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CLA could help treat osteoporosisYeonhwa Park of Food Science finds a food compound that can help treat osteoporosis
Deep sea microbes ideally live in 200F conditionsJames Holden of Microbiology says deep sea microbes could resemble potential alien life
Susan Leschine of Microbiology discovers Q microbe that produces ethanol
Stephen Herbert and Susan Leschine of UMass Amherst are researching local crops that can be used for biofuel
Om Parkash is engineering a rice plant to resist uptake of arsenicOm Parkash of Plant, Soil & Insect Sciences is engineering a rice plant that resists uptake of arsenic
Home improvement jobs can be the perfect opportunity to boost your home's energy efficiency and lower your heating bills.Paul Fisette of Natural Resources Conservation says roof replacement is the perfect opportunity to lower energy bills
Adult Gypsy MothJoseph Elkinton of Plant, Soil & Insect Sciences finds that a 1989 fungus is taking a major toll on gypsy moths
Insecticides on golf courses are no threat to golfersJohn Clark of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry finds that insecticides used on golf courses are no threat to golfers
D. Julian McClementsD. Julian McClements of Food Science finds that proteins and dietary fibers can be produced by electrostatic deposition
Baoshan Xing of Plant, Soil and Insect Sciences finds new way to clean wastewater from agricultural plants
Guy Lanza, Director of the Environmental Science Program, is trying to curb damage caused by hydroelectric dams in Asia.
NRE scientist Om Parkash speaks about engineering rice plants that resist the uptake of arsenic in the latest UMass TechCast.
Kathleen Arcaro of Vet and Animal Sciences has found chemicals used in Teflon and Scotchguard in human breast milk
John Burand receives a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to study the nationwide disappearance of Honey Bees.
Climate change could significantly change the water quality in New England according to NRE researcher Timothy Randhir.
Resource Economics Professor Julie Caswell says high food costs are likely to go down soon as farmers produce more food.
NRE food scientist Kalidas Shetty finds red wine and tea can help regulate the blood sugar levels of those with diabetes.
NRE economists find that Wal-Mart Supercenters force competitive pricing on local goods, especially groceries.
NRE Professor Janice Telfer recieves first ever "Armstrong Fund for Science" grant for her work with adult stem cells.
NRE researchers found 'Elephants Without Borders', a conservation program that will study African elephant populations.
Two NRE Professors work to demystify cancers by analyzing the enzymes and genes significant to their diagnosis.
An NRE research team has found that protein Deer Tick saliva may help inhibit HIV from attacking the human immune system.
NRE research has found a way to encapsulate fat in fiber, creating low-calorie foods that retain their high-fat flavor.
NRE Scientists receive three-year, $450,000 NSF grant to study the effects of suburbanization on plant evolution.
Kevin McGarigal has been awarded a $750,000 NSF grant to develop a system of tracking wildlife using digital photography.
Richard Rogers has infused a dose of enthusiasm and teaching skill to energize his students about statistics.
Elizabeth Stuart tries an out-of-the-box approach to find a cure for the airborne chlamydia virus.
James Holden has been awarded over $600,000 by the NSF to study microorganisms in deep-sea volcanic environments.
NRE Microbiologist Susan Leschine is named one of the "Top Ten Women in Cleantech" for her work developing the Q-microbe.
Professor Susan Leschine, Microbiology, is working with SunEthanol Inc. on the Q Microbe which produces cellulosic ethanol.
Robert Childs says millions of cicadas will mature into adulthood at the same time in 2008, an event that occurs only once every 17 years.
Rodney Rountree is learning how to track different species of fish by keeping his ear to the ocean.
Wilmore Webley's course on cancer and AIDS has had a significant impact on the smoking habits of students, causing many to quit.
NRE students have created a 3D model of nearly all buildings on the Amherst campus using Google Sketchup and Google Earth.
Professor Barbara Osborne has been granted $5 million in order to study the effects of an enzyme on cancer and other diseases.
Julian McClements attempts to reduce the digestibility of bad fat in foods to make them healthier without sacrificing taste.
Julie Caswell, resource economics, served on a research committee dedicated to better communicating the health benefits of fish.
Barbara Osborne receives an outstanding accomplishment award at the UMass Amherst Faculty Convocation.
Emeritus landscape architecture professor Nick Dines creates a 'living landscape' in the center of Williamsburg.
Entomology professor Stephen Rich weighs in on the safety of pesticides being used in new home sprinkler systems.
Eric Decker and Julian McClements, faculty members in Food Science, have been ranked among the top 25 authors in the agricultural sciences.
Professor Derek Lovley's research team has boosted the electrical output of microbial fuel cells more than 10-fold by utilizing biofilms.
Professor Prasanta Bhowmik has received a Fulbright award to teach graduate weed management and ecology courses in Bangladesh.
Professor Jack Ahern is leading a study for greenway development, including bikepaths and riverfront access in Chicopee.
Professor Guy Lanza has received a Fulbright grant to develop Vietnam's first master's program in environmental health sciences.
Looks are important, particularly when it comes to managing the nation's forests, according to a report by Professor Robert Ryan.
2006 NRE Outstanding Achievement Award nominations are now being accepted. Nominating letters due April 3rd.
Yeonhwa Park and Deborah Good have received a $260,000 grant to investigate a compound with anti-obesity properties.
UMass Amherst will be the lead research center in a global effort to develop the tools needed to treat infectious animal diseases.
Professor Henry Lu helps students and alums find their way through the challenges and rewards of landscape architecture.
Professor Julie Caswell is developing tools to help government officials assess risks and factor in food safety.
Twenty-five years and 25,000 students later, Albey Reiner reflects on his popular class, the Biology of Cancer and AIDS.
UMass Amherst welcomes alpacas to Hadley Farm with the launch of the nation's first undergrad program in Camelid Studies.
Research into microbes that can harvest electricity from waste matter and clean up polluted sites has garnered a $21.8M award.
Derek Lovley and Kalidas Shetty receive outstanding accomplishment awards at the UMass Faculty Convocation
UMass department of Food Science hosts an international conference on omega-3s and their use to fortify everyday foods.
Charlie Schweik, Assistant Professor of Natural Resources Conservation receives NSF CAREER award
Construction begins on a new building at the Joseph Troll Turf Research Center in South Deerfield.

