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL STRESSORS Featured Topic Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: L. Wold Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure Environmental Stress 3:15 Deployment-Related Toxicants: Effects on the Cardiopulmonary System. M. Falvo. VA New Jersey Hlth. Care Syst. 3:45 Thermoregulatory and Ventilatory Responses in Humans with a Patent Foramen Ovale during Passive Cooling While Immersed in 20°C Water. J.T. Davis, M.W. Hay, A.M. Hardin, A.T. Lovering. Univ. of Oregon. (954.9) 4:00 Influence of Acute Lower Limb Heating on Clinical Measures and Functional Capacity in Peripheral Artery Disease. T.K. Pellinger, C.B. Pearce, G.H. Simmons. Salisbury Univ. and Univ. of MissouriColumbia Sch. of Med. (954.8) 4:15 Maternal Separation Stress Causes Mis-p[rogramming of Arterial Smooth Muscle Maturation. J. Reho, S.A. Fisher. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. (954.4) 4:30 Exposure to PM2.5 during the First Trimester Contributes to Adult Cardiac Dysfunction. V. Tanwar, M. Gorr, C. Eichenseer, L. Wold. The Ohio State Univ. (954.7) 4:45 Endothelial Hyper-permeability and Cardiomyocyte Dysfunction following Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting. M. Velten, G.D. Duerr, M. Hamiko, S. Frede, L.K. Rogers, G. Baumgarten, A. Hoeft, T. Hilbert. Univ. Med. Ctr. Bonn and Nationwide Children’s Hosp., Columbus, OH. (954.3) 5:00Wrap-Up. L. Wold. The Ohio State Univ. 350. CARL GOTTSCHALK DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS RENAL SECTION Lecture Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Aldosterone and Hypertension: What’s the DCT Got to Do with It? D. Ellison. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. 105 M O N PHYSIOLOGYMONDAY 351. ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATORS OF INFLAMMATION: GENETIC AND EPIGENETIC IMPLICATIONS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Physiological Genomics Group) Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: K. Claycombe and S. Meydani 3:15Introduction. K. Claycombe. USDA, Grand Forks. 3:30 Epigenetic Regulation of Macrophage Polarization and Renal Inflammation. S. Pushpakumar, L. Ren, R. Biswas, U. Sen. Univ. of Louisville. (771.11) 3:45 Vitamin D Supplementation and DNA Methylation Patterns during Pregnancy and Lactation in Mothers and Infants. C.M. Anderson, D.K. Thiele, J.L. Ralph, D. Perley, J.E. Ohm. Col. of Nursing, The Ohio State Univ., Sch. of Nursing, Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. and Col. of Nursing and Prof. Disc. and Sch. of Med. and Hlth. Sci., Univ. of North Dakota. (1028.3) 4:00 The Essence of Quiescence: Understanding the Roles of Histone Modification H4K20me3 and the Histone Modifying Enzyme Suv4-20h2 in Cellular Quiescence. A.Z. Corvalan, A.G. Evertts, W.E. Lowry, H.A. Coller. UCLA and Princeton Univ. (1028.5) 4:15 Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors Exhibit Enhanced Kidney Functions in Guanylyl Cyclase-A/Natriuretic Peptide Receptor-A Gene-Disrupted Mice: Role of Epigenetic Mechanisms. P. Kumar, R. Periyasamy, U. Subramanian, K.N. Pandey. Tulane Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. (771.2) 4:30 Searching for the Genetic Basis of Impaired Placentation in the Dahl Salt Sensitive Rat Model of Superimposed Preeclampsia. J.M. Sasser, A.C. Johnson, M.R. Garrett. Univ of Mississippi Med. Ctr. (771.8) 4:45 RNA Next Gen Sequencing of Kidneys from Diabetic Rats Provides Insights into Reno-protective Effects of Vitamin D Receptor Activation. S.S. Prabhakar, K. Kam, R. Kottapalli, C. Yego. Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. (771.3) 5:00 MicroRNAs Target Decidual Angiogenic Factors during Early Pregnancy in BPH/5, a Spontaneous Mouse Model of Preeclampsia. J. Xia, S. Baxter, J. Grenier, R.L. Davisson, J.L. Sones. Cornell Univ. (1028.14) 352. INFLAMMATION AND ITS INFLUENCE ON LUNG FUNCTION AND RESPIRATORY CONTROL 106 Lecture Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Neurobiology Neurophysiology Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Women in Physiology Committee) Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: K.M. Mathis and K.L. Sweazea Career Development (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) 4:05 Intermittent Hypoxia-Dependent Regulation of Microglial Activities and Respiratory Plasticity. J. Watters. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. Ventilatory Acclimatization to Hypoxia Requires Early Microglia Activation. J.A. Stokes, T.E. Arbogast, F.L. Powell. UCSD. (1262.2) Immune Stress and the Brain: Synaptic Substrates of Sickness. Q. Pittman. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. 354. NEGOTIATING FOR SUCCESS! 3:15 3:45 Chaired: S.M. Wilson and C.G. Wilson 3:45 353. JOSEPH ERLANGER DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM SECTION Featured Topic Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B 3:15 4:00 Lipopolysaccharide-Induced IL-6 and TNF-Alpha Expression in Neonatal Rat Nucleus Tractus Solitarii In Vivo. R. Johnson, S. Murray, C. Wilson. Loma Linda Univ. (1262.3) 4:15 The Src Family Tyrosine Kinase fyn Protects Mice from Inflammation-Induced Lung Injury. Y.D. Jin, Y. Liu, J.K. Trittmann, L.G. Chicoine, B. Chen, L.D. Nelin. Nationwide Children’s Hosp. and The Ohio State Univ. (1262.6) 4:30 Effects of Two-Hit Lipopolysaccharide Administration on Basal Inspiratory Motor Activity in Spontaneously Breathing Adult Male C57BL/6 Mice. R.M.Wadolowski, M.S. Ahmad, M. Wang, I.C. Solomon. Stony Brook Univ. (1262.10) 4:45 Differential Effects of Systemic versus Intratracheal Lipopolysaccharide Administration on Inspiratory Motor Output in Anesthetized Spontaneously Breathing Sprague Dawley Rat. M. Wang, R.M. Wadolowski, M.S. Ahmad, I.C. Solomon. Stony Brook Univ. (1262.12) 5:00 Sensitizing Effects of Chronic Pretreatment with Tumor Necrosis Factor Alpha on Vagal Pulmonary Afferent Sensitivity in Mice. R-L. Lin, L-Y. Lee. Univ. of Kentucky. (1262.13) 4:15 4:25 4:35 4:45 4:55 Making Your Personality Type Work for You. Negotiation 101: Skills Everyone Needs. P. Blair. Manpower, San Diego. Negotiation 201: Industry Sales/Marketing. K. Atkinson. Illumina, Inc. Negotiation 201: Industry R&D. M. Alonso-Galicia. Bayer Healthcare LLC, San Francisco. Negotiation 201: Academia Research. K. Barrett. UCSD. Negotiation 201: Academia Teaching. J. Uno. Elon Univ. Negotiation 201: Military. K. Ryan. U.S. Army Inst. of Surg. Res., TX. Panel Discussion. MONDAYPHYSIOLOGY 355. ROLE OF EPITHELIUM IN INNATE DEFENSE: MORE THAN A BARRIER Symposium 357. THE CONTROL OF SKELETAL MUSCLE ATROPHY IN RESPONSE TO DISUSE: CLINICAL/ PRECLINICAL CONTENTIONS AND FALLACIES OF EVIDENCE Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Symposium Chaired: J.P. Garnett (Sponsored by: APS Endocrinology and Metabolism Section) Transporters/Channels/Barriers Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium Chaired: P.J. Atherton and C. Lang Inflammation/Immunity The Retinal Pigment Epithelial Cell: Key Role in Ocular Innate Immunity. B. Detrick. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 3:55 Epithelial Innate Immune Pathways in Intestinal Homeostasis. K. Maloy. Univ. of Oxford. 4:35 3D Lung Models for Studying Host-Pathogen interactions and Antimicrobial Treatment Efficacy In Vitro. A. Crabbe. Univ. of Ghent. 5:00 Panel Discussion. Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome 3:15 356. SCIENTIFIC FOUNDATION FOR CLINICAL PRACTICE: MORE THAN A PILE OF FACTS Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Teaching of Physiology Section) Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B 3:15 3:35 3:55 4:15 4:35 Skeletal Muscle Physiology 3:15 3:45 4:15 4:45 Is there a Role of insulin Resistance in Driving Muscle Disuse Atrophy? P. Greenhaf. Univ. of Nottingham. The Regulation of Protein Metabolism in Human Disuse Atrophy: Now and the Future. S. Phillips. McMaster Univ., Canada. The Regulation of Protein Metabolism in Pre-Clinical Models of Disuse Atrophy: Now and the Future. S. Bodine. Univ. of California, Davis. Insights into Atrophy Using Systems Approaches: Now and the Future. C. Adams. Univ. of Iowa. 358. TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND EPIGENETIC REGULATION OF CARDIORESPIRATORY HOMEOSTASIS Chaired: M.L. Alacórn Fortepiani and P. Sanchez-Diaz Symposium Education (Sponsored by: APS Hypoxia Group) Application of Core Concepts in Physiology to Student-Centered Learning and Scientific Teaching. J. McFarland. Edmonds Community Col., WA. Teaching Basic Sciences When Time is Tight: Blended Learning, Just in Time Teaching, and In-Class Case Discussion. P. Sanchez-Diaz. Rosenberg Sch. of Optom., Univ. of the Incarnate Word, San Anotnio. Building A Solid Pathophysiology Foundation for Clinical Practice in Optometry. M. Lourdes Fortepiani. Rosenberg Sch. of Optom., Univ. of the Incarnate Word, San Anotnio. Teaching Physiology in a Medical School. L. HarrisonBernard. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr. Sch. of Med. Panel Discussion. Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: G.L. Semenz and J-M. Ramirez Oxidative Stress Hypertension Neurobiology 3:15 Regulation of Cell Metabolism by Hypoxia-Inducible Factors. G. Semenza. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 3:45 Epigenetic Regulation of Redox State inder Intermittent Hypoxia. J. Nanduri. Univ. of Chicago. 4:15 Transcriptional Mechanisms Underlying HypoxiaInduced Pulmonary Hypertension. L. Shimoda. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 4:45 Genetic Determinants of Red Blood Cell Production. J. Prchal. Univ. of Utah. 107 M O N PHYSIOLOGYMONDAY 359. VAGAL-RESPIRATORY COUPLING AND ITS IMPLICATIONS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE 360. ERLANGER LECTURE MINISYMPOSIUM Minisymposium Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Central Nervous System Section) (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) Mon. 4:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: Q.J. Pittman and S.S. Stocker Mon. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Neurobiology Chaired: M. Dutschmann Neurobiology Neurophysiology 3:15 3:45 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 108 Origins of Cardiac Vagal Tone and Its Modulation by the Respiratory Control Circuit. D. Farmer. Florey Inst. Interaction of Vagal Bradycardia and Respiratory Failure in Animal Models of Sudden Death in Epilepsy. F. Kalume. Seattle Children’s Hosp. Univ. of Washington. Quantification of Cardiac Baroreflex Sensitivity during Autonomic Stimulation. P. Sharma, M. Mavai, O.L. Bhagat, M. Murugesh, S. Sircar. All India Inst. of Med. Sci., Jodhpur. (1236.1) Dynamics of Cardio-respiratory Coupling during Sighs in Conscious Rats. E. Bondarenko, E. Nalivaiko. Univ. of Newcastle, Australia. (1236.2) Improvement of Vagal Tone and Reduction in the Blood Pressure by Physical Training in Aging Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats. L.O. Dellacqua, L.C. Michelini, C. Hindmarch, J.F.R. Paton, D. Murphy, V. Antunes. Univ. of São Paulo and Univ. of Bristol. (1236.3) Protection of Renal Ischemia/reperfusion Injury by Optogenetic Stimulation of the C1 Neurons. C. Abe, T. Inoue, A. Inglis, K. Viar, L-P. Huang, H. Ye, D. Rosin, R. Stornetta, M. Okusa, P. Guyenet. Univ. of Virginia. (1236.4) Neurophysiology 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 Neonatal Maternal Separation Increases Microglial Activation in Brainstem Regions Controlling the Laryngeal Chemoreflex. C. Baldy, S. BoisjolyVilleneuve, S. Fournier, M-E. Tremblay, R. Kinkead CHU de Québec, Laval Univ. (991.2) Dopamine System Regulation of Inhibition in an Animal Model of Interneuron Transcriptional Dysregulation and Hippocampal Circuit Dysfunction. L. Brady, A. Bartley, Q. Li, L. Dobrunz. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1284.7) Inhibition of Endocannabinoid Degradation Improves Recovery of Neurobehavioral Function and Resolution of Neuroinflammation and Synaptic Hyperexcitability in a Rodent Model of Traumatic Brain Injury. J.P. Mayeux, P. Katz, S. Edwards, J. Middleton, P. Molina. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. (993.5) Depletion of Brain Perivascular Macrophages Mitigates Depressive-Like Behavioral Consequences of Chronic Mild Stress. J-S. Grigoleit, E. Alvarez, C.B. Farrokhi, P.E. Sawchenko. Salk Inst. for Biol. Studies. (991.8) TUESDAY, APRIL 5 Across Societies 361. CAREER DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOPS Workshop Tue. 9:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Exhibit Hall D Career Development The following workshops will be held in the EB2016/FASEB Career Center. Access to the Career Center is FREE to all registered Experimental Biology 2016 meeting attendees. Poster/Platform Presenter Preparation Workshop and Practice Lab FASEB MARC Program will sponsor a Poster/Platform Presenter Preparation Workshop and Practice Lab beginning Saturday, April 2, to provide FASEB MARC poster/oral presentation travel award recipients and other interested EB2016 student/postdoc attendees with an opportunity to practice their presentations and obtain feedback from designated Workshop Mentors/Coaches. If you would like to participate in this workshop/practice lab, sign-up onsite at the Career Center beginning Saturday morning, April 2. First-come, firstserved. Limited space/session availability. 9:00 Negotiation Strategies for Scientists Part 1. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 9:00 Understanding Search Committees & Finding Job Announcements. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 9:00 Job Hunting in Biotech Part 3: Compensation Negotiation for Scientist Positions. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. 10:00 Navigating the Protocol, Milestones & Graduate Degree Requirements. H. Adams. H.G. Adams & Assocs. Inc., Norfolk, VA. 10:00 Responsible Conduct of Research Part 2: Best Practices: Mentoring, Collaboration, Peer Review, Data Management and Ownership. S. Sodeke, T. Turner. Tuskegee Univ., Jackson State Univ. 10:30 Talking About Yourself: How to Interview Well. N. Saul. UCSF. 10:30 11:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 1:00 2:30 2:30 3:00 3:00 Ten Ways to Get Lucky in the Job Search. P. Clifford. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago, Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Marquette Univ. Making Mistakes When Speaking: How to Handle Them. J. Blumenthal. Montgomery Col., MD. Negotiation Strategies for Scientists Part 2. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. Selling Yourself to the Life Sciences Industry. J. Tringali. Tringali & Assocs. Inc. Creating Effective CV’s Cover Letters, Research & Teaching Statements. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. How to Choose Your Ideal Career. B. Lindstaedt. UCSF. Responsible Conduct of Research Part 3: Best Practices: Publication Practices & Authorship, Conflicts of Interest, and Research. S. Sodeke, T. Turner. Tuskegee Univ., Jackson State Univ. Networking with Strangers is Required for Your Future. J. Blumenthal. Montgomery Col., MD. Handshakes, Eye Contact, Small Talk: How to Successfully Network at a Conference. N. Saul. UCSF. Nailing the Job Talk & Interview Prep. A. Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. Job Search in Academia & Industry. D. Behrens. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 362. TANG PRIZE IN BIOPHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE AWARD LECTURE Lecture (Sponsored by: Tang Prize Foundation, Taiwan) Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33ABC Cancer Immunotherapy by PD-1 Antibody. T. Honjo. Kyoto Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med. Enhance Your EB Experience. Download the App! The latest scientific sessions and Event information at your fingertips. Download at http://m.core-apps.com/eb2016 or scan the QR Code. 109 T U E ANATOMYTUESDAY Anatomy 363. CLINICAL APPROACH IN CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH Hybrid Symposium (Cosponsored by: Brazilian Society of Anatomy) Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Chaired: R.H. Cabral Cardiovascular Biology 365. WHAT CAN WE DO WHEN IT ALL FALLS APART? REMEDIATION AND HOW TO HELP STUDENTS WHO ARE STRUGGLING Hybrid Symposium Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Chaired: P. Husmann Education and Teaching Education 8:30 363.1 Parietal Valve of the Coronary Sinus: Morphological Features and Clinical Importance. N.E.V. de Prates. Univ. of São Paulo. 9:00 363.2 Comparative Cardiac Anatomy and Transmyocardial Laser Revascularization. R. Halti Cabral. Univ. of São Paulo and Tiradentes Univ. Sch. of Med., Brazil. 9:30 363.3 Sodium Overload Induces Remodeling of Aorta and Cardiac Arteries without Blood Pressure Changes in Mice. S. Lacchini, J.C.S. Silva, C.T. Lima, K.A. Viegas, T.C.S. Oliveira, P. Fiorino, V.M.A. Farah, R.H. Cabral. Univ. of São Paulo, São Paulo State Univ., Botucatu and Presbiterian Univ. Mackenzie, São Paulo. 9:45 363.4 Applied Anatomy of the Gastrocnemic Veins. J. Aderval Aragão. Fed. Univ. of Sergipe and Tiradentes Univ., Brazil. 8:30 365.1 Evaluating the Impact of Pre-matriculation Instruction on Academic Performance in the Anatomical and Physiological Sciences. D.E. Chico, S. Smith, W-J.A. Chen, T.V. Peterson, A. Hairrell. Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr. Col. of Med. 8:45 365.2 Prediction, Performance, and Adjustments: Medical Students’ Reflections on the First Gross Anatomy Exam. L.A. Hoffman. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med., Fort Wayne. 9:00 365.3 Early Interventions: Promoting Success to Prevent Remediation. A. Schutte, E. Kalb. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. - Evansville. 9:30 365.4 Remediation in an Integrated Medical School Curriculum – Lessons Learned. P. Ward. West Virginia Sch. of Osteo. Med. 364. CRANIAL SUTURES AND THE PERIODONTAL LIGAMENT - THE SOFT FORCES BEHIND SHAPING THE SKULL OR TEETH 366. WRITTEN AND VISUAL COMMUNICATION: DEVELOPING AN OUTSTANDING ABSTRACT AND POSTER Symposium Symposium Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 (Cosponsored by: AAA’s Advisory Committee for Young Anatomists) Chaired: A. Burrows Developmental Biology/Morphology Bones/Muscle/Connective Tissue 8:30 364.1 Supernumerary Sutures in the Zygoma and Their Impacts on Skull Modularity and Biomechanics. Q.C. Wang, P.C. Dechow. Texas A&M Univ. Baylor Col. of Dent. 9:00 364.2 Cranial Fibrous Connective Tissue Joints and Experiments in Their Growth. C.D. Byron. Mercer Univ., GA. 9:30 364.3 Transcriptional Control of Cranial Suture Development. R. Maxson, C. Teng, M. Ting, G. Crump. Univ. of So. California. Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Cochaired: K. Brown and L. Jerome-Majewska Professional Development Career Development Participants should sign up ahead of time and are asked to bring their own abstract/poster to the session. This is to help prepare for future meeting presentations, not for the current meeting. 367. CARDIOVASCULAR BIOLOGY PLATFORM Platform Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Cardiovascular Biology Georgios Kararigas is competing as a finalist in the Postdoctoral Platform Presentation Award and Vanessa Vrolyk is competing as a finalist in the Langman Graduate Platform Presentation Award 110 TUESDAYANATOMY 10:30 367.1 Lung Inflammation and Pulmonary Intravascular Macrophage Recruitment in L-Arginine-Induced Acute Necrotizing Pancreatitis in Mouse. V. Vrolyk, B. Wobeser, L. Khanh, B. Singh. Western Col. of Vet. Med., Univ. of Saskatchewan. 10:45 367.2 Repression but Not Deletion of β-Catenin Contributes to Heart Failure. G. Kararigas, L.C. Zelarayan, K. Toischer, H. Summer, I. Baczko, S. Golz, G. Hasenfuss, H. Jarry, V. Regitz-Zagrosek. Charité Univ. Hosp., Berlin, GeorgAugust-Univ. Goettingen and Bayer HealthCare, Wupperal, Germany and Univ. of Szeged, Hungary. 11:15 367.4 Ambient Ultra Fine Particle Impair Vascular Repair via Notch Signaling. K.I. Baek. UCLA. 11:30 367.5 The Methyl Donor Betaine Prevents Congenital Defects Induced by Prenatal Alcohol Exposure. M. Watanabe, G. Karunamuni, Y.Q. Doughman, M.M. Sheehan, P. Ma, L.M. Peterson, K.K. Linask, M.W. Jenkins, A.M. Rollins. Case Western Reserve Univ. and Univ. of South Florida. 11:45 367.6 Reelin Signaling in Cardiovascular Development. D. Kim, A. Poles, G. Gorski, C.J. Hatcher. Philadelphia Col. of Osteo. Med. 368. FORM AND FUNCTION PLATFORM Platform Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Chaired: M. Serrat Developmental Biology/Morphology Evolution/Anthropology Megan Holmes is competing as a finalist in the Postdoctoral Platform Presentation Award 10:30 368.1 The Dynamic Ontogenetic Structure of Mandibular Morphological Integration. M.A. Holmes, M.A. McNulty, J.C. Mussell, V.B. DeLeon. Sch. of Med., Duke Univ., LSU Sch. of Vet. Med., Baton Rouge, LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans and Univ. of Florida. 10:45 368.2 Comparison of Morphology and Bending Mechanics of Femora in Response to Chronic Exercise in Three Strains of Mice. K.M. Middleton, S.J. Peacock, B.R. Coats, J.K. Kirkland, T. Garland; Jr. Univ. of MissouriColumbia, Saint Louis Col. of Pharm., Michigan State Univ. and Univ. of California, Riverside. 11:00 368.3 Novel Findings in Rodent Pelvic Limb Anatomy. H.A. Richbourg, M.J. Martin, M.A. McNulty. LSU Sch. of Vet. Med. 11:15 368.4 Variation in Sexual Dimorphism of Mouse Os Coxae Shape, Volume, and Bone Mineral Density in Response to Selection for High Voluntary Wheel Running. H. Schutz, K. Braaten-Fierros, C. Higginbotham, H.A. Jamniczky, E.R. Donovan, T. Garland; Jr. Pacific Lutheran Univ., Cumming Sch. of Med., Univ. of Calgary, Canada and Univ. of California Riverside. 11:30 368.5 Differences in Anterior Cruciate Ligament Fiber Orientation between Digitigrade and Palmigrade Animals. A.A. Ruth, T. Hieironymus, C.O. Lovejoy. Kent State Univ. and Northeast Ohio Med. Univ. 11:45 368.6 Human Achilles and Equine Navicular Apparatus: A Structural and Functional Comparison of Two Premier Enthesis Organs. M.L. Osborn, U. Blas-Machado, E.W. Uhl. Univ. of Georgia Col. of Vet. Med. 369. ANATOMY EDUCATION PLATFORM 2 Platform Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 8 Cochaired: V.D. O’Loughlin and K. Metzger Education and Teaching Education Evidence-Based Approaches to Anatomy Education 10:30 369.1 Student Approaches to Anatomy Learning Are Influenced by Clinically Relevant Peer-Peer Teaching. M. Lazarus, J. Dos Santos, P. Haidet, T. Whitcomb. Monash Univ., Australia and Penn State 10:45 369.2 The Embryology Educator Experience: A Comprehensive Survey of Faculty and the Generation of a Phenomenology of Embryology Education. K. Cassidy. Indiana Univ. 11:00 369.3 Student Perspectives on General Learning Compared to Learning Anatomy. A. Notebaert. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. 11:15 369.4 Dissecting the Development of Clinical Reasoning in the Gross Anatomy Laboratory. G. Rae, A.C. Karpinski, R. McGoey. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans and Kent State Univ. Col. and Grad. Sch. of Educ. 11:30 369.5 Comparison of Temporal Variations in Ultrasound Training in Four Novice Groups. C. Elzie, A.P. Trace, B. Knapp, F. Toreno, R. Conran, C. Goodmurphy. Eastern Virginia Med. Sch. 11:45 369.6 Preliminary Results of a National Survey on the Integration of Anatomical Variations in Medical School Curricula. C. Goldberg, D. Royer. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. 370. PUBLISHING SUCCESS: HOW TO SUCCEED WHEN SUBMITTING TO AAA JOURNALS Symposium (Sponsored by: AAA Journals: Anatomical Sciences Education, Developmental Dynamics and The Anatomical Record) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Chaired: S. Miller Professional Development Career Development 10:30 Publication Metrics and Evaluators of Success. P. Antin. Univ. of Arizona. 11:00 Ethics in Scientific Publishing. K. Albertine. Univ. of Utah. 11:30 Publishing Educational Research Manuscripts. R. Drake, W. Pawlina. Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine. 111 T U E ANATOMYTUESDAY 371. NEUROBIOLOGY AWARD HYBRID Hybrid Symposium Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Chaired: B. Allman Neurobiology Neurobiology C.J. Herrick Award Lecture in Neuroanatomy featuring 2016 Young Investigator Award Recipient, Hillel Adesnik. Innocent Edagha is competing as a finalist in the Postdoctoral Platform Presentation Award and Amanda White is competing as a finalist in the Langman Graduate Platform Presentation Award 2:00 371.1 New Approaches and Insights Into Cortical Microcircuits. H. Adesnik, A. Mardinly, N. Pegard, I. Oldenburg, L. Waller. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 2:30 371.2 Microscopic Evaluation of Synaptic Connectivity and Network Formation in Primary Hippocampal Neurons. P. Verstraelen, J.R. Detrez, I. Pintelon, R. Nuydens, T. Meert, W. De Vos, J-P. Timmermans. Univ. of Antwerp and Janssen Pharmaceut., Beerse, Belgium. 2:45 371.3 Colonic Dysfunction following Acute Spinal Cord Injury: Oxidative Damage to Interstitial Cells of Cajal? A.R. White, G.M. Holmes. Penn State Col. of Med. 3:00 371.4 Cerebellar Neurotoxicity of ArtemetherLumefantrine in Prophylactic, Suppressive and Curative Experimental Malaria Models. I.A. Edagha, G.J. Ekandem, U.M. Ekanemesang. Univ. of Uyo and Obong Univ., Nigeria. 3:15 371.5 Behavioral Evidence of Transient versus Persistent Tinnitus Induced by Loud Noise Exposure in a Novel Rat Model. K. Beh, M. Typlt, G. Sigel, A. Schormans, D. Stolzberg, B.L. Allman. Univ. of Western Ontario. (561.12) 372. THE ROLE OF MICRORNAS IN DEVELOPMENT Symposium Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 9 Symposium Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 7B Chaired: T. Ritter Stem Cells/ Regeneration Cell Biology Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) 2:00 373.1 Extracellular Vesicles Derived from Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Treatment of Ocular Surface Injuries. T. Ritter, C. Lal, O. Treacy, G. O’Malley, M. Naughton, S. Naicker, P. Lohan, H.M. Subhash, A. Ryan, G. Fahy, M. Leahy, M.D. Griffin, S. Rani. Sch. of Phys., Univ. Hosp., Galway, Natl. Univ. of Ireland. 2:30 The Role of Stem Cell Exhaustion in Aging and Disease: Implications for Stem Cell Therapy. J. Huard. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at Houston. 3:00 373.2 Exosomes and Their RNA Contents as Mediators of Therapeutic Regeneration. E. Marban. CedarsSinai Heart Inst. 374. HENRY GRAY DISTINGUISHED EDUCATOR AWARD SYMPOSIA Award Lecture Tue. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Education and Teaching Education 4:00 374.1 On the Way to Virtual. R.W. Ogilvie. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Univ. of South Carolina. 375. HENRY GRAY SCIENTIFIC AWARD SYMPOSIA Chaired: B.A. Amendt Award Lecture Developmental Biology/Morphology Tue. 4:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 10 Bones/Muscle/Connective Tissue 2:00 372.1 MicroRNA Regulation of Craniofacial Development Using New Biotechnology: Inhibition ofmIRr Families in Transgenic Mice and Cells. B.A. Amendt, H. Cao, S. Eliason. Univ. of Iowa and Houston Methodist. 2:30 372.2 MicroRNA Regulation of Early Mammalian Development. R.J. Parchem. Baylor Col. of Med. 3:00 372.3 MicroRNA in Cardiac Arrhythmias. J. Wang, Y. Bai, N. Li, W. Ye, M. Zhang, S.B. Greene, Y. Tao, Y. Chen, X.H.T. Wehrens, J.F. Martin. Baylor Col. of Med. and Tulane Univ. 112 373. PARACRINE EFFECTS OF STEM AND PROGENITOR CELLS 4:30 375.1 The Repairable Brain: An Anatomists View. J.R. Sladek; Jr. Univ. of Colorado, Aurora. TUESDAYBIOCHEMISTRY Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 376. ASBMB PLENARY LECTURE 379. CHROMATIN REMODELING AND EPIGENETICS Plenary Symposium Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B Tue. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B 8:00 Awardee introduction. 8:05 376.1 Everything That Matters in Biomedicine Builds on Basic Science. F.S. Collins. OD, NIH. 377. BERT AND NATALIE VALLEE AWARD IN BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE LECTURE Award Lecture Tue. 8:55 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 8:55 Awardee introduction. 9:00 377.1 DNA Excision Repair Map of the Human Genome at Single Nucleotide Resolution. A. Sancar. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Sch. of Med. 378. CHEMICAL BIOLOGY APPROACHES TO UNDERSTAND GLYCAN-RELATED DISEASES Symposium Tue. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A Chaired: L. Wells Follow the conversation: #glyco 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 378.1 Activity-Based Glycosidase Profiling: Monitoring Glycosphingolipid Metabolism in Health and Disease. H. Overkleeft. Leiden Univ., Netherlands. 10:15 A New Selective Probe for Visualization and Identification of O-GlcNAc-Modified Proteins in Cells. P.G. Wang, J. Li, J. Wang, L. Wen, S. Li, H. Zhu, C. Ma, X. Li. Georgia State Univ. and Col. of Pharm., Nankai Univ., China. (616.2) 10:30 378.2 Photocrosslinking Sugars Capture GlycanDependent Interactions. J. Kohler, S-H. Yu, A.C. Rodriguez. Univ. of Texas Southwestern. 10:55 Bioengineering Proteoglycan-Based Matrices for Blood Contacting Applications. M. Lord, C. Chuang, J. Rnjak-Kovacina, B. Cheng, G. Lyons, J. Whitelock. Grad. Sch. of Biomed. Engin., Univ. of New South Wales, Univ. of Copenhagen, Sydney Med. Sch., Royal Prince Alfred Hosp., Univ. of Sydney and Sydney Head and Neck Cancer Inst. (622.2) 11:10 ABO Blood Type Correlates with Survival on Prostate Cancer Vaccine Therapy. J. Gildersleeve. NCI at Frederick. (1095.5) 11:25 378.3 O-GlcNAc Occurs Cotranslationally to Stabilize Nascent Polypeptides. D. Vocadlo, Y. Zhu, T-W. Liu, S. Cecioni, R. Eskandari, W. Zandberg, L. Willems. Simon Fraser Univ., Canada. 11:50 Discussion. Chaired: B. Ren Follow the conversation: #chromatin 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 379.1 Reversible RNA Methylation in Gene Expression Regulation. C. He. Univ. of Chicago and HHMI. 10:15 Chromatin Remodeler EP400 Deposits H3.3 Into Promoters and Enhancers during Gene Activation. S.K. Pradhan, T. Su, L. Yen, K. Jacquet, J. Cote, S. Kurdistani, M. Carey. UCLA and Laval Univ. Cancer Res. Ctr., Quebec. (803.9) 10:30 379.2 Mechanism and Regulation of the SWI/ SNF Family of ATP-Dependent Chromatin Remodelers. B. Bartholomew, P. Sen, S. Kundu, S. Hailu, J. Persinger, A. Hada, Y. Lu, J. Luo, J. Ranish. MD Anderson, Smithville, Univ. of Pennsylvania and Univ. of Washington. 10:55 Epigenetics Impacts Copy Number Heterogeneity and Drug Resistant Gene Selection. J.R. Whetstine, J.C. Black, S. Mishra, B. Sexton, C. Van Rechem, S. Murphy. MGH Cancer Ctr. and Harvard Med. Sch., Charlestown. (802.10) 11:10 Structural Basis for Histone H2B Deubiquitination by the SAGA DUB Module. M.T. Morgan, M. Haj-Yahya, A.E. Ringel, P. Bandi, A. Brik, C. Wolberger. Johns Hopkins Med. Inst., Ben Gurion Univ. of the Negev and Technion-Israel Inst. of Technol. (803.14) 11:25 379.3 Structural and Functional Analysis of Histone Chaperones. Y. Gu, S. Bergeron, D. Krzizike, K. Luger. Univ. of Colorado at Boulder. 11:50 Discussion. 380. CHEMICAL COMMUNICATION, BIOLOGICAL REGULATION Symposium Tue. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C Chaired: E. Carlson Follow the conversation: #chembio 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 380.1 Imaging Cell-Cell Interactions with Bioluminescent Probes. J. Prescher. Univ. of California, Irvine. 10:15 Design and Development of Chemically Gated Artificial Regulatory Domains. D.T. Cunningham-Bryant. Univ. of Washington. (809.1) 10:30 380.2 Understanding the Regulation of Ferroptosis. S. Dixon. Stanford Univ. 10:55 Engineered Caspases with Altered Specificities Enable Identification of Exosites. J.A. Hardy, M. Hill, D.J. MacPherson, P. Wu, O. Julien, J.A. Wells. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and UCSF. (842.10) 11:10 Determination of HNO-Derived Modifications on the Cardiac Protein Phospholamban. G. Keceli, A. Majumdar, C.N. Thorpe, J.E. Mahaney, N. Paolocci, J.P. Toscano. Johns Hopkins Univ., Edward Via Col. of Osteo. Med., VA and Johns Hopkins Med. Instns. (1092.7) 113 T U E BIOCHEMISTRYTUESDAY 11:25 380.4 Metabolic Control Interaction. M. Burkart. UCSD. 11:50 Discussion. via Protein-Protein 381. INTEGRATIVE PROTEOMICS OF PROTEIN COMPLEXES Symposium Tue. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Chaired: A-C. Gingras Follow the conversation: #proteomics 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 381.1 Integrative Methods for Elucidating the Structure and Function of Cellular Machines. B.T. Chait. Rockefeller Univ. 10:15 Understanding the Lipid Mediated Oligomerisation in Membrane Proteins. K. Gupta, C. Robinson. Univ. of Oxford. (819.13) 10:30 381.2 Mapping Dynamic Protein Interaction Landscapes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Using a Novel Whole Network Enrichment Approach. J. Yates, B.D. Stein, D. Calzolari, M. Lavallee-Adam. The Scripps Res. Inst. and Qualcom, San Diego. 