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1.
Ann Epidemiol ; 9(2): 108-13, 1999 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10037554

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To examine the correlates of plasma leptin, including fasting insulin, adiposity, and several health habits and behaviors among a nondiabetic multiethnic population. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 25-44 year old African-Americans (n = 126), Cuban-Americans (n = 107), and non-Hispanic whites (n = 189) randomly selected from Dade County Florida. Fasting leptin levels were correlated with fasting insulin, percent body fat, smoking, alcohol use, and physical activity within each sex. Multiple linear regression and analysis of covariance were used to estimate the independent determinants of plasma leptin concentration separately among men and women. RESULTS: Stepwise linear regression analyses revealed statistically significant associations of leptin with percent body fat, fasting insulin, cigarette smoking, and physical activity (both inversely) among men (p < 0.05 for each). Among women, percent body fat, fasting insulin (both positively), cigarette smoking, and alcohol use (inversely) were independent predictors of leptin levels explaining over 70% of the variance. Analyses of covariance revealed that women had higher adjusted mean leptin levels than men (13.1 ng/ml vs. 5.9 ng/ml; p < 0.001), whereas no separate effect of ethnicity was noted. CONCLUSIONS: Although adiposity was the strongest correlate of leptin levels, fasting insulin and several health habits and behaviors were independently associated with leptin. After adjustment for these factors, women had significantly higher mean leptin levels than men. The independent association among leptin and insulin levels is intriguing and suggests additional avenues for epidemiologic research.


Subject(s)
Alcohol Drinking/ethnology , Exercise , Life Style/ethnology , Proteins/analysis , Smoking/ethnology , Adult , Age Factors , Alcohol Drinking/blood , Analysis of Variance , Biomarkers/blood , Body Constitution , Cohort Studies , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Cross-Sectional Studies , Ethnicity/statistics & numerical data , Female , Florida/epidemiology , Health Surveys , Humans , Leptin , Linear Models , Male , Obesity/blood , Obesity/ethnology , Sex Factors , Smoking/blood
2.
Ann Epidemiol ; 8(4): 236-44, 1998 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9590602

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to examine the associations among fasting insulin, adiposity, waist girth, and blood pressure among a nondiabetic multiethnic population. METHODS: A cross-sectional study was performed among 25-44-year-old African-Americans (n = 159), Cuban-Americans (n = 128), and non-Hispanic whites (n = 207) selected from Dade County, Florida. Fasting insulin levels were correlated with resting blood pressure level within each ethnic group. The separate effects of percentage body fat and waist girth on the association between blood pressure and insulin were analyzed in multiple linear regression and analysis of covariance. RESULTS: Fasting insulin was positively associated with systolic (r = 0.26-0.39; P < 0.01) and diastolic blood pressure (r = 0.19-0.30; P = 0.10 to P < 0.001) among women of all ethnic groups and among non-Hispanic white men (r = 0.27; P < 0.05). Stepwise linear regression analyses revealed statistically significant associations between systolic and diastolic blood pressure and fasting insulin level in non-Hispanic whites independent of other covariates, including sex and percentage body fat (P < 0.001). Fasting insulin was also independently and significantly related to systolic blood pressure among African-Americans (P = 0.02). Among Cuban-Americans, sex and percentage body fat were the main correlates of blood pressure level. Analysis of covariance revealed a relationship between insulin and blood pressure that was independent of waist girth among men and women. CONCLUSIONS: Fasting insulin level and blood pressure were positively associated among African-Americans and non-Hispanic whites. This association was not entirely due to the common association with percentage body fat or waist girth.


Subject(s)
Blood Pressure , Body Composition , Ethnicity , Insulin/metabolism , Adipose Tissue , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Black People , Cross-Sectional Studies , Fasting , Female , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Linear Models , Male , White People
3.
Diabetes Care ; 20(11): 1670-76, 1997 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9353606

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To assess sex and ethnic differences in hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance and to examine the impact of percent body fat on such differences. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A cross-sectional epidemiological study was performed in a normoglycemic population of African-Americans (n = 159), Cuban Americans (n = 128), and non-Hispanic whites (n = 207) who resided in Dade County, Florida, from 1990 to 1995. The insulin area under the curve (AUC) in response to a standard 75-g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was used as an indicator of hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance. Analysis of covariance was performed to compare sex and ethnic differences in the insulin AUC. Multiple linear regression was used to evaluate the independent correlates of the insulin AUC. RESULTS: After covariate adjustment for percent body fat, men displayed a significantly higher insulin AUC than did women (P < 0.001). African-Americans and Cuban-Americans each had a significantly higher insulin AUC than did non-Hispanic white participants (P = 0.01). Alcohol consumption was inversely related to AUC (P = 0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Despite the greater percentage of body fat in women, the insulin AUC was similar in women and men. After adjustment for the sex difference in percent body fat, women displayed a lower insulin AUC than did men, indicating enhanced insulin sensitivity. These differences by sex and ethnicity in insulin resistance are consistent with established differences in heart-disease risk (i.e., higher in men and African-Americans) and suggest that hyperinsulinemia/insulin resistance may partly underlie such differences.


