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Dive into the research topics where Mohammad Ghatei is active.

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Featured researches published by Mohammad Ghatei.


Gastroenterology | 1992

Nutrient-independent increases in proglucagon and ornithine decarboxylase messenger RNAs after jejunoileal resection

Dorothy B. Rountree; Martin H. Ulshen; Steven E. Selub; C. Randall Fuller; Stephen Bloom; Mohammad Ghatei; P. Kay Lund

To assess potential mediators of adaptive bowel growth, ileal proglucagon messenger RNA (mRNA) ornithine decarboxylase (ODC) mRNA, plasma enteroglucagons, and plasma glucagonlike peptide I (GLP-I) were analyzed in rats soon after jejunoileal resection or control transection. Analyses were performed before and after refeeding to establish whether responses are nutrient dependent. The elevation of ileal proglucagon and ODC mRNAs within 12 hours after resection and before refeeding shows a nutrient-independent component of the adaptive response. The onset of adaptive growth of the ileum required luminal nutrient but occurred very rapidly, within 4 hours of refeeding. The onset of adaptive growth was accompanied by transient elevation of ileal ODC mRNAs. Ileal proglucagon mRNA and plasma GLP-I levels were also elevated, and these increases were sustained up to 8 days after resection. These early and sustained increases in proglucagon mRNA and plasma GLP-I indicate that in addition to the enteroglucagons, other intestinal proglucagon-derived peptides must be considered as potential mediators of adaptive growth after jejunoileal resection.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1996

Increased ileal proglucagon expression after jejunectomy is not suppressed by inhibition of bowel growth

Martin H. Ulshen; Eileen C. Hoyt; C. Randall Fuller; Mohammad Ghatei; Stephen Bloom; P. Kay Lund

After jejunectomy, a rapid and sustained increase in the abundance of proglucagon mRNA occurs in residual ileum and is accompanied by increases in plasma intestinal proglucagon-derived peptides. This response may be a component of adaptive growth, or proglucagon-derived peptides may regulate adaptive growth. To distinguish these possibilities, rats were treated with difluoromethylornithine, blocking ornithine decarboxylase activity and thereby adaptive bowel growth. Three groups fedad libitum were compared: (1) resect: rats with 80% proximal small bowel resection; (2) resect + difluoromethylornithine: resected rats given difluoromethylornithine in drinking water; and (3) transect: transected controls. Six days after surgery, the resect + difluoromethylornithine group demonstrated inhibition of adaptive bowel growth. Abundance of ileal proglucagon mRNA in resect and resect + difluoromethylornithine groups was double that in the transect group (P<0.02), whereas ornithine decarboxylase mRNA levels did not differ. Plasma enteroglucagon and glucagon-like peptide-I levels were greater in resect than transect groups (P<0.002) and did not differ between resect and resect + difluoromethylornithine groups. The rise in ileal proglucagon mRNA after proximal small bowel resection is not inhibited by difluoromethylornithine despite blocking bowel growth and, therefore, is not merely a component of adaptive growth. Proglucagon-derived peptides are possible modulators of adaptive bowel growth but cannot stimulate growth when ornithine decarboxylase activity is inhibited.


Archive | 2002

Modification of feeding behavior

Michael Cowley; Roger Cone; Malcolm J. Low; Andrew Butler; Stephen Bloom; Caroline Jane Small; Rachel Louise Batterham; Mohammad Ghatei


Archive | 2002

Oxyntomodulin for Preventing or Treating Excess Weight

Stephen Bloom; Mohammad Ghatei; Caroline Jane Small; Catherine Louise Dakin


Archive | 2006

Oxyntomodulin analogues and their effects on feeding behaviour

Stephen Bloom; Mohammad Ghatei


Archive | 2006

Modified pyy(3-36) peptides and their effects on feeding behavior

Stanley Moore; Mohammad Ghatei; Stephen Bloom


Archive | 2004

Modification of feeding behaviour and weight control by oxyntomodulin

Stephen Bloom; Mohammad Ghatei; Caroline Jane Small; Catherine Louise Dakin


16th European Congress of Endocrinology | 2014

Kisspeptin: a novel physiological trigger for oocyte maturation in IVF treatment

Ali Abbara; Channa N. Jayasena; Alexander Comninos; Monica Nijher; Georgios Christopoulos; Chioma Izzi-Engbeaya; Mathini Sridharan; Shankunthala Narayanaswamy; Deborah Ashby; Mohammad Ghatei; S.R. Bloom; Anna Carby; Geoffrey Trew; Waljit Dhillo


Society for Endocrinology BES 2014 | 2014

The effects of kisspeptin-54 administration on GH, prolactin, and TSH secretion in healthy women

Shakunthala Narayanaswamy; Channa N. Jayasena; Alexander Comninos; Sanjana Bhalla; Ali Abbara; Zainab Gainyu-Dada; Mark Busbridge; Mohammad Ghatei; Stephen Bloom; Waljit Dhillo


Society for Endocrinology BES 2013 | 2013

Energy intake following infusion of glucagon and GLP-1: a double-blind crossover study

Jaimini Cegla; Rachel C. Troke; Ben Jones; George Tharakan; McCullough Ka; Julia Wilde; Chung Thong Lim; Naseem Parvizi; Mohamed Hussein; James Minnion; Joyceline Cuenco; Edward S. Chambers; Mohammad Ghatei; Tricia Tan; Stephen Bloom

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Stephen Bloom

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Waljit Dhillo

Imperial College Healthcare

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Ali Abbara

Imperial College London

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Kevin Murphy

Imperial College London

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