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result(s) for
"Beck, Wesley D."
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Cobalt-electrocatalytic HAT for functionalization of unsaturated C–C bonds
2022
The study and application of transition metal hydrides (TMHs) has been an active area of chemical research since the early 1960s
1
, for energy storage, through the reduction of protons to generate hydrogen
2
,
3
, and for organic synthesis, for the functionalization of unsaturated C–C, C–O and C–N bonds
4
,
5
. In the former instance, electrochemical means for driving such reactivity has been common place since the 1950s
6
but the use of stoichiometric exogenous organic- and metal-based reductants to harness the power of TMHs in synthetic chemistry remains the norm. In particular, cobalt-based TMHs have found widespread use for the derivatization of olefins and alkynes in complex molecule construction, often by a net hydrogen atom transfer (HAT)
7
. Here we show how an electrocatalytic approach inspired by decades of energy storage research can be made use of in the context of modern organic synthesis. This strategy not only offers benefits in terms of sustainability and efficiency but also enables enhanced chemoselectivity and distinct, tunable reactivity. Ten different reaction manifolds across dozens of substrates are exemplified, along with detailed mechanistic insights into this scalable electrochemical entry into Co–H generation that takes place through a low-valent intermediate.
A perspective is given on how an electrocatalytic approach, inspired by decades of energy storage studies, can be used in the context of efficient cobalt-hydride generation with a variety of applications in modern organic synthesis.
Journal Article
Biomarkers associated with low, moderate, and high vastus lateralis muscle hypertrophy following 12 weeks of resistance training
by
Kephart, Wesley C.
,
Martin, Jeffrey S.
,
Roberts, Michael D.
in
Absorptiometry
,
Analysis
,
Biology
2018
We sought to identify biomarkers which delineated individual hypertrophic responses to resistance training. Untrained, college-aged males engaged in full-body resistance training (3 d/wk) for 12 weeks. Body composition via dual x-ray absorptiometry (DXA), vastus lateralis (VL) thickness via ultrasound, blood, VL muscle biopsies, and three-repetition maximum (3-RM) squat strength were obtained prior to (PRE) and following (POST) 12 weeks of training. K-means cluster analysis based on VL thickness changes identified LOW [n = 17; change (mean±SD) = +0.11±0.14 cm], modest (MOD; n = 29, +0.40±0.06 cm), and high (HI; n = 21, +0.69±0.14 cm) responders. Biomarkers related to histology, ribosome biogenesis, proteolysis, inflammation, and androgen signaling were analyzed between clusters. There were main effects of time (POST>PRE, p<0.05) but no cluster×time interactions for increases in DXA lean body mass, type I and II muscle fiber cross sectional area and myonuclear number, satellite cell number, and macronutrients consumed. Interestingly, PRE VL thickness was ~12% greater in LOW versus HI (p = 0.021), despite POST values being ~12% greater in HI versus LOW (p = 0.006). However there was only a weak correlation between PRE VL thickness scores and change in VL thickness (r2 = 0.114, p = 0.005). Forced post hoc analysis indicated that muscle total RNA levels (i.e., ribosome density) did not significantly increase in the LOW cluster (351±70 ng/mg to 380±62, p = 0.253), but increased in the MOD (369±115 to 429±92, p = 0.009) and HI clusters (356±77 to 470±134, p<0.001; POST HI>POST LOW, p = 0.013). Nonetheless, there was only a weak association between change in muscle total RNA and VL thickness (r2 = 0.079, p = 0.026). IL-1β mRNA levels decreased in the MOD and HI clusters following training (p<0.05), although associations between this marker and VL thickness changes were not significant (r2 = 0.0002, p = 0.919). In conclusion, individuals with lower pre-training VL thickness values and greater increases muscle total RNA levels following 12 weeks of resistance training experienced greater VL muscle growth, although these biomarkers individually explained only ~8-11% of the variance in hypertrophy.