10:55 Information Extraction from Native Mass Spectra. S. Guan. UCSF. (819.14) 11:10 Dynamic Organellar Maps, a Tool to Study Proteome-Wide Subcellular Localization Changes. D. Itzhak, S. Tyanova, J. Cox, M. Mann, G. Borner. Max Planck Inst. of Biochem., Martinsried. (819.3) 11:25 381.3 Defining Interaction and Structural Dynamics of Protein Complexes Using Integrated Mass Spectrometry Approaches. L. Huang. Univ. of California, Irvine. 11:50 Discussion. 382. TARGETED THERAPIES Symposium Tue. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Chaired: F. Sicheri Follow the conversation: #cellsignal 9:50 382.1 Kinases as Molecular Switches: Catalytic and Non-catalytic Functions of BRAF Reveal Novel Insights into Oncogenic Activation. S. Malek, S. Foster, D. Whalen, A. Ozen, J. Haling, J. Sudhamsu, I. Yen, J. Yin, G. Hatzivassiliou, A. Shaw, C. Yu, C. Eigenbrot, G. Manning, N. Skelton, S. Hymowitz. Genentech. 10:15 ProKinO: A Unified Resource for Mining the Cancer Kinome. N. Kannan. Univ. of Georgia. (1107.4) 10:30 382.2 Targeting Tumors Driven by VHL or IDH Mutations. W. Kaelin. Dana-Farber Cancer Inst. and Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch., HHMI. 10:55 Covalent Inhibition of ERK Docking Interactions. T.S. Kaoud, W.H. Johnson, A. Piserchio, N.D. Ebelt, M. Warthaka, M. Cano, R. Sammons, Q. Wang, P. Ren, R. Ghose, K.N. Dalby. Univ. of Texas at Austin, Fac. of Pharm., Minia Univ., Egypt and City Col. of New York. (856.11) 114 11:10 Clonal Evolution of the HER2 L755S Mutation Leads to Acquired HER-Targeted Therapy Resistance That Can Be Reversed by the Irreversible HER1/2 Inhibitor Afatinib. X. Xu, A. Nardone, H. Hu, L. Qin, S. Nanda, T. Mitchell, M. Shea, L. Heiser, N. Wang, K. Covington, E. Chen, A. Renwick, T. Wang, C. De Angelis, A. Contreras, C. Gutierrez, S. Fuqua, G. Chamness, C. Shaw, D. Wheeler, J. Gray, S. Hilsenbeck, M. Rimawi, K. Osborne, R. Schiff. Baylor Col. of Med., Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. and MD Anderson Cancer Ctr., Houston. (1107.5) 11:25 382.3 Disrupting Adaptive Bypass Pathways Activated by Targeted Kinase Inhibitors. G.L. Johnson. Univ. of North Carolina Sch. of Med. 11:50 Discussion. 383. NAFLD: METABOLIC INSIGHT INTO THE ENZYMATIC PLAYERS Symposium (Sponsored by: ASBMB Minority Affairs Committee) Tue. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Chaired: D.D. Moore Follow the conversation: #liver 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 383.1 Posttranscriptional Regulation of Lipogenesis. J.D. Horton. Univ of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr. 10:15 Palmitoleate Protection against PalmitateInduced Cholangiocyte Lipoapoptosis Is Sensitive to Pertussis Toxin. S.K. Natarajan, M.A. Walker, M. Toews, J.L. Mott. Univ. of Nebraska Med. Ctr. (870.5) 10:30 383.2 Thioesterase Superfamly Member 2: Metabolic Control of Hepatic Fatty Acid Channeling and Pathogenic Role in Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. D.E. Cohen. Brigham and Women’s Hosp./Harvard Med. Sch. 10:55 Cyclin D1 Regulates Adipose Triglyceride Lipase to Influence Hepatic Lipid Droplet Metabolism and Cell Proliferation. J. Ploeger, S. Kamarajugadda, D. Mashek, J.H. Albrecht. Univ. of Minnesota. (871.1) 11:10 Phosphatidylcholine Transfer Protein Regulates Lipid Droplet Morphology in Experimental Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis. H.T. Nicholls, J. Song, J. Wu, J.L. Hornick, D.E. Cohen. Brigham and Women’s Hosp. and Harvard Med. Sch. (1128.1) 11:25 383.3 Interactions of Branched-Chain Amino Acids and Lipids in Metabolic Disease. C. Newgard. Duke Univ. 11:50 Discussion. 384. DEVELOPING AND SHARING BEST PRACTICES: FROM CONCEPTS TO CLASSROOM Symposium Tue. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 14A Chaired: J.E. Bell This session will bring together experienced and early career educators to learn about resources for course materials, assessment tools and teaching the foundational concepts of biochemistry and molecular biology. TUESDAYBIOCHEMISTRY Invited Speakers: Ann Aguanno, Marymount Manhattan College, Pam Mertz, St. Mary’s College of Maryland, Jessica Schrader, Eastern Florida State College, Marilee Benore, University of Michigan, Dearborn Follow the conversation: #education 385. THE DO’S AND DON’TS OF DATA ANALYSIS AND REPORTING Workshop (Sponsored by: Journal of Biological Chemistry) Tue. 12:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Chaired: F.P. Guengerich 386. ASBMB MERCK AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture 4:30 Tripartite DNA Lesion Recognition and Verification by XPC, TFIIH, and XPA in Nucleotide Excision Repair. F.M. Golebiowski, C-L. Li, Y. Onishi, N.L. Samara, K. Sugasawa, W. Yang. NIDDK, NIH, Inst. of Molec. Biol., Acad. Sinica, Taipei and Kobe Univ., Japan. (793.2) 4:45 389.2 Mechanism of Structure-Selective Nucleases. M. Nowotny. Intl. Inst. of Molec. and Cell Biol., Warsaw. 5:10 Base Excision Repair of Bulky DNA Adducts Generated by the Antitumor Drug Yatakemycin. E.A. Mullins, R. Shi, Y. Igarashi, B.F. Eichman. Vanderbilt Univ. and Toyama Prefect. Univ. (791.2) 5:25 Kinetic Mechanism for Binding and Flipping of Damaged Bases by DNA Repair Dealkylases. P. O’Brien. Univ. of Michigan. (574.2) 5:40 389.3 The Replication Machinery Encoded by SCCmec and Related Mobile Genetic Elements. P.A. Rice, I. Mir-Sanchis, S. Boyle-Vavra, Y.Z. Pigli. Univ. of Chicago. 6:05 Discussion. 390. STRUCTURAL STUDIES OF COMPLEX SYSTEMS (Sponsored by: Merck & Co., Inc.) Symposium Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B Tue. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C 2:00 Awardee introduction. 2:05 386.1 Prospects for Noncoding RNA Discovery in Bacteria. R.R. Breaker. Yale Univ., HHMI. 387. WILLIAM C. ROSE AWARD LECTURE Award Lecture Tue. 2:35 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 2:35 Awardee introduction. 2:40 387.1 When Good Ribosomes Go Bad. S.J. Baserga, K.L. McCann, T. Teramoto, J. Zhang, T.M. Tanaka Hall. Yale Univ. Sch. of Med. and NIEHS, NIH, Research Triangle Park. 388. HERBERT A. SOBER LECTURESHIP Award Lecture Tue. 3:10 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6B 3:10 Awardee introduction. 3:15 388.1 The Nanodisc Platform for Determining the Structure and Function of Membrane Proteins. S.G. Sligar. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 389. STRUCTURAL INSIGHTS INTO DNA REPAIR Symposium Tue. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Chaired: A. Sfeir Follow the conversation: #DNA 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 389.1 The Double Edged Sword of DNA Repair. C. Kisker, J. Kuper, C. Braun, A. Elias, G. Michels, A. Poterszman, J-M. Egly. Univ. of Würzburg, Germany and CNRS, Univ. of Strasbourg, France. T U E Chaired: TBD Follow the conversation: #catalysis 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 390.1 Snapshots of Benzylsuccinate Synthase: Getting a Handle on Toluene Degradation. C.L. Drennan, M.A. Funk. MIT and HHMI, Cambridge, MA. 4:30 Biochemical Characterization of Two Evolutionary Distant Ten-Eleven Translocation Enzymes and Their Utility in 5-Methylcytosine Sequencing in the Genomes at Single-Base Resolution. L. Saleh, E. Tamanaha, R. Vaisvila, J.E. Pais, N. Dai, S. Guan, I.R. Corrêa; Jr., Y. Zheng. New England Biolabs. (834.2) 4:45 390.2 Learning Drug Design from Nature – The Substrate-Protein and Protein-Protein Interactions of Fatty Acid and Polyketide Mega-Synthases. S-C. Tsai. Univ. of California, Irvine. 5:10 Protein-Protein Interactions Reduce Ca2+Requirements for Transglutaminase 2 Mediated Posttranslational Modifications of α-Synuclein. T.N. Zeczycki, J.S. Viscomi. Brody Sch. of Med. at East Carolina Univ. (1083.16) 5:25 Histone Deacetylase 6: Structure, Mechanism, and Inhibitor Selectivity. Y. Hai, D. Christianson. Univ. of Pennsylvania. (1083.1) 5:40 390.3 Serial Femtosecond Crystallography Opens a New Era in Membrane Protein Structural Biology. P. Fromme. Biodesign Inst., Arizona State Univ. 6:05 Discussion. 391. NEW FRONTIERS IN PROTEIN QUALITY CONTROL Symposium Tue. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Chaired: B.A. Schulman Follow the conversation: #proteins 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 115 BIOCHEMISTRYTUESDAY 4:05 391.1 Unconventional Protein Secretion and Protein Quality Control. Y. Ye, J-G. Lee. NIDDK, NIH. 4:30 ER Protein Quality Control and Lipid Droplets: Unexpected Functional Connections. J.A. Olzmann. Univ. of California, Berkeley. (816.5) 4:45 391.2 Rqc2p and 60S Ribosomal Subunits Mediate mRNA-Independent Elongation of Nascent Chains. O. Brandman. Stanford Univ. 5:10 Elucidating ER-Associated Degradation Pathway for GABAA Receptors. T. Mu. Case Western Reserve Univ. (598.9) 5:25 The Degradation Requirements for Topologically Distinct Quality Control Substrates in the Yeast Endoplasmic Reticulum. C.J. Guerriero, K.R. Reutter, A. Augustine, J.L. Brodsky. Univ. of Pittsburgh. (1063.2) 5:40 391.3 The E3 Ligase Listerin/Ltn1 Links RibosomeAssociated Protein Quality Control and Neurodegeneration. C. Joazeiro. Heidelberg Univ. (ZMBH), Germany and The Scripps Res. Inst. 6:05 Discussion. 392. NATURAL PRODUCT BIOSYNTHESIS FOR NEW DRUG LEADS Symposium Tue. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Chaired: C. Barry Follow the conversation: #metabolism 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 392.1 Culture Independent Approaches for the Discovery of New Bacterial Metabolites. S.F. Brady. Rockefeller Univ. 4:30 The Biosynthesis of the Indolic Acid Moiety from the Antibiotic Nosiheptide. E. Badding, S. Booker. Penns State Univ. and HHMI. (1101.2) 4:45 392.2 Semisynthetic Natural Products for Antibacterial Drug Discovery. R. Lee. St. Jude Children’s Res. Hosp. 5:10 The Polyamine Pathway of Leishmania donovani as a Potential Therapeutic Target. S. Roberts, D. Paradis, J. Perdeh, J. Harrelson, B. Jan, P. Yates, B. Ullman. Pacific Univ. and Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. (1103.3) 5:25 Small Fungal Molecule Metabolites Targeting Mosquito Midgut FREP1 Block Malaria Transmission. J. Li. Univ. of Oklahoma. (627.6) 5:40 392.3 Nature Bank and Drug Leads for TB. R. Quinn. Griffith Univ., Australia. 6:05 Discussion. 393. WALTER A. SHAW YOUNG INVESTIGATOR AWARD IN LIPID RESEARCH Award Lecture (Sponsored by: Avanti Polar Lipids, Inc.) Tue. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Presented in the session, “Membrane Lipid Regulation”. Refer to session 394 for additional details 4:00 116 Awardee introduction. 4:00 393.1 Functional Lipidomics: From Lipid Timelines to Regulation of Metabolic Networks. C.S. Ejsing. Univ. of So. Denmark. 394. MEMBRANE LIPID REGULATION Symposium Tue. 4:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Chaired: J. Ntambi Follow the conversation: #lipids 4:00 Chair’s Introduction. 4:05 Walter A. Shaw Young Investigator Award in Lipid Research Introduction and Presentation. 4:10 Functional Lipidomics: From Lipid Timelines to Regulation of Metabolic Networks. C.S. Ejsing. Univ. of So. Denmark. (393.1) 4:35 394.3 Dynamic Regulation of the Signaling Lipid Phosphatidylinositol 3,5-Bisphosphate. L.S. Weisman, N. Jin. Univ. of Michigan. 5:00 Alterations in Acyl Phosphatidylglycerol Levels in ΔpagP, ΔpldB, and Δcls Escherichia coli Leads to Phenotypic Variance. M. Pourmaleki, T.A. Garrett. Vassar Col., NY. (1133.2) 5:15 394.2 Regulation of Lipid Metabolism by SREBPs. P. Espenshade. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. 5:40 394.1 Regulation of Yeast Pah1 Phosphatidate Phosphatase in Lipid Synthesis. G.M. Carman. Rutgers Univ. 6:05 Discussion. 395. STRAIGHT FROM THE BENCH: RECENT ADVANCES IN PROTEIN ENGINEERING Symposium Tue. 6:30 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, San Diego Ballroom A Chaired: M.R. White Cochaired: D.L. Schmitt Follow the conversation: #proteins 6:30 Chair’s Introduction. 6:45 395.1 Nearer to Nature: Design and Optimization of Artificial Enzymes. D. Hilvert. ETH Zurich. 7:10 Tyro-3, Axl and Mer Chimeric Reporter Systems Shows the Differential Regulations of the TAM Family Receptor Tyrosine Kinases. S.G. Kimani, S. Kumar, S. Kotenko, R. Birge. Rutgers-New Jersey Med. Sch. (1117.1) 7:20 Novel Cell-Penetrating Peptides Overcome Endosomal Escape and Deliver Protein Cargos Into the Cell. V. Ngwa, J. Salerno, S. Nowak, C. Chrestensen, J. McMurry. Kennesaw State Univ. (631.2) 7:30 Altered DNA-Binding Specificity Transcription Activator Variant Provides Key to Unlocking Gene Activation Mechanism. A.N. Meyer, P.A. Weil. Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr. (803.11) 7:40 Atomic Force Microscopy Studies of Conformational Changes in Proteins and Peptides. N.T. Ploscariu, J. Tomich. Kansas State Univ. (823.3) TUESDAYBIOCHEMISTRY 7:50 Amino Acid Selection during Teicoplanin Biosynthesis Can Be Switched by a Point Mutation. T. Kittilä, M.J. Cryle. Max Planck Inst. for Med. Res., Heidelberg and EMBL, Monash Univ., Australia. (841.6) 8:00 Uptake and Lysosomal Delivery of Recombinant Human Alpha-N-Acetylglucosamine-6-Sulfatase to Mucopolysaccharidosis IIID Fibroblasts. D.R. Moen, D.M. Wang, X. Zhang, S-h. Kan, J. Wood, S. Ekins, T-F. Chou, P.I. Dickson. LA BioMed at Harbor-UCLA and Phoenix Nest Inc. and Jonah’s Just Begun, Brooklyn. (1070.6) 8:10 Assessment of CCN2 Independent Modules Regenerative Capacity on Osteoarthritis and Further Selecting the Most Suitable among Them as a Potential Therapeutic Drug. T. Abdelkader, E. Aoyama, T. Nishida, T. Hattori, D. Janune, E.S. Hara, M. Ono, Y. Tabata, T. Kuboki, S. Kubota, M. Takigawa. Okayama Univ. and Kyoto Univ. (1070.2) 8:20 Enhanced Sample Preparation for Proteomic Analysis Utilizing Reversible Biotinylation and Polymer-Based Protein Engineering. A. Lucas, C. Cummings, A. Russell, J. Minden. Carnegie Mellon Univ. (821.1) 8:30 Development of “Inside-Out” PEGylated Crosslinked Hemoglobin Polymers: A Novel HemoglobinBased Oxygen Carrier. K.D. Webster, D. Dahhan, C. Frosti, W. Dean, J.B. Chaires, K.W. Olsen. Loyola Univ. Chicago and Univ. of Louisville. (825.3) 8:40 Large-Scale Structure-Based Prediction and Identification of Novel Protease Substrates Using Computational Protein Design. M.A. Pethe, A. Rubenstein, S.D. Khare. Rutgers and Ctr. for Integrative Proteomics Res., Piscataway. (601.2) 8:50 395.3 Controlling the Rate of Energy Transduction in a Protein System through Coupling Pathway Redesign. C.J. Wilson. Yale Univ. 9:15 Discussion. 7:22 Integrated Analysis of Posttranslational Modification Proteomes Reveals Interactions and Cell Cycle Regulatory Patterns In Toxoplasma gondii. N.C. Silmon de Monerri, R.R. Yakubu, L.M. Weiss, K. Kim. Albert Einstein Col. of Med. (864.13) 7:34 Proteome-Wide Structural Analysis of PTM Hotspots Reveals Large Body of Putative Regulatory Elements with Predicted Biological Function. H. Dewhurst, M. Torres. Georgia Tech. (864.24) 7:46 Ate1-Mediated Posttranslational Arginylation Is Essential for Stress Response Regulation and Mutagenesis Suppression. A. Kumar, M.D. Birnbaum, W. Morgan, F. Zhang. Univ. of Miami. (864.2) 7:58 Investigating the Mechanism by Which the Small RNA MtlS Regulates the Mannitol Protein Transporter at the Post-translational Level in Vibrio cholerae. E.E. Hansen, M.C. Coyle, J.M. Liu. Pomona Col., CA. (595.3) 8:10 Evidence for the Interplay between Posttranslational Modifications in Regulating Mycobacterial Sirtuin Activity. G.S. Yadav, S.K. Ravala, N. Malhotra, P.K. Chakraborti. CSIR-Inst. of Microbial Technol., Chandigarh. (1131.1) 8:22 Metabolite-Driven Modifications: Protein Acylations Elucidate Substrate Metabolism in Syntrophic Bacteria. H.H.T. Nguyen, P.H.N. Nguyen, R.P. Gunsalus, M.J. McInerney, J.A. Loo, R.R. Ogorzalek Loo. UCLA and Univ. of Oklahoma. (864.1) 8:34 Investigation into the Role of N-Terminal Acetylation of ESAT-6 in Pathogenesis of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. J.A. Aguilera, J. Sun. Univ. of Texas at El Paso. (864.22) 8:46 396.2 Posttranslational Modifications in BacteriaHost Interaction. F. Shao. Natl. Inst. of Biol. Sci., Beijing. 9:11 Conclusion. 396. STRAIGHT FROM THE BENCH: POSTTRANSLATIONAL MODIFICATIONS AND THE MICROORGANISM RESPONSE 397. ASBMB WOMEN’S BMB SCIENTIST PANEL AND NETWORKING EVENT Symposium Tue. 6:30 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, San Diego Ballroom C Chaired: A. Hadjikyriacou Cochaired: A.N. Patananan Special Event Tue. 6:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Each year, the ASBMB sponsors a session where women scientists reflect on some aspect of their careers or general issues surrounding women’s participation in science. Networking, mentoring, refreshments, and fun. ASBMB members and biochemistry attendees welcome. Follow the conversation: #PTM 6:30 Chair’s Introduction. 6:45 396.1 Arginine Methylation Modulates RNA Biology of African Trypanosomes. L.K. Read. Univ. of Buffalo Sch. of Med. 7:10 Specificity of Protein Arginine Methyltransferases: How Does the Trypanosoma brucei PRMT7 Limit Its Activity to Monomethylation of Its Target Proteins? K. Jain, R.A. Warmack, Y. Feng, E.W. Debler, P. Stavropoulos, G. Blobel, S.G. Clarke. UCLA and The Rockefeller Univ. (864.3) 398. MEET THE BIOARTIST Special Event Tue. 7:00 pm—Karl Strauss Brewing Company, 1157 Columbia St., San Diego, CA 92101 Join us for a discussion with the winning scientists behind the images of the Annual FASEB BioArt Competition and more at the Karl Strauss Brewing Company in downtown San Diego, where the images will be on display throughout EB2016. Refreshments available for purchase. 117 T U E NUTRITIONTUESDAY Nutrition 400. USING THE NIH BODY WEIGHT PLANNER FOR NUTRITION RESEARCH AND COUNSELING (Sponsored by: ILSI NA Technical Committee on Protein) Tue. 7:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB Chaired: K.D. Hall 9:00 9:25 403. INTERNATIONAL FORUM – BRAZIL/ICAN 401. BIOLOGY OF LINEAR GROWTH: A GUIDE FOR REDUCING CHILDHOOD STUNTING International Forum (Supported by International Colleges for the Advancement of Nutrology ) Symposium (Organized and Sponsored by: the International Colleges for the Advancement of Nutrology (ICAN)) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC Chaired: K.P. West, Jr. Cochaired: A. Ferreira Heyn and R. Figueredo Cochaired: K. Kraemer Nutrition Across the Lifespan: From Pediatrics to Geriatrics 8:00 8:10 Introduction: Keeping Biological Plausibility in View When Setting Public Health Goals to Reduce Childhood Stunting. K. West, Jr. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. Nutritional, Hormonal and Inflammatory Determinants of Bone Development. J. Lui. NICHD, NIH. Patterns of Normal Fetal and Postnatal Growth During the 1st 1000 Days. M. Lampl. Emory Univ. Efficacy of Maternal and Child Nutrition Interventions to Improve Linear Growth. P. Christian. Johns Hopkins Univ. Linear Growth Beyond the 1st 1000 Days of Life: Is There Catch-up Growth? Is it Healthy? A. Stein. Emory Univ. Discussion: Implications for Reducing Childhood Stunting. K. Kraemer. Sight and Life. 8:40 9:00 9:20 9:40 Bailey. CDC, Natl. Ctr. for Hlth. Statistics, NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and Purdue Univ. Monitoring of Nutritional Status in NHANES through Blood and Urine Biomarkers. C. Pfeiffer. CDC. Statistical Approaches for Modeling Usual Intake Using NHANES Data. K. Dodd. NIH, NCI. 8:30 Malnutrition in Hospitals. A. Ferreira Heyn, Sociedad Paraguaya de Nutr., Paraguay 8:45 The Challenges of Obesity’s Pharmacotherapy. D. Ribas Filho, Assn. de Nutrologia, Brazil 9:00 Collagen Supplement in the Prevention and Treatment of Degenerative Osteoarthritis. M. Garcez Duarte, Curitiba—Paraná, Brazil 9:15 Infertility and Oxidative Stress. V. Ferreira do Amaral, Univ. Fed. do Paraná, Brazil 9:30 Obesity Comorbidities in Brazilian Children and Adolescents. C.A. Nogueira-de-Almeida, Univ. de Ribeirão Preto, Brazil 9:45 Questions & Answers. 404. DBC: DIETARY ANTIOXIDANTS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29A 402. NUTRITIONAL STATUS MONITORING IN THE U.S. OVER 45 YEARS IN THE NATIONAL HEALTH AND NUTRITION EXAMINATION SURVEY (NHANES): UPDATES AND CHALLENGES Symposium Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC Chaired: N. Ahluwalia Cochaired: C.J. Boushey Nutritional Epidemiology 8:00 8:10 8:35 118 NHANES in Monitoring Nation’s Health and Nutrition: Setting the Stage. N. Ahluwalia. CDC, Natl. Ctr. for Hlth. Statistics. Data Collection, Database Updates, and Findings from the What We Eat in America (WWEIA) Component of the NHANES. A. Moshfegh. USDA, Beltsville. Dietary Supplements: Data Collection, Databases, Total Intakes, and Trends in the U.S. J. Gahche, R. Chaired: L. Gu Cochaired: S. Moser 8:00 404.1 Protandim Treatment Causes Reversible Nuclear Translocation of Nrf-2 and Activation of the Antioxidant Response Element. N. Chevreau. LifeVantage Corp., Sandy, UT. 8:15 404.2 Effects of Acute n-3 Fatty Acid Administration on Cardiac Lipid Metabolism and Ca2+ Homeostasis during Ischemia-Reperfusion. H. Zirpoli, N. Quadri, K.M. O’Shea, R. Ananthakrishan, M. Abdillahi, R. Rosario, R.J. Deckelbaum, R. Ramasamy. Col. of P&S, Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. and NYU Med. Ctr. 8:30 404.3 Sweet Sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) Stalk Extract, a Byproduct of Biofuel Production, Ameliorates Systemic Oxidative Stress in a Murine Model of High-Caloric Diet-Induced Obesity. L. Reddivari, R. Bhatnagar, A. Massey, J. Vanamala. Penn State and Colorado State Univ. TUESDAYNUTRITION 8:45 404.4 M-A-T (Mucuna, Ashwagandha and Tribulus) Enhances Testosterone and Reduces Oxidative Stress: In Vivo Model. V. Juturu, K. Sahin, F. Akdemir, C. Orhan, M. Tuzcu, G. Turk, N. Sahin, I. Yilmaz. OmniActive Hlth. Technols. Inc., NJ and Firat Univ., Turkey. 9:00 404.5 Lycopene Inhibits Amyloid-β25-35-Induced Apoptosis by Decreasing Intracellular and Mitochondrial Ros Levels in Human Neuronal SH-SY5Y Cells. S. Hwang, J.W. Lim, H. Kim. Col. of Human Ecol., Yonsei Univ., South Korea. 9:15 404.6 Broccoli (Brassica oleracea) Extract Combats Streptozotocin-Induced Diabetes and Oxidative Stress in Rats. S. Suresh, M.I. Waly, N. Guizani, M.S. Rahman. Col. of Agr. and Marine Sci., Sultan Qaboos Univ., Oman. 9:30 404.7 Redox Modulation of Curcumin Stability: Redox Active Antioxidants Increase Chemical Stability and Biological Activity of Curcumin. G. Zhang, Y. Nimiya, W. Wang, E. Decker. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst. 9:45 404.8 Hydroxytyrosol Is More a More Potent Antioxidant Than Tyrosol. J. Rodríguez-Morató, R. de la Torre, J. Blumberg, C-Y.O. Chen. Hosp. del Mar Med. Res. Inst., Barcelona, Pompeu Fabra Univ., Spain, Physiopathol. of Obesity and Nutr., Madrid and Tufts Univ., Boston 405. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: ENERGY BALANCE, MACRONUTRIENTS AND WEIGHT MANAGEMENT Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29C Chaired: S.K. Das Cochaired: J.P. Karl 8:00 405.1 The Portion Control Strategies Trial: A YearLong Randomized Controlled Trial on the Impact of Portion Control on Weight Change. B.J. Rolls, B.L. James, C.E. Sanchez, L.S. Roe. Penn State. 8:15 405.2 A New Commercial Behavioral Weight Loss Program: Effect of Program Location, Delivery Mode and Participant Factors on Weight Loss. S.K. Das, C. Brown, J. O’ Toole, S.B. Roberts. USDA at Tufts Univ. and Instinct Hlth. Sci. LLC, Weston, MA. 8:30 405.3 Dietary Substitution of Whole Grains for Refined Grains Favorably Effects Fiber Intake and Energy Metabolism in Adults. J.P. Karl, M. Meydani, J.B. Barnett, S.M. Vanegas, B. Goldin, H. Rasmussen, E. Saltzman, S.S. Jonnalagadda, S.N. Meydani, S.B. Roberts. USDA at Tufts Univ., Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med. and General Mills Inc., Minneapolis. 8:45 405.4 Comparison of Two Administration Forms of a Highly Viscous Fibre Blend on Appetite and Glycemic Response in Healthy Individuals. F. Au-Yeung, E. Jovanovski, H. Ho, A. Zurbau, A.L. Jenkins, V. Vuksan. St. Michael’s Hosp. and Univ. of Toronto. 9:00 405.5 FTO Genotype, Dietary Protein Intake and Body Weight in a Population of Young Adults. J. Jamnik, D. Merritt, A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto. 9:15 405.6 Predicting Initial Lipid Release from Masticated Tree Nuts Using Mathematical Modelling. T. Grassby, Y. Shen, L. Wagner, S. Beckett, W. Hall, S. Berry. King’s Col. London. 9:30 405.7 Hunger and Satiety Responses to Saturated Fat-Rich Meals before and after a High PUFA Diet. J.A. Cooper, J.L. Stevenson, C.M. Paton. Univ. of Georgia and Texas Christian Univ. 9:45 405.8 Spatial Reorganization of Proopiomelanocortin (POMC)-Expressing Neurons in the Arcuate Nucleus of POMCEGFP Mice Resistant or Prone to Obesity. D. Tomé, M. Soto, C. Chaumontet, M. Guillaumin, S. Benoit, G. Fromentin, N. Darcel. AgroParisTech, INRA, Univ. Paris-Saclay and Univ. de Lorraine-Nancy. 406. NUTRITION AND GASTROINTESTINAL FUNCTION: THE MICROBIOME AND BEYOND Minisymposium Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29D Chaired: K.A. Tappenden Cochaired: H.D. Holscher 8:00 406.1 Gastrointestinal Microbial Changes following Whole Grain Barley and Oat Consumption in Healthy Men and Women. S.V. Thompson, K.S. Swanson, J.A. Novotny, D.J. Baer, H.D. Holscher. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USDA, Beltsville, MD. 8:15 406.2 Walnut Consumption Influences the Human Gut Microbiome. H.M. Guetterman, K.S. Swanson, J.A. Novotny, D.J. Baer, H.D. Holscher. Univ. of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign and USDA, Beltsville, MD. 8:30 406.3 Utilizing Machine Learning Approaches to Understand the Interrelationship of Diet, the Human Gastrointestinal Microbiome, and Health. H. Guetterman, L. Auvil, N. Russell, M. Welge, M. Berry, L. Gatzke, C. Bushell, H. Holscher. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 8:45 406.4 Impacts of Age, Snack Food, and Whole and Refined Wheat on the Rat Fecal Microbiome. C. Cotton, K. Westerman, D. Van Roosebeke, A.V. Kane, A. Tai, J.B. Blumberg, C-Y.O. Chen, M.S. Obin. Tufts Univ. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy, Tufts Med. Ctr., Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med. and USDA at Tufts Univ. 9:00 406.5 Impact of Almond Consumption on the Composition of the Gastrointestinal Microbiota of Healthy Adult Men and Women. A.M. Taylor, K.S. Swanson, J.A. Novotny, D.J. Baer, H.D. Holscher. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and USDA, Beltsville, MD. 9:15 406.6 Trimethylamine-N-Oxide Biomarker Response Is a Function of Dietary Precursor Intake and Gut Microbiota Composition in Healthy Young Men. C.E. Cho, S. Taesuwan, O.V. Malysheva, E. Bender, N.F. Tulchinsky, J. Yan, J.L. Sutter, M.A. Caudill. Cornell Univ. 9:30 406.7 Differences in the Infant Gut Microbiota Related to the Fatty Acid Composition of Human Milk: Results from the GEHM Cohort. D.H. Taft, K.A. Dingess, C.J. Valentine, B.S. Davidson, N.J. Ollberding, D.V. Ward, J.T. Brenna, R.J. McMahon, A.L. Morrow. Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. and Med. Ctr., Mead Johnson Nutr., Glenview, IL, Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. and Cornell Univ. 9:45 406.8 Formula Milk Alters Microbial Diversity in Porcine Colon and Impacts Immune Response. M.K. Saraf, A.K. Bowlin, S.V. Chintapalli, K. Shankar, T. LeRoith, M.J. Ronis, T.M. Badger, L. Yeruva. Arkansas Children’s Nutr. Ctr., Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci., VA-MD Col. of Vet. Med. and LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. 119 T U E NUTRITIONTUESDAY 407. NUTRITION ACROSS THE LIFESPAN: NUTRITION, NEUROBIOLOGY, MOOD AND BEHAVIOR Minisymposium Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Aging and Chronic Disease RIS) (Sponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS) (Cosponsored by: Nutrition Translation RIS and Obesity RIS ) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30A Chaired: L. Sibeko Chaired: N.A. Khan Cochaired: M.D. Olfert Cochaired: C. Castaneda-Sceppa 8:00 407.1 EGCG Decreases Mortality in a DoseDependent Fashion but Does Not Improve Cognition in Aged Mice. B.D. Pence, T.K. Bhattacharya, J.L. Rytych, P. Park, J.M. Allen, Y. Sun, R.H. McCusker, K.W. Kelley, R.W. Johnson, J.S. Rhodes, J.A. Woods. Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. 8:15 407.2 Early Exposure to High-Sucrose Diet Triggers Hippocampal Endoplasmic Reticulum-Stress in Young Rats. A.M.A. Paes, B.A.S. Pinto, T.M. Melo, K.F.T. Flister, L.M. França, L.Y. Tanaka, F.R.M. Laurindo. Fed. Univ. of Maranhão and Univ. of São Paulo, Brazil. 8:30 407.3 DHA Status Is Related to Prefrontal CortexMediated Impulse Control in Adolescents. V.L. Darcey, S. El Damaty, E.J. Rose, D.H. Fishbein, J.W. VanMeter. Georgetown Univ. and Penn State 8:45 407.4 Blood Cholesterol in Late-Life and Cognitive Decline: A Longitudinal Study of the Chinese Elderly. C. Ma, Z. Yin, J. Luo, P. Zhu, X. Shi, X. Gao. Penn State, Chinese Ctr. for Dis. Control and Prevent., Beijing. 9:00 407.5 Homocysteine Concentration Correlates with Baseline Clinical Status and Predicts Outcomes in a Large, Early Parkinson’s Disease Cohort (DATATOP). R. Green, Y. Yelpaala, S. Catalya, P. Auinger, C. Christine. Univ. of California Davis, Sacramento, Univ. of Rochester and UCSF. 9:15 407.6 Beneficial Interactions between B Vitamins and Omega-3 Fatty Acids in the Prevention of Brain Atrophy and of Cognitive Decline in Early Stage Alzheimer’s Disease. D. Smith, H. Refsum, A. Oulhaj, C.A. de Jager, F. Jerneren. Univ. of Oxford, Univ. of Oslo, United Arab Emirates Univ. and Univ. of Cape Town. 9:30 407.7 Gray Matter Thickness of Inferior Frontal Cortex Mediates the Relationship between Phosphatidylcholine and Executive Functions in Healthy, Older Adults. M.K. Zamroziewicz, T. Das, S.L. Pereira, A.K. Barbey. Univ. of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Abbott Nutr., Columbus, OH. 9:45 407.8 Changes in Eating Behaviors Are Associated with Intentional Weight Loss following Intervention in Older Women. A.C. Berg, K.B. Johnson, C.R. Straight, R.M. Acitelli, P.J. O’Connor, E.M. Evans, M.A. Johnson. Univ. of Georgia. 120 408. COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION: HEALTH DISPARITIES AND PROMOTING HEALTH IN DIVERSE POPULATIONS 8:00 408.1 The Effects of Experimentally Manipulating Social Status on Acute Eating Behavior: A Randomized, Crossover Pilot Study. M. Cardel, S.L. Johnson, J. Beck, E. Dhurandhar, A. Dulin-Keita, A. Tomczik, G. Pavela, T. Huo, D. Janicke, K. Muller, J.C. Peters, J.O. Hill, D.B. Allison. Univ. of Florida, Univ. of Colorado Denver, Aurora, Colorado State Univ., Texas Tech Univ., Brown Univ. and Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. 8:15 408.2 The Relationship between Weight Loss Advice from Friends on Self-Perception of Weight and Eating Habits. T. Thibodeau, I. van Woerden, P. Ohri-Vachaspati, J. Huberty, M. Bruening. Arizona State Univ. 8:30 408.3 Promotion of Drinking Water among Latino Immigrant Youth. N. Barrett, U. Colón-Ramos, I. Rivera, W.D. Evans, M. Edberg. George Washington Univ. Milken Inst. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Rivera Group Inc., Washington, DC. 8:45 408.4 Nutrient Intake among Overweight/Obese Hispanic Women Based on Type 2 Diabetes Diagnosis Status. M. Arias-Gastelum, N.M. Lindberg, A.G. Rosales, M. Petrovic, E.S. LeBlanc, V.J. Stevens, T.J. Kapka, R.T. Meenan, S. Vega-López. Arizona State Univ., Kaiser Permanente Ctr. for Hlth. Res., Portland and Virginia Garcia Mem. Hlth. Ctr., Hillsboro, OR. 9:00 408.5 Barriers and Facilitators to Healthy Eating: A Transnational Comparison of Central American Communities in a Socio-ecological Framework. M. Fuster, U. Colón-Ramos. CUNY-Brooklyn Col. and George Washington Univ. Milken Inst. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 9:15 408.6 Associations between Dysfunctional Eating Behaviors and Cardiovascular Risk among Latinos. A.A. Lopez-Cepero, C.M. Frisard, S.C. Lemon, M.C. Rosal. Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch. 9:30 408.7 Secular Trends in Regional Differences in Biomarkers of Dietary Exposure and Inflammation among American Adults: NHANES III, 1988-1994 to C-NHANES 19992010. A.K. Kant, B.I. Graubard. Queens Col. of CUNY and NCI, NIH. 9:45 408.8 Racial/Ethnic and Income Disparities in the Sodium Content of Packaged Food Purchases by U.S. Households in the Past 15 Years. J.M. Poti, E. Dunford, B.M. Popkin. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. TUESDAYNUTRITION 409. POLICY: INNOVATIONS IN MONITORING HEALTH AND NUTRITION STATUS 410. NUTRITION EDUCATION: NUTRITION EDUCATION AND BEHAVIOR CHANGE Minisymposium Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Public Policy Committee) (Sponsored by: Nutrition Education and Behavioral Science RIS) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Chaired: A.H. Lichtenstein Cochaired: S.D. Ohlhorst Science Policy 8:00 409.1 Adherence Monitoring Tool for Controlled Feeding Studies. D.J. Burnett, J.M. Peerson, B. Miller, L.C. Welch, M.G. Witbracht, S. Krishnan, N.L. Keim. USDA and Univ. of California, Davis. 