BAHS Faculty and Students publish research

 Graduate student Shanda Burroughs, 2018 BAHS alumni Taylor Trautwein and Arjun Dalsania, and faculty members Candice Klingerman, Jennifer Venditti, and William Schwindinger  recently had a paper accepted for publication in the journal Hormones and Behavior.  Dr. Klingerman's laboratory examines the neuroendocrine mechanisms underlying diseases of energy dysregulation, such as obesity and anorexia, from an evolutionary perspective. Their recent work investigated reproductive and feeding behaviors in Syrian hamsters. The BAHS research group was the first to show that the chemokine Prokineticin 2 simultaneously enhances reproductive behavior and decreases feeding behaviors  in a female mammal. Ghrelin, a hormone secreted by the stomach and hypothalamus, had opposite effects.  These novel findings demonstrate the need to further investigate the roles of ghrelin and Prokineticin-2 in regulating feeding and reproductive behaviors. Congratulations to all of the co-authors!

Check out their paper:

Burroughs, S., Schwindinger W.F., Venditti, J.J., Trautwein, T., Dalsania, A,, Klingerman, C.M. 2018. Prokineticin-2 and ghrelin robustly influence the sexual and ingestive behaviors of female Syrian hamsters. Hormone Research,
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30189212

 2018 Sep 3. pii: S0018-506X(18)30103-X. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2018.08.013. [Epub ahead of print]

Shanda Burroughs and Dr. Candice Klingerman

Taylor Trautwein, Dr. Candice Klingerman, Arjun Dalsania
Dr. Jennifer Venditti

Dr. William Schwindinger


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