Journal Article
The 1-Week and 8-Month Effects of a Ketogenic Diet or Ketone Salt Supplementation on Multi-Organ Markers of Oxidative Stress and Mitochondrial Function in Rats
by
Zhang, Yufeng
,
Lowery, Ryan
,
Young, Kaelin
in
3-Hydroxybutyric Acid - blood
,
Animals
,
antioxidant activity
2017
We determined the short- and long-term effects of a ketogenic diet (KD) or ketone salt (KS) supplementation on multi-organ oxidative stress and mitochondrial markers. For short-term feedings, 4 month-old male rats were provided isocaloric amounts of KD (n = 10), standard chow (SC) (n = 10) or SC + KS (~1.2 g/day, n = 10). For long-term feedings, 4 month-old male rats were provided KD (n = 8), SC (n = 7) or SC + KS (n = 7) for 8 months and rotarod tested every 2 months. Blood, brain (whole cortex), liver and gastrocnemius muscle were harvested from all rats for biochemical analyses. Additionally, mitochondria from the brain, muscle and liver tissue of long-term-fed rats were analyzed for mitochondrial quantity (maximal citrate synthase activity), quality (state 3 and 4 respiration) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) assays. Liver antioxidant capacity trended higher in short-term KD- and SC + KS-fed versus SC-fed rats, and short-term KD-fed rats exhibited significantly greater serum ketones compared to SC + KS-fed rats indicating that the diet (not KS supplementation) induced ketonemia. In long term-fed rats: (a) serum ketones were significantly greater in KD- versus SC- and SC + KS-fed rats; (b) liver antioxidant capacity and glutathione peroxidase protein was significantly greater in KD- versus SC-fed rats, respectively, while liver protein carbonyls were lowest in KD-fed rats; and (c) gastrocnemius mitochondrial ROS production was significantly greater in KD-fed rats versus other groups, and this paralleled lower mitochondrial glutathione levels. Additionally, the gastrocnemius pyruvate-malate mitochondrial respiratory control ratio was significantly impaired in long-term KD-fed rats, and gastrocnemius mitochondrial quantity was lowest in these animals. Rotarod performance was greatest in KD-fed rats versus all other groups at 2, 4 and 8 months, although there was a significant age-related decline in performance existed in KD-fed rats which was not evident in the other two groups. In conclusion, short- and long-term KD improves select markers of liver oxidative stress compared to SC feeding, although long-term KD feeding may negatively affect skeletal muscle mitochondrial physiology.
Journal Article
Effect of 1-week betalain-rich beetroot concentrate supplementation on cycling performance and select physiological parameters
by
Moore, Angelique N
,
Romero, Matthew A
,
Ruffin, William C
in
Blood flow
,
Indoles
,
Inflammation
2018
PurposeBetalains are indole-derived pigments found in beet root, and recent studies suggest that they may exert ergogenic effects. Herein, we examined if supplementation for 7 days with betalain-rich beetroot concentrate (BLN) improved cycling performance or altered hemodynamic and serum analytes prior to, during and following a cycling time trial (TT).MethodsTwenty-eight trained male cyclists (29 ± 10 years, 77.3 ± 13.3 kg, and 3.03 ± 0.62 W/kg) performed a counterbalanced crossover study whereby BLN (100 mg/day) or placebo (PLA) supplementation occurred over 7 days with a 1-week washout between conditions. On the morning of day seven of each supplementation condition, participants consumed one final serving of BLN or PLA and performed a 30-min cycling TT with concurrent assessment of several physiological variables and blood markers.ResultsBLN supplementation improved average absolute power compared to PLA (231.6 ± 36.2 vs. 225.3 ± 35.8 W, p = 0.050, d = 0.02). Average relative power, distance traveled, blood parameters (e.g., pH, lactate, glucose, NOx) and inflammatory markers (e.g., IL-6, IL-8, IL-10, TNFα) were not significantly different between conditions. BLN supplementation significantly improved exercise efficiency (W/ml/kg/min) in the last 5 min of the TT compared to PLA (p = 0.029, d = 0.45). Brachial artery blood flow in the BLN condition, immediately post-exercise, tended to be greater compared to PLA (p = 0.065, d = 0.32).ConclusionsWe report that 7 days of BLN supplementation modestly improves 30-min TT power output, exercise efficiency as well as post-exercise blood flow without increasing plasma NOx levels or altering blood markers of inflammation, oxidative stress, and/or hematopoiesis.