Subject(s)
Blood Glucose/analysis , Body Composition , Hyperinsulinism/diagnosis , Insulin Resistance/physiology , Insulin/blood , Adult , Black People , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Cohort Studies , Cross-Sectional Studies , Cuba/ethnology , Female , Florida , Glucose Tolerance Test , Hispanic or Latino , Humans , Hyperinsulinism/blood , Hyperinsulinism/ethnology , Insulin/metabolism , Linear Models , Male , Sex Factors , White People
4.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1337(2): 241-7, 1997 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9048901

ABSTRACT

The extracellular hemoglobin of the earthworm has four major O2-binding chains, a, b, c and d, together with additional non-heme structural chains that are required for assembly. Although the abc trimer self-associates extensively at least to (abc)10, addition of chain d results in the formation of a discrete 280 kDa complex corresponding to (abcd)4. Thus a primary function of chain d is to cap the abc association and convert an abc trimer that binds O2 with weak cooperativity to a highly cooperative (abcd)4 complex. Amino-acid sequences of the major globin chains a, b, c have been determined previously by peptide and cDNA analysis. However, the peptide sequence reported for the major chain d (Shishikura, F., Snow, J.W., Gotoh, T., Vinogradov, S.N. and Walz, D.A. (1987) J. Biol. Chem., 262. 3123-3131), has a calculated molecular mass 134-167 Da higher than masses for components of chain d determined by mass spectrometry (Owrby, D.W., Zhu, H., Schneider, K., Beavis, R.C., Chait, B.T. and Riggs, A.F. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 13539-13547). Reverse-phase HPLC confirms the presence of two distinct polypeptides, d1 and d2, together with d'1, a variant of d1, cDNA derived amino acid sequences have been determined for chains d'1 and d2 by application of the polymerase chain reaction with primers based on the NH2-terminal sequences and oligo-dT. Each of the two cDNA-derived sequences has 140 residues and they differ by 28 substitutions. The data show that the sequence originally reported had been derived from peptides generated from both polypeptides.


Subject(s)
Hemoglobins/chemistry , Oligochaeta/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Base Sequence , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , DNA, Complementary/genetics , Globins/chemistry , Globins/genetics , Globins/isolation & purification , Hemoglobins/genetics , Hemoglobins/isolation & purification , Mass Spectrometry , Molecular Sequence Data , Molecular Structure , Molecular Weight , Oligochaeta/genetics , Protein Conformation
5.
J Clin Epidemiol ; 49(8): 859-64, 1996 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8699204

ABSTRACT

An association between blood pressure and insulin sensitivity among normotensive African-Americans has not been demonstrated consistently in epidemiologic studies. Part of the discrepancy may be due to studying persons with profound obesity-an insulin-resistant state itself. The association between insulin-mediated glucose uptake (i.e., insulin sensitivity) and blood pressure was examined among 25 nondiabetic African-American and 28 white non-Hispanic persons aged 25-44 years who ranged from normal weight to obese, using the hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp technique. In bivariate analyses, insulin sensitivity was inversely related to systolic (p < 0.01) and diastolic blood pressure (p = 0.08) among African-American persons and to diastolic blood pressure among white non-Hispanic subjects (p < 0.05). Covariate adjustment for age and sex had only a marginal effect on these results. When the data were pooled and further adjusted for ethnicity, insulin sensitivity remained significantly associated with both systolic and diastolic blood pressure (p < 0.01 for each). To consider the effect of obesity, body mass index (BMI) was divided at the sample median (26.5 kg/m2) and the analyses were repeated within each stratum. Among those whose BMI was below the median value, each increment in insulin sensitivity was associated with a 2-mmHg decrease in systolic blood pressure (p = 0.02). These results suggest that ethnicity was not a strong effect modifier in this sample and indicated that insulin sensitivity was inversely related to blood pressure level in these normotensive African-American and white, non-Hispanic participants.


Subject(s)
Black People , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Blood Pressure/physiology , Insulin/blood , Adult , Body Mass Index , Female , Humans , Insulin Resistance , Male , Obesity/blood , Obesity/ethnology , Regression Analysis
6.
Physiol Plant ; 79(4): 593-8, 1990 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21087265

ABSTRACT

Blue light gradients in the pulvini of soybean (Glycine max var. Northrup King S1346) leaves with different laminar orientations were examined with a fiber optic microprobe. The gradients changed markedly as a function of both incident light angle and leaf position and were determined largely by the amount of light present in the adaxial side of the pulvinus. The steepest gradient for inclined leaves was with light incident at 90° whereas for declined leaves it occurred when the light was incident at 150°. A proposed pulvinar mechanism which allows for the detection of light direction and leaf position by using the blue light gradient as an orientation signal could account for solar tracking by soybean.

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