- Title
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Cinnamon attenuates adiposity and affects the expression of metabolic genes in Diet-Induced obesity model of zebrafish
- Authors
- Kaur, N., Chugh, H., Tomar, V., Sakharkar, M.K., Dass, S.K., Chandra, R.
- Source
- Full text @ Artif Cells Nanomed Biotechnol
ZFIN is incorporating published figure images and captions as part of an ongoing project. Figures from some publications have not yet been curated, or are not available for display because of copyright restrictions. |
ZFIN is incorporating published figure images and captions as part of an ongoing project. Figures from some publications have not yet been curated, or are not available for display because of copyright restrictions. PHENOTYPE:
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ZFIN is incorporating published figure images and captions as part of an ongoing project. Figures from some publications have not yet been curated, or are not available for display because of copyright restrictions. PHENOTYPE:
|
ZFIN is incorporating published figure images and captions as part of an ongoing project. Figures from some publications have not yet been curated, or are not available for display because of copyright restrictions. PHENOTYPE:
|
Histology of liver using Oil Red O staining and haematoxylin staining. (A) Oil Red O staining at 2 weeks endpoint- Significant accumulation of fat was seen in overfeeding group, with reduction in fat accumulation in liver tissues at 4 weeks endpoint. (B) Oil Red O staining at 4 weeks endpoint - At the end of 4 weeks, immense increase in fat accumulation was observed in fishes subjected to overfeeding; however, cinnamon treatment along with overfeeding resulted in reduction of fat storage in liver tissues.
PHENOTYPE:
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Histology images of Oil Red O staining and haematoxylin staining of overfeeding groups. Scale bar: 20 µm. Arrows indicate accumulation of fat vacuoles in zebrafish overfed with artemia over a period of 2 weeks and 4 weeks. 4 weeks overfeeding group showed higher accumulation as compared to 2 weeks overfeeding group.
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