Journal Article
The cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome
2023
Cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome is an increasingly common problem associated with significant morbidity. Decriminalization of marijuana use in many states and widespread availability and acceptance in many other jurisdictions has led to increased use of marijuana. Nearly 1 in 5 persons in the United States over age 12 years (nearly 50 million persons) endorses annual use of marijuana. Within this group, an increasing number are frequent or even daily users. Among the side effects of daily use is the cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome (CHS). Characterized by cyclical, sometime unrelenting emesis, CHS is best treated by cessation of cannabinoid ingestion; supportive care and effective pharmaceutical treatments may be necessary for more serious cases.
Journal Article
CITY-LEVEL AUDIT FEE PRESSURE, AUDITOR OFFICE SIZE, AND AUDIT QUALITY
2024
Much research has examined how engagement-level audit fees impact audit quality. Several studies suggest that unusually high or low audit fees charged at the engagement level detrimentally affect audit quality. In this study, we investigate how fee pressure in the auditor's local environment affects audit quality by developing a measure of citywide audit fee pressure and examining its effect on audit quality, (as measured by earnings management and restatements). We analyze the audits of small and large Big Four offices both together and separately and find similar results for the overall sample as we do for both sub-groups-that audit quality is diminished in cities with greater fee pressure (while controlling for engagementspecific audit fee pressure, auditor competition, and other audit and city attributes). Interestingly, the effects appear to be the greatest for larger Big Four offices. While prior research has largely treated audit fee pressure as an engagement-specific construct, our results suggest that audit quality is impacted by city-level fee pressure and therefore it may be beneficial for the PCAOB to scrutinize audits in high-fee-pressure markets more carefully.
Journal Article
Soy protein supplementation is not androgenic or estrogenic in college-aged men when combined with resistance exercise training
2018
It is currently unclear as to whether sex hormones are significantly affected by soy or whey protein consumption. Additionally, estrogenic signaling may be potentiated via soy protein supplementation due to the presence of phytoestrogenic isoflavones. Limited evidence suggests that whey protein supplementation may increase androgenic signalling. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the effects of soy protein concentrate (SPC), whey protein concentrate (WPC), or placebo (PLA) supplementation on serum sex hormones, androgen signaling markers in muscle tissue, and estrogen signaling markers in subcutaneous (SQ) adipose tissue of previously untrained, college-aged men (n = 47, 20 ± 1 yrs) that resistance trained for 12 weeks. Fasting serum total testosterone increased pre- to post-training, but more so in subjects consuming WPC (p < 0.05), whereas serum 17β-estradiol remained unaltered. SQ estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) protein expression and hormone-sensitive lipase mRNA increased with training regardless of supplementation. Muscle androgen receptor (AR) mRNA increased while ornithine decarboxylase mRNA (a gene target indicative of androgen signaling) decreased with training regardless of supplementation (p < 0.05). No significant interactions of supplement and time were observed for adipose tissue ERα/β protein levels, muscle tissue AR protein levels, or mRNAs in either tissue indicative of altered estrogenic or androgenic activity. Interestingly, WPC had the largest effect on increasing type II muscle fiber cross sectional area values (Cohen’s d = 1.30), whereas SPC had the largest effect on increasing this metric in type I fibers (Cohen’s d = 0.84). These data suggest that, while isoflavones were detected in SPC, chronic WPC or SPC supplementation did not appreciably affect biomarkers related to muscle androgenic signaling or SQ estrogenic signaling. The noted fiber type-specific responses to WPC and SPC supplementation warrant future research.
Journal Article
Guidelines for the diagnosis and management of food allergy in the United States: Summary of the NIAID-Sponsored Expert Panel Report
by
Schneider, Lynda C.
,
Sampson, Hugh A.
