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Medicine

D-Index
75
Citations
14931
World Ranking
19238
National Ranking
9585

Overview

Helen E. Raybould is affiliated with the University of California, Davis in the United States. Their research spans various interconnected fields including Medicine, Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, and Nursing.

Their scholarly work primarily focuses on subfields such as Molecular Biology, Nutrition and Dietetics, Physiology, Endocrine and Autonomic Systems, and Gastroenterology. Within these areas, key topics addressed include:

  • Gut microbiota and health
  • Infant Nutrition and Health
  • Diet and metabolism studies
  • Regulation of Appetite and Obesity
  • Dietary Effects on Health
  • Gastrointestinal motility and disorders
  • Biochemical Analysis and Sensing Techniques

Notable recent papers authored or co-authored by Raybould include:

  • "Indole-3-lactic acid associated with Bifidobacterium-dominated microbiota significantly decreases inflammation in intestinal epithelial cells" (2020), published in BMC Microbiology
  • "Sex differences in response to short-term high fat diet in mice" (2020), published in Physiology & Behavior
  • "Obesity induces gut microbiota alterations and augments acute graft-versus-host disease after allogeneic stem cell transplantation" (2020), published in Science Translational Medicine
  • "2'-Fucosyllactose Supplementation Improves Gut-Brain Signaling and Diet-Induced Obese Phenotype and Changes the Gut Microbiota in High Fat-Fed Mice" (2020), published in Nutrients
  • "Bifidobacterium catabolism of human milk oligosaccharides overrides endogenous competitive exclusion driving colonization and protection" (2021), published in Gut Microbes

Raybould has frequently published in journals including Physiology & Behavior, Nutrients, Peptides, BMC Microbiology, and Science Translational Medicine. Some of these venues have hosted multiple of their publications.

Collaboration is a significant aspect of their work. Frequent co-authors include Michael L. Goodson, Amy M. Ehrlich, Daniela Barile, Carlito B. Lebrilla, and David A. Mills, reflecting an interdisciplinary approach within their research network.

Best Publications

  • Propensity to high-fat diet-induced obesity in rats is associated with changes in the gut microbiota and gut inflammation

    Claire Barbier de La Serre;Collin L. Ellis;Jennifer Lee;Amber L. Hartman

  • Role of visceral afferent mechanisms in functional bowel disorders.

    Emeran A. Mayer;Helen E. Raybould;Helen E. Raybould

  • Cholecystokinin inhibits gastric motility and emptying via a capsaicin-sensitive vagal pathway in rats

    Helen E Raybould;Y. Tache

  • CHANGES IN INTESTINAL BARRIER FUNCTION AND GUT MICROBIOTA IN HIGH-FAT DIET FED RATS ARE DYNAMIC AND REGION-DEPENDENT

    M. Kristina Hamilton;Gaëlle Boudry;Danielle G. Lemay;Helen E. Raybould

  • The G-Protein−Coupled Receptor GPR40 Directly Mediates Long-Chain Fatty Acid−Induced Secretion of Cholecystokinin

    Alice P. Liou;Alice P. Liou;Xinping Lu;Yoshitatsu Sei;Xilin Zhao

  • Bifidobacteria isolated from infants and cultured on human milk oligosaccharides affect intestinal epithelial function

    Maciej Chichlowski;Guillaume De Lartigue;J. Bruce German;Helen E. Raybould

  • Gut chemosensing: Interactions between gut endocrine cells and visceral afferents

    Helen E. Raybould

  • Vagal sensors in the rat duodenal mucosa: distribution and structure as revealed by in vivo DiI-tracing

    Hans Rudolf Berthoud;Michael Kressel;Helen E Raybould;Winfried L. Neuhuber

  • Oligosaccharide Binding Proteins from Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis Reveal a Preference for Host Glycans

    Daniel Garrido;Jae Han Kim;J. Bruce German;Helen E. Raybould

  • Diet-induced obesity leads to the development of leptin resistance in vagal afferent neurons

    Guillaume de Lartigue;Claire Barbier de la Serre;Elvis Espero;Jennifer Lee

  • The extracellular calcium sensing receptor is required for cholecystokinin secretion in response to L-phenylalanine in acutely isolated intestinal I cells

    Alice P. Liou;Yoshitatsu Sei;Xilin Zhao;Jianying Feng

  • Expression of 5-HT3 receptors in the rat gastrointestinal tract

    Jörg Glatzle;Jörg Glatzle;Catia Sternini;Carla Robin;Tilman T. Zittel

  • Expression of 5-HT3 receptors by extrinsic duodenal afferents contribute to intestinal inhibition of gastric emptying.

    Helen E. Raybould;Jorg Glatzle;Carla Robin;James H. Meyer

  • CRF in the paraventricular nucleus mediates gastric and colonic motor response to restraint stress.

    H. Monnikes;B. G. Schmidt;Helen E Raybould;Y. Tache

  • Vagal afferent neurons in high fat diet-induced obesity; intestinal microflora, gut inflammation and cholecystokinin.

    Guillaume de Lartigue;Claire Barbier de La Serre;Helen E Raybould

  • Indole-3-lactic acid associated with Bifidobacterium-dominated microbiota significantly decreases inflammation in intestinal epithelial cells

    Amy M. Ehrlich;Alline R. Pacheco;Alline R. Pacheco;Bethany M. Henrick;Bethany M. Henrick;Diana Taft;Diana Taft

  • Central nervous system action of peptides to influence gastrointestinal motor function

    Yvette Taché;Tomas Garrick;Helen E Raybould

  • Mechanisms of CCK signaling from gut to brain.

    Helen E Raybould

  • Intestinal lipid inhibits gastric emptying via CCK and a vagal capsaicin-sensitive afferent pathway in rats

    H. H. Holzer;C. M. Turkelson;T. E. Solomon;Helen E Raybould

  • C-fos protein expression in the nucleus of the solitary tract correlates with cholecystokinin dose injected and food intake in rats.

    Tilman T Zittel;Jörg Glatzle;Martin E Kreis;M Starlinger

Frequent Co-Authors

Catia Sternini
Catia Sternini University of California, Los Angeles
Patrick Tso
Patrick Tso University of Cincinnati
Yvette Taché
Yvette Taché University of California, Los Angeles
David A. Mills
David A. Mills University of California, Davis
Emeran A. Mayer
Emeran A. Mayer University of California, Los Angeles
Graham J. Dockray
Graham J. Dockray University of Liverpool
Kevin C K Lloyd
Kevin C K Lloyd University of California, Davis
Peter Holzer
Peter Holzer Medical University of Graz
Peter J. Havel
Peter J. Havel University of California, Davis
Linda Rinaman
Linda Rinaman Florida State University

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