8:15 409.2 Inter-finger Variability and Other Influencing Factors for Using Reflectance Spectroscopy for Skin Carotenoid Detection. L.D. Whigham, A.H. Redelfs. Paso del Norte Inst. for Healthy Living, El Paso. 8:30 409.3 Skin Carotenoids as Biomarker for Vegetable and Fruit Intake: Validation of the Reflection-Spectroscopy Based “Veggie Meter”. I.V. Ermakov, L.D. Whigham, A.H. Redelfs, L. Jahns, J. Stookey, P.S. Bernstein, W. Gellermann. Image Technols. Corp., Salt Lake City, Paso del Norte Inst. for Hlth. Living, El Paso, USDA, Grand Forks, San Francisco Dept. of Publ. Hlth. and Univ. of Utah. 8:45 409.4 Understanding the Impacts of State Laws on Child Nutrition Programs: An Argument for Employing New Methodologies. A. Field, B. Fiese. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana. 9:00 409.5 Utilizing Smartphone Technology to Monitor Improvements in the Healthiness of the Food Supply. E. Dunford, M. Crino, B. Neal. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and George Inst. for Global Hlth., Sydney. 9:15 409.6 Diet Quality, Measured Using the Healthy Eating Index-2010, Varies by Source Where Food Is Obtained in the United States. M. Wilson, S. Krebs-Smith, J. Reedy, M. Story, P. Britten, W. Juan. NCI, NIH, Duke Global Hlth. Inst., USDA, Alexandria, VA and FDA, College Park, MD. 9:30 409.7 Cereal Foods Consumption Trends and Factors Associated with Changing Intake, among Western Australian Adults, 1995 to 2012. C.M. Pollard, C. Pulker, X. Meng, F. Denham, V. Solah, J.A. Scott, D.A. Kerr. Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Curtin Univ., Dept. of Hlth. in Western Australia and Flinders Univ., Australia. 9:45 409.8 Application of the Evidence Review Cycle Model to Review Food and Health Evidence to Inform Canadian Dietary Guidance Decision-Making. H. Lowell, A. Ellis, C.K. Colapinto. Hlth. Canada, Ottawa. Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30D Chaired: J. Banna Cochaired: H. Muzaffar 8:00 410.1 Effect of Nutrition Education on Weight Gain Prevention in Adult Women: Findings from a Randomized Controlled Trial. C.J. Metzgar, S.M. Nickols-Richardson. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 8:15 410.2 Effect of Nutrition Education with an Emphasis on Consumption of Iron-Rich Foods on Hemoglobin Levels of Pregnant Women in Ghana. G. Otoo, Y. Adam. Univ. of Ghana. 8:30 410.3 Diet Quality of a Pregnant Primarily African American Cohort Residing in the Mississippi Delta: Delta Healthy Sprouts. M.H. Goodman, J.L. Thomson, L.M. Tussing-Humphreys. USDA, Stoneville, MS and Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. 8:45 410.4 Online and In-Person Nutrition Education Reduces Sodium Intake: A Randomized Trial to Assess Knowledge, Self-Efficacy and Behaviors in WIC Participants. L. Au, S. Whaley, N.J. Rosen, M. Meza, L.D. Ritchie. Univ. of California, Berkeley, Publ. Hlth. Fndn. Enterprises WIC, Irwindale, CA and Informing Change, Berkeley. 9:00 410.5 Social Media Usage Pattern among Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education Eligible Individuals in Georgia. A. White, R. Hagues, A. Childers, J.S. Lee, B. Olubajo, J. Phua. Univ. of Georgia and Samford Univ. 9:15 410.6 The Role of Grit in Body Weight Regulation Over Time. C.J. Metzgar, S.M. Nickols-Richardson. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 9:30 410.7 Dietary Intake and Diet Quality of Low-Income Adult Georgians Participating in Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education. J.S. Lee, J. Hibbs, J. Moore, B. Olubajo, A. White, C. Bailey, M. Lewis. Univ. of Georgia. 9:45 410.8 What Can Nutrition Education Offer to Improve Dietary Sodium Restriction Interventions for Heart Failure Patients? M. Burgermaster, R. Rudel, J. Wessler, D.S. Seres. Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr., New York Presbyterian Hosp. 411. OBESITY RIS ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETING: HOT TOPIC DISCUSSION: GUT MICROBIOTA, CAUSAL INFERENCE, AND OBESITY RIS Forum (Sponsored by: Obesity RIS) Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB Chaired: D.B. Allison To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. 121 T U E NUTRITIONTUESDAY 412. NUTRITION, MICRORNAS AND HUMAN HEALTH Symposium 10:30 11:00 11:30 12:00 Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Symposium Chaired: J. Zempleni Chaired: L.P. Smith Taillie Cochaired: S.A. Ross Cochaired: Y. Segar Cellular and Molecular Nutrition Education Biological Activities of Dietary microRNAs. J. Zempleni. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. Effects of Dietary Compounds on the Expression of Genes Coding for Endogenous microRNAs. S. Ross. NCI, NIH. Bioinformatics Tools and Databases for the Analysis of Nutrition, MicroRNAs and Human Health. J. Cui. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. Regulation of Immune Function in Adipose Tissue by microRNAs. B. Zhou. UConn Hlth. 413. PROGRAM EFFECTIVENESS FOR ADDRESSING UNDERNUTRITION DURING THE FIRST 1000 DAYS 11:30 11:50 122 Education 10:30 10:50 11:10 11:30 Priorities and Pitfalls for Powerful Postdoc Experiences. S. Chang. Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Ctr. The Future of the Postdoc: Thinking Outside the Training Box. R. Wheeler. The Scripps Res. Inst. Mind Your P’s and hD’s: What Else Can I Do With My Degree? K. Gibbs, Jr. NIGMS, NIH. Preparing for a Career in Industry: The First Job PostPhD. D. Bolster. PepsiCo. 415. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: PROTEIN INTAKE AND HEALTH IMPLICATIONS Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC (Sponsored by: Energy & Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) Nutrition Across the Lifespan: From Pediatrics to Geriatrics 11:10 Career Development Minisymposium Cochaired: Z. Maalouf-Manasseh 10:50 Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC Symposium Chaired: M.L. Deitchler 10:30 414. AMID CONTROVERSY AND CAVEATS: THE FUTURE OF THE POSTDOC Effectiveness of Home-fortification Approaches in the First 1000 days for Preventing Maternal and Child Undernutrition: The Rang-Din Nutrition Study in Bangladesh. K. Dewey. Univ. of California, Davis. The Impact of a Food-Assisted Integrated Health and Nutrition Program in Burundi on Maternal and Child Nutrition and on Child Development Outcomes. M. Ruel. Intl. Food Policy Res. Inst. The Impact of a Food-Assisted Integrated Health and Nutrition Program in Guatemala on Maternal and Child Nutrition and on Child Development Outcomes. D. Olney. Intl. Food Policy Res. Inst. Differential Pathways for Linear, Ponderal and Head Growth in Fetal Life: Implications for Healthy Child Growth Programs in Low-income Settings. P. Ashorn. Univ. of Tampere. Moving from Measured Effects to Human Behavior, Costs and Policy Choices: Identifying Innovative and Costeffective Products and Delivery Platforms to Address Undernutrition. S. Vosti. Univ. of California, Davis. Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33A Chaired: A. Thalacker-Mercer Cochaired: M. Drummond 10:30 415.1 The Relationship between Dietary Protein Intake Distribution and Lean Mass Loss in Free-Living Older Adults: Effect of Sex and Total Protein Intake. S. Farsijani, J.A. Morais, H. Payette, P. Gaudreau, B. Shatenstein, K. Gray-Donald, S. Chevalier. McGill Univ., Univ. of Sherbrooke, CHUMRC, Montreal and Univ. of Montreal. 10:45 415.2 Whey and Pea Protein Influence Energy Metabolism and Appetite Response to a Greater Extent Than Beef Protein. B.L. Neumann, L. Cambias, C. Mitchell, E. Silva, J.I. Baum. Univ. of Arkansas. 11:00 415.3 The Effects of Reduced Protein-Nutrition Bars with Enhanced Leucine Content on Ratings of Fullness in Healthy Women. D. Bolster, M. Rahn, A. Kamil, L. Toth, H. Leidy, M. Blaze, M. Nunez, E. Guo, J. Wang, L. Harkness. PepsiCo, Barrington, IL and New Haven, CT and Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 11:15 415.4 The Effect of Dietary Protein on Bone during Weight Loss: A Meta-analysis and Systematic Review. C.S. Wright, J. Li, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. 11:30 415.5 Effects of Increased Dietary Protein on Daily Appetite Control, Satiety, and Free-Living Ad Libitum Food Intake during Acute Energy Restriction in Healthy, Overweight Women. J.A. Gwin. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 11:45 415.6 Higher Protein Intake Improves Sleep and Blood Pressure, and Influences the Relation between Changes in Blood Pressure and Sleep during Energy Restriction in Middle-Aged Overweight and Obese Adults. J. Zhou, J.E. Kim, W.W. Campbell. Purdue Univ. TUESDAYNUTRITION 12:00 415.7 Protein Oxidation as a Relevant Factor Determining Protein Status in Humans. G. Reckman, M. Priebe, R. Vonk. Univ. Med. Ctr. Groningen, Netherlands. 12:15 415.8 General Control Nonderepressible 2 Kinase Regulates Body Composition and Antioxidant Defenses during Dietary Methionine Restriction. A.P. Pettit, A. Bargoud, E.T. Mirek, T.G. Anthony. Rutgers Univ.-New Brunswick. 416. DBC: PROBIOTICS, GUT MICROBIOTA, AND GUT HEALTH Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29A 10:30 416.1 Dietary Small RNA Modulation of Gut Microbiota Composition: In Silico and In Vitro Analyses. H. Huang, C. Davis, L. Yu, T.T.Y. Wang. USDA, Beltsville, MD, ODS, NIH and Univ. of Maryland College Park. 10:45 416.2 High-Calorie Diet Induced Chronic Colonic Inflammation: A Human-Relevant Porcine Model to Assess Whole Food Approach to Reduce Colon Cancer Risk. J. Vanamala, A. Sido, E. Eriksson, S.W. Kim, V. Bhat, S. Radhakrishnan, L. Reddivari. Penn State, Penn State Col. of Med., Lund Univ., Sweden, North Carolina State Univ., Agilent Technols., Wilmington, DE and Res. Diets, New Brunswick, NJ. 11:00 416.3 Soluble Mediators from lLactobacillus rhamnosus GG Reduce Intestinal Permeability and Bacterial Translocation in a Rat Model of Short Bowel Syndrome Model. J. Wu, L. Qian, Y. Zhong, G. Gross, E. van Tol, T. Lambers, W. Cai. Xin Hua Hosp. Affil. to Shanghai Jiaotong Univ. Sch. of Med., Shanghai Inst. for Pediat. Res. and Mead Johnson Pediat. Nutr. Inst.,Shanghai and Nijmegen. 11:15 416.4 Expression of MicroRNA-148a and Its Target Gene EPAS1 (Endothelial Pas Domain-Containing Protein 1) in Intestinal Cells in Response to Bifidobacterium bifidum MIMBb75. A. Taibi, E.M. Comelli, N. Singh, J. Chen, S. Guglielmetti. Univ. of Toronto, Ctr. for Child Nutr. and Hlth., Toronto and Univ. of Milan. 11:30 416.5 The Impact of Limonin on Gut Microbiota. M. Gu, J. Sun, C. Qi, K.X. Cai, T. Goulette, Y.M. Song, M.X. You, D. Sela, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and Jiangnan Univ., China. 11:45 416.6 Impact of Cranberry on Gut Microbiota in a Colon Carcinogenesis Mouse Model. X. Cai, J. Sun, C. Qi, M. Gu, T. Goulette, X. Wu, M. Song, X. You, D. Sela, C. Neto, H. Xiao. Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst, Jiangnan Univ., China and Univ. of Massachusetts Dartmouth. 12:00 416.7 Dietary Enrichment with Blueberry and/or Probiotics Does Not Alter Blood Pressure Variability Compared to Control Diet in Hypertensive Rats. C. Blanton, Z. He, K.T. Gottschall-Pass, M.I. Sweeney. Idaho State Univ. and Univ. of Prince Edward Island, Canada. 12:15 416.8 Dietary Red Raspberries Supplementation Ameliorates Dextran Sulfate Sodium-Induced Acute Colitis. S. Bibi, Y. Kang, M. Du, Y. Xue, M-J. Zhu. Washington State Univ. Pullman. 417. NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY: NUTRITION AND CHRONIC DISEASE EPIDEMIOLOGY Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29B Chaired: S. Sahni Cochaired: N. Ollberding 10:30 417.1 Impact of Body Mass Index and Metabolic Health Status on All-Cause Mortality Risk among Older Adults. F.W. Cheng, X. Gao, D.C. Mitchell, C. Wood, C. Still, G.L. Jensen. Penn State and Geisinger Obesity Inst., Danville, PA. 10:45 417.2 Higher Adherence to the Mediterranean Diet Score, but Not Other Diet Quality Scores, Is Associated with a Favorable Longitudinal Cardiometabolic Profile in the Boston Puerto Rican Health Study. J. Mattei, M. Sotos-Prieto, S.E. Noel, K.L. Tucker. Harvard T.H. Chan Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Univ. of Massachusetts Lowell. 11:00 417.3 Vitamin K Consumption Is Associated with Left Ventricular Structure and Function in Adolescents. J. Nguyen, M.E. Fain, C.L. Davis, G.K. Kapuku, B. Gutin, N.K. Pollock. Georgia Regents Univ., Med. Col. of Georgia, Georgia Prevent. Inst. and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 11:15 417.4 Correlation of Adolescent Caffeine Intake with Blood Pressure in Adolescence and Adulthood. E. Estrada, E.M. Urbina, S.R. Daniels, J.G. Woo. Univ. of California, Davis, Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. and Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med. 11:30 417.5 Breastfeeding as a Potential Factor Related to Preservation of Insulin Secretion in Youth with Recently Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetes: The Search Nutrition Ancillary Study. T.L. Crume, J. Crandell, A.P. Lamichhane, D. Dabelea, J.A. Tooze, A. Liese, L. Dolan, J.M. Lawrence, C. Pihoker, E.J. Mayer-Davis. Colorado Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, LEAD Ctr., Aurora, Wake Forest Univ., Univ. of South Carolina, Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr., Kaiser Permanente So. California, Pasadena and Seattle Children’s Hosp. 11:45 417.6 Nut Intake, Prospective Weight Change, and Obesity Risk: The Adventist Health Study-2. S.S. El-Amari, J.I. Lloren, J. Sabate. Loma Linda Univ. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 12:00 417.7 Dietary Carbohydrate Intake, Glycemic Index and Glycemic Load in Relation to Adiposity-Related Cancer Risk: Results from the Framingham Offspring Cohort (19912013). N. Makarem, Y. Lin, E.V. Bandera, P. Jacques, N. Parekh. Col. of Publ. Hlth., NYU, Rutgers Cancer Inst. of NJ, Rutgers Univ. and USDA at Tufts Univ. 12:15 417.8 A Review and Meta-analysis of Prospective Studies of Red and Processed Meat, Meat Cooking Methods, Heme Iron, Heterocyclic Amines and Prostate Cancer. L.C. Bylsma, D. Alexander. EpidStat Inst., Ann Arbor. 123 T U E NUTRITIONTUESDAY 418. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: DIET AND/OR EXERCISE REGULATION OF FOOD INTAKE Minisymposium Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Energy & Macronutrient Metabolism RIS) (Sponsored by: Medical Nutrition Council) (Cosponsored by: Obesity RIS) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29D Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29C Chaired: C.W. Bales Chaired: N. Bellissimo Cochaired: B. Burton-Freeman 10:30 418.1 Mechanisms of Appetite Suppression after High Intensity Exercise in Lean and Obese Boys. S. Hunschede, A. Schwartz, R. Kubant, R. Akilen, S. Thomas, G.H. Anderson. Univ. of Toronto Fac. of Med. and Fac. of Kinesiol. 10:45 418.2 The Relative Reinforcing Value of Snack Foods in Response to Consumption of Sugar- or Non-nutritiveSweetened Beverages. S.L. Casperson, L. Johnson, J.N. Roemmich. USDA, Grand Forks. 11:00 418.3 Changes in Hunger and Fullness in Relation to Gut Peptides Before and After 8 Weeks of Alternate Day Fasting. K.A. Varady, K.K. Hoddy, C.M. Kroeger, J.F. Trepanowski, S. Bhutani, A. Barnosky. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. 11:15 418.4 FTO Genotype and Weight Status among Children: Assessing Mediating and Independent Effects of Child Eating Behaviors. J.A. Emond, A. Tovar, R. Lansigan, Z. Li, D. Gilbert-Diamond. Geisel Sch. of Med. at Dartmouth and Univ. of Rhode Island. 11:30 418.5 Impact of Imposed Exercise on Children’s Ad Libitum Energy Intake. S.N. Fearnbach, T.D. Masterson, H.A. Schlechter, D.S. Downs, D. Thivel, K.L. Keller. Penn State and Clermont Auvergne Univ., France 11:45 418.6 Menstrual Cycle Hormones, Food Intake, and Cravings. S. Krishnan, R. Tryon, L.C. Welch, W.F. Horn, N.L. Keim. Univ. of California, Davis and USDA, Davis. 12:00 418.7 Effects of Dietary Protein and Fiber at Breakfast on Postprandial Appetite, Neural Responses to Visual Food Stimuli, and Ad Libitum Energy Intake at Lunch in Overweight Adults. R.D. Sayer, A. Amankwaah, G. Tamer; Jr, N. Chen, A. Wright, J. Tregellas, M. Cornier, D. Kareken, T. Talavage, M. McCrory, W. Campbell. Weldon Sch. of Biomed. Engin., Purdue Univ., Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med., Anschutz Med. Campus, Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. and Georgia State Univ. 12:15 418.8 Comparison of the Effects of a Sweetened Beverage Intervention on Self-Selected Food Intake. A.M. Widaman, K.L. Stanhope, G.X. Chen, V.M. Medici, A.A. Bremer, V. Lee, M.V. Nunez, P.J. Havel, N.L. Keim. Univ. of California, Davis and USDA, Davis. 124 419. INTERVENTIONS FOR THE TREATMENT AND PREVENTION OF NUTRITIONRELATED DISEASES 10:30 419.1 Influence of Daily and per Meal Protein Intakes on Function and Body Composition in Frail, Obese Older Adults Undergoing Weight Reduction. K.N. Porter Starr, M.C. Orenduff, S.R. McDonald, C.F. Pieper, H.C. Mulder, K. Maloney, C.W. Bales. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr. and Durham VA Med. Ctr. 10:45 419.2 Multipronged Therapeutic Mechanisms of Chinese Herbal Medicine QHD in the Treatment of NAFLD. Q. Feng, W. Liu, S.S. Baker, H. Li, S. Meng, Y. Tang, S. Tang, L. Guan, M. Tsompana, R. Kozielski, R. Zhu, R.D. Baker, J. Peng, G. Ji, P. Liu, Y. Hu, L. Zhu. Shanghai Univ. of Traditional Chinese Med., SUNY Buffalo, Ningbo No.2 Hosp. and Tongji Univ., China. 11:00 419.3 Acute Orange Pomace Consumption Diminishes Postprandial Glycemic Responses in Healthy Men. C-Y.O. Chen, J.B. Blumberg. USDA at Tufts Univ. 11:15 419.4 Prebiotic Diet Modulates Gut Microbial Composition and Metabolic Functions in Metabolic Syndrome Patients: Follow-Up of a Double Blind, Controlled, Crossover Intervention. B. Upadhyaya, R. Juenemann, L. McCormack, A.R. Fardin-Kia, J. Clapper, S. Nichenametla, B. Specker, M. Dey. South Dakota State Univ. and USDA, College Park, MD. 11:30 419.5 Parents of Preschoolers: Weight-Related Cognitions and Behaviors. J.T. Martin-Biggers, V. Quick, G. Povis-Alleman, N. Hongu, J. Worobey, C. Byrd-Bredbenner. Rutgers Univ. and Univ. of Arizona. 11:45 419.6 Prospective Association of Fasting Blood Glucose Levels with Risk of Incident Stroke among Hypertensive Patients in China: Impact of Folic-Acid Intervention. R. Xu, X. Kong, B. Xu, M. Ji, Y. Zhang, B. Wang, F.F. Hou, J. Ge, Y. Huo, J. Li. River Hill H.S., Clarksville, MD, Peking Univ. First Hosp., Beijing, Zhongshan Hosp., Fudan Univ., China, Nanfang Hosp., So. Med. Univ., China. 12:00 419.7 Camel Milk and Nigella sativa Oil Improve Liver Biomarkers among Children with Viral Hepatitis. M.S. Ismail, A.E-S. El- Adawi, O.M. Nassar. Menoufia Univ., Egypt and Univ. of Dammam, Saudi Arabia. 12:15 419.8 Three Doses of Vitamin D on Insulin Resistance and Osteocalcin Measures in Older Women. L.C. Pop, S.H. Schneider, D. Sukumar, Y. Schlussel, S.A. Shapses. Rutgers Univ., Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Med. Sch. and Drexel Univ. TUESDAYNUTRITION 420. AGING: NUTRITION AND GASTROINTESTINAL HEALTH Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Aging and Chronic Disease RIS) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30A Chaired: B.H. Arjmandi Cochaired: M.G. Miller 10:30 420.1 Food Items That Trigger a Symptom in Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders. D. Dikmen, Z. Göktaş, A. Demir, Ö. Öztürk, E. Kahramanoğlu Aksoy, H. Köklü, Y. Tuna, M. Kekilli, H. Korkmaz, B. Yılmaz, M. Asıl, G. Köklü, S. Köklü. Hacettepe Univ., Hacettepe Univ. Fac. of Med., Akdeniz Univ. Fac. of Med., Ankara Educ. and Res. Hosp., Selçuk Univ. Fac. of Med. and Necmettin Erbakan Univ. Meram Fac. of Med., Turkey. 10:45 420.2 Black Berry Polyphenol Reduce Nox1 Function to Inhibit Senescence in Vascular Smooth Muscle Cells. J. Huang, R. Feresin, Y. Zhao, S. Pourafshar, B.H. Arjmandi, G. Salazar. Florida State Univ. and Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. 11:00 420.3 Capsaicin Inhibits Methionine Cotransport in Rat Intestinal Epithelial Cells. J. Talukder, C. Cameron Hill, A. Jaima, J. Santiz-Lopez. LeMoyne-Owen Col., TN and Boston Univ. 11:15 420.4 Effect of Dietary Carboxymethyllysine on Glucose and Insulin Sensitivity, Cecal Fatty Acids and the Plasma Metabolome in Mice Fed the Total Western Diet. R.E. Ward, S. Xiao, M-C. Michalski, A. Geloen, K. Hintze. Utah State Univ. and INSA-Lyon, France. 11:30 420.5 A High Flavonoid Diet Reduces Gut Permeability, Short Chain Fatty Acid Production and Decreases Gut Inflammation in Overweight and Obese Men and Women. R.E. Ward, J. Bergerson, N. Hergert, J. Hergert, S. Aguilar, A. Khan, S. Kung, M. Lefevre. Utah State Univ. 11:45 420.6 Serum 25-Hydroxy D3 Levels in Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. Z. Goktas, S. Galyean, D. Syn, S. Koklu, S. Wang, M. Boylan, D. Dikmen, B. Uyar. Hacettepe Univ., Turkey, Texas Tech Univ. and Gazi Univ., Turkey. 12:00 420.7 Mango (Mangifera indica L.) in the Promotion of Intestinal Regularity and Decreases Inflammation in Human Subjects with Constipation. S.U. Mertens-Talcott, H. Kim, S.T. Talcott, V.P. Venancio. Texas A&M Univ. 12:15 420.8 Lactose Intolerance, Calcium, Vitamin D and Parathyroid Hormone Levels in Type 2 Diabetic Patients. S. Rana, A. Malik, S.K. Bhadada, N. Sachdeva, R.K. Morya, G. Sharma. Post Grad. Inst. of Med. Educ. and Res., Chandigarh, India. 421. PULSES, NUTRITION AND HEALTH Minisymposium Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B Chaired: C. Marinangeli 10:30 421.1 Effect of Dietary Pulse Consumption on Blood Pressure. S.E. Stewart, C.A. Ireland, C. de Souza, R.J. de Souza, S. Mitchell, L.S. Augustin, R.G. Josse, L.A. Leiter, C.W.C. Kendall, J.L. Sievenpiper, D.J.A. Jenkins. Fac. of Med., Univ. of Toronto, St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto, McMaster Univ. and Univ. of Saskatchewan Col. of Pharm. and Nutr. 10:45 421.2 Navy Bean Supplementation in Obesity Increases Akkermansia muciniphila Abundance and Attenuates Obesity-Related Impairments in Gut Barrier Function. J.M. Monk, D. Lepp, W. Wu, D. Graf, A.L. Hutchinson, L.E. Robinson, K.A. Power. Univ. of Guelph and Agr. and AgriFood Canada, Guelph. 11:00 421.3 White Tepary Bean Shows Higher In Vitro Iron Bioavailability than Brown Tepary or Common Bean. A.E. Bries, M.B. Reddy, D.M. Winham. Iowa State Univ. 11:15 421.4 Studies of Cream Seeded Carioca Beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) from a Rwandan Efficacy Trial: In Vitro and In Vivo (Including Effects on Intestinal Microbiome) Screening Tools Reflect Human Studies and Predict Beneficial Results from Iron Biofortified Beans. E. Tako, R.P. Glahn. USDA, Cornell Univ. 11:30 421.5 Effect of Dietary Pulses in a Low Glycemic Index Diet on Renal Function in Participants with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. S. Blanco Mejia, C. Ireland, L.S.A. Augustin, E. Vidgen, C.W.C. Kendall, S. Mitchell, S. Sahye-Pudaruth, L. Chiavaroli, A. Mirrahimi, B. Bashyam, J. Coveney, R.J. de Souza, J.L. Sievenpiper, L.A. Leiter, R.G. Josse, T.M.S. Wolever, V.V.V. Vuksan, P.B. Pencharz, D.J.A. Jenkins. St. Michael’s Hosp., Univ. of Toronto, Univ. of Saskatchewan, Queen’s Univ., Canada, McMaster Univ., Canada and Sick Kids Hosp., Toronto. 11:45 421.6 Determination of the In Vivo and In Vitro Protein Quality of Pulse Protein Concentrates and Isolates. M.G. Nosworthy, J. Neufeld, J.D. House. Univ. of Manitoba. 12:00 421.7 The Effect of a Low-Glycemic Index PulseBased Diet on Performance and Body Composition in Soccer Players. E. Mizelman, P. Chilibeck, A. Hanifi, M. Kaviani, E. Brenna, G. Zello. Col. of Kinesiol and Col. of Pharm. and Nutr., Univ. of Saskatchewan. 12:15 421.8 Toward Closing the Dietary Fiber Gap: Candidate Genes Associated with Dietary Fiber Content in Common Bean. M.A. Brick, H.J. Thompson. Colorado State Univ. 422. COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION: COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Chaired: G. George Cochaired: J. Martin-Biggers 10:30 422.1 B’More Healthy Communities for Kids, a Multilevel Obesity Prevention Program for African American Children: Wave 1 Process and Impact Results. J. Gittelsohn, A. Trude, C. Shipley, M.J. Mejia Ruiz, T. Schwendler, T. Eckmann, I. Loh, N. Rapp. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 10:45 422.2 HomeStyles: Recruitment Strategies for a Childhood Obesity Prevention Randomized Controlled Trial. J.T. Martin-Biggers, C. Delaney, M. Koenings, C. ByrdBredbenner. Rutgers Univ. 125 T U E NUTRITIONTUESDAY 11:00 422.3 Impact of Folic-Acid Intervention and MTHFRC677T Gene Polymorphism on All-Cause Mortality Associated with Elevated Serum Homocysteine Levels in Chinese Adults with Hypertension. B. Xu, X. Kong, R. Xu, M. Zhao, Y. Song, C. Zhang, T. Yu, L. Liu, F. Fan, Y. Zhang, X. Qin, G. Tang, B. Wang, F.F. Hou, Y. Huo, J. Li. River Hill High Sch., Clarksville, MD, Peking Univ. First Hosp., Beijing, Nanfang Hosp., Southern Med. Univ., Guangzhou and Anhui Med. Univ., China. 11:15 422.4 Longitudinal Quality of Life Improvement after a Family-Based Lifestyle Intervention in Youth with Obesity. S.R. Engebretsen, K. Briggs Early, R. Sorrells, J.P. YiFrazier, M. Sanchez, K. Gottlieb, B.L. Gonzalez, B. Lopez. Pacific Northwest Univ. of Hlth. Sci., Seattle Children’s Res. Inst. and Yakima Valley Mem. Hosp., WA. 11:30 422.5 Food Label Use Improves Dietary Quality and Mediates Improved Glycemic Control in Latinos with Type 2 Diabetes: The DIALBEST Trial. G. Kollannoor Samuel, F.M. Shebl, S. Segura-Pérez, J. Chhabra, S. Vega-López, R. Pérez-Escamilla. Yale Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Hispanic Hlth. Council, Harford, CT, Hartford Hosp. and Arizona State Univ. 11:45 422.6 Understanding Acceptance, Compliance, and Utilization of Micronutrient Powder in Northern Nigeria – Informing Implementation through Formative Research. S.R. Kodish, C.L. Ejembi, T. Osunkentan, A. Imohe, P. Mathema. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Ahmadu Bello Univ., Nigeria and UNICEF Nigeria. 12:00 422.7 Cross-Country Comparison of the Acceptability of a Social Support Behavior Change Strategy to Improve Adherence to Antenatal Calcium and Iron-Folic Acid Supplementation. S. Martin, M. Omotayo, G. Chapleau, R. Stoltzfus, Z. Birhanu, S. Ortolano, K. Dickin. Cornell Univ. and Jimma Univ., Ethiopia. 12:15 422.8 The Impact of Nutrition Label Usage on Food Selection and Consumption in a University Dining Setting. M.J. Christoph, B.D. Ellison. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 11:15 423.3 Measurement of Epigallocatechin Gallate (EGCG) and Caffeine Content of 32 Green Tea Dietary Supplements for the Dietary Supplement Ingredient Database. K.W. Andrews, P.T. Dang, S. Savarala, P.A. Gusev, F. Han, P.R. Pehrsson, J.M. Harnly, P. Chen, Y. Zhao, J.T. Dwyer, J.M. Betz, L.G. Saldanha, R.B. Costello. USDA, Beltsville and ODS, NIH. 11:30 423.4 Are Chromium Supplements Efficacious for Glycemic Control in Type 2 Diabetes? J.T. Dwyer, R.B. Costello, R.L. Bailey, E. Wambogo. ODS, NIH. 11:45 423.5 Do Cinnamon Supplements Have a Role in Glycemic Control in Type 2 Diabetes? R.B. Costello, J.T. Dwyer, L.G. Saldanha, R.L. Bailey, E. Wambogo. ODS, NIH and Purdue Univ. 12:00 423.6 Menaquinone-7 Supplementation Improves Lipid Profile in Obese African-American Children: A Randomized Controlled Trial. N.K. Pollock, J. Nguyen, M.E. Fain, B.A. Gower, R. Bassali, C.L. Davis. Georgia Regents Univ., Med. Col. of Georgia and Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. 424. W.O. ATWATER MEMORIAL LECTURE Award Lecture Tue. 12:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D 12:45Introduction. 1:00 How Can Nutrition Scientists Help Reverse the Obesity Epidemic? S.B. Roberts. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med. 425. AFRICAN GRADUATE NUTRITION STUDENTS NETWORK International Forum (Organized and Sponsored by: the African Graduate Nutrition Students Network) 423. NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY: RESEARCH WITH DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS AND BIOACTIVE COMPOUNDS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30D Chaired: N. Ahluwalia Cochaired: P.M. Coates 10:30 Introduction. 10:45 423.1 Comparison of Polyphenol Intakes in Relation to Dietary Patterns and Food Sources in the Adventist Health Study-2 Cohort. N. Burkholder-Cooley, S. Rajaram, E. Haddad, G. Fraser, K. Jaceldo-Siegl. Loma Linda Univ. 11:00 423.2 Daily Patterns and Factors Including Gender, Race and Occupation Associated with Caffeine Intake among US Adults: NHANES 2007-2012. H.R. Lieberman, S. Agarwal, V.L. Fulgoni III. U.S. Army Res. Inst. of Envrn. Med., Natick, MA, NutriSci. LLC, East Norriton, PA, Oak Ridge Inst. for Sci. & Educ., Belcamp, MD, Nutr. Impact LLC, Battle Creek, MI and Henry M. Jackson Fndn., Bethesda, MD. 126 Tue. 1:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28DE Chaired: J. Ashong The overall goal of this session is to raise awareness of the African Graduate Nutrition Students Network (AGSNet) – the history of the network, its goals and aspirations. The emphasis will be on the unique approach and the strategic position of the network to contribute to tackling the malnutrition menace on the African continent. The session will also highlight the importance of the strategic partnership between ASN and the AGSNet and its implications for the future of the network. 1:30 Background to AGSNet formation: The Road Up to Now. N. Mbuya. World Bank. 1:45 Partnerships: ASN and AGSNet. P. Stover. Cornell Univ. 2:00 AGSNet in the Future. B. Zarhari Abu. Texas Tech Univ. 2:15Discussion. TUESDAYNUTRITION 426. ARCHITECTURE OF HEALTHY MUSCLES: THE INTERPLAY BETWEEN EXERCISE AND NUTRITION ON MUSCLE METABOLISM Symposium Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC Chaired: B.B. Rasmussen Cochaired: T.A. Davis Clinical and Translational Nutrition 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 Aged Muscle Protein Metabolism Responses to Physical Inactivity and Rehabilitation. M. Drummond. Univ. of Utah. Identification of Nutritional Ingredients that Reduce Agerelated Muscle Weakness and Atrophy. C. Adams. Univ. of Iowa Carver Col. of Med. Preserving Healthy Muscle During Weight Loss. B. Mittendorfer. Washington Univ. in St. Louis. Muscle Health During Prolonged Resistance Training and Protein Supplementation. B. Rasmussen. Univ. of Texas Med. Br. 427. INNOVATIVE TECHNIQUES TO EVALUATING BEHAVIORAL NUTRITION INTERVENTIONS IN THE COMMUNITY Symposium Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 32AB Chaired: A.R. Mobley Cochaired: R.E. Scherr Global and Community Nutrition 3:00 3:15 3:40 4:05 4:30 Current Limitations and Future Opportunities in Evaluating Behavioral Nutrition Interventions in the Community. A. Mobley, R. Scherr. Univ. of Connecticut, Univ. of California, Davis. An Inside Out View of Responsiveness to Nutrition Education: What Can Functional MRI Tell Us About the Brain? K. Laugero. USDA ARS Western Human Nutr. Res. Ctr. I’ll Believe It When I See It: Results of Eye-Tracking Nutrition Research. D. Graham. Colorado State Univ. Smartphone Biosensors: New Tools for Nutrition and Health Diagnostics. B. Cunningham. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The Special Case of Fruit and Vegetables: Assessing Community Intervention Effectiveness Using Skin Carotenoid Status. L. Jahns. USDA ARS Grand Forks Human Nutrition Res. Ctr. 428. DBC: DIETARY BIOACTIVE COMPONENTS AND OBESITY AND METABOLIC SYNDROME Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Dietary Bioactive Components RIS) Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29A Chaired: J.D. Lambert Cochaired: K-H. Kim 3:00 428.1 Inclusion of 100% Concord Grape Juice Reduces Glucose Release following In Vitro Digestion of a Model Carbohydrate Rich Meal. S.E. Moser, J. Lim, J.D. Whiteman, B. Hamaker, M. Ferruzzi. Purdue Univ. 3:15 428.2 Insulin and Cinnamon Polyphenol Extract Regulated Diacylglycerol Acyltransferase and Tristetraprolin Gene Expression in Cultured Mouse Adipocytes and Macrophages. H. Cao, R.A. Anderson. USDA, New Orleans and Beltsville, MD. 3:30 428.3 Mice Fed High-Fat Obesigenic Diets with Walnut Plus Other Whole Foods Demonstrate Metabolic Improvement and Changes in Gene Expression and Metabolomic Patterns. N.F. Shay, T. Luo, O. Miranda, A. Adamson. Oregon State Univ. 3:45 428.4 Effect of Decaffeinated Green and Black Tea Extracts on Energy Metabolism in Mice Fed a High Fat/High Sucrose/Western Diet. S.M. Henning, J. Yang, E.M. Grojean, R-P. Lee, M. Hsu, D. Heber, Z. Li. UCLA. 4:00 428.5 Cocoa Increases Postprandial GLP-1 Response in Adults with Impaired Glucose Tolerance. K. Strat, B.M. Davy, M.W. Hulver, K.P. Davy, A.P. Neilson. Virginia Tech. 4:15 428.6 The Hypoglycaemic Potential of AntioxidantRich Food Extracts. L. Chepulis. Waiariki Inst. of Technol., New Zealand. 4:30 428.7 Ingested Capsaicinoids Can Prevent Low-Fat/ High-Carbohydrate Diet and High-Fat Diet-Induced Obesity by Regulating the Expression of Genes for Metabolism. K. Sahin, C. Orhan, M.Tuzcu, N. Sahin, O. Ozdemir, V. Juturu. Firat Univ., Turkey and OmniActive Hlth. Technols. Inc., Morristown, NJ. 4:45 428.8 Effects of Selenium in Comparison to Exendin-4 on the Expression of GLP-1R, IRS-1 and Preproinsulin in the Pancreas of Diabetic Rats. S. Rizk, G. Barakat, M. Moustafa, I. Khalifeh, M.H. Hodroj, A. Bikhazi. Lebanese American Univ. and American Univ. of Beirut. 429. NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY: ADVANCING NUTRITIONAL EPIDEMIOLOGY WITH PUBLIC USE AND COMMERCIAL DATA SETS Minisymposium (Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS) Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29B Chaired: J. Mattei Cochaired: K. Kordas 3:00 429.1 Total and Added Sugar Intakes among 4-13 Year Old Children in China, Mexico, and the U.S. M.C. Afeiche, B.N. Shaheen Koyratty, D. Wang, E. Jacquier, A.L. Eldridge, K-A. Lê. Nestlé Res. Ctr., Lausanne. 127 T U E NUTRITIONTUESDAY 3:15 429.2 Nudging Food Purchases towards Health: Trends in Price Promotions and Nutrient Claims on Packaged Foods and Beverages. L.S. Taillie, S.W. Ng, Y. Xue, M. Harding. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke Univ. Sanford Sch. of Publ. Policy. 3:30 429.3 Calibrating Self-Reported MVPA Strengthens Relationship with Metabolic Syndrome. C. Ford, S. Chang, S. Grabich, L. Strong, M. Mendez. Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Ctr., EPA, Chapel Hill and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 3:45 429.4 Dietary Intake Assessment of Snacking among Children in China and U.S. D. Wang, A.L. Eldridge. Nestlé Res. Ctr., Lausanne. 4:00 429.5 Dietary Flavonoid Intake Is Negatively Associated with Anthropometric Risk Factors for Chronic Disease in Some Population Subgroups but Not Others: Results from What We Eat in America, NHANES 2007-2010. R.S. Sebastian, C. Wilkinson Enns, J.D. Goldman, L.C. Steinfeldt, A.J. Moshfegh. USDA, Beltsville, MD. 4:15 429.6 Has the Sodium Content of U.S. Households’ Packaged Food and Beverage Purchases Improved in the Past 15 Years? J.M. Poti, E. Dunford, B.M. Popkin. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 4:30 429.7 Assessing the Public’s Comprehension of Dietary Guidelines: Perception of Diet Quality Is Inversely Associated with Dietary ED in U.S. Adults. J.A. Vernarelli, R. Nouri. Fairfield Univ. 4:45 429.8 Socioeconomic Disparities in Dietary Intake and Food Purchasing of Foods and Beverages of Varying Healthfulness in Mexico. N. Lopez-Olmedo, L.P. Smith Taillie, B.M. Popkin. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 430. ENERGY AND MACRONUTRIENT METABOLISM: PROTEIN AND AMINO ACID METABOLISM Minisymposium Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29C Chaired: E-K. Samer 3:00 430.1 Energy Deficiency, but Not Aerobic Exercise, Is Associated with Increased Stable Nitrogen Isotope Ratio of Urinary Urea. K. Koehler, U. Flenker, W. Schaenzer, F. Huelsemann. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln and German Sport Univ., Cologne. 3:15 430.2 Intermittent Leucine Pulses during Continuous Feeding Alters Novel Components Involved in Skeletal Muscle Growth of Neonatal Pigs. A. Suryawan, C. Boutry, R. Manjarín, A. Cánovas, A. Islas-Trejo, J.F. Medrano, H. Nguyen, M.L. Fiorotto, T.A. Davis. USDA and Baylor Col. of Med., Cal Poly State Univ., San Luis Obispo, Univ. of California, Davis and Univ. of Guelph, Canada. 3:30 430.3 Effects of Inflammation on Arginine Transport and Metabolism in Human Primary Myotubes. D. Gupta, E.S. Riddle, J.E. Blum, H. Roman, A. Thalacker-Mercer. Cornell Univ. 3:45 430.4 Depletion of Programmed Cell Death Protein 4 (PDCD4), an mTORC1/S6K1 Substrate, Attenuates Proteolysis in L6 Myotubes. O.J. Adegoke, S. Abou Sawan, H. Cho. York Univ., Canada. 128 4:00 430.5 Genes Associated with Amino Acid Sensing in Human Skeletal Muscle Are Altered by Amino Acid Availability and Acute Lysosomal Perturbation. T.G. Graber, M.S. Borack, P.T. Reidy, E. Volpi, B.B. Rasmussen. Univ. of Texas Med. Branch. 4:15 430.6 Citrulline Is a More Efficient Supplement Than Arginine to Increase Systemic Arginine Availability in Mice. U. Agarwal, I.C. Didelija, J.C. Marini. Baylor Col. of Med. 4:30 430.7 Leucine in the Presence of Inflammation Alters BCAA Metabolism in Human Myotubes. E.S. Riddle, H. Roman, M. Ahsan, H. Shin, A. Thalacker-Mercer. Cornell Univ. 4:45 430.8 Genetic Background and Sex Determine Citrulline and De Novo Arginine Production in Mice. J.C. Marini, U. Agarwal, I.C. Didelija. Baylor Col. of Med. 431. NUTRIENT-GENE INTERACTION: CHRONIC DISEASE, OBESITY AND INFLAMMATION Minisymposium Nutrient-Gene Interaction RIS Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 29D Chaired: J.I. Baum 3:00 431.1 Differential DNA Methylation between Obese and Normal Weight Women in CD4+ and CD8+ T Cells, and CD16+ Neutrophils. N.M. Hohos, A.K. Smith, V. Kilaru, H.J. Park, D.B. Hausman, L.B. Bailey, R.D. Lewis, R.B. Meagher. Univ. of Georgia and Emory Univ. 3:15 431.2 Lipoprotein Lipase Modulates Bone Marrow Myeloid Cell Proliferation by Affecting Colony-Stimulating Factor Levels and Recruitment. C.L. Chang, I.J. Goldberg, R.J. Deckelbaum. Columbia Univ. and NYU. 3:30 431.3 Genetic Ablation of TNF-α Attenuates High Fat Diet-Induced Obesity Potentially via Diminishing Wnt-Signaling and Determinant Genes of Adipogenesis. J. Li, A-L. Frederick, Y-C. Kim, R.J. Wood, Z. Liu. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Hlth. Sci., Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst and USDA at Tufts Univ. 3:45 431.4 Detection of Intimal Macrophages in Atherosclerotic Lesions Using Biocompatible CD36-Targeted Ligand Containing Nanoparticle. C.S. Dhanasekara, J. Zhang, S. Nie, S. Wang. Texas Tech Univ. 4:00 431.5 Congenic Mice Confirmed QTL Linked to Obesity and Hyperlipidemia on Chromosome 1 in the TALLYHO Mouse. J.K. Parkman, X. Mao, K. Dillon, J.H. Kim. Marshall Univ. 4:15 431.6 Oral Corticosterone Administration Reduces Insulitis but Promotes Insulin Resistance and Hyperglycemia in Male Non-obese Diabetic Mice. S.J. Burke, A.E. Eder, K.M. Regal, M.D. Karlstad, D.H. Burk, R.C. Noland, J. Collier. Pennington Biomed. Res. Ctr., Baton Rouge and Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville. 4:30 431.7 Exacerbation of NAFLD in Both HFD-Fed Mice and MCD-Fed Mice by Adenosine 2A Receptor Deficiency. Y. Cai, J. Zheng, X. Guo, H. Li, Y. Pei, R. Botchlett, S-L. Woo, M. Liu, G. Chen, Y. Huo, C. Wu. Tongji Col. of Med., China, Texas A&M Univ. and Georgia Regents Univ. 4:45 431.8 Lipids and Cholesterol-Lowering Activity of Red Cabbage Microgreens. X. Jiang, H. Huang, Z. Xiao, L. Yu, Q. Pham, L. Yu, Y. Luo, T.T.Y. Wang. Univ. of Maryland College Park and USDA, Beltsville, MD. TUESDAYNUTRITION 432. GLOBAL NUTRITION: LINEAR GROWTH, GROWTH FAILURE, AND ANTHROPOMETRY Minisymposium 433. COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH NUTRITION: COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACHES TO OBESITY PREVENTION (Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council) Minisymposium Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30B (Sponsored by: Community and Public Health Nutrition RIS) Chaired: A.D. Stein Cochaired: N. Perumal 3:00 432.1 Protein and Micronutrient Intakes Are Associated with Child Growth and Morbidity from Infancy to Adulthood in the Philippines. A. Bhargava. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Publ. Policy. 3:15 432.2 A Plasma Proteome Is Associated with Anthropometric Status in School-Aged Children in Nepal. S.E. Lee, P. Christian, K. Schulze, R.N. Cole, L.S.F. Wu, J.D. Yager, J. Groopman, C.P. Stewart, K.P. West; Jr. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Johns Hopkins Sch. of Med. and Univ. of California, Davis. 3:30 432.3 Length-for-Age and Weight-for-Age z Scores at Birth Using the World Health Organization Growth Standards versus the New INTERGROWTH 21st Newborn Size Standards. N. Perumal, J. Shi, D. Bassani, A. Al-Mahmud, M.M. Islam, T. Ahmad, D. Roth. Dalla Lana Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Toronto, Hosp. for Sick Children, Toronto and icddr,b, Dhaka, Bangladesh. 3:45 432.4 An Enteropathy Score Predicts Subsequent Length Better Than Lactulose Mannitol Ratio Alone in Children Enrolled in a Community-Based Randomized Trial of Complementary Food Supplements in Rural Bangladesh. R. Campbell, K. Schulze, S. Shaikh, H. Ali, S. Mehra, L. Wu, P. Christian. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and JiVitA, Bangladesh. 4:00 432.5 Maternal Docosahexaenoic Acid Supplementation Promotes Lean Body Mass in the Preterm Infant. C.J. Valentine, J. Kleiman, K. Dingess, A. Morrow, L.K. Rogers. Mead Johnson Nutr., Univ. of Cincinnati, Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. and The Ohio State Univ. 4:15 432.6 Perinatal Exposure to Aflatoxins Is Associated with a Lower Rate of Weight Gain among HIV-Infected Pregnant Women and Reduced Linear Growth of HIV-Exposed Infants. B.K. Natamba, J-S. Wang, S.L. Young, S. Ghosh, J.K. Griffiths. Harvard Univ., Gulu Univ., Uganda, Univ. of Georgia, Cornell Univ. and Tufts Univ. 4:30 432.7 Pre-pregnancy Energy Balance, Gestational Weight Gain, and Small-for-Gestational Age in Rural Gambia: The Early Nutrition and Immune Development Trial (ISRCTN49285450). W. Johnson, S.A.A. Elmrayed, A.M. Prentice, S.E. Moore. MRC Human Nutr. Res., Cambridge and MRC Unit, The Gambia, London. 4:45 432.8 Non-responsive Feeding Behaviors Are Negatively Associated with Growth and Dietary Diversity at 24 Months in Rural Bangladesh. Z.T. Chowdhury, K.M. Hurley, M. Jahan, S. Shaikh, S. Mehra, H. Ali, A.A. Shamim, P. Christian. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and JiVitA Proj., Bangladesh. Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 30C Chaired: S. Colby Cochaired: M. Cardel 3:00 433.1 Increasing Physical Activity in American Indian Adults: Preliminary Results from a Multi-institutional Obesity Prevention Program. L. Redmond, T. Eckmann, M. Pardilla, J. Swartz, H. Platero, J. Gittelsohn. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 3:15 433.2 Does the Left Hand Know What the Right Hand Is Doing? Part Ii: Alignment between the AFRI Childhood Obesity Prevention Challenge Area Program and the 2010 Dietary Guidelines. M.M. Koenings, C. Perez, K. Krishnan, D.N. Chester. IFSN, NIFA, Washington, DC and Texas A&M Univ., Bryan. 3:30 433.3 Energy Balance-Related School Environment/ Policy Factors and Childhood Obesity in China: A National Study of 19,487 Students from 112 Middle Schools. M. Li, H. Xue, J. Min, M. Wen, W. Wang, Y. Wang. Univ at Buffalo, SUNY, Univ of Utah and Renmin Univ of China, Beijing. 3:45 433.4 Camp NERF: Efficacy of a Theory-Based Nutrition Education Recreation and Fitness Program Aimed at Preventing Unhealthy Weight Gain in Disadvantaged Children during Summer Months. L.C. Hopkins, C. Gunther. The Ohio State Univ. 4:00 433.5 Parental Expectations and Sedentary Behaviors among Chinese Children: A National Study of 15,736 Students from 112 Middle Schools. M. Li, H. Xue, J. Min, Y. Wang. Univ at Buffalo, SUNY. 4:15 433.6 Consistent Weight Gain Tracking Is Associated with a Reduction in Gestational Weight Gain in High Income Women. C.M. Olson, M.L. Graham, M.S. Strawderman. Cornell Univ. 4:30 433.7 Sustaining the Youth-Leader Program in Baltimore City Recreation Centers: Formative Research Findings. A. Trude, E. Anderson Steeves, C. Shipley, M.J. Mejía Ruiz, S. Priscila, L. Lachenmayr, J. Gittelsohn. Johns Hopkins Univ., Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, Fed. Univ. of São Paulo, Brazil and Univ. of Maryland Ext., Columbia, MD. 4:45 433.8 Overweight and Obesity, Weight Perception, and Weight Management Practices among Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program Education Participants in Georgia. C. Bailey, J.S. Lee, B. Olubajo. Univ. of Georgia 129 T U E NUTRITION/ PATHOLOGY TUESDAY 434. RESEARCH AND PARTNERSHIP OPPORTUNITIES WITHIN THE NATIONAL NUTRITION RESEARCH ROADMAP (ANDP) FORUM Special Session (Supported by Association of Nutrition Departments and Programs ) Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28DE Opportunities Relevant to the National Nutrition Research Roadmap. D.M. Klurfeld. USDA, Beltsville, MD. 3:45 Examples of Interagency Collaborations and Public Partnerships to Advance Nutritional Sciences Research. • NIH—Vitamin D Standardization Program: Progress and New Opportunities. C.T. Sempos. ODS, NIH. • USDA—Branded Food Products Database for Public Health: Novel Research Resource. P.E. Starke-Reed. USDA, Beltsville, MD. 4:05Discussion. Chaired: N. Hord 435. DANONE INTERNATIONAL PRIZE IN NUTRITION AWARD CEREMONY AND LAUREATE LECTURE Cochaired: R. Ballard 3:00 Overview of the National Nutrition Research Roadmap: Purpose, Research Questions and Identification of Research Gaps. R. Ballard. ODP, NIH 3:15 NIH Research Activities Addressing Research Opportunities Relevant to the National Nutrition Research Roadmap. P.M. Coates. ODS, NIH 3:30 USDA Research Activities Addressing Research Award Lecture (Sponsored by: Danone Institute International.) Tue. 5:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Pathology 436. AUTOPHAGY: BASIC MECHANISMS AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY 437. SOCIETY OF TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY SYMPOSIUM: AQUATIC TOXICOLOGY AND LESSONS FOR PREVENTION OF DISEASE Symposium Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Symposium Chaired: W-X. Ding Cochaired: M.J. Czaja (Sponsored by: the ASIP Environmental and Toxicologic Scientific Interest Group and the Society of Toxicologic Pathology) Inflammation/Immunity Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Immunopathology Chaired: E. Galbreath Cell Death Cochaired: D.A. Gorelick 8:30 Cellular Nutrient Signaling and Cell Growth Regulation. K-L. Guan. UCSD. 9:00 Mechanisms of Selective Autophagy of Subcellular Organelles. S. Subramani. UCSD. 9:30 Autophagy in Innate Immunity and NASH. M. Czaja. Albert Einstein Col. of Med. 10:00 Autophagy in Pancreatitis. A. Gukovskaya. UCLA. 10:30 Autophagy and Drug-Induced Liver Injury. W-X. Ding. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 11:00 Autophagy in Cardiovascular Diseases. R. Gottlieb. Cedars-Sinai Heart Inst. Environmental and Toxicologic Pathology 8:30 Overview of Zebrafish Pathology & Model Use Screening Environmental Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Safety. J. Engelhardt. ISIS Pharmaceuticals. 9:30 Endocrine Disrupting Activity Associated with Hydraulic Fracturing for Natural Gas. S. Nagel. Univ. of Missouri. 10:30Environmental Estrogens and Cardiovascular Development: New Roles for Old Hormones. D. Gorelick. The Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. Visit the Exhibits April 3–April 5 Exhibit Hours Sunday–Tuesday | 9:00 AM–4:00 PM 130 TUESDAYPATHOLOGY 438. STRUCTURE AND REGULATION OF INTERCELLULAR JUNCTIONS: QUEST FOR NEW MOLECULES AND MECHANISMS Symposium Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Chaired: A. Ivanov Cochaired: A. Nusrat Transporters/Channels/Barriers Epithelial and Mucosal Pathobiology 8:30 Regulation of Adherens Junction Protein Assemblies by Mechanical Force. W. Weis. Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med. 9:15 Tension and the Regulation of Endothelial Junctions. A. Malik. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. 10:00 New Insights into Functional Coupling of Actin to the Tight Junction Barrier. J. Anderson. NIH. 10:45 Desmogleins as Signaling Hubs to Integrate Cell Adhesion and Cell Behaviour. J. Waschke. LMU Munich. 439. TUMOR PROGRESSION METABOLISM AND METASTASIS Minisymposium Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Chaired: W-K. Lee 9:50 439.6 Overexpression of Ghrelin Is Associated with Poor Prognosis of Renal Cell Carcinoma and Promotes Metastasis through GHSR-Mediated Activation of AKT-Snail Pathway. T-C. Lin, S-L. Hsu, M. Hsiao. Acad. Sinica, Taipei and Taichung Veterans Gen. Hosp., Taiwan. 10:05 439.7 Long Non-coding RNA HOTAIR Activation by TGF-Beta1 Induces Epithelial Mesenchymal Transition in T24 Bladder Carcinoma Cells. R. Barbosa de Oliveira Brito, C.S. Malta, Y.S.T. Matos, D.M. Souza, L.H.G. Matheus, M.A. Dalboni, H. Dellê. Nove de Julho Univ., São Paulo. 10:20 439.8 The Role of p120-Catenin and PIK3Ca in Migration in Head and Neck Squamous Cell Carcinoma. M. Kidacki, H.L. Lehman, P.A. Welsh, J.I. Warrick, D.B. Stairs. Penn State, Hershey. 10:35 439.9 Epigenetic Regulation of Epithelial Cellular Fate by CTBP. J.S. Byun, K. Gardner. NCI, NIH. 10:50 439.10 FoxP3+ T-Cells and PD-L1 Highlight ImmuneSuppressive Profiles in Vulvar Squamous Cell Carcinoma. E.R. Holthoff, T. Kelly, C.M. Quick, S.R. Post. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. 11:05 439.11 Regulative Loop between β-Catenin and Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase Receptor Type γ in Chronic Myeloid Leukemia. L. Tomasello, M. Vezzalini, Z. Fiorini, N. Al-Dewik, M. Yassin, C. Sorio. Univ. of Verona and Hamad Med. Corp., Qatar. 440. SCIENTIFIC SLEUTHING OF HUMAN DISEASE FOR UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS AND HIGH SCHOOL TEACHERS AND STUDENTS Special Session Cochaired: J. McHowat (Supported by an unrestricted educational grant from the Intersociety Council for Pathology Information) Cancer Biology (Sponsored by: the ASIP Education Committee) Tumor Microenvironment and Metastasis Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Marina Ballroom G Neoplasia 8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 439.1 Disease-Associated Polymorphisms in Mnsod and GPx-1 Affect Metabolism, Mitochondrial Membrane Potential and Expression of Signaling Proteins. D.N. Ekoue, S. Bera, E. Ansong, P. Hart, V. Macias, A. Kajdacsy-Balla, M. Bonini, A.M. Diamond. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. 8:50 439.2 Upregulation of the Multidrug Resistance P-Glycoprotein ABCB1 by Transcription Factor Pituitary Homeobox 2 in Human Colon and Kidney Cancers. W-K. Lee, F. Thévenod. Univ. of Witten/Herdecke, Germany. 9:05 439.3 SIRT5 in Cancer Metabolic Reprogramming. D.B. Lombard, J. Park, S. Kumar. Univ. of Michigan. 9:20 439.4 The Role of Twist1 Phosphorylation in Tumor Angiogenesis in Lung Cancer. T. Mammoto, A. Jiang, E. Jiang, A. Mammoto. Boston Children’s Hosp. 9:35 439.5 A Novel Signaling Pathway That Governs Tumor Metastasis: Ceramide Regulates Direct Crosstalk between TGF-Β and Sonic Hedgehog Signaling. S. Gencer, B. Ogretmen. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Uskudar Univ. and Abdullah Gul Univ., Turkey. Chaired: K. Nejak-Bowen Cochaired: M.B. Furie Education Pulmonary Pathobiology Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cells 9:30 Check In. 10:00 Welcome and Introductions. K. Nejak-Bowen. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 10:20 Menacing Microbes: Emerging Infectious Diseases. M. Furie. Stony Brook Univ. 11:20 Smoking-Related Lung Disease in 3D: Not Your Standard Lecture. P.G. Anderson, C. Caruso, J.R. Stone, D. Zander. Penn State Milton S. Hershey Med. Ctr. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and Massachusetts Gen. Hosp. 12:15 Stem Cells: A Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. S. Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 1:15 Tour the Exhibits at the San Diego Convention Center. 131 T U E PATHOLOGYTUESDAY 441. LUNCH AND LEARN: SCIENCE, STATISTICS, AND GETTING IT RIGHT: INTERACTIVE DISCUSSION OF COMMON PROBLEMS Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 (Sponsored by: the ASIP Education Committee) Chaired: T. Li Tue. 11:45 am—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Miramar Cochaired: C.C. Yates Chaired: D.A. Milner, Jr. Cell and Tissue Injury 442. EMERGING STRATEGIES TO RESOLVE INFLAMMATION Symposium Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: C.N. Serhan Cochaired: K. Gronert Inflammation/Immunity Immunopathology Cell and Tissue Injury 2:45 3:30 4:15 Novel Mediators and Mechanisms in Resolution of Inflammation. C. Serhan. Brigham & Women’s Hosp. Sex Specific Regulation of Tissue PMN and Lipid Mediator Circuits Controls T Cell Responses in the Eye. K. Gronert. Univ. of California - Berkeley. Mesenchymal Stem Cells May Promote the Resolution of Acute Lung Injury. M. Matthay. UCSF. Resolving Vascular Injury: Translational Implications for Cardiovascular Intervention. M. Conte. UCSF. 443. LIVER PATHOBIOLOGY SYMPOSIUM: LIVER PROGENITORS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Symposium (Supported by: an unrestricted educational grant from Samsara Science, Inc.) (Sponsored by: the ASIP Liver Pathobiology Scientific Interest Group) Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Chaired: K. Nejak-Bowen Cochaired: H. Willenbring Liver Pathobiology 2:00 3:10 3:45 4:20 132 Minisymposium Special Session An interactive lunch session will include an opportunity for participants to review 5 case vignettes featuring a common problem in scientific research statistics followed by a presentation and discussion with statistical faculty. The Do’s, Dont’s, and Pitfalls of these methods will be highlighted and discussed. 2:00 444. AUTOPHAGY, CELL DEATH, AND TISSUE INJURY Oval Cells. B. Petersen. Univ. of Florida. Beta-Catenin in Transdifferentiation. K. Nejak-Bowen. Univ. of Pittsburgh. Lineage Tracing. H. Willenbring. UCSF. Progenitors in Fibrosis and Cancer. T. Kisseleva. UCSD. Immunopathology Cell Death 2:00 444.1 Development of the Metabolic Syndrome Leads to Increased Ischemic Injury and Is Associated with Dysregulated Cardiac Fasting Response and Attenuation of Autophagy in Mice. A. Andres, J. Kooren, K. Tucker, S. Parker, E. Crowgey, N. Ravindran, B. Ito, R. Gottlieb, J. Van Eyk, R. Mentzer. Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr. and San Diego State Univ. 2:15 444.2 Regulation of Cardiac Autophagic Flux In Vivo by the Ubiquitin Ligase Muscle Ring Finger-1. T.L. Parry, M.S. Willis. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 2:30 444.3 Targeting the Enterohepatic Bile Acid Signaling to Modulate Hepatic Autophagic Activity in Non-alcoholic Steatohepatitis. Y. Wang, Y. Ding, J. Li, H. Chavan, D. Matye, H. Ni, P. Krishnamurthy, W-x. Ding, T. Li. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 2:45 444.4 Nrf2 but Not Autophagy Activation Is Associated with Resistance to EGFR Inhibitor-Induced Lung Tumor Cell Apoptosis. Y. Li, Y. Zhou, H-M. Ni, H. Zhong, W-X. Ding. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. and Chest Hosp., Shanghai Jiaotong Univ., China. 3:00 444.5 High MUC2 Biosynthesis Induce ROS Production Which Increases Goblet Cell Susceptibility to ER Stress and Apoptosis. A. Tawiah, F. Moreau, K. Chadee. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. 3:15 444.6 Targeting Macrophage Necroptosis for Therapeutic and Diagnostic Interventions to Treat Atherosclerosis. D. Karunakaran, M. Geoffrion, L. Wei, W. Gan, L. Perisic, L. Maegdefessel, U. Hedin, S. Sad, R. Virmani, T. Ruddy, K. Rayner. Ottawa Heart Inst., Karolinska Inst., Solna, Univ. of Ottawa and CVPath, Gaithersburg, MD. 3:30 444.7 Ischemia/reperfusion-Induced Myocardial Injury in Mice with Diabetes Mellitus: Role of Silent Information Regulator 1. A. Tao, T. Mele, R. Kao, C. Martin, T. Rui. Affil. People’s Hosp. of Jiangsu Univ., Lawson Hlth. Res. Inst., London, ON and Schulich Sch. of Med. and Dent., Western Univ., Canada. 3:45 444.8 Hydroxylase Inhibition Reduces Transforming Growth Factor-β1 Induced Fibrosis Associated with Colitis. M. Manresa, M. Tambuwala, P. Radhakrishnan, J. Harnoss, M. Cavadas, C. Keogh, A. Cheong, E. Cummins, K. Barrett, M. Schneider, C. Taylor. Univiversity Col. Dublin, Univ. of Heidelberg, Systs. Biol. Ireland, Dublin and UCSD. 4:00 444.9 ATF3 as an Important Factor of the Acute Phase Lung Inflammatory Response in an Animal Model. C.R. Caruso, N. Cabello, U. Sinha, N. Ekpa, S. DiAngelo, Z. Chroneos, P. Silveyra. Penn State Col. of Med. 4:15 444.10 Prognostic Significance of Tissue Oxygenation Changes and Early Signaling Responses in Fasciocutaneous Advancement Flap Healing. E. Aksamitiene, L. Bryant, M. Stanczak, J.R. Eisenbrey, J.B. Hoek, E.A. Pribitkin. Thomas Jefferson Univ. TUESDAYPATHOLOGY 4:30 444.11 Insulated Pathway Reporter Transposon Allows for HTS Approach to Transcriptional Activation Dynamics in Mammalian Cells. V.V. Mossine, J.K. Waters, D.L. Chance, T.P. Mawhinney. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. 4:45 444.12 Characterization of Mitochondrial and Metabolic Changes following Retinal Detachment. D. DiazAguilar, Z. Li, A. Khadka, S. Jacobo, K. Connor, M. SaintGeniez. Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirm., Harvard Med. Sch. and Angiogenesis Lab., Boston. 445. MECHANISMS IN UROGENITAL DISORDERS AND INTERVENTIONS 4:05 445.9 Genistein Alleviates Testicular Ischemia and Reperfusion Injury-Induced Spermatogenic Damage and Oxidative Stress by Suppressing Abnormal Testicular Matrix Metalloproteinase System. M. Al-Maghrebi. Kuwait Univ. Fac. of Med. 4:20 Discussion. 446. CLUB HEPATOMANIA (LIVER PATHOBIOLOGY) SCIENTIFIC INTEREST GROUP SPECIAL SESSION Special Session (Sponsored by: ASIP Liver Pathobiology Scientific Interest Group) Minisymposium Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Tue. 5:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: K. Gibson-Corley Liver Pathobiology Cochaired: P. Gaffney Cell and Tissue Injury 2:00 Introduction. 2:05 445.1 Absence of Mast Cells in the Kidneys of Rats Subjected to Fat Embolism Despite Their Presence in the Lungs and Heart. C. Patel, A.N. Fletcher, A.M. Poisner, A. Siddiqi, D. Arif, S. Hamidpour, R. Ponnapureddy, A. Molteni. Univ. of Missouri-Kansas City and Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 2:20 445.2 Increased Indoleamine 2,3-Dioxygenase Expression in the Renal Fibrogenesis Induced by Unilateral Ureteral Obstruction. L.H.G. Matheus, G.M.S. Simão, T.A. Amaral, R.B. Brito, C.S. Malta, Y.S.T. Matos, D.M. Souza, H. Dellê. Nove de Julho Univ., São Paulo. 2:35 445.3 Molecular Subtyping and In Vivo Phenotyping Studies Identify Human Cell Lines Suitable for Bladder Cancer Research. J. Warrick, L. Shuman, Z. Zheng, H. Yamashita, V.O. Amponsa, D. DeGraff. Penn State Col. of Med. 2:50 445.4 AA Amyloidosis in Island Foxes (Urocyon littoralis): Pathology, Risk Factors, and the Genetic Basis for Disease. P. Gaffney, C. Witte, D. Clifford, M. Ghassemian, T. Gaasterland, C. Sigurdson. UCSD, Zool. Soc. of San Diego, Escondido and California Dept. of Fish and Wildlife, Rancho Cordova. 3:05 445.5 Pathophysiological Interactions between Chronic Kidney Disease and Cardiac Remodelling. S. Liu, A.R. Kompa, B.H. Wang, H. Krum. South China Univ. of Technol., Guangzhou Monash Univ., Melbourne. 3:20 445.6 Mechanisms Underlying the Induction of a Profibrotic Epithelial Phenotype during Renal Fibrosis. J. Folke Bialik, M. Rozycki, P. Speight, Z.M. Miranda, S.G. Szeto, D.A. Yuen, Q. Dan, K. Szászi, S.F. Pedersen, A. Kapus. St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto, Univ. of Copenhagen and Univ. of Toronto. 3:35 445.7 Alternation of Nephron Morphology Associated with Sustained Delivery of Danazol Using Adult Male Rodents as a Model. H.A. Benghuzzi, M.A. Tucci. Univ. of Mississppi Med. Ctr. 3:50 445.8 Clomiphene Citrate and Male Infertility: Investigation of Treatment on Spermatogenesis and Testicular Histomorphology in a Rat Model. K. Gibson-Corley, P. Kogan, M. Wald. Univ. of Iowa. 447. ASIP SCIENTIFIC INTEREST GROUP POSTER DISCUSSION AND NETWORKING SESSION Poster Discussion (Sponsored by: ASIP Scientific Interest Groups) Tue. 5:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20BC P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 Global Analysis of lncRNAs in Gliomas and Glioblastomas. B. Reon, A. Sinegra, A. Dutta. Univ. of Virginia. (1182.1) BAC-Based Molecular Cytogenetics: From Blood to BAC in Just a Week. H-U.G. Weier, J.F. Weier, H. Zeng, C-M. Lu, M. Wang. Lawrence Berkeley Natl. Lab., UCSF and Caltech. (1182.4) Genome-Wide Association Analysis Identified Candidate Variants Associated with Responsiveness to a Blood Pressure Reduction Intervention in Rural North Carolina. K.C. Lenhart, K. Robasky, W. Jones, J. Halladay, A. Ammerman, C. Patterson, J.C. Schisler. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Quintiles, Durham, NC. (1177.15) Sepsis-Associated Proteinase 3 Induces Endothelial Permeability. E.K. Patterson, G. Cepinskas, K. Inoue, D.D. Fraser. Lawson Hlth. Res. Inst., London, ON and Western Univ., Canada. (165.5) Increased Expression of Cytokines in a New Traumatic Model of Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms Associated with Hypercholesterolemic Diet in Wistar Rats. K.M. Mata, C.R. Fernandes, C. Tefe-Silva, E.M. Floriano, S.G. Ramos. Ribeirão Preto Med. Sch., Univ. of São Paulo. (1177.1) Digital Determination of Chemotherapeutic DrugInduced Damage Sites in Single DNA Molecules Using Nanofluidic Channels. D.G. Kaufman, P.D. Chastain, S.A. Soper. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and William Carey Univ. Col. of Osteo. Med., MS. (51.8) Potential Pathological Implication of Osteocalcin and Vitamin D in Acute Aortic Dissection. M.M. Corsi Romanelli, E. Vianello, A. Barassi, S. Trimarchi, E. Dozio. Univ. of Milan and IRCCS Policlin. San Donato, Italy. (694.1) 133 T U E PATHOLOGYTUESDAY P8 VTL C3A Cells Secrete Factors Involved in Coagulation Homeostasis. S.L. Riley, D.F. Mendez, P.W. Bedard, L.K. Landeen. Vital Therapies Inc., San Diego. (924.10) P9 Sequence Variation in Hepatitis B Virus Variants of Chronically Infected Saudi Patients and Their Interaction with Host Genetic Factors. F.N. Almajhdi, A. Al-Qudari, H.M. Amer, A.A. Abdo. Col. of Sci. and Col. of Med., King Saud Univ. (925.5) P10 Rift Valley Fever Virus Protein Detected by Multiple Immunohistochemical Methods. M. Gamez, B. Faburay, B.S. Drolet, W.C. Wilson, J.A. Richt, A.S. Davis, E. Stietzle. Col. of Vet. Med., Kansas State Univ. (925.16) P11Targeting CSE1L in Colorectal Cancer. J. Pimiento, K.G. Neill, E. Henderson-Jackson, S. Eschrich, D-T. Chen, K. Husain, D. Shibata, D. Coppola, M. Malafa. Moffitt Cancer Ctr., Tampa. (515.5) P12 EXPEL: A Novel Non-destructive Method for Mining Soluble Tumor Biomarkers. A. Turtoi, B. Costanza, O. Peulen, A. Bellahcène, E. De Pauw, O. Detry, P. Delvenne, V. Castronovo. Univ. of Liege and Univ. Hosp. Liege, Belgium. (515.2) P13 Single-Cell Biomarker Detection Identifies Heterogeneity within Cancer Populations. D. Weldon, Y. Williams, A. Patel. EMD Millipore, CA. (515.4) P14 A New Composite Biomarker for Cervical Cancer Diagnosis. O. Markovic, N. Markovic. Global Acad. for Women’s Hlth. and BioSciCon Inc., Rockville, MD. (696.5) P15 CD44, CD133 and Lgr5 as Biomarkers for Early Detection of H. pylori-Associated Gastric Cancer. R. Walker, J. Mejia, H. Enderling, J.M. Pimiento, M. Malafa, D. Coppola. Moffitt Cancer Ctr., Tampa and Pathol. Inst. Mejia Jimenez, Colombia. (696.4) P16 Overexpression of Ghrelin Is Associated with Poor Prognosis of Renal Cell Carcinoma and Promotes Metastasis through GHSR-Mediated Activation of AKT-Snail Pathway. T-C. Lin, S-L. Hsu, M. Hsiao. Acad. Sinica, Taipei and Taichung Veterans Gen. Hosp., Taiwan. (439.6) P17 Influence of PI3K and MAPK Pathway Mutations on Response to Mono and Dual Treatment with Targeted Kinase Inhibitors. R.S. McNeill, D.A. Canoutas, R.E. Bash, R.S. Schmid, B.H. Constance, G.L. Johnson, C.R. Miller. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (515.1) P18 Exploring the Proteomic and Genomic Relationships between CtBP Expression and Metabolic Imbalance in Breast Cancer. L. Crawford, R. Hernandez-Mora, S. Park, J.S. Byun, K. Gardner. NIMHD, NIH and NCI, NIH. (698.13) P19 Characterizing Breast Cancer Stem Cell Populations In Vitro Using the Sore6 Gene Reporter System. D. Li, D.I. Yi, S. Park, G. Liang, M. Kabbout, J. Byun, K. Gardner. NIMHD and NCI, NIH. (698.10) P20 Intronic Regulation of Human GLI1 DNA by cis DNA Elements and Epigenetic Marks. P. Iannaccone, R. Taylor, J. Long, R. Childs, J. Yoon, K. Sylvestersen, M.L. Nielsen, D.O. Walterhouse, D. Robbins. Northwestern Univ., Univ. of Miami and Univ. of Copenhagen. (1180.1) 134 P21 P22 P23 P24 P25 P26 P27 P28 P29 P30 P31 P32 P33 P34 Insulated Pathway Reporter Transposon Allows for HTS Approach to Transcriptional Activation Dynamics in Mammalian Cells. V.V. Mossine, J.K. Waters, D.L. Chance, T.P. Mawhinney. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. (444.11) Epigenetic Silencing of MicroRNA-34a in Human Cholangiocarcinoma Cells via DNA Methylation and EZH2: Impact on Regulation of Notch Pathway. H. Kwon, K. Song, C. Han, J. Zhang, N. Ungerleider, L. Yao, T. Wu. Tulane Univ. (56.3) The Histone Deacetylase Sirt2 Regulates Slug in BasalLike Breast Cancer. W. Zhou, C. Kuperwasser. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med. and Tufts Univ. (698.5) Regulome-Seq: Searching for Single Nucleotide Variants Associated with Disease beyond ProteinCoding Regions. M. Pinsach-Abuin, J. Mates, B. del Olmo, C. Allegue, R. Brugada, I. Garcia-Bassets, S. Pagans. Univ. of Girona, Spain, UCSD. (1180.4) Knockdown of Mechanosensitive miRNA Cluster—miR106b~25 Decreases Endothelial Proliferation and Prevents Atherosclerosis in ApoE-/- Mice. S. Kumar, H. Jo. Emory Univ. (165.1) Whole Transcriptome Analysis of Osteosarcoma. S. Koks, E. Reimann, K. Maasalu, G. Koks, D.H. Xuan, E. Prans, A. Martson. Univ. of Tartu, Estonia. (515.6) Long Non-coding RNA HOTAIR Activation by TGFBeta1 Induces Epithelial Mesenchymal Transition in T24 Bladder Carcinoma Cells. R. Barbosa de Oliveira Brito, C.S. Malta, Y.S.T. Matos, D.M. Souza, L.H.G. Matheus, M.A. Dalboni, H. Dellê. Nove de Julho Univ., São Paulo. (439.7) The Role of CtBP in Tumor Progression: Insights from the Pinducer Inducible Gene Expression System. D.I. Yi, D. Li, S. Park, L. Crawford, G. Liang, M. Kabbout, R. Hernandez-Mora, T. Yan, J. Byun, K. Gardner. NCI, NIH. (698.11) Cellular Stress Response 1 Regulates RNA Splicing of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor and PlateletDerived Growth Factor Receptor through Inactivation of Splicing Factor 3A3. J. Luo, Z-H. Zuo, Y.P. Yu. Univ. of Pittsburgh. (920.4) Aberrant Modulation of the BRCA1 and G1/S Cell Cycle Pathways in Alcoholic Hepatitis Patients with Mallory Denk Bodies Present Revealed by RNA Sequencing. H. Liu. LA BioMed/Harbor UCLA Med. Ctr. (924.12) Deterministic Transfection and Genetic Manipulation of Organotypic Brain Slice Cultures for Ex Vivo Imaging. P.E. Gygli, S. Byers, N. Higuita-Castro, C. Czeisler, D. Gallego-Perez, J.J. Otero. The Ohio State Univ. and Kenyon Col., OH. (51.9) MicroRNA Profiling in Rat Model of Neurofibrillary Degeneration. M. Cente, N. Kosikova, P. Filipcik, M. Novak. Inst. of Neuroimmunol. SAS and Axon Neurosci. SE, Bratislava, Slovakia. (1180.5) Role of Gfi1 Transcription Factor in Myeloma Cells Growth and Survival. D.N. Petrusca, C. Park, F. Wang, J. Anderson, D.G. Roodman. Indiana Univ. and Richard L. Roudebush VA Med. Ctr., Indianapolis. (1180.6) Twist1 Phosphorylation Contributes to Pulmonary Fibrosis through Angiopoietin-Tie2 Signaling. A. Mammoto, A. Jiang, E. Jiang, T. Mammoto. Boston Children’s Hosp. (160.1) TUESDAYPATHOLOGY P35 P36 P37 P38 P39 P40 P41 P42 P43 P44 P45 P46 P47 P48 Dysregulation of miRNA Regulatory Networks by Chronic Ethanol Consumption Impairs Liver Regeneration. A. Parrish, E. Juskeviciute, J.B. Hoek, R. Vadigepalli. Thomas Jefferson Univ. (56.10) Epigenetic Regulation of Epithelial Cellular Fate by CTBP. J.S. Byun, K. Gardner. NCI, NIH. (439.9) Apigenin Attenuates CCL2 Release from TNFα and IL1a Stimulated MDA-MB-231 Triple Negative Breast Cancer Cells. D.F. Bauer, E.A. Mazzio, K.F. Soliman. Col. of Pharm. and Pharmaceut. Sci., Florida A&M Univ. (698.14) PEDF Reduction Induced by Cigarette Smoke: A Potential Role for Breast Tumor Development. S.E. Kispert, J. McHowat. Saint Louis Univ. Sch. of Med. (698.12) Exploring Molecular and Morphological Relationships between Obesity and CtBP in Breast Cancer. S.S. Park, D.I. Yi, D. Li, L. Crawford, G. Liang, M. Kabbout, R. Hernandez, T. Yan, S. Ambs, J.S. Byun, K. Gardner. NCI and NIMHD, NIH. (515.9) PAF/PAF-R Expression and Effects of Cigarette Smoke Exposure in Human Breast Cancer. S.E. Kispert, T. Schwartz, J. McHowat. Saint Louis Univ. Sch. of Med. (698.4) Expression and Function of Androgen Receptor in Human Breast Cancer-Associated Fibroblasts: May Androgens Shape Breast Tumor Microenvironment? M. Lanzino, A. Campana, C. Giordano, I. Barone, D. Bonofiglio, S. Catalano, S. Andò. Univ. of Calabria, Italy. (698.9) Breast Cancer Emergence from Dormancy Can Be Activated by Hepatic Stellate Cells. A.S. Khazali, A. Clark, S. Wheeler, A. Wells. Univ. of Pittsburgh and VA Pittsburgh Healthcare Syst. (698.8) Control of Breast Cancer through the Resolution of Inflammation. D.R. Vatnick, K. Lehner, M. Gilligan, D. Panigrahy, Y. Gus-Brautbar, S. Ramon, S. Huang, C. Serhan. Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr., Harvard Med. Sch., Brigham and Women’s Hosp. and Inst. for Systs. Biol., Seattle. (698.3) TIMP-2: A Novel Biologic Therapy for Triple Negative Breast Cancer. N.P. Castro, A. Chowdhury, S.M. Jensen, F. Cuttitta, W.G. Stetler-Stevenson, D. Solomon. NCI at Frederick and NCI at Shady Grove, MD. (698.2) Lactate Dehydrogenase A May Not Be Primarily Responsible for Maintaining High Tumor Lactic Acid Levels in Aggressive Breast Cancer. N. Mack, E. Mazzio, K. Soliman. Florida A&M Univ. (698.1) Characterizing Bone Tropism of Human ER+ Breast Cancer Cell Lines in a Murine Bone Metastasis Model. J.N. Cheng, J.B. Frye, S.A. Whitman, J.L. Funk. Univ. of Arizona. (698.15) Breast Tumor Development and Cigarette Smoking: Accelerated Tumor Development in Calcium Independent Phospholipase A2γ Deficient Mice. S.E. Kispert, J. McHowat. Saint Louis Univ. Sch. of Med. (698.6) The Critical Role of SENP1-Mediated GATA2 DeSUMOylation in Graft Arteriosclerosis by Promoting Endothelial Activation. C. Qiu, Y. Wang, X. Zhu, L. Song, H. Zhang, L. Qin, G. Tellides, W. Min, L. Yu. Zhejiang Univ. Col. of Life Sci., China and Yale Univ. Sch. of Med. (165.3) P49 Platelets Direct Leukocytes to Their Sites of Extravasation. G. Zuchtriegel, B. Uhl, D. PuhrWesterheide, M. Pörnbacher, K. Lauber, F. Krombach, C.A. Reichel. Ludwig Maximilian Univ. of Munich. (165.7) P50 JAM-C Deficiency Primes Endothelial Cells for a Pro-inflammatory State. N. Reglero, R. Beal, C. Cabrera, C. Pickworth, M. Golding, J. Whiteford, T. Nightingale, B. Imhof, M.R. Barnes, S. Nourshargh. Barts and London Sch. of Med. and Dent., Queen Mary Univ. of London and Ctr. Med. Univ., Univ. of Geneva. (165.10) P51 Cell-Type Specific Mechanisms Regulate Rhythmic Leukocyte Migration to Tissues. W. He, K. Kraus, D. Druzd, A. de Juan, L. Ince, C-S. Chen, C. Scheiermann. Ludwig Maximilians Univ., Munich. (165.11) P52 Neuropilin 2 Deficiency Prolongs Skin Inflammation and Edema. D.R. Bielenberg, P. Mucka, N. Levonyak, E. Geretti, B.M.M. Zwaans, X. Li, I. Adini, M. Klagsbrun, R.M. Adam. Harvard Med. Sch., Boston Children’s Hosp. (165.4) P53 Endotoxin-Stimulated Hepatic Stellate Cells Increase Suppressive Potential of Regulatory T Cells via IDOMediated AhR Activation: Therapeutic Implications. S. Kumar, A. Dangi, C.R. Gandhi. Univ. of Cincinnati and Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. (57.7) P54 Differential Regulation of Macrophage Glucose Metabolism by M-CSF and GM-CSF: Implications for 18 F-FDG PET Imaging of Inflammation. S. Tavakoli, J.D. Short, K. Downs, N. Huynh Nga, R. Asmis. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio. (57.8) P55 Vesicle Fusion Protein, YKT6, Is a Novel Regulator of Epithelial Cell-Matrix Adhesion and Migration. A. Ivanov, N. Naydenov, S. Joshi, A. Feygin. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. (305.5) P56 Intestinal Epithelial Cell Expression of CD47 Facilitates Proliferation, Neutrophil Transmigration, and Wound Healing In Vivo. M. Reed, A-C. Luissint, A. Nusrat, C.A. Parkos. Univ. of Michigan. (305.6) P57 Cortactin Is Required to Maintain Intestinal Epithelial Barrier Homeostasis. A.F. Citalán-Madrid, A. GarcíaPonce, H. Vargas-Robles, A. Betanzos, P. Nava, K. Rottner, R. Menningen, M. Schnoor. CINVESTAVIPN, Mexico City, Tech Univ. Braunschweig and Univ. Hosp. Münster, Germany. (305.8) P58 The Specialized Pro-resolving Lipid Mediator Resolvin E1 Promotes Intestinal Mucosal Wound Repair. M. Quiros, H. Nishio, G. Leoni, R. Agarwal, G. Bernal, C. Gerner-Smith, C. Gerner-Smith, R. Colas, K. Graham, C. Serhan, A. Garcia, C. Parkos, A. Nusrat. Univ. of Michigan, Inst. for Cardiovasc. Prevent., Munich, Georgia Tech, Emory Univ. and Harvard Univ. (305.7) P59 Keratin Filaments Regulate Binding Properties of the Desmosomal Adhesion Molecule Desmoglein 3. F. Vielmuth, F. Loschke, T.M. Magin, J. Waschke, V. Spindler. Ludwig Maximilians Univ. Munich and Univ. of Leipzig. (305.4) 135 T U E PATHOLOGYTUESDAY P60 Role of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor on Colonic Goblet Cell Differentiation and Function during Mucosal Healing. A.K. Whitney, K.D. Schwisow, A.J. Bayless, L. Golden-Mason, G. Mehta, K.A. Kuhn, S.P. Colgan, E.L. Campbell. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus. (305.10) P61 Sympathetic Signaling Regulates Cardiomyocyte Cohesion via the Plaque Protein Plakoglobin. C. Schinner, A. Schlipp, V. Rötzer, F. Vielmuth, A. Messoudi, A. Horn, V. Spindler, J. Waschke. Ludwig Maximilians Univ. Munich. (305.9) P62 Central Role for Intestinal Epithelial IL-10R1 Signaling in Barrier Restitution. J.M. Lanis, E.E. Alexeev, D.J. Kao, D.A. Kitzenberg, K.D. Schwisow, D.J. Kominsky, S.P. Colgan. Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus and Montana State Univ. (305.2) P63 Cell Differentiation in the Murine Intestine Requires NADPH Oxidase 1. T. Darby, R. Jones. Emory Univ. (57.3) P64 High MUC2 Biosynthesis Induce ROS Production Which Increases Goblet Cell Susceptibility to ER Stress and Apoptosis. A. Tawiah, F. Moreau, K. Chadee. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. (444.5) P65 Cleavage of the Osmotic Stress-Related Transcriptional Regulator NFAT5 Is Critical for Cardiac Injury in Coxsackievirus B3-Induced Myocarditis. Y. Qiu, P.J. Hansen, M. Zhang, D. Yang. Univ. of British Columbia and Ctr. for Heart Lung Innovation, Vancouver. (920.10) P66 Targeting Macrophage Necroptosis for Therapeutic and Diagnostic Interventions to Treat Atherosclerosis. D. Karunakaran, M. Geoffrion, L. Wei, W. Gan, L. Perisic, L. Maegdefessel, U. Hedin, S. Sad, R. Virmani, T. Ruddy, K. Rayner. Ottawa Heart Inst., Karolinska Inst., Solna, Univ. of Ottawa and CVPath, Gaithersburg, MD. (444.6) P67 Functional Diversity of Novel Disease Mutations in the Unfolded Protein Response Regulator, ATF6. W-C. Chiang, P. Chan, J.H. Lin. UCSD. (920.13) P68 Characterization of Mitochondrial and Metabolic Changes following Retinal Detachment. D. DiazAguilar, Z. Li, A. Khadka, S. Jacobo, K. Connor, M. Saint-Geniez. Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirm., Harvard Med. Sch. and Angiogenesis Lab., Boston. (444.12) P69 ATF3 as an Important Factor of the Acute Phase Lung Inflammatory Response in an Animal Model. C.R. Caruso, N. Cabello, U. Sinha, N. Ekpa, S. DiAngelo, Z. Chroneos, P. Silveyra. Penn State Col. of Med. (444.9) P70 Transgenic Up-Regulation of Claudin-6 Decreases Diesel Particulate Matter-Induced Pulmonary Inflammation. J. Bodine, J. Gassman, D.C. Milner, A. Lewis, T. Dunaway, K. Egbert, C. Christiansen, A. Christiansen, T. Monson, D. Broberg, J. Arroyo, P.R. Reynolds. Brigham Young Univ. (305.11) P71 The Roles of Matrix Metalloproteinases in Anterior Regeneration in Aeolosoma viride. T.L. Tseng. Natl. Taiwan Univ. (923.2) 136 P72 Alveolar Lipid Accumulation in GMCSFRβ KO Mice Involves Epithelial Steatosis as Well as Macrophage Lipotoxicity and Is Not Associated with Altered Surfactant Lipid Synthesis. D.J. Corkill, A.N. Hunt, M.J. Hinrichs, M.C. Rebellato, P. Ryan, A. Scott, M.A. Sleeman, A.D. Postle. MedImmune Ltd, Cambridge, U.K., Univ. of Southampton and MedImmune, Gaithersburg, MD. (921.2) P73 Allergen-Induced Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Regulates Lung Inflammation and Fibrosis. S. Jalahalli Mariswamy, E.M. Nakada, B. Mihavics, S. Hoffman, D. Chapman, C.G. Irvin, A. Dixon, M. Poynter, V. Anathy. Univ. of Vermont. (50.3) P74 Mitochondrial Dysfunction in iPSC-Derived Neurons in Subjects with Chronic Mountain Sickness. H. Zhao, G. Perkins, D. Callacondo, O. Appenzeller, G. Haddad. UCSD, Lima, Peru and Univ. of New Mexico. (1179.9) P75 NLRP3 Inflammasome as a Novel Target for Docosahexaenoic Acid and Its Metabolites to Abrogate Glomerular Injury during Hyperhomocysteinemia. Z. Chen, S.M. Conley, G. Li, M. Xia, T.W. Gehr, K.M. Boini, P-L. Li. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. (701.1) P76 Behavioral Effects of a Novel Allosteric Potentiator of the Dopamine D1 Receptor in Human D1 Knock-In Mice and Rhesus Monkeys. K.A. Svensson, J.P. Beck, J. Hao, J.M. Schaus, D.L. Maren, M.M. Menezes, J.F. Falcone, W. Anderson, K. Knopp, B.L. Adams, J.M. Witkin, X. Li, J. Cramer, A.J. Harper, K.A. Wafford, L. Zhang, C.R. Yang, R.F. Bruns. Eli Lilly, Indianapolis and Erl Wood, U.K. and Chempartner, Shanghai. (708.2) P77 Expression of Nerve Membrane Proteins in a Naturally Occurring Ca2+ Channelopathy. N. Colón-Carrion, A. Colón-Rodriguez, W.D. Atchison. Univ. of Puerto Rico at Cayey and Michigan State Univ. (1188.5) P78 Assessment of Autofluorescent Signatures in Multiple Tissue Types with Novel Excitation-Scanning Hyperspectral Imaging. P.F. Favreau, J.A. Deal, D.A. Weber, T.C. Rich, S.J. Leavesley. Univ. of South Alabama. (51.1) P79 MUSE: A New, Fast, Simple Microscopy Method for Slide-Free Histology and Surface Topography. R.M. Levenson, F. Fereidouni. Univ. of California Davis Med. Ctr., Sacramento. (51.3) P80 Potential of Hyperspectral Imaging for Label-Free Tissue and Pathology Classification. J.A. Deal, P. Favreau, D. Weber, T. Rich, S. Leavesley. Univ. of South Alabama. (51.2) P81 Lymphocyte Response Assay: Report on Precision of Novel Cell Culture Test. A.E. Lynch, R. Jaffe. Hlth. Studies Collegium, Ashburn, VA. (51.4) P82 FLIM-FRET Imaging of Ligand-Receptor Binding in Tumor Cells In Vitro and In Vivo. M.M. Barroso, A. Rudkouskaya, S. Patel, N. Sinsuebphon, X. Intes. Albany Med. Col. and Rensselaer Polytech Inst. (51.7) P83 How Different Are We? Performing Formalin Fixed Paraffin Embedded Tissue Immunohistochemistry across Species. K.N. Gibson-Corley, G. OforiAmanfo, M.R. Leidinger, A.M. Lambertz. Univ. of Iowa. (51.6) TUESDAYPATHOLOGY P84 R-Ras Subfamily Proteins Elicit Distinct Physiologic Effects and Phosphoproteome Alterations in Neurofibromin-Null MPNST Cells. A. Prechtl, N. Brossier, S. Barnes, L. Wilson, S. Brosius, S. Byer, S. Carroll. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Univ. of Alabama, Birmingham. (1179.8) 111 P85 In-DANBIRT as an In Vivo SPECT/CT Imaging Tool for the Expression of LFA-1 in the Inflammatory Process of Atheroma Development. R.I. Mota, T. Daniels, M. Nysus, S. Lucas, J. Norenberg, M. Campen. Col. of Pharm., Univ. of New Mexico. (1177.22) P86 A Novel Bioinspired Microfluidic Assay for Investigation of the Role of Protein Kinase C-Delta in Human Neutrophil-Endothelium Interaction during Acute Inflammation. F. Soroush, Y. Tang, P. Pandian, L.E. Kilpatrick, M.F. Kiani. Temple Univ. and CFD Res. Corp., Huntsville, AL. (1177.3) P87 Fenofibrate Induces Cardiac Fibrosis in Mice Lacking the Co-chaperone and E3-Ubiquitin Ligase CHIP. S. Ravi, M.S. Willis, P. Lockyer, C. Patterson, J.C. Schisler. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (306.8) P88 Hydroxylase Inhibition Reduces Transforming Growth Factor-β1-Induced Fibrosis Associated with Colitis. M. Manresa, M. Tambuwala, P. Radhakrishnan, J. Harnoss, M. Cavadas, C. Keogh, A. Cheong, E. Cummins, K. Barrett, M. Schneider, C. Taylor. Univiversity Col. Dublin, Univ. of Heidelberg, Systs. Biol. Ireland, Dublin and UCSD. (444.8) P89 Prostaglandin E2 Inhibits Monocyte Chemotactic Protein 5 Production and Secretion in Mouse Cardiac Fibroblasts via EP4 Receptor. T.D. Bryson, D. Szandzik, P. Harding. Henry Ford Hlth. Syst. and Wayne State Univ. Sch. of Med. (306.9) P90 CD36-Myeloperoxidase Connection and the Activation of Intestinal Fibroblasts. M. Anderson-Thomas, A. Nillas, T.A. Reaves. Med. Univ. of South Carolina. (922.1) P91 Amphiregulin Promotes Fibroblast Activation in Pulmonary Fibrosis. T. Liu, F. Gonzalez De Los Santos, L. Ding, Z. Wu, S.H. Phan. Univ. of Michigan. (50.6) P92 R-Spondin2 Is Upregulated in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis and Affects Fibroblasts Behavior. A. Munguia, C. Becerril, C. Mendoza, Y. Balderas, R. Ramirez, J. Melendez, A. Pardo, M. Selman. Biol. Sci., Natl. Inst. of Resp. Dis., Fac. of Sci. and Natl. Inst. of Genomic Med., UNAM, Mexico City. (50.7) P93 TGF-Beta Induces the Expression of Scleraxis in Lung Fibroblasts from Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis. M. Ramirez Aragon, M.A. Blancas Oropeza, F. Hernandez Sanchez, A. Cruz Lagunas, M.P. Czubryt, C. Mendoza Milla. UNAM and INER, Mexico City and Inst. of Cardiovasc. Sci., Winnipeg, Canada. (700.4) P94 Extracellular Vesicles Isolated from Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells Promote Resolution of Pulmonary Fibrosis. T.P. Shentu, S. Wong, C. Espinoza, M. Cernelc-Kohan, J. Hagood. UCSD and Rady Hosp. of San Diego. (160.2) P95 Role of Post-translational Modifications In Prion Strain Diversity. P. Aguilar-Calvo, C. Bett, H. Eraña, J. Castilla, P. Nilsson, C. Sigurdson. UCSD, CIC bioGUNE, Spain and Linköping Univ., Sweden. (518.1) P96 The Biophysical Determinants of Prion Neuroinvasion. C. Sigurdson, J. Lawrence, C. Bett, T. Kurt, C. Wu, W. Surewicz, K.P.R. Nilsson. UCSD, Case Western Reserve Univ. and Linköping Univ., Sweden. (518.2) P97 The Molecular Basis for Cross-Species Prion Transmission. T. Kurt, L. Jiang, N. Alderson, J. Liu, D. Eisenberg, C. Sigurdson. UCSD and UCLA. (814.7) P98 AA Amyloidosis in Island Foxes (Urocyon littoralis): Pathology, Risk Factors, and the Genetic Basis for Disease. P. Gaffney, C. Witte, D. Clifford, M. Ghassemian, T. Gaasterland, C. Sigurdson. UCSD, Zool. Soc. of San Diego, Escondido and California Dept. of Fish and Wildlife, Rancho Cordova. (445.4) P99 Caveolin-1 Regulation of DISC1 as a Potential Therapeutic Target for Schizophrenia. A. Kassan, J. Egawa, Z. Zhang, Y. Lajevardi, K. Kim, Q.M. Nguyen, E.S. Posadas, A. Sawada, D.V. Jeste, D.M. Roth, P.M. Patel, H.H. Patel, B.P. Head. UCSD. (518.3) P100 Role of Hippocampal Neurogenesis in Drug Addiction. R.J. Morales Silva, M.H. Galinato, C. Mandyam. Univ. of Puerto Rico, Ponce and The Scripps Res. Inst. (518.4) P101 Effect of Stabilizing Alpha Synuclein-Membrane Interactions on the Protein’s Aggregation and Neurotoxicity. D. Ysselstein, V. Mishra, G. McCabe, J-C. Rochet. Purdue Univ. (518.7) P102 How the γPKC Activity Is Regulated in Neurodegenerative Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 14. N. Aslam, F. Alvi. BioSystOmics, Houston and COMSAT, Lahore. (1179.3) P103Ryanodine Receptor-Dependent Modulation of Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis in Mice. N.C. Osipchuk, A. Soulika, L. Cruz-Orengo, P.D. Allen, A.F. Fomina. Univ. of California, Davis. (1179.6) P104 Regeneration of Large-Gap Peripheral Nerve Injuries Using Acellular Nerve Allografts Plus Amniotic Fluid Derived Stem Cells. X. Ma. Wake Forest Univ. (1179.7) P105 Effect of Disrupted Insulin and IGF-1 Signaling on the Pro-apoptotic and Anti-proliferative RhoGAP, Porf-2. Q.V. Luong, W. Zhang, J. Pessia, Z. Wang, Y. Zhang, Y. Slyvka, F. Nowak. Ohio Univ. (1179.13) P106 Neonatal and Juvenile Ocular Development in SpragueDawley Rats: A Histomorphological Study. V. Vrolyk, A. Apreutese, C. Gordon, R. Forster, A. Graham, B. Palate, J. Haruna, M-O. Benoit-Biancamano. Fac. of Vet. Med., Univ. of Montreal, St. Hyacinthe and CiToxLAB, Laval, Canada and Evreux, France. (1179.14) P107 Immunohistochemical Detection of Autophagy-Related Proteins in Canine Appendicular Osteosarcoma. C.R. Schott, G.A. Wood. Ontario Vet. Col., Guelph. (920.11) P108 Use of Hepatic Gene Expression Analysis to Investigate Iron Accumulation in Rats Treated with an RGMc Antagonist Monoclonal Antibody. M.J. Liguori, P. Boeser, L. Fan, L. Huang, D. Seemann, E.A.G. Blomme, A. Popp, B.K. Mueller. AbbVie, North Chicago, Abbvie Deutschland GmbH & Co., Ludwigshafen and AbbVie Biores. Ctr., Worcester. (1180.3) 137 T U E PATHOLOGY/ PHARMACOLOGY TUESDAY P109 Echinacea purpurea Down Regulates LPS-Induced Expression of Pro-inflammatory and Angiogenic Factors in an Ex Vivo Model of Equine Placentitis. C. Sloboda, S. Chico, J. Gordon, S. Bailey, K.A. Zwetsloot, C. Mowa. Appalachian State Univ. and North Carolina State Univ. Vet. Sch. (921.3) P110 Synonymous Codon Changes in Measles (HMV) and Canine Distemper (CDV) Viral Nucleic Acid Sequences Result in Gene-Specific Changes in Levels of Viral Protein Expression. E.W. Uhl, M.L. Osborn, F.J. Michel, R.J. Hogan. Univ. of Georgia. (517.4) P111 Analysis of Forces Acting on the Equine Navicular Bone in Normal and Dorsiflexed Positions. K.C. Ruff, M.L. Osborn, E.W. Uhl. Univ. of Georgia. (923.4) P112 Upregulation of Chemokine Ligands and Receptors in the Spinal Cord of Type 2 Diabetic Monkeys. N. Kiguchi, H. Ding, C.M. Peters, N.D. Kock, S. Kishioka, J.D. Wagner, J.M. Cline, M-C. Ko. Wake Forest Sch. of Med. and Wakayama Med. Univ., Japan. (921.6) P113 P114 P115 P116 P117 Kinetics and Implications of Germinal Center Formation in Induced Bronchus-Associated Lymphoid Tissue during Influenza Infection. K.N. Gibson-Corley, A.W. Boyden, L. Tygrett, T.J. Waldschmidt. Univ. of Iowa. (700.5) Identification of Protein Kinase R and Tissue Distribution in Channel Catfish. J. Ball, M. Vides, Y. Kobayashi. Fort Hays State Univ., KS. (925.3) Biologic Potency Variation among Bovine, Ovine and Porcine Heparins May Be Due to Their Differential Affinity to Antithrombin. Y. Yao, O. Bouchard, S. Abro, D. Kahn, D. Hoppensteadt, J. Fareed. Ronnsi Pharma Co. LTD, China and Loyola Univ. Med. Ctr. (1177.11) Pulmonary Dipeptidyl Peptidase-4 Expression in Lung: Relevance in Experimental Models and for Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Clinical Disease. D.K. Meyerholz, P.B. McCray; Jr. Univ. of Iowa Carver Col. of Med. (700.7) A Comparison of Ovine and Porcine Heparins and Enoxaparins: A Case for an Alternative Source of Heparin Products. O. Bouchard, S. Abro, D. Kahn, O. Iqbal, D. Hoppensteadt, Y. Yao, J. Fareed. Loyola Univ. Med. Ctr. (1177.5) Pharmacology 448. RHOA IN FOCUS: PATHWAYS FROM GPCRS TO DISEASE Lecture (Sponsored by: The Divisions for Cardiovascular Pharmacology and Molecular Pharmacology) 11:30 S. Miyamoto. UCSD. GPCR and RhoA Signaling in Hypertension. C.P. Mack. Univ. of North Carolina Sch. of Med.. 450. CENTRAL MECHANISMS CONTRIBUTING TO NOVEL ANTIDEPRESSANT EFFICACY Tue. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16A Symposium Cardiovascular Pharmacology (Sponsored by: The Division for Neuropharmacology) Molecular Pharmacology (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Translational and Clinical Pharmacology, and Behavioral Pharmacology ) 8:30Introduction. 8:35 RhoA in Focus: Pathways from GPCRs to Disease. J.H. Brown. UCSD. 449. GPCR AND RHOA AS MEDIATORS OF DISEASE Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16B Chaired: D. Lodge Neuropharmacology Symposium (Sponsored by: The Divisions for Cardiovascular Pharmacology and Molecular Pharmacology) Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16A Cochaired: R. Neubig and S. Miyamoto Cardiovascular Pharmacology Molecular Pharmacology Cancer Biology 9:30 GPCR and RhoA Signaling in Fibrosis. R. Neubig. Michigan State Univ. 10:00 GPCR and RhoASignaling in Cancer. J.S. Gutkind. UCSD. 10:30 GPCR and RhoA Signaling in the Nervous System. X. Piao. Boston Children’s Hosp. 11:00 GPCR and RhoA Signaling in Cardioprotection. 138 Neurobiology 9:30Introduction. 9:35 Antidepressant Efficacy of Ketamine in Depressed Patients. G. Sanacora. Yale Univ. 10:00 The vHipp-mPFC Pathway Mediates the Sustained Antidepressant Response to Ketamine. D. Lodge. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr., San Antonio. 10:25 Development of Prophylactics Against Stress-induced Depressive-like Behavior. C.A. Denny. Columbia Univ. 10:50 BDNF Receptor Signaling is Differentially Altered by Novel Antidepressants. F. Carreno. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr., San Antonio. 11:15 Evaluation of Molecular Biomarkers in an Adolescent Chronic Restraint Stress Model of Depression. M. Graham, M. Hibicke, R. Hayslett. Mercer Univ. Col. of Pharm. (929.3) TUESDAYPHARMACOLOGY 11:30 Chronic Isolation Stress Alters Antidepressant-Like Behaviors in Animals Lacking RGS4. J.N. Talbot, B. Poncede Leon, C.M. Benhatzel, C.L. Nielsen, D. Alp, R. Kirsh, J.R. Traynor. Roseman Univ. of Hlth. Sci., Touro Univ. Nevada, Roseman Univ. of Hlth. Sci. Cols. of Pharm. and Med., and Univ. of Michigan Med. Sch. (929.6) 11:45 General Discussion. 451. CHRONOPHARMACOLOGY IN CANCER: DOES TIME REALLY MATTER? Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Cancer Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Drug Metabolism and Pharmacology Education ) Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Chaired: S. Gaddameedhi Cancer Pharmacology Cancer Biology 9:30Introduction. 9:35 Chronopharmacology: Temporal Targets of Drug Action and Therapeutic Implications. J. Hogenesch. Univ. of Pennsylvania. 10:05 Unraveling the Potential of Chronopharmacology through Genotoxic Stress Mediated Anti-cancer Drug Effect in Cancer. S. Gaddameedhi. Washington State Univ. 10:35 Tamoxifen Resistance in Breast Cancer: The Melatonin Connection. S.M. Hill. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:05 Cancer Chronotherapy: Clinical Perspectives and Outcomes. F. Lévi. Warwick University, UK. 11:35 A Multi-scale Systems Pharmacology Approach for Personalizing Irinotecan Chronotherapy. A. Ballesta, S. Dulong, R. Dallmann, P. Innominato, F. Lévi. Univ. of Warwick, U.K. and INSERM Unit 935, Villejuif. (712.2) 11:50 Panel Discussion. 452. NICOTINIC AGONIST/ANTAGONIST DRUG DEVELOPMENT: IMPLICATIONS FOR TREATMENT OF NEURODEGENERATIVE AND ADDICTIVE DISORDERS Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Behavioral Pharmacology) 9:55 Nicotinic Receptors as Targets for Treating Parkinson’s Disease: Relevance to Parkinson’s Disease Therapy. T. Bordia. SRI Intl. 10:20 Nicotinic Receptors as Targets for Treating Alzheimer’s Disease. K. Dineley. Univ. of Texas, Med. Branch. 10:45 Nicotine and Interoceptive Conditioning: Implications for Treating Nicotine Dependence. R. Bevins. Univ. of Nebraska-Lincoln. 11:10 Acute Tolerance to the Discriminative Stimulus Effects of Nicotine in Monkeys. M.J. Moerke, L. McMahon. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio. (1187.2) 11:35 A Novel Structural Landscape for Ligand Binding to the α7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor. G.A. CamachoBustamante, K. Kaczanowska, M. Harel, J. CornejoBravo, P. Taylor. UCSD and Univ. Autonomous de Baja California, Tijuana. (1187.9) 453. PATIENT-SPECIFIC STEM CELLS AS MODELS FOR GENE-DISEASE, DRUG, AND ENVIRONMENT INTERACTIONS Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Toxicology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Neuropharmacology, Translational and Clinical Pharmacology, and Drug Discovery and Development ) Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Chaired: J.R. Richardson Toxicology Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) Neurobiology 9:30Introduction. 9:35 Modeling Gene-Environment Interactions in Alzheimer Disease. J.R. Richardson. Northeast Ohio Med. Univ. 10:05 Alterations of Manganese Biology in Huntington’s Disease. A. Bowman. Vanderbilt Univ. 10:35 Stem Cells in Inorganic Carcinogenesis. E. Tokar. NIEHS, NIH. 11:05 Leveraging Novel Technologies for Human iPSC-based Screening for Parkinson’s Disease. X. Zeng. The Buck Inst. 11:35 Panel Discussion. (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Neuropharmacology, Molecular Pharmacology, Drug Discovery and Development, and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Cochaired: A. Fleckenstein and M. Quik Behavioral Pharmacology Neurobiology 9:30 Chronic Nicotine Protects Against MethamphetamineInduced Behavioral and Dopaminergic Deficits. A. Fleckenstein. Univ. of Utah. Are You Tweeting about EB 2016? To Tweet use #expbio Be sure to follow EB on Facebook and Twitter. 139 T U E PHARMACOLOGYTUESDAY 454. CURRENT TRENDS IN ANTIBODY DRUG CONJUGATES: FROM DISCOVERY TO THE CLINIC Symposium (Sponsored by: The Divisions for Drug Discovery and Development and Drug Metabolism) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Cancer Pharmacology, and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology ) Tue. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Cochaired: T. Esbenshade and L.C. Wienkers 3:50 4:10 456. DIVISION FOR TOXICOLOGY SYMPOSIUM: FORTUITOUS PROTEIN MODIFICATION IN DISEASE PATHOGENESIS AND TREATMENT Division Symposium Drug Discovery and Development (Sponsored by: The Division for Toxicology) Drug Metabolism Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Cancer Biology 9:30Introduction. 9:35 Advances in Drug-Linker Design to Improve the Stability, Homogeneity, and Pharmacokinetics of AntibodyDrug Conjugates. R.P. Lyon. Seattle Genetics. 10:05 Considerations for ADC Catabolism and Catabolite Disposition. D. Rock. Amgen, Inc. 10:35 Analysis of Antibody-Auristatin Conjugates for Cancer Therapy. S. Hengel. Seattle Genetics. 11:05 Leveraging Clinical Learnings and Patient Tailoring to Enable Next Generation Conjugate Success: Hsp90 Inhibitor Drug Conjugates (HDCs). A.C. Rigby. Synta Pharmaceut. Inc. 11:35Discussion. 455. DIVISION FOR CARDIOVASCULAR PHARMACOLOGY TRAINEE SHOWCASE Division Oral Session (Sponsored by: The Division for Cardiovascular Pharmacology) Tue. 2:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16A 2:30 2:50 3:10 3:30 140 MSC Exosomes Deliver Cardioprotective miR-21. K. Luther, M. McGuinness, L. Haar, H. Xu, J. Chen, M. Medvedovic, W.K. Jones. Loyola Univ. Chicago Maywood and Univ. of Cincinnati. (719.1) Human Perivascular Adipose Tissue Contains an Adrenergic System. N. Ayala-Lopez, C. PereiraHicks, R. Burnett, G.D. Fink, S.W. Watts. Michigan State Univ. (719.12) Chaired: S.S. Lau Toxicology 3:00Introduction. S.S. Lau. Wayne State Univ. 3:05 Characterization of Blood Protein Adducts Formed with Cooked Meat Carcinogens and Approaches of Human Biomonitoring by Ion Trap Mass Spectrometry. R. Turesky. Univ. of Minnesota. 3:35 Dopamine Adduction to α-Synuclein and Parkinson’s Disease. T. Monks. Univ. of Arizona. 4:05 Visual Cycle Adducts and Diseases of Retina. J. Sparrow. Columbia Univ. 4:35 Dicarbonyl Protein Modification, Diabetic Complications and Metformin Therapy. S.S. Lau. Wayne State Univ. 5:00 Wide-Spread Insulin Resistance in Tyrosine Phosphorylation in Type 2 Diabetic Patients. Z. Yi. Wayne State Univ. 457. DIVISION FOR DRUG DISCOVERY AND DEVELOPMENT SYMPOSIUM: CHEMICAL BIOLOGY AS AN ENGINE FOR DRUG DISCOVERY Cochaired: C. McCarthy and J. Schilling Division Symposium Cardiovascular Pharmacology (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Discovery and Development) Inhibiting Fibronectin Improves Cardiac Function in a Mouse Model of Heart Failure. I. Valiente Alandi, M. Nieman, J.D. Molkentin, B.C. Blaxall. Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. and Univ. of Cincinnati. (939.2) Kruppel-Like Factor 15: A Critical Transcriptional Regulator of Hypoxia Induced Endothelial Arginase 2. D. Pandey, D. Hori, L. Santhanam, D. Berkowitz, L. Romer. Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. Nanogel Drug Carriers Presenting Platelet GPIb[alpha] Mimic and Enhance Platelet Adhesion. J.W. Myerson, I. Johnston, J. Wu, R. McClintock, Z. Ruggeri, M. Poncz, V. Muzykantov. Univ. of Pennsylvania and The Scripps Res. Inst. Reversal of Stem Cell Mobilopathy and Enhanced Vascular Repair by Angiotensin-(1-7) in Diabetes. G. Vasam, Y. Jarajapu. North Dakota State Univ. (1270.2) Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Cochaired: J.S. Lazo and C. Beeson Drug Discovery and Development 3:00 3:05 3:40 4:15 4:50 Introduction to the Symposium. J. Lazo. Univ. of Virginia Sch. of Med. Developing Novel Chemical Biology Strategies to Synthetically Disrupt Protein:Protein Interactions. E.J. Kennedy. Univ. of Georgia. Developing Drug-like Molecules that Alter Important Biological Processes. M. Arkin. Univ. of California, San Francisco. Targeted Protein Degradation – What it Provides and How to Achieve It. C.M. Crews. Yale Univ. Precision Biosynthesis of Natural Product Drug Leads. B. Moore. UCSD. TUESDAYPHARMACOLOGY 5:25 Summary and Concluding Remarks. C. Beeson. Med. Univ. of South Carolina. 459. DIVISION FOR NEUROPHARMACOLOGY POSTDOCTORAL SCIENTIST AWARD FINALISTS 458. DIVISION FOR CANCER PHARMACOLOGY: CELL SIGNALING IN CANCER BIOLOGY AND THERAPEUTICS Division Oral Session (Sponsored by: The Division for Neuropharmacology) Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16B Division Oral Session Neuropharmacology (Sponsored by: The Division for Cancer Pharmacology) Neurobiology Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Cochaired: R.K. Guy and J.C. Yalowich Cancer Pharmacology Cancer Biology 3:00Introduction/Overview. R.K. Guy. St. Jude Childrens Res. Hosp. 3:05 Proteinases, Proteinase-Activated Receptors and Transient Receptor Potential Ion Channels: Driving Tumorigenesis in the Bladder Cancer Microenvironment. S. Gibson, K. Mihara, M. El-Daly, M. Saifedine, M.D. Hollenberg, M.E. Hyndman. Univ. of Calgary, Snyder Inst. for Chronic Dis., Cumming Sch. of Med. and Prostate Cancer Ctr., Calgary. (714.2) 3:25 Epac1 Links Prostaglandin E2 to β-Catenin Transcriptional Activity during Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition in A549 Cells. S. Jansen, W. De Jager, S.J. Yarwood, F. Lezoualc’h, R. Gosens, M. Schmidt. Univ. of Groningen, Netherlands, Univ. of Glasgow, U.K. and Univ. Toulouse III, France. (714.5) 3:45 Electrophilic Nitroalkenes Inhibit Triple Negative Breast Cancer Metastasis. C-S. Woodcock, S.R. Woodcock, C. Cao, N.E. Davidson, Y. Huang, B.A. Freeman. Univ. of Pittsburgh, Sch. of Med. and Univ. of Pittsburgh Cancer Inst. (714.7) 4:05Break 4:25 Treatment of Triple Negative Breast Cancer-Derived Cells with Polyisoprenylated Cysteinyl Amide Inhibitors Activates Caspase 3/7 and Disrupts F-Actin Organization Leading to Apoptosis and Diminished Cell Motility. O. Salako, R. Poku, A. Nkembo, F. Amissah, E. Ntantie, N. Lamango. Florida A&M Univ. Col. of Pharm. & Pharmaceut. Sci. (936.3) 4:45 A Dock-Derived PEDF Mimic Targeting Laminin Receptor Downregulates VEGF Receptor. C.S. Umbaugh, A. Diaz-Quiñones, M. Figueiredo. Purdue Univ. and Univ. Central del Caribe Med. Sch., PR. (936.5) 5:05 Synergism between Bioengineered miR-34a Prodrugand Doxorubicin in Suppressing Osteosarcoma cell Proliferation and Xenograft Tumor Growth. M. Tu, Y. Zhao, Y. Yu, W. Wang, Q. Chen, J. Qiu, A. Yu, A. Yu. Univ. of California Davis, Sacramento, Wuhan Univ., China and Univ. of Buffalo. (936.1) 3:00 Path to Becoming a Neuropharmacologist and the Search for Novel Psychotherapeutic Drug Targets. L.C. Daws. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 3:45 Chronic Cocaine Exposure Alters D1 Medium Spiny Neuron Activity to Promote Relapse. E.S. Calipari, R.C. Bagot, I. Purushothaman, S. Pirpinias, T.J. Davidson, K. Deisseroth, E.J. Nestler. Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai and Stanford Univ. (1186.2) 4:00 Chronic Antagonism of p38α MAPK Normalizes Serotonin Clearance, Serotonin Receptor Hypersensitivity and Social Behavior Deficits in a Genetic Murine Model of Autism Spectrum Disorder. M.J. Robson, M.A. Quinlan, J. Veenstra-VanderWeele, D.M. Watterson, R.D. Blakely. Vanderbilt Univ., Columbia Univ. and Northwestern Univ., Chicago. (707.9) 4:15 Cocaine-Induced Chromatin Modifications Are Associated with Increased Gene Expression and DNA-DNA Interactions of AUTS2. O. Engmann, B. Labonte, A. Mitchell, E. Calipari, J. Rabkin, Y. Hurd, G. Turecki, S. Akbarian, E.J. Nestler. Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai and McGill Univ. (1186.3) 4:30 Rapid Antidepressant-Like Effects of the “Uptake-2” Blocker, Decynium 22 in the Flinders Sensitive Line Rat Model of Depression. R. Fraser-Spears, W.A. Owens, N.C. Mitchell, D. Overstreet, W. Koek, L.C. Daws. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (929.7) 4:45 Impact of Chronic Ethanol Self-Administration on Kappa Opioid Receptor Regulation of Dopamine Signaling in Nonhuman Primates. C.A. Siciliano, E.S. Calipari, S.C. Fordahl, J.R. Melchior, J.T. Yorgason, Y. Mateo, C.M. Helms, V.A. Jimenez, D.M. Lovinger, K.A. Grant, S.R. Jones. Wake Forest Sch. of Med., NIAAA, NIH, Rockville and Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. (704.1) 5:00 GPR171 in the Basolateral Amygdala Regulates Stress and Reward-Related Behaviors. E. Bobeck, D. Pena, I. Gomes, W. Fujita, L. Devi. Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai. (1265.9) 5:15Discussion. 141 T U E PHARMACOLOGY/PHYSIOLOGYTUESDAY 460. PAUL M. VANHOUTTE DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP IN VASCULAR PHARMACOLOGY Award Lecture (Sponsored by: The Division for Cardiovascular Pharmacology) Tue. 4:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16A Cardiovascular Pharmacology The Paul M. Vanhoutte Award in Vascular Pharmacology was established to honor Dr. Vanhoutte’s lifelong scientific contributions to our better understanding and appreciation of the importance of endothelial cells and vascular smooth muscle function in health and disease and for his mentoring of countless prominent endothelial and vascular biologists and pharmacologists. 4:30Introduction. 4:35 Capillaries as Decoders of the Neural Rhythm of the Brain: Translating Thought into Blood Flow. M. Nelson. Univ. of Vermont. Physiology 461. APS PRESIDENT’S SYMPOSIUM SERIES PHYSIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS RESPONSIVE TO BEHAVIORAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES PHYSIOLOGICAL ADAPTATION TO BEHAVIORAL, ENVIRONMENTAL, AND CHRONOLOGICAL STRESS Symposium Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A 9:30 9:45 463. A BROAD HISTORY OF TEMPERATURE REGULATION Symposium Chaired: L. Simon and A.M. Whitaker (Sponsored by: APS History of Physiology Group) Environmental Stress 10:30 Adaptation to High Altitude. T. Simonson. UCSD. 11:00 Human Heat Acclimation. M. Sawka. Georgia Inst. of Technol. 11:30 Responses of Quiescent Stem Cells to Systemic Signals. T. Rando. Stanford Univ. Med. Ctr. 12:00 Sympathoneural and Adrenomedullary Responses to Mental Stress. D. Goldstein. NINDS, NIH. 462. 2016 GABOR KALEY LECTURE FEATURED TOPIC Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section and The Microcirculatory Society) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: L.R. Leon and S. Kirkton Environmental Stress 8:00 Hypothalamic Control Mechanisms of Temperature Regulation. G. Mack. Brigham Young Univ. 8:30 Temperature Regulation in Ectotherms. L. Crawshaw. Portland State Univ. 9:00 From Beer Cans to Intelligent Agents: the Evolution of an Evolutionary Theory of Thermoregulation and Its influence on Global Change Biology. M. Angilletta. Arizona State Univ. 9:30 Physiological Mechanisms of Heat Acclimation. S. Schneider. Univ. of New Mexico. 464. ADVANCES IN RENAL PHYSIOLOGY II Chaired: S. Nourshargh 8:00 8:50 9:15 142 Neutrophil-Microvessel Interactions: Novel Concepts and Pathophysiological Implications. S. Nourshargh. Queen Mary, Univ. of London. Circadian Rhythms in Leukocyte Recruitment to Tissues. C. Scheiermann. Ludwig Maximilians Univ. Munich. (1210.1) High Affinity Bent β2 Integrin Binds Ligand in Cis and Regulates Inflammation. Z. Fan, S. McArdle, Z. Mikulski, E. Gutierrez, M. Ginsberg, A. Groisman, K. Ley. La Jolla Inst. for Allergy and Immunol. and UCSD. (1210.2) Soluble Vimentin Decreases Neutrophil Adhesion to Platelets by Inhibiting P-Selectin Glycoprotein Ligand-1-P-Selectin Interactions. F.W. Lam, Q. Da, M. Cruz, C.W. Smith. Baylor Col. of Med. and Michael E. DeBakey VA Med. Ctr., Houston. (1210.4) Endothelial Cell Secreted MIF Regulates Pericyte Contractility to Decrease Barrier Function. A. Pellowe, Y. Hou, M. Harris, R. Liu, J.S. Pober, A. Gonzalez. Yale Univ. (1210.6) Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Renal Section) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: P. O’Connor and L. Evans Ion Transport 8:00 The Role of the NADPH Oxidase Subunit p67phox in the Regulation of Renal Blood Flow in Dahl S (SS) Rats. L.C. Evans, A.J. Polichnowski, A.W. Cowley Jr. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Loyola Univ. and Hines VA Hosp., Maywood, IL. (739.7) TUESDAYPHYSIOLOGY 8:15 Bicarbonate Therapy Has No Effect on Renal T-Cell Infiltration or Blood Pressure but Markedly Reduces Tubular Casts/Fibrosis and Is Associated with an M1 to M2 Polarization in Dahl Salt-Sensitive Rats. P. O’Connor, J-K. Chen, L. Taylor, S. Ray, B. Baban, J.C. Sullivan. Georgia Regents Univ. (966.8) 8:30 Alstrom Syndrome 1, a New Interacting Protein of NKCC2, Regulates Apical NKCC2 Trafficking, Urinary Concentration and Blood Pressure. A.B. Jaykumar, P. Caceres, G. Ares, W. Beierwaltes, P. Ortiz. Henry Ford Hosp. and Wayne State Univ. (965.11) 8:45RORγt-Dependent Preferential Induction of IL-17F by TLR3 Activation in SHR Immune Cells. M.V. Singh, M.Z. Cicha, M.W. Chapleau, F.M. Abboud. Univ. of Iowa and VA Med. Ctr. (966.7) 9:00 Intervention with VG1177, a MHC Class II Invariant Peptide Chain Antagonist, Restores Afferent Arteriolar Autoregulatory Behavior during Chronic 14 Day Lipopolysaccharide Treatment. J.P. Van Beusecum, A.K. Cook, S. Zhang, R.P. Tobin, K. Newell-Rogers, E.W. Inscho. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr./Baylor Scott & White Hlth. (966.5) 9:15 Renal Cortical Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2) Stimulates Renin Release from Juxtaglomerular (JG) Cells and Increases Blood Pressure: Role of JG Cell NOX4. M. Mendez. Henry Ford Hosp. (1218.7) 9:30 Formyl Peptide Receptor Blockade Ameliorates Intrarenal Resistance Artery Function and Decreases Blood Pressure in SHR. C.F. Wenceslau, C.G. McCarthy, T. Szasz, S. Ogbi, R.C. Webb. Georgia Regents Univ. (966.2) 9:45 Three-Layered Proteomic Characterization of a Novel ACTN4 Mutation Reveals Its Pathogenic Potential in FSGS. M.M. Rinschen, M. Bartram, T. Benzing, B.B. Beck. Univ. Hosp. Cologne. (1220.1) 465. BEYOND GWAS: ATTACHING PHYSIOLOGY TO THE GENOME 466. BUILDING NEURAL CIRCUITS: WIRING AND EXPERIENCE Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Central Nervous System Section) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: S.D. Van Hooser and J. Cang Neurobiology Neurophysiology 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 467. JOHN FORTE GIL SECTION DISTINGUISHED ABSTRACT PLENARY SESSION Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology Section) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: J. Uno and Y. Zavros 8:00 8:15 Symposium (Sponsored by: Physiological Genomics Journal) 8:30 Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Chaired: P. Munroe and T. Wiltshire 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 Challenges of Interpreting GWAS Variants to Function. P. Munroe. Queen Mary Univ. of London. Utility of Model Systems for Functional Testing and Physiology. B. Joe. Univ. of Toledo Coll. of Medicine. Translational of GWAS Findings to the Clinic. S. Padmanabhan. Glasgow Univ. Cardiovascular Pharmacogenetics. T. Wiltshire. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Choosing Which Way to Go: Development of Direction Selectivity in Visual Cortex. S.D. Van Hooser. Brandeis Univ. Binocular Matching and Critical Period Plasticity in the Mouse Visual Cortex. J. Cang. Northwestern Univ. Molecules and Mechanisms that Assemble Functionally Specialized Visual Pathways. A. Huberman. Univ. of California, San Diego. Experience-Dependent Development of Visual Circuitry in Xenopus. H. Cline. Scripps Res. Inst. 8:45 9:00 9:15 Sex Differences in GABAergic Neurotransmission to Gastric-Projecting DMV Neurons. Y. Jiang, M.P. D’Angelo, L. Anselmi, R.A. Travagli. Penn State Col. of Med. and Univ. of Pittsburgh. (1254.4) Involvement of TFF2 and Na/H Exchanger in Gastric Wound Repair In Vitro in Gastric Organoids. K.A. Engevik, A.L. Matthis, E. Aihara, M.H. Montrose. Univ. of Cincinnati. (1250.5) Cardiorespiratory Fitness as a Predictor of Intestinal Microbial Diversity and Distinct Metagenomic Functions. M. Estaki, J. Pither, P. Baumeister, J.P. Little, S. Gill, S. Ghosh, Z. Ahmadi-Vand, K.R. Marsden, D.L. Gibson. Univ. of British Columbia Okanagan. (1027.5) Activation of Nlrp3 Inflammasomes in Mouse Hepatic Stellate Cells during Schistosoma J. Infection. N. Meng, M. Xia, P-L. Li, W-X. Tang. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. and Tongji Med. Col., Huazhong Univ. of Sci. and Technol., China. (1024.1) Blocking NF-κB Activation in Intestinal Lysozyme M Positive Cells Prevents the NEC-Induced Decrease in Ly6C Positive Cells in the Neonatal Intestine. E. Managlia, X. Yan, X. Liu, J. Mangrum, I. De Plaen. Ann & Robert H. Lurie Children’s Hosp. of Chicago and Northwestern Univ., Chicago. (1023.6) Regulation of the Antioxidant Glutathione by Enteric Glia during Inflammation. I.A.M. Brown, B.D. Gulbransen. Michigan State Univ. (1023.7) 143 T U E PHYSIOLOGYTUESDAY 9:30 9:45 Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Is Associated with Dysfunction in Hepatic Circadian Rhythm. S. Larion, J.D. Mintz, D.J. Fulton, S. Khurana, D.W. Stepp. Med. Col. of Georgia. (1249.5) Maternal High Fat Diet Increases an Inhibitory Extrasynaptic Tonic GABAA Current in Dorsal Motor Nucleus of the Vagus Neurons Regulating Gastric Functions. C.A. McMenamin, K.N. Browning. Penn State Col. of Med. (1252.5) 468. NEURAL CONTROL OF INFLAMMATIONMEDIATED HYPERTENSION 8:20 8:40 9:00 9:20 Neural and Cellular Mechanisms Mediating OpioidInduced Respiratory Depression and Strategies to Reverse It. G. Montandon. Univ of Toronto. Opioid Effects on Respiration- Data From Preclinical Animal Models in Vivo. A. Stucke. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. How Opioids Interfere With Central Respiratory Control. A. Garcia. Univ. of Washington Sch. of Med. Ampakine Therapy for Opioid-induced Respiratory Depression. J. Greer. Univ. of Alberta. 470. ORIGINS OF ADULT CARDIOVASCULAR AND METABOLIC DISEASE Featured Topic Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) (Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis Section) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: E. Lazartigues Chaired: A. Loria and E. Gillis Neurobiology Inflammation/Immunity Hypertension 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 Microglia Participate in Neurogenic Regulation of Hypertension. P. Shi. Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr. Neuroimmune Pathway Critical in Development of Hypertension. K. Mathis. Univ. of North Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. Defect Mitochondrial Biogenesis at Rostral Ventrolateral Medulla in Neurogenic Hypertension under Peripheral Inflammation. J.Y.H. Chan, K.L.H. Wu. Kaohsiung Chang Gung Mem. Hosp., Taiwan. (1237.1) Knockdown of Bradykinin B1 Receptor Reduces Neuroinflammation and Prevents the Development of SaltSensitive Hypertension. S. Sriramula, E. Lazartigues. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. (1237.4) Cholinergic Stimulation of Immune Cells with Nicotine Induces Renal Inflammation and Premature Development of Hypertension in Young SHR. S. Harwani, M. Chapleau, F. Abboud. Univ. of Iowa and VA Med. Ctr. (1237.3) Microglia Modulate Ang II-Induced Neuronal Activity and Neuroinflammation. M.M. Santisteban, J. Zubcevic, M. Febo, M.K. Raizada. Univ. of Florida. (1237.8) 469. OPIOID-INDUCED RESPIRATORY DEPRESSION: SITES/MECHANISMS OF ACTION AND POTENTIAL SOLUTIONS Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Chaired: H.V. Forster and J. Miller Neurobiology Neurophysiology 8:00 144 Opiod Effects on Respiratory Control in Diseased States. A. Malhotra. UCSD. 8:00 Developmental Programming in Mouse, Monkey, and Man: From Stem Cells to the Microbiome. J. Friedman. Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med. Anschutz Medical Campus. 8:30 Leptin, Melanocortin 4 Receptor and Renal Nerves Play a Role in High Blood Pressure Programmed by Intrauterine Growth Restriction in Mouse. S. Intapad. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. (1214.4) 8:45 Early-Life Stress Induces Increased Plasma Heme and Toll-Like Receptor 4 Activation Leading to Increased Superoxide Production in Aortic Endothelial Cells. D.H. Ho, A.L. Ring, J.S. Pollock. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and Tripler Army Med. Ctr., Honolulu. (1214.2) 9:00 Influence of Activity before or during Pregnancy on Fetal and Infant Heart Outcomes. L.E. May, O.R. Reoyo, C.M. Moyer, E.R. Newton, D. Strickland. East Carolina Univ., Tech Univ. of Madrid and Bridgewater Col., VA. (1214.10) 9:15 Pulmonary and Systemic Vascular Responses in Rats Exposed to Perinatal Hyperoxia. T.J. Greiner, D. Rotella, M.L. Bates. Univ. of Iowa. (1214.11) 9:30 Increased Hepatic Lipogenic Gene Expression Correlates with Enhanced Central and Ectopic Adiposity in Female C57BL6 Mice Exposed to Maternal Separation. M. Murphy, D. Cohn, C. Wills, L. Gilbert, D. Powell, A. Loria. Univ. of Kentucky. (1214.1) 9:45 Chronic Flutamide Treatment Alters Intrarenal Renin Angiotensin System Expression in Intrauterine Growth Restricted Female Rats. J.H. Dasinger, S. Intapad, B.R. Rudsenske, B.T. Alexander. Univ. of Mississippi Med. Ctr. (1214.5) TUESDAYPHYSIOLOGY 471. REDOX MEDIATED ENDOTHELIAL RESPONSES: SHOWCASING NOX2 ENZYMES IN PATHOPHYSIOLOGY Symposium Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) (Sponsored by: APS Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology Section) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Chaired: S. Chatterjee and V. Sampath Inflammation/Immunity Oxidative Stress 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 473. CHRONIC LIVER DISEASES MODULATED BY TRANSCRIPTIONAL AND TRANSLATIONAL MECHANISMS Endothelial NOX2 Signaling in Cardiovascular Disease. K. Channon. Univ. of Oxford. NOX2 in Cerebrovascular Dysfunction in Hypertension and Alzheimer’s Disease. C. Iadecola. Weill Cornell Inst. Mechanosignal via Endothelial NOX2 Activation Triggers inflammation During Donor Lung Preservation. S. Chatterjee. Univ. of Pennsylvania. Role of NOX2 in the Microvascular Dysfunction in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus. K. Matrougui. Eastern Virginia Sch. of Med. 472. SKELETAL MUSCLE PEROXISOMALMITOCHONDRIAL INTERACTIONS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Muscle Biology Group) Tue. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: R. Cortright and R. Noland 8:00 Introduction to the Topic. R. Cortright. East Carolina Univ. 8:15 Peroxisomal-Mitochonrial interactions in Cardiac Muscle. C. Hoppel. Case Western Reserve Univ. 9:00 Peroxisomes in Skeletal Muscle Protect against LipidInduced Insulin Resistance. R.C. Noland, E.A. Worsham, J. Simon, S.E. Fuller, M. Baes, S. Ghosh, R.L. Mynatt. Pennington Biomed. Res. Ctr., Baton Rouge, Katholieke Univ. Leuven and Duke-Natl. Univ. of Singapore Grad. Med. Sch. (1246.1) 9:15 Energy Sensing Pathways Differentially Regulate Peroxisomes in Skeletal Muscle versus Liver. S.E. Fuller, E.A. Worsham, J. Simon, T.W. Gettys, R.L. Mynatt, R.C. Noland. Pennington Biomed. Res. Ctr., Baton Rouge. (1246.2) 9:30 Overexpression of PGC-1α Increases Peroxisomal Biogenesis and Mitochondrial Lipid Oxidation in Human Primary Myotubes. T-Y. Huang, D. Zheng, J.A. Houmard, J.J. Brault, R.C. Hickner, R.N. Cortright. East Carolina Univ., Diabetes Obesiy Inst. and Brody Sch. of Med., Greenville, NC. (1246.3) 9:45Conclusion. Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Chaired: L. Wang and K. Machida Inflammation/Immunity 10:30 LncRNA in Lipoprotein Metabolism. C. Wahlestedt. Univ. of Miami Miller Sch. of Med. 11:00 Function of Non-Coding RNAs in Bile Acid Homeostasis. L. Wang. Univ. of Connecticut Inst. for Systs. Genomics. 11:30 The Critical Role of the G Protein-Coupled Receptor 30, a Novel Estrogen Receptor, in the Formation of Lithogenic Bile through a Non-transcriptional Regulatory Mode in 17β-Estradiol (E2)-Treated Mice. D.Q. Wang, O. de Bari, H.H. Wang. Saint Louis Univ. Sch. of Med. (1251.2) 11:45 TRPV4 Modulates CYP2E1 Function in Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis Progression. R.K. Seth, S. Das, D. Dattaroy, F.A. Alhasson, G.A. Michelotti, M. Nagarkatti, P. Nagarkatti, P.D. Bell, W.B. Liedtke, A.M. Diehl, S. Chatterjee. Univ. of South Carolina, Metabolon Inc., Durham, Univ. of South Carolina Sch. of Med., Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham and Duke Univ. (1251.3) 12:00 Chronic Alcohol Consumption Alters Rhythms in Key Enzymes and Transcription Factors Involved in Lipid Metabolism: Potential Role of the Circadian Clock. J.A. Valcin, U.S. Udoh, T. Swain, S.M. Bailey. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1251.1) 12:15 Mast Cells Promote Biliary Proliferation and Hepatic Fibrosis in Normal and HDC-/- Mice by Interacting with Cholangiocytes and Hepatic Stellate Cells via TGF-β1 Signaling. H. Francis. Central Texas VA Hlth. Care Syst./Baylor Scott & White Hlth., Temple. (1251.4) 474. CONTEXT DEPENDENCE OF CARDIORESPIRATORY PHYSIOLOGY: TEMPERATURE EFFECTS, CIRCADIAN CYCLES, AND SYSTEM INTERDEPENDENCE Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology Section) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: J. Santin and L. Hartzler Oxidative Stress Environmental Stress Neurobiology 10:30 Anurans as Research Models for Cardio-Respiratory Physiology: Classic Questions and New Directions. S. Hillman. Portland State Univ. 145 T U E PHYSIOLOGYTUESDAY 11:00 Temperature Effects on the Baroreflex in toads. L. Zena. UNESP, Jaboticabal, Brazil. 11:30 Temperature Effects on Central Chemosensitivity in Bullfrogs. J. Santin. Wright State Univ. 12:00 Orexin and the Modulation of Respiratory Control in Ectothermic Vertebrates. E. Maioqui. UNESP, Jaboticabal, Brazil. 477. LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT SKILLS: WHAT YOU MIGHT NOT SEE IN YOUR CV Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Careers Opportunities in Physiology Committee) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B 475. ION CHANNELS AND TRANSPORTERS IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology Section) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: D. Kravtsov and T. Thai Ion Transport 10:30 Ion Transport Defects and Secretory Diarrhea. N. Ameen. Yale Univ. Sch. of Med. 11:00 An Investigational Anti-cancer Agent Synergizes with VX-809 in F508del Correction. A. Ambrosetti, Y. Fan, E.F. Kirby, R.M. Riggs, X.R. Wang. Samford Univ. McWhorter Sch. of Pharm. and Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1224.48) 11:15 Store Operated Ca2+ Entry Suppressed TGFβ1- Smad3 Signaling Pathway in Glomerular Mesangial Cells. S. Chaudhari, W. Li, R. Ma. Univ. of North Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. (1224.28) 11:30 The Physiological Effect of Altering Mitochondrial Calcium Uptake in the Renal Cortical Collecting Duct. L.I. Galarza-Paez, D.C. Eaton, L. Zou, O. Al-Khalili, H. Ma, J.M. Sands, J.D. Klein, T.L. Thai. Emory Univ. Sch. of Med. (1224.13) 11:45 Human CLCA2 Modulates the Conductance of Ano1 by Regulating Intracellular Calcium Level. A. Sharma, G. Ramena, L. Premkumar, R.C. Elble. So. Illinois Univ. Sch. of Med. (1224.44) 12:00 Marked Dysfunction in Gating Properties and Surface Expression of Podocyte TRPC6 Channels in Experimental Models of Primary and Secondary Focal and Segmental Glomerulosclerosis In Vivo and In Vitro. S.E. Dryer, E.Y. Kim, H. Roshanravan. Univ. of Houston. (1224.29) 12:15 Modulation of the BK Channel during Acute Spinal Cord Injury Is Neuroprotective. M.C. Jacobsen, K.A. Lett, M. Karnitsky, B.M. Arwini, J.M. Barden, J. Buttigieg. Univ. of Regina, Canada. (1224.42) 476. JULIUS H. COMROE, JR. DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS RESPIRATION SECTION Chaired: C. Schnackenberg and C. Richards-Williams Career Development 10:30 Developing the Leader Within You: Head, Heart and Gut. David Brooks. Johnson & Johnson. 10:55 Discovering the Leader Within You: Where You’ve Been. Thomas Herzig. U.S. Navy, Groton, CT. 11:20 Translating Your Cv into An Effective Resume in the Life Sciences. Andrew Green. Univ. of California, Berkeley. 11:45 Demonstrating Leadership and Management in Practice: Examples of Success and Errors. Patricia Molina. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. 12:10 Panel Discussion. 478. MECHANISMS OF NEUROMUSCULAR JUNCTION DESTABILIZATION AND FRAGMENTATION IN AGING SKELETAL MUSCLE Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: M. Jackson and R. Hepple Exercise, Aging, and Disease Skeletal Muscle Physiology 10:30 Myofiber-Driven Mechanisms of NMJ Decline and Impact. R. Hepple. McGill Univ. Hlth. Ctr. 11:00 Role of the Perisynaptic Schwann Cell in Neuromuscular Junction Maintenance and Reinnervation. R. Robitaillle. Univ. of Montreal. 11:30 Muscle Innervation and Reactive Oxygen Species Generation during Aging. M. Jackson. Univ. of Liverpool. 12:00 Nerve Terminal Regrowth following Regeneration of Muscle Fibers. W. Thompson. Texas A&M Univ. 479. NEW INSIGHTS INTO THE ROLE OF AUTOPHAGY IN CARDIAC DISEASE Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Lecture Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Chaired: K.M. Mellor and B. Hill Mysteries and Maladies of Mitochondrial Dynamics. G. Sieck. Mayo Clin. Col. of Med. Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure 10:30 146 Novel Glycogen Autophagy Mechanisms in the Diabetic Heart. L. Delbridge. Univ. of Melbourne. TUESDAYPHYSIOLOGY 11:00 Insulin Regulation of Cardiac Autophagy. E.D. Abel. Univ. of Iowa. 11:30 Mitophagy and Biogenesis in the Homeostatic Intracellular Repair Response to Ischemia. R. Gottlieb. Cedars Sinai Hosp. 12:00 Role of Mitochondrial Autophagy during Pathological Hypertrophy and Heart Failure. J. Sadoshima. Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch. 480. SHEAR STRESS-INDUCED MECHANOTRANSDUCTION IN ENDOTHELIAL CELLS: IMPLICATIONS FOR VASCULAR HEALTH AND ADAPTATIONS TO PHYSICAL ACTIVITY 12:10 Use of Patch-Clamp Analysis to Study Sodium Transport in Isolated Split-Open Cortical Collecting Ducts. A. Staruschenko. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. 482. THE MIND MATTERS: PSYCHOLOGY AS AN OVERLOOKED VARIABLE IN AUTONOMIC PHYSIOLOGY Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: E. Wehrwein and J. Carter Symposium Environmental Stress (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Hypertension Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Neurophysiology Chaired: Y. Hellsten and S. Egginton Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium Exercise, Aging, and Disease 10:30 Microvascular Response to Altered Endothelial Phenotype in High and Low Shear Environments. S. Egginton. Univ. of Leeds. 11:00 Response of the Arterial Vascular Tree to Shear and Consequences for Vascular Remodeling. M. Laughlin. Univ. of Missouri Sch. of Med. 11:30 Molecular Regulation of Shear Stress-Induced Mechanotransduction in Man. L. Gliemann. Univ. of Copenhagen. 12:00 Shear Stress Modulation of Crosstalk between Endothelial Cells and Skeletal Myocytes. T. Haas. Univ. of York, Toronto. 481. STILL UNRAVELING THE MYSTERIES OF THE KIDNEY WITH ISOLATED TUBULES AFTER ALL THESE YEARS Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Renal Section) Tue. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: J.M. Sands and H.L. Brooks Transporters/Channels/Barriers 10:30 History of the Development of Tubule Perfusion. M. Burg. NHLBI, NIH. 10:55 Use of Adenovirus-Mediated Gene Transfer and Microscopy to Study NaCl Transport and Signaling in the Perfused Thick Ascending Limb. G. Ares. Henry Ford Hosp. 11:20 Use of Knock-Out Mice and Electron Microscopy to Study Chloride and Bicarbonate Transport in Perfused Cortical Collecting Ducts. S. Wall. Emory Univ. 11:45 Use of Perfused Tubules and 3-D Digital Models of the Renal Medulla to Study the Urine Concentrating Mechanism. T. Pannabecker. Univ. of Arizona. 10:30 Psychophysiology: The Influence of Personality and State of Mind in Autonomic Neural Control and Cardiovascular Reactivity Studies. J. Moser. Michigan State Univ. 10:45 Renal Pelvic Afferent Nerves Are Responsible for Greater Resting and Evoked Vasoconstrictor Tone in Individual Rats. M.M. Knuepfer, N.B. HoffmanSchepers, J.L. Perry. St. Louis Univ. Sch. of Med. (1238.1) 11:00 Cardiovascular and Behavioral Sequelae of Witnessing Social Defeat Stress in Male and Female Rats. C.M. Lombard, M.N. Melson, J.R. Fadel, C.S. Wood, S.K. Wood. Univ. of South Carolina Sch. of Med. (1238.3) 11:15 Impaired Autonomic Regulation in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder. A.P. Swiercz, J. Park, L. Hopkins, C. Moshfegh, J. Wiaderkiewicz, C.N. Young, P.J. Marvar. George Washington Univ. and Emory Univ. (1238.7) 11:30 Baroreflex Dysfunction and Augmented Sympathetic Nerve Responses during Combat-Related and Noncombat-Related Mental Stress in Veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. J. Park, P.J. Marvar, P. Liao, M.L. Jefferson, B.O. Rothbaum. Emory Univ., Atlanta VA Med. Ctr., Decatur and George Washington Univ. (1238.8) 11:45 Oxidative Stress Contributes to Microvascular Endothelial Dysfunction in Humans with Major Depressive Disorder. J.L. Greaney, L. Santhanam, E.F. Saunders, L.M. Alexander. Penn State, Johns Hopkins Univ. Sch. of Med. and Penn State Col. of Med. (1238.9) 12:00 Slow Breathing Reductions in Mean Arterial Pressure Are Dependent on Psychological Characteristics. K.L. Kelly, J. Lin, J.M. Poteracki, K.M. Adams, C.A. Kelly, B.J. Wegner, L.P. Newhouse, J.S. Moser, E.A. Wehrwein. Michigan State Univ. (1238.11) 12:15 Does Trait Anxiety Influence Muscle Sympathetic Nerve Activity Responsiveness in Humans? J.R. Carter, I.T. Fonkoue. Michigan Technol. Univ. (1238.12) 147 T U E PHYSIOLOGYTUESDAY 483. HISTORY OF PHYSIOLOGY LECTURE 4:45 Lecture (Sponsored by: APS History of Physiology Group) Tue. 1:00 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, Marina Ballroom DE 5:00 Rediscoveries of Oxygen. J. Severinghaus. UCSF Sch. of Med. 484. ROBERT M. BERNE DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS CARDIOVASCULAR SECTION High Salt Intake Alters Renal Medullary Clock Genes via ETB Receptors. J.S. Speed, K.A. Hyndman, M. Kasztan, J.G. Johnston, K.J. Roth, M.E. Young, J.S. Pollock, D.M. Pollock. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1216.9) Role of Kir5.1 (Kcnj16) Channel in the Control of Potassium Homeostasis in the Kidney. O. Palygin, V. Levchenko, A. Geurts, A. Staruschenko. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (1216.16) 487. AUGUST KROGH DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS COMPARATIVE AND EVOLUTIONARY PHYSIOLOGY SECTION Lecture Lecture (Supported by Novo Nordisk Foundation) Tue. 2:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Oh, the Places You’ll Go! My Many Colored Serotonin (Apologies to Dr. Seuss). S. Watts. Michigan State Univ. Environmental Stress Oxidative Stress 485. TANG PRIZE IN BIOPHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCE AWARD LECTURE Lecture (Sponsored by: Tang Prize Foundation) 488. GENE REGULATION IN SKELETAL MUSCLE Tue. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33BC Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis Section) Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: N. Li 3:15 3:45 4:00 4:15 4:30 148 Symposium Cancer Immunotherapy by PD-1 Antibody. T. Honjo. Kyoto Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med. 486. CROSS-TALK BETWEEN SALT AND OTHER FACTORS IN HYPERTENSION Interaction between Dietary Fructose and Salt in the Regulation of Blood Pressure. P. Ortiz. Henry Ford Hosp. Inhibition of Hypoxia Inducible Factor-1α in the Renal Medulla Contributes to Fructose-Induced SaltSensitive Hypertension. J. Hu, Q. Zhu, P-L. Li, K.M. Boini, N. Li. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. (1216.2) High Salt Activates Human Monocytes and Promotes Their Conversion into Dendritic Cells via Formation of Immunogenic Isoketal-Adducts. A. Kirabo, N. Barbaro, J.D. Foss, K.R. Montaniel, W. Chen, D.G. Harrison. Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr. (1216.4) Deletion of Rag1 Prevents High Dietary Protein-Induced Exacerbation of Hypertension and Renal Injury in Dahl SS Rats. J.M. Abais-Battad, H. Lund, D.L. Mattson. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (1216.3) Modulation of Salt and Mineralocorticoid Sensitivity of Blood Pressure by the Circadian Clock Protein Per1. K. Solocinski, X. Wen, K-Y. Cheng, J. Lynch, C.S. Wingo, B.D. Cain, M.L. Gumz. Univ. of Florida and NF/SG Veterans Hlth. Syst. (1216.10) Physiological and Evolutionary interactions among Body Size, Metabolic Rate and Oxygen. J. Harrison. Arizona State Univ. (Sponsored by: APS Muscle Biology Group) Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: G. Nader 3:15 Nuclear Receptors and Exercise Mimetics: Running around Physiology. R. Evans. Univ. of Kentucky. 3:45 Muscle Gene Control Elements Exhibit Differential Transcriptional Activities in Skeletal Muscle Fiber Types, Cardiac Muscle, and Non-muscle Tissue Types. S. Hauschka. Univ. of Washington. 4:15 Alternative Splicing Transitions during Postnatal Skeletal Muscle Development Contribute to Adult Muscle Function. T. Cooper. Baylor Coll. of Medicine. 4:45 Delineating Gene Regulatory Circuitry Controlling Muscle Fitness. D. Kelly. Sanford-Burnham Med. Res. Inst. 489. HORACE W. DAVENPORT DISTINGUISHED LECTURESHIP OF THE APS GASTROINTESTINAL AND LIVER PHYSIOLOGY SECTION Lecture Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium The intermediate Filament Cytoskeleton: From Bench to Bedside. B. Omary. Univ. of Michigan. TUESDAYPHYSIOLOGY 490. HORMONES AND REPRODUCTION Featured Topic 492. MECHANISMS REGULATING SKELETAL MUSCLE MASS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Endocrinology and Metabolism Section) (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: W. Samson Chaired: S.C. Bodine Neurobiology Exercise, Aging, and Disease Neurophysiology 3:15 Novel Peptide/Receptor Interaction Controlling Reproduction. L. Stein. Saint Louis Univ. 3:45 Hypothalamic Circuits Controlling Reproductive Hormone Secretion. D. Belsham. Univ. of Toronto. 4:15 Estrogen Treatment Restores Muscle Mitochondrial Function and Redox Homeostasis, Reversing the Pro-diabetogenic State Induced by Ovariectomy. M.J. Torres, L. Reese, C. Smith, E. Pennington, T. Ryan, R. Shaikh, P.D. Neufer. East Carolina Diabetes and Obesity Inst., East Carolina Univ. (1247.1) 4:30 Artificial Synchronization of Ovarian Hormones in Early Pregnancy Improves Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes Associated with Preeclampsia in the BPH/5 Mouse Model. J.L. Sones, A.K. Woods, J. Cha, S.K. Dey, R.L. Davisson. Cornell Univ. and Cincinnati Children’s Res. Fndn. (1247.4) 4:45 Association between Hormonal Contraceptive Use and Prevalence of Premenstrual Symptoms. A.C. Jarosz, J. Jamnik, A. El-Sohemy. Univ. of Toronto. (1247.5) 5:00 Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Phenotype in Hyperinsulinemic but Normoandrogenic Monosodium L-Glutamate Obese Rats. R.S. Gaspar, R.O.A. Benevides, J.L. Fontelles, C.C. Vale, L.M. França, A.M.A. Paes. Fed. Univ. of Maranhão, Brazil. (1247.6) 491. ION, WATER, AND GAS MOVEMENTS THROUGH THE BRAIN IN HEALTH AND DISEASE: PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology Section) Skeletal Muscle Physiology 3:15 TGF and BMP Signaling in Skeletal Muscle and the Regulation of Muscle Mass. P. Gregorevic. Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Inst., Melbourne, Australia. 3:45 Mechanotransduction and the Regulation of Skeletal Muscle Mass. T. Hornberger. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 4:15 Multiple Tripartite Motif E3 Ubiquitin Ligases Facilitate Skeletal Muscle Atrophy. H. Manring, E.M. Smith, E.X. Beck, K.E. McElhanon, L. Gushchina, W.A. He, D.C. Guttridge, N. Weisleder. The Ohio State Univ. (1244.9) 4:30 Postnatal Muscle Growth Is Dependent on Satellite Cell Proliferation Which Demonstrates a Specific Requirement for Dietary Protein. M.L. Fiorotto, D.A. Columbus, J. Steinhoff-Wagner, A. Suryawan, H.V. Nguyen, T.A. Davis. USDA, Baylor Col. of Med. (1244.1) 4:45 Contribution of Satellite Cells to Skeletal Muscle Proteostasis during Advanced Age and Aerobic Exercise. A.R. Konopka, S.E. Ehrlicher, K.A. Baeverstad, J. Reid, F.F. Peelor III, A.L. Confides, E.E. Dupont-Versteegden, B.F. Miller, K.L. Hamilton. Colorado State Univ. and Univ. of Kentucky Col. of Hlth. Sci. (1244.2) 5:00 Leucine Modulates mTORC1 Signaling by Acting Specifically to Alter the Phosphorylation Status of Sestrin2. S.R. Kimball, B.S. Gordon, J.E. Moyer, M.D. Dennis, L.S. Jefferson. Penn State Col. of Med. and Univ. of Central Florida. (1244.3) 493. MECHANOBIOLOGY OF FIBROSIS ACROSS ORGAN SYSTEMS Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Symposium Chaired: M.E. O’Donnell and J.J. Iliff Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Transporters/Channels/Barriers Chaired: D. Tschumperlin Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium Ion Transport 3:15 3:45 4:15 4:45 Role of Blood Brain Barrier Ion Transporters and Channels in Brain Edema Formation. M. O’Donnell. Univ. of California. Aquaporins as Gas Channels. W. Boron. Case Western Reserve Univ. The Glymphatic System. J. Iliff. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. Role of Aquaporins in Brain injury. J. Badaut. Univ. of Bordeaux. Inflammation/Immunity 3:15 3:55 4:35 Mechanobiology in Liver Fibrosis: Implications for Fibrosis Progression and Regression. R. Wells. Univ. of Pennsylvania. Targeting Cytoskeletal/Mechanical Signaling Pathways in Fibrosis. R. Neubig. Michigan State Univ. Novel Tools to Image and Target the Extracellular Matrix. T. Barker. Georgia Tech. 149 T U E PHYSIOLOGYTUESDAY 494. METABOLIC REGULATION OF CARDIAC FUNCTION IN DIABETES: EPIGENETICS AND POSTTRANSLATIONAL MECHANISMS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) 4:45 Disease. B. Smith. Univ. of Florida. Spinal Stimulation as a Rehabilitative Tool to Restore Respiratory Motor Output after Spinal injury. E. Gonzalez-Rothi. Univ. of Florida. 496. NOVEL MECHANISMS AT THE LEVEL OF THE SOLITARY TRACT NUCLEUS (NTS) Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Featured Topic Chaired: A. Wende and J. Chatham (Sponsored by: APS Central Nervous System Section) Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome 3:15 3:15 3:15 3:15 3:15 3:15 O-GlcNAcylation at the Interface of Cardiac Responses to Exercise and Nutrient Excess. S. Marsh. Washington State Univ. Glucose-Mediated Regulation of UQCRFS1 and the Cardiac Metabolome. L.J. Williams, M.K. Brahma, M.M. McCrory, A.R. Wende. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1273.10) Cardiomyocyte Glucose Handling Is Influenced by β-Adrenergic and AMPK Regulation of Glycogen and Autophagy in Metabolic Stress Settings. K.M. Mellor, U. Varma, E. Stevens, L.M.D. Delbridge. Univ. of Auckland and Univ. of Melbourne. (1273.8) CaMKIId as a Nodal Mediator of Insulin Signaling and Adrenergic Signaling in Cardiomyocytes – a Signaling Network Map Profiling by Quantitative Phospho-proteomics. S. Dewan, A. Campos, S. Wu, J. Stowe, A. Wolf, D.M. Bers, L.M. Brill, J.H. Brown, A. McCulloch. UCSD, Sanford Burnham Med. Res. Inst., La Jolla and Univ. of California, Davis. (1273.3) Anti-diabetic Effects of Class 1 Histone Deacetylase Inhibition in a Rodent Model of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. E. Johnson, S. Marsh. Washington State Univ. (1273.6) Metabolomics Meets Epigenetics: Posttranslational Remodeling of the Chromatin Structure. J. Hanover. NIH, NIDDK. 495. NEUROSTIMULATION TO RESTORE BREATHING WITH NEUROMUSCULAR DISORDERS Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) Tue. 3:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Chaired: G.S. Mitchell and K. Streeter Neurobiology Neurophysiology 3:15 3:45 4:15 150 Spinal Cord Stimulation for Restoring Mobility after Spinal Cord injury. V. Mushahwar. Univ. of Alberta. Diaphragm Pacing as a Rehabilitative Tool to Restore Breathing Capacity in Individuals with SCI. E. Fox. Univ. of Florida. Diaphragm Pacing as a Rehabilitative Tool to Restore Breathing Capacity in Individuals With Pompe Chaired: S. McDougall Neurobiology Hypertension Neurophysiology 3:15 Spontaneous Neurotransmission in the NTS Conveys Circuit State. J. Peters. Washington State Univ. 3:45 Inflammation Increases the Excitatory Synaptic Transmission in the Nucleus Tractus Solitarius of Rats Submitted to Sustained Hypoxia. L. Lima Silveira, D. Accorsi-Mendonca, L.G.H. Bonagamba, B.H. Machado. Univ. of São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto. (1232.5) 4:00 GABA Transporters within the Nucleus Tractus Solitarii Modulate GABAergic Signaling, Neuronal Activity and Cardiorespiratory Function. M.P. Matott, E.M. Hasser, D.D. Kline. Univ. of Missouri-Columbia. (1232.4) 4:15 Adult Neurogenesis in the NTS: A Role in Hypertension? Song Yao. Florey Inst., Parkville, Australia. 4:45 High Fat Diet Induced Inhibition of Sympathetic Outflow to Brown Adipose Tissue: Role of the Nucleus Tractus Solitarius. C.J. Madden, S.F. Morrison. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. (1232.2) 5:00 Dysfunction of Astrocytes in the Nucleus Tractus Solitarii Leads to Cardiorespiratory Compromise. W.T. Talman, L-H. Lin, S. Jones, D.N. Dragon, Y. Wu, G.B. Richerson. Univ. of Iowa and VA Med. Ctr. (1232.3) 497. APS BUSINESS MEETING Business Meeting Tue. 5:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6 Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 498. ASBMB PLENARY LECTURE Plenary Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D 8:00 Awardee Introduction. 8:05 498.1 Regulation of Gene Expression by Complex RNA Molecules. A.M. Pyle. Yale Univ., HHMI. 499. ASBMB PLENARY LECTURE Plenary Wed. 8:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D 8:45 Awardee Introduction. 8:50 499.1 Physical Mechanisms of Cell Organization on Micron Length Scales. M.K. Rosen. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr., HHMI. 500. REPAIR DURING DNA REPLICATION Symposium Wed. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Chaired: J.M. Berger Follow the conversation: #DNA 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 500.1 DNA Repair during DNA Replication. D. Cortez. Vanderbilt Univ. Sch. of Med. 10:15 Early Replication Stress Leads to Abnormal Mitosis and Genome Rearrangement. S. Forsburg. Univ. of So. California. (793.4) 10:30 500.2 Molecular Mechanism of DNA Interstrand Crosslink Repair. A. Smogorzewska, M. Kottemann, B. Conti, S. Thongthip, K. Rickman, F. Lach. The Rockefeller Univ. 10:55 A Nucleolar Role for the Fanconi Anemia Pathway Protein, FANCI, in rDNA Transcription. S.B. Sondalle, S. Longerich, P. Sung, S.J. Baserga. Yale Univ. (1048.1) 11:10 Multiple Invasions-Induced Chromosomal Rearrangements. A. Piazza, W-D. Heyer. Univ. of California, Davis. (576.2) 11:25 500.3 Chromatin Replication and Epigenome Maintenance. A. Groth. BRIC, Univ. of Copenhagen. 11:50 Discussion. 501. RADICALS IN CATALYSIS Symposium Wed. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C Chaired: C. Krebs 10:15 Radical SAM Enzyme-Catalyzed Formation of Thioether Crosslinks in Ribosomal-Produced Peptides: Formation of the RiPP Natural Product Thuricin CD by the Radical Sam Enzymes TrnC and TrnD. J.T. Jarrett, C.E. Holjencin. Univ. of Hawaii at Manoa. (1084.2) 10:30 501.2 Capturing a Cryptic Biosynthetic Intermediate Reveals Novel Enzyme Functions in Molybdenum Cofactor Biosynthesis. K. Yokoyama, B.M. Hover, N.K. Tonthat, M.A. Schumacher. Duke Univ. Med. Ctr. 10:55 Structure of a Key Intermediate in the Reaction Catalyzed by the Dual Specificity Methylase RlmN. E.L. Schwalm, T. Grove, A. Boal, S. Booker. Penn State and HHMI. (1085.1) 11:10 Sifting through the Haystack to Find the Needle: Spatial Identification of a Structural Conduit for Transfer of Thermal Activation Energy in the Course of C-H Cleavage in Soybean Lipoxygenase. A. Offenbacher, S. Hu, A. Nguy, A. Iavarone, J. Klinman. Univ. of California, Berkeley. (1086.1) 11:25 501.3 Structural Basis for Divergent Reaction Outcomes in Iron(II)/2OG-Dependent Oxygenases. A. Boal. Penn State 11:50 Discussion. W E D 502. PROTEIN DEGRADATION IN HEALTH AND DISEASE Symposium Wed. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A Chaired: C. Joazeiro Follow the conversation: #proteins 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 502.1 Dissection and Reconstitution of Autophagic Membrane Fusion. Q. Zhong, J. Diao, R. Liu, Y. Rong. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr. and Stanford Univ. 10:15 A High-Content RNAi Screen to Elucidate Novel Effectors of Cardiac Proteotoxicity. P.M. McLendon, G. Davis, J. Gulick, K. Shay-Winkler, J.D. Molkentin, J. Robbins. Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr. (1063.3) 10:30 502.2 Twists and Turns in Ubiquitin Conjugation Cascades. B. Schulman. St. Jude Children’s Res. Hosp. 10:55 An Inherited Developmental Disorder Reveals Functions for WHAMM and the Actin Nucleation Machinery in Early Stages of Autophagy. K. Campellone, A. Mathiowetz, A. Russo, E. Baple, A. Crosby. Univ. of Connecticut and Univ. of Exeter Med. Sch. (1064.2) 11:10 APOBEC3F-Vif Binding Interface Elucidated by Multiple Experimental Approaches. R. Harris, C. Richards, N. Shaban, B. Anderson, O. Demir, R. Amaro. Univ. of Minnesota and HHMI, Minneapolis and UCSD. (1069.1) 11:25 502.3 Ubiquitin and ISG15 Conjugation at the Ribosome. J. Huibregtse, L. Canadeo, C. Swaim, H. O’Connor. Univ. of Texas at Austin. 11:50 Discussion. Follow the conversation: #catalysis 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 501.1 Enzymes Involved in Secondary Metabolism and RNA Modification. V. Bandarian. Univ. of Utah. 151 BIOCHEMISTRYWEDNESDAY 503. BIOCHEMICALLY-INFORMED IMAGING IN DRUG DISCOVERY Symposium Wed. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Follow the conversation: #metabolism 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 503.1 Exploiting the Biology of Trehalose to Develop Novel Imaging Probes for Tuberculosis. C. Barry. NIAID, NIH. 10:15 Targeting Peptide Bound to Major Histocompatibility Complex Allows Visualization of Insulin Secreting Beta Cells In Vivo. K.R. Miller, J. Taft, A. Koide, M. Johnson, R. Tisch, S. Koide, E. Collins. Univ. of Mount Union, Univ. of Chicago and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (1098.2) 10:30 503.2 Imaging Mass Spectrometry – The Pyrazinamide Enigma. B. Prideaux, J. Sarathy, L. Via, P. Gopal, C. Barry, T. Dick, V. Dartois. New Jersey Med. Sch., Rutgers Univ., NIAID, NIH and Natl. Univ. of Singapore. 10:55 Sequestration-Mediated Downregulation of de Novo Purine Biosynthesis by AMPK. D.L. Schmitt, S. An. Univ. of Maryland Baltimore County. (850.9) 11:10 Effects of Synthetic Ligands on Heterodimer Pairs Regarding PPARα, RXRα and LXRα. E.E. Delman, S.D. Rider, H.A. Hostetler. Wright State Univ. (630.1) 11:25 503.3 Fluorogenic Probes for Detecting Mycobacterial Hydrolases. K. Beatty, S. Levine, K. Tallman. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. 11:50 Discussion. 504. LIPIDS AND ENERGY METABOLISM Symposium Wed. 9:45 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6F Chaired: K.M. Reinisch Follow the conversation: #lipids 9:45 Chair’s Introduction. 9:50 504.1 Regulation and Function of Fatty Acid Desaturases. J. Ntambi, M.S. Burhans, C-A. Guo, L.M. Bond. Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. 10:15 Multifaceted Regulation of Hepatic G0/G1 Switch Gene 2 Expression and Relevance to Lipid Metabolism. B. Heckmann, X. Zhang, A. Saarinen, J. Liu. Mayo Clin., Scottsdale. (1134.4) 10:30 504.2 A Potential Mediator of Diabetes-Associated Cardiovascular Disease: The Enzyme FMO3. S. Biddinger. Boston Children’s Hosp. 10:55 A Novel Mouse Model with Targeted and Inducible Deletion of Intestinal CTP:Phosphocholine Cytidylyltransferase α. J.P. Kennelly, J. van der Veen, R. Nelson, R. da Silva, K. Kelly, K. Leonard, S. Wan, R. Jacobs. Univ. of Alberta. (1134.6) 11:10 Evidence of a Perilipin-5 Splice Variant. B.L. Ranzau, D.M. DuBreuil, T. Hubbell, J.T. Tansey. Otterbein Univ. (1134.7) 11:25 504.3 Discovery of a Novel Class of Naturally-Occurring Lipids with Anti-diabetic and Anti-inflammatory Effects. B. Kahn, M.M. Yore, I. Syed, P.M. Moraes-Vieira, T. Zhang, M.A. Herman, E. Homan, J. Lee, S. Chen, O.D. Peroni, A. Hammarstedt, R. Patel, T.E. McGraw, U. Smith, A. Saghatelian. Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Ctr. and Harvard Med. Sch. 11:50 Discussion. 152 505. BEYOND THE BENCH: MAXIMIZING GRADUATE/ POSTDOCTORAL TRAINING FOR NONRESEARCH STEM CAREERS Symposium (Sponsored by: ASBMB Minority Affairs Committee) Wed. 12:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6A Chaired: S. Blatch 12:30 Chair’s Introduction. 12:30 505.1 To Stay (at the Bench) or Go? Determinants of Career Decision-Making in Recent PhD Graduates. K.D. Gibbs, K. Griffin. NCI, NIH and Univ. of Maryland College Park. 12:30 505.2 Finding Your Fit among Career Options with a PhD. R. McGee. Northwestern Univ. 12:30 505.3 Science Policy: Making a Big Difference in the Future of Discovery. D.R. Wilson. Indian Hlth. Svc., Rockville, MD. 12:30 Discussion. 506. BACTERIAL GLYCOSYLATION AND THE MICROBIOME Symposium Wed. 2:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1A Chaired: J. Kohler Follow the conversation: #glyco 2:15 Chair’s Introduction. 2:20 506.1 Human Gut Bacteroidetes. H. Gilbert. Newcastle Univ., U.K. 2:45 Lectin Nucleotide Phosphohydrolases May Function as Co-receptors or Modulators of Several ChitinBased Oligosaccharide Signaling Events in Plants. M.E. Etzler, N. Roberts, G. Kalsi. Univ. of California, Davis, AgRes. Grasslands Res. Ctr., New Zealand and ITC Ltd., Bengaluru, India. (847.2) 3:00 506.3 Proteins and Carbs – The Balanced Diet of a Complex and Unusual Enzyme Family. A. Boraston, I. Noach, E. Ficko-Blean, C. Stuart, D. Brochu, M. Gilbert. Univ. of Victoria, Canada and Natl. Res. Council Canada, Ottawa. 3:25 Bacterial Glycosidases Acting on Red Blood Cells. Y. Bourne, G. Ponchel, V. Roig-Zamboni, E.P. Bennett, B. Henrissat, H. Clausen, G. Sulzenbacher. CNRS, AixMarseille Univ. and Copenhagen Ctr. for Glycomics. (843.5) 3:40 Bacterial Cell Wall Remodeling to Study the Production of Immunoactivating Fragments. H. Liang, K.E. DeMeester, C-W. Hou, C.L. Grimes. Univ. of Delaware. (1095.3) 3:55 506.5 Interactions between Campylobacter jejuni and AB5 Toxins in the Gut. C.M. Szymanski, R.T. Patry, M. Stahl, J.C. Sacher, B.A. Vallance. Complex Carbohydrate Res. Ctr., Athens, GA, BC Children’s Hosp., Univ. of British Columbia and Univ. of Alberta. 4:20 Discussion. WEDNESDAYBIOCHEMISTRY 507. NON-CODING RNA AND GENE REGULATION Symposium Wed. 2:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 1B Chaired: J.Q. Svejstrup Follow the conversation: #chromatin 2:15 Chair’s Introduction. 2:20 507.1 Genome Regulation by Long Noncoding RNAs. H.Y. Chang. Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med. 2:45 Transfer RNA Fragments: A Novel Class of Non-micro Short RNAs That Uses Ago1, 3 and 4 to Repress Specific Target RNAs through 5’ Seed Sequences. A. Dutta, P. Kumar, M. Kiran, C. Kuscu. Univ. of Virginia. (1054.5) 3:00 507.2 The Primary Target of Let-7 MicroRNA. A. Pasquinelli. UCSD. 3:25 A Specialized Mechanism of MicroRNAMediated Translation in Quiescence. S. Vasudevan, S.I.A. Bukhari, S.S. Truesdell, S. Lee, S. Kollu, A. Classon, M. Boukhali, E. Jain, A. Yanagiya, R. Sadyrev, W. Haas. MGHHarvard Med. Sch. and McGill Univ. (1054.6) 3:40 NURF Localizes in Gene Bodies to Regulate mRNA Processing. J. Landry, A. Alhazmi, M. Mack, A. Petencin, H. Nelson, J. Hiegel, V. Koparde, N. Scarsdale, C. Lyons, M. Dozmorov. Virginia Commonwealth Univ. (1053.1) 3:55 507.3 Enhancer Transcription and Enhancer Function. C. Glass, D. Gosselin, V. Link, C.E. Romanoski, T. Troutman, M. Lam, D. Eichenfeld. UCSD. 4:20 Discussion. 508. CHEMISTRY, BIOLOGY, AND SUSTAINABILITY Symposium 509. MOLECULAR CROSSTALKS OF MULTIPLE CONSORTIA Symposium Wed. 2:15 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6D Chaired: O. Lichtarge Follow the conversation: #proteomics 2:15 Chair’s Introduction. 2:20 509.1 Multi-omics of the Soil Microbiome. J.K. Jansson. Pacific Northwest Natl. Lab., Richland, WA. 2:45 Syntrophic Metabolism of Vitamins and Amino Acids in Gut Microbial Community as Revealed by In Silico Genomic Analyses. M.S. Khoroshkin, D. Rodionov. IITP, Russian Acad. of Sci., Moscow and Sanford Burnham Prebys Med. Discovery Inst., San Diego. (819.5) 3:00 509.2 Metabolic Exchange in Microbial Communities. A. Osterman. Sanford Burnham Prebys Med. Discovery Inst., La Jolla. 3:25 Evolutionary and Comparative Genome Analysis of Phage NAD Metabolic Genes. L. Sorci, M.D. Kazanov, S. Gerdes. Marche Polytech Univ., Italy, Russian Acad. of Sci., Moscow and Argonne Natl. Lab., IL. (819.15) 3:40 Integrating Reductive and Synthetic Approaches in Biology Using Man-Made Cell-Like Compartments. W. Aoki, S. Komura, E. Tamiya, M. Ueda. Kyoto Univ. and Osaka Univ. (1074.1) 3:55 509.3 How Antibiotics Affect the Human Gut Microbiome: Lessons from the Extreme. J. Xavier. Mem. Sloan-Kettering Cancer Ctr. 4:20 Discussion. 510. TUMOR SUPPRESSORS/TUMOR DRIVERS Wed. 2:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6C Symposium Chaired: J. Jez Wed. 2:15 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 6E Follow the conversation: #chembio 2:15 Chair’s Introduction. 2:20 508.1 The Future of Biobased Chemicals. B. Shanks. Iowa State Univ. 2:45 A Novel Thermotolerant β-Glucosidase from Aspergillus nidulans Has Activity across a Broad pH Profile and a Likely Bacterial Origin. R. Auta, I. Radecka, P. Hooley. Univ. of Wolverhampton, U.K. and Kaduna State Univ., Nigeria. (1070.1) 3:00 508.2 Engineering Microbial Fatty Acid Biosynthesis as an Industrial Biotechnology Platform. A. Schirmer. REG Life Sci., South San Francisco. 3:25 Optimization and Lipid Quantitation of Potential Algal Biofuels Feedstocks. S.J. Brad, B.E. Umbach, E.D. Gehlhausen, C.R. Sweet. U.S. Naval Acad., Annapolis. (838.5) 3:40 Comparison of Stability and Kinetic Properties of DszB from N. asteroides A3H1 and R. erythropolis IGTS8. A. Hutchinson-Lundy, A. Crithary, J.M. Schmitz, L. Watkins. James Madison Univ. (1087.2) 3:55 508.3 Expanding the Boundaries of Biocatalysis. H. Zhao. Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. 4:20 Discussion. Chaired: S. Malek Follow the conversation: #cellsignal 2:15 Chair’s Introduction. 2:20 510.1 Reversing the Paradigm: Protein Kinase C as a Tumor Suppressor. A. Newton. UCSD. 2:45 Ceramide Is a Key Factor That Regulates the Crosstalk between TGF-β and Sonic Hedgehog Signaling at the Basal Cilia to Control Cell Migration and Tumor Metastasis. S. Gencer, N. Oleinik, M. Dany, B. Ogretmen. Med. Univ. of South Carolina and Uskudar Univ. and Abdullah Gul Univ., Turkey. (1108.2) 3:00 510.2 DNAJB1-PKRACA – A Novel PKA Fusion Protein That Drives Fibrolamellar Hepatocellular Carcinoma. S. Simon. The Rockefeller Univ. 3:25 HER2+ Breast Cancer Metastasis Mediated by E2F2 Copy Number Changes. E. Andrechek. Michigan State Univ. (1108.3) 3:40 Exosomes Secreted by Inflammatory Cytokine Stimulated Glioma Cells Carry a Repertoire of Proteins Which Influence Progression of Glioblastoma Multiforme. R.A. Kore, E.C. Abraham, R.J. Griffin. Univ. of Arkansas for Med. Sci. (1108.16) 3:55 510.3 Dysfunctional PKA Drives Diverse Disease Phenotypes. S.S. Taylor, J. del Rio, J. Bruystens, G. Veglia, E. Stefan, R. Ilouz, P. Zhang. UCSD, Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis and Univ. of Innsbruck, Austria. 4:20 Discussion. 153 W E D NUTRITION/PATHOLOGYWEDNESDAY Nutrition 511. ASN SPONSORED SATELLITE 4TH GLOBAL SUMMIT ON THE HEALTH EFFECTS OF YOGURT ASN Satellite (Organized and Sponsored by: Danone Institute International and the American Society for Nutrition) Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 33ABC For more information on ASN Sponsored Satellite Programs, please visit http://scientificsessions.nutrition.org/ satellitesessions/. 512. NUTRITION AND PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY: PROGRESS, OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES 8:35 Panel: Cross-sector Solutions to Obesity in Communities, Health Care and Evalutation. P. Schwartz. Kaiser Permanente. 8:40 Panel: Cross-sector Solutions to Obesity in Communities, Health Care and Evalutation. N. Pronk. HealthPartners, Inc. 8:45 Functional Roles for Public-private Partnerships to Support Food and Nutrition Research. C. Woteki. USDA, Washington DC. 9:00 Functional Roles for Public-private Partnerships to Support Food and Nutrition Research. P. Stover. Cornell Univ. 9:15 Principles for Building Public-private Partnerships. S. Rowe. SR Strategy. 513. PROMISE OF METABOLOMICS FOR ADVANCING NUTRITION RESEARCH Symposium Symposium Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 31ABC Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20D Chaired: S. Subramaniam Chaired: A.L. Yaktine Cochaired: P. Maruvada Global and Community Nutrition 8:00 8:15 Food and Nutrition Board Update. C. Garza. Boston Col. FNB’s Roundtable on Obesity Solutions and Innovation Collaboratives. W. Purcell. Jones Hawkins Farmer, PLC. 8:30 Panel: Cross-sector Solutions to Obesity in Communities, Health Care and Evalutation. W. Dietz. George Washington Univ. Cellular and Molecular Nutrition 8:00 Dynamic Diet-Induced Changes in Plasma Metabolomic and Lipidomic Profiles and the Potential for Estimating Macronutrient Intake. C. Burant. Univ. of Michigan. Expanding Metabolomics to Exposome Analysis and Comprehensive Food Assessments. T. Cajka. Univ. of California, Davis. The Metabotype of the Bloodtype, and Implications in Health and Nutritional Research. S. Sumner. RTI Intl. Integrated Omics: Insights into Human Pathologies. S. Subramaniam. UCSD. 8:20 8:40 9:00 Pathology 514. WORKSHOP: LONG NON-CODING RNA 8:30 9:15 10:00 10:45 154 515. BIOMARKERS AND TARGETED THERAPY Workshop Minisymposium Wed. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 2 Wed. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 3 Chaired: A. Dutta Chaired: G. Vecchio Cochaired: P. Iannaccone Cochaired: D. Bell Gene Expression Cancer Biology Enhancers Arising: eRNAs and lncRNAs. M. Rosenfeld. Howard Hughes Med. Inst. Long Noncoding RNAs in Human Diseases. H. Chang. Howard Hughes Med. Inst. Long Noncoding RNAs in Regulation of Cell Proliferation and Differentiation. A. Dutta. Univ. of Virginia Hlth. Sci. Ctr. Clinical and Mechanistic Exploration of Long Noncoding RNA in Prostate Cancer. R. Malik. Univ. of Michigan Sch. of Med. Neoplasia 8:30 Introductory Remarks. 8:35 515.1 Influence of PI3K and MAPK Pathway Mutations on Response to Mono and Dual Treatment with Targeted Kinase Inhibitors. R.S. McNeill, D.A. Canoutas, R.E. Bash, R.S. Schmid, B.H. Constance, G.L. Johnson, C.R. Miller. Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. WEDNESDAYPATHOLOGY 8:50 515.2 EXPEL: A Novel Non-destructive Method for Mining Soluble Tumor Biomarkers. A. Turtoi, B. Costanza, O. Peulen, A. Bellahcène, E. De Pauw, O. Detry, P. Delvenne, V. Castronovo. Univ. of Liege and Univ. Hosp. Liege, Belgium. 9:05 515.3 Optimization of a Series of Novel Chalcone Derivatives for Anti-cancer Activity. T.L. Whited, C.R.T. Stang, B.R. Adams, R.S. Khupse, R.W. Dudley, R.A. Schneider. Univ. of Findlay, Col. of Pharm. 9:20 515.4 Single-Cell Biomarker Detection Identifies Heterogeneity within Cancer Populations. D. Weldon, Y. Williams, A. Patel. EMD Millipore, CA. 9:35 515.5 Targeting CSE1L in Colorectal Cancer. J. Pimiento, K.G. Neill, E. Henderson-Jackson, S. Eschrich, D-T. Chen, K. Husain, D. Shibata, D. Coppola, M. Malafa. Moffitt Cancer Ctr., Tampa. 9:50 515.6 Whole Transcriptome Analysis of Osteosarcoma. S. Koks, E. Reimann, K. Maasalu, G. Koks, D.H. Xuan, E. Prans, A. Martson. Univ. of Tartu, Estonia. 10:05 515.7 Downregulation of Alpha-L-Fucosidase Expression Is Related to Dedifferentiation and Worse Prognosis in Thyroid and Breast Cancer. G. Vecchio, A. Parascandolo, C. Allocca, C. Ugolini, F. Basolo, S. Bonin, G. Stanta, M.D. Castellone, M. Santoro, N. Tsuchida. Univ. of Naples Federico II, ISO, Genova, Azienda Univ. Hosp. Pisana, State Univ. of Trieste, IEOS, CNR, Naples and Tokyo Med. Dent. Univ. 10:20 515.8 Identification of Lipocalin 2 in Human Hepatoblastoma. D.E. Bell, J. Tao, S. Singh, M. Chikina, S. Ranganathan, S.P. Monga. Children’s Hosp. of Pittsburgh and Univ. of Pittsburgh. 10:35 515.9 Exploring Molecular and Morphological Relationships between Obesity and CtBP in Breast Cancer. S.S. Park, D.I. Yi, D. Li, L. Crawford, G. Liang, M. Kabbout, R. Hernandez, T. Yan, S. Ambs, J.S. Byun, K. Gardner. NCI and NIMHD, NIH. 516. COPING WITH HEPATIC INJURY Minisymposium Wed. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 4 Chaired: S.P. Monga - Excellence in Cardiovascular Research Cochaired: M.L. Tomasi Liver Pathobiology Cell and Tissue Injury 8:30 516.1 The Ghrelin/Leptin Imbalance during Cholestasis Is Driven by Peripheral S1P2R-Dependent Bile Acid Signaling. S. DeMorrow, J. Zigman, M. McMillin. Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Central Texas Veterans Healthcare Syst., Temple and Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr. 8:45 516.2 Regulation of p65-β-Catenin Complex and Its Targets in Liver Injury and Regeneration. K. Nejak-Bowen, P.K. Cornuet, S.P. Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 9:00 516.3 Thrombospondin-1 Promotes Hepatic Injury and Extrahepatic Complications during Acute Liver Failure in Mice. M. McMillin, S. Andry, G. Frampton, S. Grant, G. Alpini, S. DeMorrow. Texas A&M Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Central Texas Veterans Hlth. Care Syst. and Baylor Scott & White Hlth., Temple, TX. 9:15 516.4 Paradoxical Role of Yes-Associated Protein in Liver Injury and Regeneration following Acetaminophen Overdose. S. Poudel, M.W. Manley, B. Bhushan, M.R. McGill, H. Jaeschke, U. Apte. Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr. 9:30 516.5 Lack of β-Catenin in Hepatocytes Impairs Proliferation and Leads to Increased Morbidity in Response to a Choline-Deficient Ethionine-Supplemented Diet. J.O. Russell, H. Okabe, S. Singh, M. Poddar, S.P. Monga. Univ. of Pittsburgh. 9:45 516.6 Hippo/YAP Signaling Induced by Endotoxin Promotes Kupffer Cell Activation and Hepatic Inflammation in Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. K. Song, H. Kwon, C. Han, J. Zhang, L. Yao, N. Ungerleider, T. Wu. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. 10:00 516.7 Maternal Obesity Programs Offspring’s Predisposition to Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease and Steatohepatitis. U.D. Wankhade, S.V. Chintapalli, Y. Zhong, P. Kang, K. Shankar. Univ. of Arkansas Med. Sci. 10:15 516.8 Role of TLR7 in Development of Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease: A New Target for Prevention of Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease. H. Matsumoto, C. Yang, K. Sugimoto. Osaka Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med. 10:30 516.9 Biomarkers of Neutrophil-Mediated Liver Injury in Patients with Alcoholic Liver Disease. B. Woolbright, W. Dunn, E. Malle, H. Jaeschke. Kansas Univ. Med. Ctr. and Med. Univ. of Graz, Austria. 10:45 516.10 Role of Sumoylation in Aldehyde Dehydrogenase 2 Function during Alcoholic Liver Disease. C. Cossu, K. Ramani, Y. Spissu, A. Floris, M.L. Tomasi. CedarsSinai Med. Ctr., Univ. of Sassari and Univ. of Cagliari, Italy. 11:00 516.11Withdrawn. 11:15 516.12 Regulation of Mesenchymal Phenotypes by MicroRNA-21 during Alcohol-Induced Liver Injury. F. Meng, H. Francis, K. McDaniel, G. Alpini. Baylor Scott & White Healthcare, Texas A&M Hlth. Sci. Ctr. Col. of Med. and Central Texas Veteran Healthcare Syst., Temple. 517. PATHOBIOLOGY OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES Minisymposium Wed. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Inflammation/Immunity Immunopathology 8:30 517.1 Giardia muris Protection against Citrobacter rodentium Colitis Is Associated with Inflammasome Activation and Increased Release of Antimicrobial Peptides in the Gut. A. Manko, J-P. Motta, J.A. Cotton, A. Oyeyemi, B.A. Vallance, J.L. Wallace, A.G. Buret. Univ. of Calgary and Univ. of British Columbia, Canada. 8:45 517.2 Cathelicidin Enhances the LPS-Inducing Synthesis of Toll-Like Receptors 4 in the Colonic Epithelium. M. Marin, R. Holani, C. Shah, Q. Haji, A. Odeón, E. Cobo. CONICET, Buenos Aires and INTA, Balcarce, Argentina and Cumming Med. Sch., Univ. of Calgary, Canada. 9:00 517.3 Androstenetriol Enhances Lung Macrophage Host Defense against Bacterial Pneumonia in Mice. L. Kobzik, Z. Yang, P. Lu, F. Mo, R. Loria. Harvard Univ., Brigham and Women’s Hosp. and Virginia Commonwealth Univ. 9:15 517.4 Synonymous Codon Changes in Measles (HMV) and Canine Distemper (CDV) Viral Nucleic Acid Sequences Result in Gene-Specific Changes in Levels of Viral Protein Expression. E.W. Uhl, M.L. Osborn, F.J. Michel, R.J. Hogan. Univ. of Georgia. 155 W E D PATHOLOGY/PHARMACOLOGYWEDNESDAY 518. NEUROPATHOLOGY: MODELS AND MECHANISMS OF DISEASE Minisymposium Wed. 10:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 5A Chaired: C. Sigurdson Cochaired: C. Kolarcik Neurobiology Neuropathology 10:00 518.1 Role of Post-translational Modifications In Prion Strain Diversity. P. Aguilar-Calvo, C. Bett, H. Eraña, J. Castilla, P. Nilsson, C. Sigurdson. UCSD, CIC bioGUNE, Spain and Linköping Univ., Sweden. 10:15 518.2 The Biophysical Determinants of Prion Neuroinvasion. C. Sigurdson, J. Lawrence, C. Bett, T. Kurt, C. Wu, W. Surewicz, K.P.R. Nilsson. UCSD, Case Western Reserve Univ. and Linköping Univ., Sweden. 10:30 518.3 Caveolin-1 Regulation of DISC1 as a Potential Therapeutic Target for Schizophrenia. A. Kassan, J. Egawa, Z. Zhang, Y. Lajevardi, K. Kim, Q.M. Nguyen, E.S. Posadas, A. Sawada, D.V. Jeste, D.M. Roth, P.M. Patel, H.H. Patel, B.P. Head. UCSD. 10:45 518.4 Role of Hippocampal Neurogenesis in Drug Addiction. R.J. Morales Silva, M.H. Galinato, C. Mandyam. Univ. of Puerto Rico, Ponce and The Scripps Res. Inst. 11:00 518.5 Brainstem Pathology Induces Peripheral Changes Correlating with Hippocampal Markers of Alzheimer’s Disease in Animal Model. P. Filipcik, M. Cente, S. Zorad, M. Fecik, M. Novak. Inst. of Neuroimmunol., Axon Neurosci. SE and Inst. of Exptl.l Endocrinol., Bratislava, Slovakia. 11:15 518.6 Changes in Plasma and Urine Docosahexaenoic Acid Levels in Alzheimer’s Disease. A.N. Fonteh, K. Castor, E. Chung, S. Applegate, M. Harrington. Huntington Med. Res. Insts., Pasadena. 11:30 518.7 Effect of Stabilizing Alpha SynucleinMembrane Interactions on the Protein’s Aggregation and Neurotoxicity. D. Ysselstein, V. Mishra, G. McCabe, J-C. Rochet. Purdue Univ. Pharmacology 519. RAY FULLER LECTURE IN THE NEUROSCIENCES: SEX BIASED STRESS SIGNALING Lecture Wed. 8:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16A Neuropharmacology 11:20 11:55 521. KEEP CALM AND TARGET PEPTIDES: MODULATION OF STRESS-RELATED BEHAVIORS BY NEUROPEPTIDE SYSTEMS Symposium Neurobiology (Sponsored by: The Division for Behavioral Pharmacology) The Ray Fuller Lecture in the Neurosciences was established to honor the achievements of Ray W. Fuller, PhD in applying an improved understanding of the central nervous system to discover better treatments for the mentally ill. Dr. Fuller was one of the triad that discovered fluoxetine (Prozac), leading to an entire new approach to the therapy of depression. (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Neuropharmacology, Molecular Pharmacology, and Drug Discovery and Development) Wed. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Cochaired: S. Clark and V. Sabino 8:30Introduction. 8:35 Sex Biased Stress Signaling. R.J. Valentino. Children’s Hosp. of Philadelphia, Univ. of Pennsylvania. 520. RAY FULLER SYMPOSIUM: SEX DIFFERENCES IN BIOLOGY: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR DRUG DEVELOPMENT Symposium Wed. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16A Chaired: R.J. Valentino 9:30Introduction. R.J. Valentino. Children’s Hosp. of Philadelphia, Univ. of Pennsylvania. 