,
Eichenfield, Lawrence
in
Anaphylaxis - diagnosis
,
Anaphylaxis - therapy
,
Biological and medical sciences
2011
Journal Article
Author Correction: Soy protein supplementation is not androgenic or estrogenic in college-aged men when combined with resistance exercise training
by
Kephart, Wesley C.
,
Healy, James C.
,
Patel, Romil K.
in
Author
,
Author Correction
,
Humanities and Social Sciences
2018
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions of this paper. The error has been fixed in the paper.
Journal Article
Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Society of Sports Nutrition (ISSN) Conference and Expo
2016
Table of contents
P1 Impact of antioxidant-enriched nutrient bar supplementation on the serum antioxidant markers and physical fitness components of track and field athletes
Lalitha Ramaswamy, Supriya Velraja
P2 The effects of phosphatidic acid supplementation on fitness levels in resistance trained women
Guillermo Escalante, Phil Harvey, Michelle Alencar, Bryan Haddock
P3 The effects of phosphatidic acid supplementation on cardiovascular risk factors in resistance trained men
Phil Harvey, Guillermo Escalante, Michelle Alencar, Bryan Haddock
P4 The efficacy of sodium bicarbonate supplementation on physical capacity and selected biochemical markers in elite wrestlers
Krzysztof Durkalec-Michalski, Jan Jeszka, Bogna Zawieja, Tomasz Podgórski
P5 Effects of different nutritional strategies in hydration and physical performance in healthy well-trained males
Ana Paula Trussardi Fayh, Alexandre Hideki Okano, Amanda Maria de Jesus Ferreira
P6 Reduction of plasma creatine concentrations as an indicator of improved bioavailability
Ralf Jäger, Martin Purpura, Roger C Harris
P7 Effect of three different breakfast meals on energy intake and nutritional status in college-age women
Molly M. Krause, Kiley A. Lavanger, Nina O. Allen, Allison E. Lieb, Katie A. Mullen, Joan M. Eckerson
P8 Accuracy of the ASA24® Dietary Recall system for assessing actual dietary intake in normal weight college-age women.
Kiley A. Lavanger, Molly M. Krause, Nina O. Allen, Allison E. Lieb, Katie A. Mullen, Joan M. Eckerson
P9 β-aminoisobutyric acid does not regulate exercise induced UCP-3 expression in skeletal muscle
Elisa Morales, Jeffrey Forsse, Thomas Andre, Sarah McKinley, Paul Hwang, Grant Tinsley, Mike Spillane, Peter Grandjean, Darryn Willoughby
P10 The ability of collegiate football athletes to adhere to sport-specific nutritional recommendations
A. Jagim, G. Wright, J. Kisiolek, M. Meinking, J. Ochsenwald, M. Andre, M.T. Jones, J. M. Oliver
P11 A single session of low-volume high intensity interval exercise improves appetite regulation in overweight men
Victor Araújo Ferreira, Daniel Costa de Souza, Victor Oliveira Albuquerque dos Santos, Rodrigo Alberto Vieira Browne, Eduardo Caldas Costa, Ana Paula Trussardi Fayh
P12 Acute effects of oral peppermint oil ingestion on exercise performance in moderately-active college students
Suresh T. Mathews, Haley D. Bishop, Clara R. Bowen, Yishan Liang, Emily A. West, Rebecca R. Rogers, Mallory R. Marshall, John K. Petrella
P13 Associations in body fat and liver triglyceride content with serum health markers in sedentary and exercised rats fed a ketogenic diet, Western diet or standard chow over a 6-week period
A. Maleah Holland, Wesley C. Kephart, Petey W. Mumford, C. Brooks Mobley, Ryan P. Lowery, Jacob M. Wilson, Michael D. Roberts
P14 Physiological changes following competition in male and female physique athletes: A pilot study
