Topics (3)

Research experience

    • Jan 2001–
      Dec 2013
      Research: University of Central Florida
      University of Central Florida · Department of Health Professions, Department of Child, Family and Community Sciences, College of Education
      Orlando · USA
    • Jan 2006–
      Dec 2012
      Research: University of Connecticut
      University of Connecticut · Department of Kinesiology
      Storrs · USA
    • Jan 2007–
      Dec 2011
      Research: Children's National Medical Center
      Children's National Medical Center · Center for Genetic Medicine Research
      Washington, D. C. · USA
    • Jan 2004–
      Dec 2011
      Research: Hartford Hospital
      Hartford Hospital
      Hartford · USA
    • Jan 2010
      Research: George Washington University
      George Washington University · Department of Integrative Systems Biology
      Washington, D. C. · USA
    • Jan 2010
      Research: University of South Carolina
      University of South Carolina · Department of Exercise Science
      Columbia · USA
    • Jan 2008
      Research: University of Pennsylvania
      University of Pennsylvania
      Philadelphia · USA
    • Jan 2008
      Research: City University of New York - Queens College
      City University of New York - Queens College · Department of Family, Nutrition, and Exercise Sciences
      New York City · USA
    • Jan 2008
      Research: Florida Atlantic University
      Florida Atlantic University · Department of Exercise Science and Health Promotion
      Boca Raton · USA
    • Jan 2004–
      Dec 2007
      Research: University of Rhode Island
      University of Rhode Island · Nutrition and Food Sciences
      Kingston · USA
    • Jan 2005
      Research: University of Massachusetts Amherst
      University of Massachusetts Amherst · Department of Kinesiology
      Amherst Center · USA
    • Jan 1997–
      Dec 2002
      Research: University of Southern Mississippi
      University of Southern Mississippi
      Hattiesburg · USA
    • Jan 1998
      Research: University of Washington Seattle
      University of Washington Seattle · Department of Medicine
      Seattle · USA
    • Jan 1993–
      Dec 1995
      Research: University of Pittsburgh
      University of Pittsburgh · Human Energy Research Laboratory
      Pittsburgh · USA
    • Jan 1992
      Research: Washington University in St. Louis
      Washington University in St. Louis
      Saint Louis · USA
  • Teaching: Physiology Research Methodology

Education

  • Aug 1986–
    Apr 1990
    University of Pittsburgh
    Epidemiology · MPH
    United States of America · Pittsburgh
  • Aug 1986–
    Apr 1991
    University of Pittsburgh
    Exercise Physiology · Ph.D
    United States of America · Pittsburgh
  • Jan 1983–
    Apr 1986
    University of Pittsburgh
    Exercise Physiology · MS
    United States of America · Pittsburgh