9:35 Estrogens Enhance Female Vulnerability to Drug Addiction. P. Mermelstein. Univ. of Minnesota. 10:10 Social Defeat Stress in Males and Female: Role of Kappa Opioid Receptors. B. Trainor. Univ. of California, Davis. 10:45 Sex Differences in Ketamine’s Antidepressant-Like Effects. M. Kabbaj. Florida State Univ. 156 Sex Differences in the Brain are Established Early and Enduringly. M. McCarthy. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. Wrap up. Behavioral Pharmacology Neurobiology 9:30 9:35 Opening Remarks. Genetic Dissection of the CRF-System in the Extended Amygdala. A. Chen. Max Plank Inst. of Psychiat. 10:00 Role of Extended Amygdala PACAP in the Behavioral Response to Acute and Chronic Stress. V. Sabino. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med. 10:25 Neuropeptide Y in the Basolateral Amygdala: Role in Stress Resilience. J. Urban. Franklin Univ. of Med. and Sci. 10:50 Amygdaloid Corticotropin Releasing Factor as the Key Mediator of Chronic Visceral Pain in Females with a History of Early Life Stress. D.K. Prusator, B. Greenwood-Van Meerveld. Univ. of Oklahoma Hlth. Sci. Ctr. (720.7) 11:05 ProSAAS-Derived Peptides: Major Brain Neuropeptides Implicated in the Regulation of Stress and RewardRelated Behaviors. L. Devi. Mount Sinai Univ. WEDNESDAYPHARMACOLOGY 11:30 Development of Neuropeptide S Receptor Targeted Compounds as Potential Therapies for AnxietyRelated Disorders. S. Clark. Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY. 11:55 Closing Remarks. 522. CANCER STEM CELLS AS PHARMACOLOGICAL TARGETS Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Cancer Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Translational and Clinical Pharmacology, and Drug Discovery and Development ) Wed. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Cochaired: J.S. Gutkind and T. Reya Cancer Pharmacology Cancer Biology Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) Targeting the Cancer Cell Cycle: The Development of Palbociclib in Breast Cancer. R. Abraham. Pfizer Inc. 10:00 Drug Treatment or Cellular Stress Drives Tumor Reprogramming, Progression and Drug Resistance. D. Cheresh. UCSD. 10:30 Heterotrimeric G-Protein α Subunit Chaperone Ric-8A as a Novel Target for Cancer Therapeutics. B. Patel. Univ. of Rochester Med. Ctr. 10:45mTOR Co-targeting Strategies Against Oral Malignancies andTheir Cancer Initiating Cells. Z. Wang. UCSD 11:00 Lung Stem Cell Approaches to Understanding Differentiation, Disease and Therapy. C. Kim. Harvard Stem Cell Inst. 11:30 Stem Cell Properties Using Patient-Derived Circulating Tumor Cells. M. Yu. Univ. of So. California 10:05 Mineralocorticoid Receptor Signaling and Cardiovascular Stiffness in Insulin Resistance. J.D. Sowers. Univ. of Missouri Sch. of Med. 10:30 Self-Renewal of Cardiomyocyte: Metabolic Signals as Regulators of Protein Turnover. H. Taegtmeyer. The Univ. of Texas Health Sciences Ctr. 10:55 Therapeutic Targeting of Autophagy in the Management of Cardiometabolic Diseases. Y. Zhang. Xijing Hosp., Fourth Military Med. Univ. 11:20 Metabolic Syndrome Perivascular Adipose Tissue Impairment of Aortic Reactivity Post Stroke, Improved by NOX2 Inhibition. E. DeVallance, K. Branyan, K. Lemaster, R. Skinner, S. Brooks, J. Frisbee, P. Chantler. West Virginia Univ. (1269.5) 11:35 Mitochondrial Function of Cerebral Vasculature in Insulin Resistant Zucker Obese Rats. I. Merdzo, I. Rutkai, T. Tokes, V.N.L.R. Sure, P.V.G. Katakam, D.W. Busija. Tulane Univ. Sch. of Med. (717.6) 11:50Summary. 524. INTRACELLULAR GPCR AND LIPID SIGNALING Symposium 9:30 523. NOVEL TARGETS FOR TREATMENT OF CARDIOMETABOLIC DISEASES Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Cardiovascular Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Translational and Clinical Pharmacology, and Drug Discovery and Development ) (Sponsored by: The Division for Molecular Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Cardiovascular Pharmacology, Neuropharmacology, and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology ) Wed. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15B Cochaired: A. Marchese and A. Smrcka Molecular Pharmacology Neurobiology 9:30 GPCR Promoted Akt Signaling from Early Endosomes. A. Marchese. Loyola Univ. Chicago. 10:05 Ubiquitin Regulates GPCR-Induced p38 MAPK Signaling from Endosomes. J. Trejo. UCSD. 10:35 Lipid Signaling from the Golgi. A. Smrcka. Univ. of Rochester Med. Ctr. 11:05 Phosphatidylinositol 4-Phosphate: A Lipid’s Journey to Fame. T. Balla. NICHD, NIH. 11:35 Structural and Functional Characterization of the Metastatic RhoGEF P-Rex1 and Its Regulation by PtdIns(3,4,5)P3: Towards Inhibitory Small Molecule Development. J.N. Cash, E.M. Davis, J.J.G. Tesmer. Univ. of Michigan. (1190.5) 11:48 Spatial Encoding of Cyclic AMP Signaling Specificity by GPCR Endocytosis. N. Tsvetanova, M. von Zastrow. UCSF. (1266.1) Wed. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 15A Cochaired: J. Ren and S. Nair Cardiovascular Pharmacology Metabolism and Metabolic Disease 9:30Introduction. J. Ren. Univ. of Wyoming. 9:40 Interplay of Oxidative Stress, Inflammation, and Cell Death, in Diabetic Cardiomyopathy. P. Pacher. NIAAA, NIH. 157 W E D PHARMACOLOGYWEDNESDAY 525. DRUG TRANSPORTER PROTEIN QUANTIFICATION BY LC-MS/MS FOR IN VITRO TO IN VIVO EXTRAPOLATION AND PREDICTION OF INTERINDIVIDUAL VARIABILITY OF TRANSPORTER MEDIATED DRUG DISPOSITION Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Translational and Clinical Pharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Cardiovascular Pharmacology and Drug Metabolism ) Wed. 9:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16B Cochaired: B. Prasad and Y. Lai Translational and Clinical Pharmacology Transporters/Channels/Barriers 9:30 Blood-Brain Barrier Pharmacoproteomics: Reconstruction of In Vivo Brain Drug Distribution in Mouse, Monkey and Diseased Models. T. Terasaki. Tohoku Univ. 10:03 Quantitative Proteomics for IVIVE of Transporter Mediated Drug Clearance. Y. Lai. BristolMyers Squibb. 10:36 No Escape from Models in Translating LCMS-Derived Abundance Values!. A. Rostami. Univ. of Manchester. 11:09 Effect of Ontogeny and Pharmacogenomics on Transporter Mediated Interindividual Variability in Drug Disposition. B. Prasad. Univ. of Washington. 11:42 Chronic Paroxetine Treatment in Mice Leads to Adiposity and Glucose Intolerance. W. Zha, J. Wang. Univ. of Washington. (717.4) 526. NEW TWISTS ON NEUROTRANSMITTER TRANSPORT: UNRAVELING NOVEL THERAPEUTIC TARGETS FOR ADDICTION AND PSYCHIATRIC DISORDERS Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Neuropharmacology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology and Behavioral Pharmacology ) 3:33 Organic Cation Transporter 3: An Unsuspected Player in the Actions of Amphetamine and a New Target for Psychotherapeutic Drug Development. L.C. Daws. Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr. at San Antonio. 4:01 Transporters as Clinical Targets of Drugs: Amphetamines, New Psychoactive Substances and the Monoamine Transporter Cycle. H.H. Sitte. Med. Univ. Vienne, France. 4:29 DAT and EAAT3 Trafficking Regulation by Amphetamine: Integration of Dopaminergic and Glutamatergic Signaling. S.M. Underhill. NIMH, NIH. 4:57 Sick, Stressed, Depressed, and Addicted: Immune Modulation of Cocaine Targets. N.L. Baganz. Vanderbilt Univ. 5:25 Closing Remarks. 527. MODULATION OF BSEP AND MDR3 IN DRUGINDUCED LIVER INJURY Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Toxicology) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Drug Metabolism, Drug Discovery and Development, and Molecular Pharmacology ) Wed. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17A Cochaired: K. He and D. Rodrigues Toxicology 3:00Introduction. D. Rodrigues. Pfizer Co. 3:05 Integration of BSEP Inhibition Data in DILIsym®: Perspectives from System. P. Watkins. The Hamner Insts. for Hlh. Scis. 3:35 BSEP Inhibition in Drug Discovery Screening. R. Morgan. Amgen, Inc. 4:05 Novel BSEP and MDR3 Assays Using Primary Hepatocytes for Screening DILI Drugs and Species Differences. K. He. Biotranex LLC. 4:35 The Role of Bile Salt Export Pump Gene Repression in Drug-Induced Cholestatic Liver Toxicity. B. Garzel. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Pharmacy. 5:00 BSEP and MDR3 Inhibition by DILI Drugs and the Implications with Systems Biology Analysis. J. Zhang. Natl. Ctr. for Toxicol. Res. Wed. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16A Cochaired: L.C. Daws and H.H. Sitte Neuropharmacology Neurobiology Transporters/Channels/Barriers 3:00Introduction. 3:05 Integrating Organic Cation Transporter 3 into Models of Dopamine Clearance and Cocaine Addiction. P.J. Gasser. Marquette Univ. 158 Join Us Next Year! Experimental Biology 2017 April 22–26 Chicago, IL www.experimentalbiology.org WEDNESDAYPHARMACOLOGY/PHYSIOLOGY 528. THE BIOLOGY AND TRANSLATIONAL POTENTIAL OF HYDROGEN SULFIDE: ONE PERSON’S TRASH IS ANOTHER PERSON’S TREASURE 529. TRANSLATING MICRORNA CANCER BIOLOGY TO THERAPY Symposium (Sponsored by: The Division for Cancer Pharmacology) Symposium (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Drug Discovery and Development and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology ) (Sponsored by: The Division for Drug Discovery and Development) (Cosponsored by: The Divisions for Molecular Pharmacology, Cancer Pharmacology, and Translational and Clinical Pharmacology ) Wed. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 17B Wed. 3:00 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 16B Cancer Pharmacology Cochaired: J.L. Wallace and A. Papapetropoulos Cancer Biology Cochaired: A. Yu and A.G. Bader Drug Discovery and Development 3:00 Cancer Biology 3:35 3:00 H2S Actions and Interactions with NO in the Cardiovascular System. A. Papapetropoulos. Univ. of Athens. 3:25 Diet, H2S and Longevity. J.R. Mitchell. Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth. 3:50 Modulation of H2S as an Anti-cancer Strategy. C. Szabo. The Univ. of Texas Med. Branch at Galveston. 4:15 H2S and Glucose Metabolism. L. Wu. Lakehead Univ. 4:40 Development of H2S-Releasing, GI-Safe Antiinflammatory Drugs. J.L. Wallace. Univ. of Calgary, Canada. 5:05 Transdermal Detection of Low Concentrations of Hydrogen Sulfide. L. Rios, D. Friedrichsen, C. Mowry, G. Silaski, R. Shekarriz, N.L. Kanagy. Univ. of New Mexico, Exhalix and Sandia Natl. Labs., Albuquerque. (1271.3) 5:18 Sodium Hydrosulfide Alleviates Cecal Ligation and Puncture-Induced Sepsis and Elevates the Regional Blood Flow in Septic Shock. A. Ahmad, C. Szabo. Univ. of Texas Med. Branch and Shriners Hosp. for Children. (1271.7) 4:10 4:45 5:15 MicroRNA Replacement Therapy. A.G. Bader. Mirna Therapeutics, Inc. Modulating MicroRNAs to Improve Cancer Therapy. J.J. Welsh. Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Ctr. A Combinatorial MicroRNA Therapeutics Approach to Suppressing Cancer Growth. A. Kasinski. Purdue Univ. Recombinant MicroRNAs as Novel Cancer Therapeutics. A. Yu. Univ. of California Davis Sch. of Med. miR-186 Suppresses Cell Proliferation and AnchorageIndependence in a Metastatic Prostate Cancer Cell Line. D.Z. Jones, M.L. Schmidt, K.R. Hobbing, G. Clark, L.R. Kidd. Univ. of Louisville. (936.6) 530. CLOSING RECEPTION Special Event Wed. 6:00 pm—San Diego Marriott Marquis & Marina Hotel, South Tower Poolside We invite ASPET members and pharmacology attendees to join us for a closing reception. Physiology 531. APS PRESIDENT’S SYMPOSIUM SERIES PHYSIOLOGICAL MECHANISMS RESPONSIVE TO BEHAVIORAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHALLENGES Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Central Nervous System Section) NOBEL PRIZE AWARD LECTURE Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Lecture Chaired: T. Moreira Wed. 4:45 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Ballroom 20A Neurobiology Cancer Biology 532. BREATHING DISTURBANCES IN NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS Molecules against Cancer or for Very Long-Term Memory. R. Tsien. HHMI, UCSD. Neurophysiology 8:00 8:30 Breathing Challenges in Rett Syndrome: Lessons Learned from Humans and Animal Models. J. Ramirez. Seattle Children’s Res. Inst. Breathing Disturbances in Neurodegenerative Disorders. M. Dutschmann. Florey Inst., Parkville, Australia. 159 W E D PHYSIOLOGYWEDNESDAY 9:00 Failure in Central Respiratory 5HT-Dependent Chemoreception in a Genetic Model of Epilepsy. L.T. Totola, A.C. Takakura, J.A. de Oliveira, N. Garcia-Cairasco, T.S. Moreira. Univ. of São Paulo, São Paulo and Ribeirão Preto. (1285.1) 9:15 Genome-Wide Assessment of the Pompe (Gaa-/-) Mouse Cervical Spinal Cord Confirms Widespread Neuropathology. S. Turner, A. Hoyt, D. Falk, B. Byrne, D. Fuller. Univ. of Florida. (1285.2) 9:30 Characterization of Respiratory Activity in Spontaneously Breathing Urethane-Anesthetized 6-OHDA SNLesioned Parkinson’s Disease Rat Model. I.C. Solomon, W.F. Collins. Stony Brook Univ. (1285.3) 9:45 Cervical Spinal Contusion Alters NKCC1 and KCC2 Expression in Phrenic Motor Neurons. L.L. Allen, Y.B. Seven, T. Baker, G.S. Mitchell. Univ. of Florida and Univ. of Wisconsin-Madison. (1285.4) 8:45 533. CARDIAC MITOCHONDRIA: MORE THAN AN ATP POWER PLANT 9:30 Symposium (Sponsored by: Pan-American Societies) Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 9:00 9:15 535. MECHANISMS UNDERLYING HOST-MICROBIAL INTERACTIONS IN PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF DISEASES Chaired: V.R. Antunes and M.C. Villa-Abrille 8:00 8:30 9:00 9:30 Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: Z. Schlader and D. Gagnon Exercise, Aging, and Disease Environmental Stress 8:00 8:30 Symposium Mitochondria: Getting to the Heart of the Matter. R. Gottlieb. Cedars-Sinai Heart Inst. Targeting Mitochondrial Aldehyde Dehydrogenase 2 in Cardiac Diseases. J. Baptista Ferreira. Univ. of São Paulo. Mitochondrial Energetic-Redox Regulation of Heart Disease: An Experimental-Computational Modeling Approach. M. Aon. NIH, NIA. Mitochondria and Cardiac Hypertrophy: Pros and Cons. I. Ennis. Natl. Univ. de la Plata, Buenos Aires. 534. HOT, COLD, AND OLD: AGING AND THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THERMAL STRESS Understanding the Effects of Aging on the Body’s Physiological Capacity to Dissipate Heat. G. Kenny. Univ. of Ottawa. Blunted Increases in Skin Sympathetic Nerve Activity Contribute to the Attenuated Reflex Vasodilation in Aged Human Skin. A.E. Stanhewicz, J.L. Greaney, L.M. Alexander, W.L. Kenney. Penn State. (1290.1) Evidence of Disrupted Human Heat Balance in Heart Failure Patients Exercising in the Heat. B. Balmain, O. Jay, S. Sabapathy, D. Royston, G. Stewart, R. Jayasinghe, Y. Eqbal, N. Morris. Griffith Univ., Univ. of Sydney and Gold Coast Univ. Hosp., Australia. (1290.4) Whole-Body Heat Loss Is Enhanced in Older Adults following a Summer in a Humid Continental Climate. M.P. Poirier, S. Dervis, A.D. Flouris, G.P. Kenny. Univ. of Ottawa, Canada and Univ. of Thessaly, Greece. (1290.13) Brown Adipose Tissue Characteristics of Epicardial Fat and Its Relationship with Growth during Aging in Early Life. H. Budge, S. Ojha, P.H. Fainberg, V. Wilson, M. Castellanos, G. Pelella, A. Lotto, H. Sacks, M. Symonds. Univ. of Nottingham, Nottingham and Loughborough, Glenfield Hosp., Leicester, U.K. and UCLA. (1290.12) Aging Modifies Reflex Cardiovascular Responses to Local and Systemic Cold Exposure. M. Muller. Pennsylvania State Univ. Coll. of Medicine. (Sponsored by: APS Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology Section) Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: P.K. Dudeja and J. Sun Neurophysiology Diet, Nutrition and Metabolism, and Development Microbiome 8:00 The Microbiome Co-Opts Genetic Pathways Linked to Inflammatory Bowel Disease. H. Chu. Caltech. 8:30 The Impact of Diet-induced Gut Microbiota on Circadian Rhythm and Obesity. V. Leone. Univ. of Chicago. 9:00 Bacterial-Infected Organoid Culture System for Host– Bacterial interactions. V. Young. Univ. of Michigan. 9:30 Immunologic Tolerance to Intestinal Microbiota Depends on Rab11 Endosome Mediated Control of Pathogen Pattern Recognition Receptor Processing and Signaling. N. Gao. Rutgers Univ. 536. MICROTUBULES IN LUNG DISEASE AND RECOVERY Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: A. Birukova and T. Stevens Transporters/Channels/Barriers 8:00 Microutubule Dynamics Modulates Endothelial inflammation induced by High Pulsatility Flow. K. Stenmark. Univ. of Colorado, Denver. 160 WEDNESDAYPHYSIOLOGY 8:25 8:50 9:15 9:40 MT-Associated Trafficking of VEGFR2 Is Necessary for Lung Recovery. Y. Komarova. Univ. of Illinois Col. of Med. Role of Microtubules in Chronic EC Barrier Dysfunction in P. aeruginosa-Infected Pulmonary Endothelium. T. Stevens. Univ. of South Alabama. Microtubule-Dependent Mechanisms of Lung Vascular Barrier Restoration. Y. Ke. Univ. of Chicago. Reduced Microtubule Acetylation in Cystic Fibrosis Epithelial Cells. S. Rymut. Case Western Reserve Univ. 537. NEW APPROACHES FOR INDUCTION OF ARTERIOGENESIS Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) 9:25 539. RENAL POTASSIUM SENSING MECHANISMS: A NEW PARADIGM FOR POTASSIUM SECRETION Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Renal Section) Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: D. Ellison and A. Subramanya Transporters/Channels/Barriers 8:00 8:30 Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 9:00 Chaired: P. Rocic 9:30 8:00 Use of Ephrin-B2-Activated Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells for Cellular Therapy in Patients with Critical Limb Ischemia. B. Levy. INSERM, Paris. 8:45 Passive Heat Therapy as a Novel Approach for Inducing Angiogenesis in Humans: Roles of Nitric Oxide. V.E. Brunt, K.W. Needham, L.N. Comrada, M.A. Francisco, C.T. Minson. Univ. of Oregon. (1211.1) 9:00 DPPI Deficiency Enhances Both Angiogenesis and Arteriogenesis and Improves Cardiac Function after Myocardial Infarction. M.A. Kolpakov, B. Hooshdaran, X. Guo, T. Wang, K. Rafiq, L. Vlasenko, Z. Qi, V.N.S. Garikipati, R. Kishore, S.R. Houser, A. Sabri. Temple Univ. and Thomas Jefferson Univ. (1211.2) 9:15 Angiotensin-(1-7) Requires both Mas1 and AT1 Receptors to Restore Angiogenesis. T. Stodola, E. Exner, B. Hoffmann, D. Didier, A. Greene. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (1211.3) 9:30 Matricryptin p1158/59 Modulates Vascular Remodeling during Carotid Artery Bypass. P.R. Shaver, G.A. Grilo, K.C. Barefoot, A.W. Holt, D.A. Tulis, R.M. Lust, L.E. de Castro Brás. East Carolina Univ. (1211.4) 538. NOVEL MOLECULAR TARGETS AND THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES IN MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION AND HEART FAILURE Renal Potassium Sensing. A. Terker. Oregon Hlth. & Sci. Univ. Regulation of Kir.4.1 in the Kidney. W-H. Wang. New York Med. Col. FHHt Proteins form an Endocytic Switch for the the ROMK Channel. P. Welling. Univ. of Maryland Baltinore. Regulation of WNK/SPAKI by Dietary K Intake. C-L.Huang. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr. 540. REPROGRAMMED CELLS AS MODELS FOR DISEASE Symposium W E D Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 24 Chaired: W.M. Chilian and E. Pashos Microbiome Regenerative Medicine (Stem Cells, Tissue Regeneration, Biomaterials) 8:00 Creation of Reprogrammed Cells to Study Vascular Growth. L. Yin. Northesast Ohio Med. Univ. 8:25 Modeling Biliary Disease Using Stem Cell-Derived Cholangiocytes. R. Huebert. Mayo Clin. 8:50 Interrogating Cardiometabolic Association Signals in Human iSPC-Hepatocytes. E. Pashos. Univ. of Pennsylvania Perelman Sch. of Med. 9:15 The Use of iPS Cells to Study Type 1 Diabetes. I. Yasuhiro. Mayo Clin. 9:40 Panel Discussion with Questions from the Audience. 541. ROLE OF OXYTOCIN IN THE CONTROL OF ENERGY HOMEOSTASIS Symposium Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Translational Physiology Interest Group) (Sponsored by: APS Endocrinology and Metabolism Section) Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Wed. 8:00 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Chaired: W.J. Koch and T.E. Sharp 8:00 RhoA Signaling Pathways in Heart Failure. M. Kontaridis. Beth Israel Deaconess. 8:20 Harnessing Cardiac Progenitor Cells in Heart Disease. J. van Berlo. Univ. of Minnesota. 8:40 Targeting Mitochondrial Calcium Exchange Mechanisms in Heart Failure. J. Elrod. Temple Univ. Sch. of Med. 9:00 Autophagy in the Development of Heart Failure. Å. Gustafsson. UCSD. Translating Hydrogen Sulfide Therapeutics to the Clinic. D. Lefer. LSU Hlth. Sci. Ctr., New Orleans. Chaired: J. Blevins and W. Samson Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome Metabolism and Metabolic Disease 8:00 increased Oxytocin Signaling Attenuates Weight Gain in Diet-Induced Obese Rodents and Nonhuman Primates. J. Blevins. Univ. of Washington, VA Puget Sound Hlth. Care Syst. 161 PHYSIOLOGYWEDNESDAY 8:30 9:00 9:30 Hindbrain Oxytocin Receptor Signaling: Effects on Energy Balance Control. Z. Yi. Univ. of Pennsylvania. Salt-Loading Reveals Brain Oxytocin Circuits that Modulate Stress Responding. E. Krause. Univ. of Florida. Effects of Oxytocin on Caloric Intake and Metabolism in Men. E. Lawson. Harvard Med. Sch. 543. COMPARATIVE PHYSIOLOGY OF SKELETAL MUSCLE – NOVEL STUDIES IN PLASTICITY AND STRUCTURE Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Comparative and Evolutionary Physiology Section) 542. ACTIONS AND INTERACTIONS OF BAROREFLEXES, CHEMOREFLEXES AND METABOREFLEXES IN AUTONOMIC REGULATION AND HEART DISEASE Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C Chaired: B. Rourke and A. Horner Environmental Stress Skeletal Muscle Physiology Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Neural Control and Autonomic Regulation Section) 10:30 11:00 Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28B Chaired: M. Amann and P. Fadel Neurobiology 11:30 Neurophysiology Myocardial Infarction/Heart Failure 10:30 Carotid Body Chemoreflex in Animals: Health and Heart Failure. N. Marcus. Univ. of Nebraska Med. Ctr. 11:00 Baroreflex-Metaboreflex Interaction in Animals: Health and Heart Failure. D. O’Leary. Wayne State Univ. 11:30 Activation of the Chemo- and Cardiopulmonary Reflexes Blunt Baroreflex Sensitivity through Independent Mechanisms. H.G. Petersen-Jones, W.W. Holbein, B.D. Johnson, V.A. Convertino, T.B. Curry, M.J. Joyner. Mayo Clin., Univ. at Buffalo and U.S. Army Inst. of Surg. Res., Houston. (1286.1) 11:45 Diastolic Dysfunction and Arrhythmia Incidence Are Exacerbated by Central Chemoreflex Activation in HfpEF. R. Del Rio, C. Toledo, D.C. Andrade, C. Lucero, V. Aliaga, N.J. Marcus, C. Madrid. Autonomous Univ. of Chile, Santiago and Des Moines Univ. (1286.2) 12:00 Increased Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor in Lumbar Dorsal Root Ganglia Contributes to the Enhanced Skeletal Muscle Afferent Neuronal Excitability via a MAPK-Dependent Pathway in Heart Failure. H. Wang, G. Rozanski, I.H. Zucker. Univ. of Nebraska Med. Ctr. (1286.3) 12:15 Unilateral Carotid Body Resection in Patients with Resistant Hypertension: A Safety and Feasibility Trial. E.C. Hart, L.E.K. Ratcliffe, K. Narkiewicz, L.J.B. Briant, M. Chrostowska, J. Wolf, Szyndler, D. Hering, A.E. Burchell, A.P. Abdala, C. Durant, M. Lobo, P.A. Sobotka, N. Patel, J. Leiter, Z.J.B. Engelman, A.K. Nightingale, J.F.R. Paton. Univ. of Bristol, Gdansk Med. Univ., BARTS and London Sch. of Med., The Ohio State Univ., Dartmouth Geisel Sch. of Med. and Cibiem, Los Altos. (1286.4) 162 12:00 Structural Basis of Muscle Work Capacity. N. Holt. Univ. of California, Irvine. The Function of Oblique Striation Explained? Tuning the Length-Force Relationship in the Muscles of Soft-Bodied Invertebrates. J. Thompson. Franklin & Marshall Col. Polar Bear Skeletal Muscle Primarily Reflects Recent Activity Rather than a Seasonal Pattern. J. Whiteman. Univ. of Wyoming. Why Are Sloths So Strong? Unique Muscle Modifications for Suspensorial Locomotion. M. Butcher. Youngstown State Univ. 544. COMPARTMENTALIZATION OF SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION IN EPITHELIAL CELL BIOLOGY Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Epithelial Transport Group) Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 27 Chaired: R.A. Fenton and T. Rieg Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome Ion Transport 10:30 Compartmentalization of Cellular Signaling Using Fluorescent Biosensors. J. Zhang. Johns Hopkins Univ. 11:00 Monitoring Spatiotemporal cAMP Production in Living organisms. M. Lohse. Univ. of Wuerzburg. 11:30 PDEs in cAMP Signaling. W. Richter. Univ. of South Alabama. 12:00 Localization of β(2)-Adrenergic Receptor Mediated cAMP Signaling Using Scanning Ion Conductance Microscopy. J. Gorelik. Imperial Col. London. WEDNESDAYPHYSIOLOGY 545. EMERGING NEW MECHANISM IN ALCOHOLIC LIVER DISEASE 547. NOW HIRING PHDS: POSTDOC NOT REQUIRED Symposium Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Trainee Advisory Committee) (Sponsored by: American Federation for Medical Research) Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 22 Chaired: A.M. Hernandez-Carretero and B. Dougherty Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 23 Career Development Chaired: S. Liangpunsakul 10:30 Fat-Specific Protein 27/CIDEC Plays an Important Role in Promoting Alcoholic Liver Injury in Mice and Humans. B. Gao. NIAAA, NIH. 11:00 Role of Hepatic Microphages in Alcohol Liver Disease. C. Ju. Skaggs Sch. of Pharm. and Pharmaceut. Sci., UCSD. 11:30 Circadian Clock Mediated Homocysteine Metabolism in Alcoholic Fatty Liver. L. Wang. Univ. of Connecticut. 12:00 The Pivotal Role Played by Lipocalin-2 in Mediating Detrimental Effects of Ethanol in the Liver. M. You. Northeast Ohio Med. Univ. 546. ENDOTHELIAL DYSFUNCTION IN DIABETES Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section) Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 26 Chaired: B. Dokken and C. Meininger Diabetes, Metabolic Syndrome Barriers: Endothelium and Epithelium 10:30 Effects of Glucose on the Endothelial Extracellular Matrix. B. Dokken. Univ. of Arizona. 11:00 Hyperglycemia-Induced Glycosylation: A Driving Force for Vascular Dysfunction in Diabetes? B.R. Hoffmann, M.E. Widlansky, A.S. Greene. Med. Col. of Wisconsin. (1282.13) 11:15 Dynamic Regulation of Endothelial Cell-Specific Molecule 1 in Diabetic Mouse Kidney. X. Zheng, F. Soroush, E. Hall, P. Adishesha, S. Bhattacharya, M. Kiani, V. Bhalla. Stanford Univ., Temple Univ. Col. of Engin. and UCSF Sch. of Med. (1282.12) 11:30 Thyroid Hormone Induces Vascular Relaxation through VASP Phosphorylation at Serine239: A Potential Therapeutic Approach to Treat Diabetic Vascular Dysfunction. S. Samuel, A.M. Gerdes, M.A. CarrilloSepulveda. NYIT and NYIT Col. of Osteo. Med. (1282.11) 11:45 HuR-Mediated HK2 Downregulation Leads to Coronary Endothelial Dysfunction in Diabetic Mice. W. Wang, A.H. Truong, A. Makino. Univ. of Arizona. (1282.2) 12:00 Enhanced Mobilization of Endothelial Ca2+ by SKA-31 Contributes to the Restoration of Agonist-Mediated Vasorelaxation in Resistance Arteries from Type 2 Diabetic Rats. B.D. Kyle, R.C. Mishra, A.P. Braun. Cumming Sch. of Med., Univ. of Calgary, Canada. (1282.1) 12:15 Perivascular Adipose Tissue-Derived TNFα Neutralization Recovers Aortic Function in Metabolic Syndrome. E. DeVallance, K. Branyan, K. Lemaster, S. Brooks, S. Asano, R. Skinner, J.C. Frisbee, P.D. Chantler. West Virginia Univ. (1282.7) 10:30 A Goal without a Plan Is Just a Wish. P. Clifford. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago. 10:45 After Your PhD: The Non-traditional Career Path for Scientists. M. Urso. Smith & Nephew Biotherapeutics, Hull, MA. 11:00 How to Love What You Do and Be Good at It: Being Competitive in the 21St Century Job Market. S. Zarate. Univ. of San Diego. 11:15 Medical and Science Writing: No Postdoc Required. A. Gwosdow. Gwosdow Assoc. Sci. Consultants, Arlington, MA. 11:30 Successfully Attaining a Position in Academic Technology Transfer without a Postdoc. J. Mitzelfelt. Univ. of Maryland College Park. 11:45 From Inside the Lab to Inside the Beltway: A Career in Science Policy. C. Wolinetz. OSP, NIH. 12:00 Transferable Skills between Academics and Industry: Making the Most of Your PhD. B. Kirby. Nike Sport Res. Lab. 548. RECENT ADVANCES IN THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF EPITHELIAL TIGHT JUNCTIONS Symposium (Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology Section) Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: R.K. Rao and S. Vetrano Transporters/Channels/Barriers 10:30 Paracellular Transport as an Energy Conservation Strategy in Renal Tubule. A. Yu. Kansas Univ. Med. Ctr. 11:00 Tight Junction Regulation during Enteric Infection: Benefits of Increased Permeability. J. Turner. Univ. of Chicago. 11:30 Claudins and TAMPS in the Ischemic Blood-Brain Barrier. I. Blasig. Leibniz Inst. of Molec. Pharmacol., Berlin. 12:00 Occludin Regulatory Motif Confers Dynamics and Regulation of Epithelial Tight Junctions. R. Rao. Univ. of Tennessee Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 163 W E D PHYSIOLOGYWEDNESDAY 549. RECOVERY FROM EXERCISE AND TRANSLATING POST-EXERCISE HYPOTENSION 11:45 Featured Topic (Sponsored by: APS Environmental and Exercise Physiology Section) 12:00 Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 28A Chaired: T. Baynard Exercise, Aging, and Disease 10:30 11:00 11:15 11:30 11:45 12:00 Clinical Insights into Recovery from Exercise and the Relevance of Post-exercise Hypotension. C. Forjaz. Univ. of São Paulo. Influence of Time of Day on Post-exercise Hypotension Might Be Different in Hypertensives Receiving Different Anti-hypertensive Drugs: An Exploratory Study. L. Brito, T. Peçanha, R. Fecchio, P. Sousa, R. Rezende, M. Navarro, G. Silva, A. Abreu, D. MionJunior, C. Forjaz. Univ. of São Paulo. (1291.1) Exaggerated Systolic Blood Pressure Response after Unaccustomed High-Intensity Interval Exercise Is Independently Related to Decreased Small Arterial Elasticity in Normotensive African American Women. S.J. Carter, T.U. Goldsby, G. Fisher, E.P. Plaisance, B.A. Gower, S.P. Glasser, G.R. Hunter. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham. (1291.2) Effect of Combination Ice and Compression Socks on Resting Calf Blood Flow in Trained Male Athletes. M.J. Hudock, J.L. Keller, A.R. Crecelius. Univ. of Dayton. (1291.3) The Effects of Cold Water Immersion on Inflammation, Growth and Neurotrophic Factors in Skeletal Muscle after Resistance Exercise. J. Peake, L. Roberts, T. Raastad, V. Figueiredo, D. Cameron-Smith, J. Coombes, J. Markworth. Queensland Univ. of Technol., Univ. of Queensland, Norwegian Sch. of Sports Sci., Oslo and Univ. of Auckland. (1291.4) Mechanistic Insights into Recovery from Exercise and the Cause of Post-Exercise Hypotension. J. Halliwill. Univ. of Oregon. 12:15 551. NATURAL PRODUCTS: BIOLOGICAL EFFECTS AND THERAPEUTIC POTENTIAL IN HUMAN DISEASE Symposium (Sponsored by: American Federation for Medical Research) Wed. 2:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25A Chaired: S.S. Prabhakar and D. Wu 2:30 Green Tea and Bone Health: From Bench to Clinical Trial. C-L. Shen. Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 3:00 Effects of Curcumin in Experimental Diabetic Nephropathy. S. Prabhakar. Texas Tech Univ. Hlth. Sci. Ctr. 3:30 Green Tea EGCG, T Cell Function, and T Cell-Mediated Autoimmune Diseases. D. Wu. Friedman Sch. of Nutr. Sci. and Policy, Tufts Univ. 4:00 Natural Products and Their Applications to Treat Aging and Neurodegenerative Diseases. H. Reddy. Garrison Inst. of Aging, Texas Tech Univ. 552. ORPHEUS — DEVELOPING BEST PRACTICES FOR GRADUATE EDUCATION IN EUROPE Special Session 550. REDUNDANCY AND PLASTICITY IN RESPIRATORY CONTROL (Sponsored by: NDOGS) Featured Topic Wed. 2:30 pm—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25C (Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section) Chaired: J. Barnett Wed. 10:30 am—San Diego Convention Center, Room 25B Chaired: R. Bavis and N. Nichols 10:30 Oxygen Sensing by Extra-Carotid Chemoreceptors. C. Nurse. McMaster Univ., Canada. 11:00 Role of Central and Peripheral Chemoreceptor Interdependence in the Control of Breathing. G. Blain. Univ. of Nice, Sophia Antipolis, France. 11:30 Loss of the Persistent Sodium Current Elicits Homeostatic Plasticity in Respiratory Rhythm Generation. N.A. Baertsch, S.C. Ramirez, J.M. Ramirez. Seattle Children’s Res. Inst. (1299.10) 164 Ventilatory and Neurochemical Effects of Microdialysis of the Ionotropic GABAA Receptor Agonist Muscimol Into the Ventral Respiratory Column of Awake Goats. T.M. Langer, S. Neumueller, N. Burgraff, E. Crumley, L. Pan, M.R. Hodges, H.V. Forster. Med. Col. of Wisconsin and Marquette Univ. (1299.8) Ampakines Increase Spinal Respiratory Motor Output after Cervical Spinal Cord Injury in Rats. K. Streeter, E. Gonzalez-Rothi, M. Sandhu, D. Baekey, J. Greer, D. Fuller. Univ. of Florida and Univ. of Alberta. (1299.4) Effects of A2A and 5-HT2A Antagonists on Hypoxic and Hypercapnic Ventilatory Response in Rats Exposed to Chronic Sustained Hypoxia. E.A. Moya, F.L. Powell. UCSD. (1299.6) 2:30 R. Harris. Karolinska Univ.