Eric T. Trexler, Katie R. Hirsch, Bill I. Campbell, Meredith G. Mock, Abbie E. Smith-Ryan
P15 Relationship between cognition and hydration status in college students at a large Southwestern university
Kate Zemek, Carol Johnston
P16 Whey protein-derived exosomes increase protein synthesis in C2C12 myotubes
C. Brooks Mobley, Petey W. Mumford, David D. Pascoe, Christopher M. Lockwood, Michael E. Miller, Michael D. Roberts
P17 The effect of three different energy drinks on 1.5-mile running performance, oxygen consumption, and perceived exertion
Gabriel J. Sanders, Willard Peveler, Brooke Warning, Corey A. Peacock
P18 The Ketogenic diet improves rotarod performance in young and older rats
Wesley C. Kephart, Petey W. Mumford, Ryan P. Lowery, Michael D. Roberts, Jacob M. Wilson
P19 Absorption of bonded arginine silicate compared to individual arginine and silicon components
David Sandler, Sara Perez Ojalvo, James Komorowski
P20 Effects of a high (2.4 g/kg) vs. low/moderate (1.2 g/kg) protein intake on body composition in aspiring female physique athletes engaging in an 8-week resistance training program
Bill I. Campbell, Danielle Aguilar, Andres Vargas, Laurin Conlin, Amey Sanders, Paola Fink-Irizarry, Layne Norton, Ross Perry, Ryley McCallum, Matthew R. Wynn, Jack Lenton
P21 Effects of a high (2.4 g/kg) vs. low/moderate (1.2 g/kg) protein intake on maximal strength in aspiring female physique athletes engaging in an 8-week resistance training program
Bill I. Campbell, Chris Gai, Seth Donelson, Shiva Best, Daniel Bove, Kaylee Couvillion, Jeff Dolan, Dante Xing, Kyshia Chernesky, Michael Pawela, Andres D. Toledo, Rachel Jimenez
P22 Monitoring of female collegiate athletes over a competitive season reveals changes in nutritional biomarkers
M. Rabideau, A. Walker, J. Pellegrino, M. Hofacker, B. McFadden, S. Conway, C. Ordway, D. Sanders, R. Monaco, M. S. Fragala, S. M. Arent
P23 Comparison of prediction equations to indirect calorimetry in men and women athletes
Jason D. Stone, Andreas Kreutzer, Jonathan M. Oliver, Jacob Kisiolek, Andrew R. Jagim
P24 Regional variations in sweat-based electrolyte loss and changes in plasma electrolyte content in Division I female athletes over the course of a competitive season
M. Hofacker, A. Walker, J. Pellegrino, M. Rabideau, B. McFadden, S. Conway, D. Sanders, C. Ordway, R. Monaco, M. S. Fragala, S. M. Arent
P25 In-season changes in plasma amino acid levels in Division I NCAA female athletes
Ozlem Tok, Joseph K. Pellegrino, Alan J. Walker, David J. Sanders, Bridget A. McFadden, Meaghan M. Rabideau, Sean P. Conway, Chris E. Ordway, Marissa Bello, Morgan L. Hofacker, Nick S. Mackowski, Anthony J. Poyssick, Eddie Capone, Robert M. Monaco, Maren S. Fragala, Shawn M. Arent
P26 Effects of a ketogenic diet with exercise on serum markers of bone metabolism, IGF-1 and femoral bone mass in rats
Petey W. Mumford, A. Maleah Holland, Wesley C. Kephart, Ryan P. Lowery, C. Brooks Mobley, Romil K. Patel, Annie Newton, Darren T. Beck, Michael D. Roberts, Jacob M. Wilson, Kaelin C. Young
P27 Casein supplementation in trained men and women: morning versus evening
Tobin Silver, Anya Ellerbroek, Richard Buehn, Leo Vargas, Armando Tamayo, Corey Peacock, Jose Antonio
P28 A high protein diet has no harmful effects: a one-year crossover study in resistance-trained males
Anya Ellerbroek, Tobin Silver, Richard Buehn, Leo Vargas, Armando Tamayo, Corey Peacock, Jose Antonio
P29 SUP (Stand-up Paddling) athletes: nutritional intake and body composition
Adam Pollock, Anya Ellerbroek, Tobin Silver, Corey Peacock, Jose Antonio