Other

Publications (78) View all

  • Article: Lack of evidence for high fructose corn syrup as the cause of the obesity epidemic.
    D M Klurfeld, J Foreyt, T J Angelopoulos, J M Rippe
    International journal of obesity (2005) 09/2012; · 4.34 Impact Factor
  • Article: Leptin and leptin receptor genetic variants associate with habitual physical activity and the arm body composition response to resistance training.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: We investigated the influence of Leptin (LEP) and leptin receptor (LEPR) SNPs on habitual physical activity (PA) and body composition response to a unilateral, upper body resistance training (RT) program. European-derived American volunteers (men=111, women=131, 23.4±5.4yr, 24.4±4.6kg·m(-2)) were genotyped for LEP 19 G>A (rs2167270), and LEPR 326 A>G (rs1137100), 668 A>G (rs1137101), 3057 G>A (rs1805096), and 1968 G>C (rs8179183). They completed the Paffenbarger PA Questionnaire. Arm muscle and subcutaneous fat volumes were measured before and after 12wk of supervised RT with MRI. Multivariate and repeated measures ANCOVA tested differences among phenotypes by genotype and gender with age and body mass index as covariates. Adults with the LEP 19 GG genotype reported more kcal/wk in vigorous intensity PA (1273.3±176.8, p=0.017) and sports/recreation (1922.8±226.0, p<0.04) than A allele carriers (718.0±147.2, 1328.6±188.2, respectively). Those with the LEP 19 GG genotype spent more h/wk in light intensity PA (39.7±1.6) than A allele carriers (35.0±1.4, p=0.03). In response to RT, adults with the LEPR 668 G allele gained greater arm muscle volume (67,687.05±3186.7 vs. 52,321.87±5125.05mm(3), p=0.01) and subcutaneous fat volume (10,599.89±3683.57 vs. -5224.73±5923.98mm(3), p=0.02) than adults with the LEPR 668 AA genotype, respectively. LEP19 G>A and LEPR 668 A>G associated with habitual PA and the body composition response to RT. These LEP and LEPR SNPs are located in coding exons likely influencing LEP and LEPR function. Further investigation is needed to confirm our findings and establish mechanisms for LEP and LEPR genotype and PA and body composition associations we observed.
    Gene 09/2012; 510(1):66-70. · 2.34 Impact Factor
  • Article: Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (NOS3) +894 G>T associates with physical activity and muscle performance among young adults
    J Vasc Med. 01/2012;
  • Source
    Article: Adiposity attenuates muscle quality and the adaptive response to resistance exercise in non-obese, healthy adults.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: Emerging data have revealed a negative association between adiposity and muscle quality (MQ). There is a lack of research to examine this interaction among young, healthy individuals, and to evaluate the contribution of adiposity to adaptation after resistance exercise (RE). The purpose of this investigation was to examine the influence of subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) on muscle function among non-obese individuals before and after RE. Analyses included 634 non-obese (body mass index <30 kg m(-2)) subjects (253 males, 381 females; age=23.3 ± 5.2 years). SAT and muscle mass (magnetic resonance imaging-derived SAT and biceps muscle volume), isometric and dynamic biceps strength, and MQ (strength/muscle volume), were analyzed at baseline and after 12 weeks of unilateral RE. At baseline, SAT was independently associated with lower MQ for males (β=-0.55; P<0.01) and females (β=-0.45; P<0.01), controlling for body mass and age. Adaptation to RE revealed a significant negative association between SAT and changes for strength capacity (β=-0.13; p=0.03) and MQ (β=-0.14; P<0.01) among males. No attenuation was identified among females. Post-intervention SAT remained a negative predictor of MQ for males and females (β=-0.47; P<0.01). The findings reveal that SAT is a negative predictor of MQ among non-obese, healthy adults, and that after 12 weeks of progressive RE this association was not ameliorated. Data suggest that SAT exerts a weak, negative influence on the adaptive response to strength and MQ among males.
    International journal of obesity (2005) 12/2010; 35(8):1095-103. · 4.34 Impact Factor
  • Article: Leptin responses to long-term cardiorespiratory exercise training without concomitant weight loss: a prospective study.
    [show abstract] [hide abstract]
    ABSTRACT: The aims of the present study were to examine 1) whether changes in circulating leptin levels occur in response to six months of aerobic exercise training (ET) without concomitant weight loss; 2) whether there is a different response with respect to gender; and 3) the relationship between age and leptin and whether this relationship has any impact on the response to ET without weight-loss. Thirty-eight healthy, sedentary men and women (age 38.43+/-2.24, range 18-59 years) participated in 6 months of supervised, moderate intensity (ET) performed 4 days per week. Maintenance of usual dietary practices were encouraged to minimize weight-loss. Participants were evaluated for circulating fasting leptin, body mass, body fat percentage and maximal aerobic power (VO2max) prior to and after ET. There was no decrease in body weight or leptin concentration (17.69+/-2.67 vs 16.85+/-3.12 ng dL(-1)). Gender did not affect the response to exercise training. The bivariate correlation between leptin and age was not significant, but the relationship reached significance after controlling for body fat percentage and VO2max (r = -0.358, P < 0.05). Age did not affect the response of leptin concentration to ET. It is probable that changes in leptin concentration reported previously with ET may be attributable to concomitant weight loss, but age does not play a role in how leptin responds to ET.
    The Journal of sports medicine and physical fitness 09/2008; 48(3):391-7. · 0.85 Impact Factor

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