Yeonhwa Park of Food Science finds a food compound that can help treat osteoporosis

Excerpted from UMass In the Loop


December 30th, 2008

CLA could help treat osteoporosis

Yeonhwa Park, assistant professor of Food Science, recently received a two-year, $407,000 grant from the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine to improve osteoporosis prevention and treatment. She is testing a new compound that could boost the efficiency of dietary calcium and nudge marrow stem cells to form new bone, even in older adults, when taken as a supplement with calcium.

Campaigns to persuade millions of women to take calcium supplements have raised awareness and are a step in the right direction, Park says, but taking calcium by itself has limited effect. Her research has identified a food compound known as conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) that shows promise as an additive that might put calcium to work more efficiently and build stronger bones, especially in older people where it is needed the most. CLA was discovered in the 1980s in ruminant animals such as cows and sheep.

Among other things, CLA seems to regulate fat formation, Park explains, and in bone marrow, stem cells have the option to form either fat or bone cells. Further, it is known that in older animals bone marrow stem cells tend to favor fat cell formation at the expense of bone. But there's some evidence that when more CLA is available in marrow, stem cells will opt to form more bone cells. If Park and colleagues can find a way to nudge stem cells to form a higher percentage of bone cells and not fat, the supplement might help prevent osteoporosis.

Park's two-pronged study will test CLA plus calcium in a living animal model in mice and in a laboratory tissue model using mouse bone marrow stem cells. The two experiments will build on the food scientist's earlier observation that when extra calcium is available in the diet plus CLA, total bone mass improves. With their new experiments, Park and colleagues will extend this knowledge to see whether CLA plus calcium supplement in the diet can slow bone loss in ovarectomized mice, that is, in animals forced into early menopause, which mimics old age.

At the same time, they'll study bone marrow tissue to try to find a mechanism that can explain how CLA plus dietary calcium supplements might improve bone mass.

As with some other animal laboratory work, Park cautions, in this case the CLA plus calcium model for improving bone mass seems to be more robust in mice than in humans. Nevertheless, she is hopeful that by pinpointing the mechanism for enhanced bone formation in marrow stem cells and adding dietary CLA, she might devise a new preventive strategy for humans, to reduce the more than 2 million bone fractures per year estimated to be related to osteoporosis.