P30 The effects of 8 weeks of colostrum and bio-active peptide supplementation on body composition in recreational male weight lifters
A. Kreutzer, P. Zavala, S. Fleming, M. Jones, J. M. Oliver, A. Jagim
P31 Effects of a Popular Women’s Thermogenic Supplement During an Energy-Restricted High Protein Diet on Changes in Body Composition and Clinical Safety Markers
Cody T. Haun, Petey W. Mumford, Parker N. Hyde, Ciaran M. Fairman, Wesley C. Kephart, Darren T. Beck, Jordan R. Moon, Michael D. Roberts, Kristina L. Kendall, Kaelin C. Young
P32 Three days of caffeine consumption following caffeine withdrawal yields small strength increase in knee flexors
Geoffrey M Hudson, Tara Hannings, Kyle Sprow, Loretta DiPietro
P33 Comparison of cellular nitric oxide production from various sports nutrition ingredients
Doug Kalman, Sara Perez Ojalvo, James Komorowski
P34 The effects of 8 weeks of bio-active peptide supplementation on training adaptations in recreational male weight lifters
P. Zavala, S. Fleming, M. Jones, J. Oliver, A. Jagim
P35 Effects of MusclePharm Assault Black
TM
on lower extremity spinal excitability and postactivation potentiation: A pilot study
Brian Wallace, Haley Bergstrom, Kelly Wallace
P36 Effects of four weeks of Ketogenic Diet alone and combined with High intensity Interval Training or Continuous-Moderate intensity on body composition, lipid profile and physical performance on healthy males
Matias Monsalves-Alvarez, Sebastian Oyharçabal, Victoria Espinoza
P37 Effect of branched-chain amino acid supplementation on creatine kinase, muscular performance, and perceived muscle soreness following acute eccentric exercise
Trisha A. VanDusseldorp, Kurt A. Escobar, Kelly E. Johnson, Nathan Cole, Terence Moriarty, Matthew Stratton, Marvin R. Endito, Christine M. Mermier, Chad M. Kerksick
P38 Effects of endurance training on markers of ribosome biogenesis in rodents fed a high fat diet
Matthew A. Romero, C. Brooks Mobley, Melissa Linden, Grace Margaret-Eleanor Meers, R. Scott Rector, Michael D. Roberts
P39 The effects of acute citrulline-malate on lower-body isokinetic performance in recreationally active individuals
Joshua L Gills, Hocheng Lu, Kimberly Parker, Chris Dobbins, Joshua N Guillory, Braden Romer, David Szymanski, Jordan Glenn
P40 The effect pre-ingested L-isoleucine and L-leucine on blood glucose responses and glycemic hormones in healthy inactive adults: Preliminary data.
Daniel E. Newmire, Eric Rivas, Sarah E. Deemer, Robert Wildman, Victor Ben-Ezra
P41 Does protein and source impact substrate oxidation and energy expenditure during and after moderate intensity treadmill exercise?
C Kerksick, B Gieske, R Stecker, C Smith, K Witherbee
P42 Effects of a pre-workout supplement on peak power and power maintenance during lower and upper body testing
Michael T. Lane, M. Travis Byrd, Zachary Bell, Emily Frith, Lauren M.C. Lane
P43 Effects of a pre-workout supplement on peak power production during lower and upper body testing in college-age females
Michael T. Lane, M. Travis Byrd, Zachary Bell, Emily Frith, Lauren M.C. Lane
P44 A comparison of whey versus casein protein supplementation on resting metabolic rate and body composition: a pilot study
Corey A. Peacock, Tobin A. Silver, Megan Colas, Mauricio Mena, Winter Rodriguez, Gabriel J. Sanders, Jose Antonio
P45 A novel mixed-tocotrienol intervention enhances recovery after eccentric exercise: preliminary findings
Andrea Vansickle, Brittany DiFiore, Stephanie Stepp, Grant Slack, Bridget Smith, Kayla
Journal Article