Skip to main content
Home

Navigation Menu

  • Back
  • About
    • Back
    • About

      Contact Us

      Business Address
      5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

      Washington , DC 20015
      United States place Map
      Call Us (202) 387-640
    • Who We Are
      • Back
      • Leadership
      • Our Blueprint For Discovery
      • Board of Trustees
      • Financial Stewardship
      • Awards & Accolades
      • History
    • Connect with Us
      • Back
      • Outreach & Education
      • Newsletter
      • Yearbook
    • Working at Carnegie
      • Back
      • Applications Open: Postdoctoral Fellowships

    Contact Us

    Business Address
    5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

    Washington , DC 20015
    United States place Map
    Call Us (202) 387-6400
  • Research
    • Back
    • Research Areas & Topics
    • Research Areas & Topics
      • Back
      • Research Areas
      • From genomes to ecosystems and from planets to the cosmos, Carnegie Science is an incubator for cutting-edge, interdisciplinary research.
      • Astronomy & Astrophysics
        • Back
        • Astronomy & Astrophysics
        • Astrophysical Theory
        • Cosmology
        • Distant Galaxies
        • Milky Way & Stellar Evolution
        • Planet Formation & Evolution
        • Solar System & Exoplanets
        • Telescope Instrumentation
        • Transient & Compact Objects
      • Earth Science
        • Back
        • Earth Science
        • Experimental Petrology
        • Geochemistry
        • Geophysics & Geodynamics
        • Mineralogy & Mineral Physics
      • Ecology
        • Back
        • Ecology
        • Atmospheric Science & Energy
        • Adaptation to Climate Change
        • Water Quality & Scarcity
      • Genetics & Developmental Biology
        • Back
        • Genetics & Developmental Biology
        • Adaptation to Climate Change
        • Developmental Biology & Human Health
        • Genomics
        • Model Organism Development
        • Nested Ecosystems
        • Symbiosis
      • Matter at Extreme States
        • Back
        • Matter at Extreme States
        • Extreme Environments
        • Extreme Materials
        • Mineralogy & Mineral Physics
      • Planetary Science
        • Back
        • Planetary Science
        • Astrobiology
        • Cosmochemistry
        • Mineralogy & Mineral Physics
        • Planet Formation & Evolution
        • Solar System & Exoplanets
      • Plant Science
        • Back
        • Plant Science
        • Adaptation to Climate Change
        • Nested Ecosystems
        • Photosynthesis
        • Symbiosis
    • Divisions
      • Back
      • Divisions
      • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
        • Back
        • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
        • About

          Contact Us

          Business Address
          5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

          Washington , DC 20015
          United States place Map
          Call Us (202) 387-640
        • Research
        • Culture
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory
        • Back
        • Earth & Planets Laboratory
        • About

          Contact Us

          Business Address
          5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

          Washington , DC 20015
          United States place Map
          Call Us (202) 387-640
        • Research
        • Culture
        • Campus
      • Observatories
        • Back
        • Observatories
        • About

          Contact Us

          Business Address
          5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

          Washington , DC 20015
          United States place Map
          Call Us (202) 387-640
        • Research
        • Culture
        • Campus
    • Instrumentation
      • Back
      • Instrumentation
      • Our Telescopes
        • Back
        • Our Telescopes
        • Magellan Telescopes
        • Swope Telescope
        • du Pont Telescope
      • Observatories Machine Shop
      • EPL Research Facilities
      • EPL Machine Shop
      • Mass Spectrometry Facility
      • Advanced Imaging Facility
  • People
    • Back
    • People
      Observatory Staff

      Featured Staff Member

      Staff Member

      Staff Member

      Professional Title

      Learn More
      Observatory Staff

      Search For

    • Search All People
      • Back
      • Staff Scientists
      • Leadership
      • Biosphere Science & Engineering People
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory People
      • Observatories People
    Observatory Staff
    Dr. Michael Blanton
    Observatories Director and Crawford M. Greenewalt Chair

    Featured Staff Member

    Observatories Director Michael Blanton

    Dr. Michael Blanton

    Observatories Director and Crawford M. Greenewalt Chair

    Learn More
    Observatory Staff
    Dr. Michael Blanton
    Observatories Director and Crawford M. Greenewalt Chair

    Astronomer Michael R. Blanton joined the Carnegie Science Observatories as its 12th director in January 2026. In this role he oversees astronomical research in Pasadena and telescope operations at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile.

    Search For

    Search All Staff
  • Events
    • Back
    • Events
    • Search All Events
      • Back
      • Public Events
      • Biosphere Science & Engineering Events
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory Events
      • Observatories Events

    Upcoming Events

    Events

    Events

    Image credit: The Bullet Cluster X-ray: NASA/CXC/M. Markevitch et al.; Optical: NASA/STScI; Magellan/U. Arizona/D. Clowe et al.; Lensing Map: NASA/STScI; ESO WFI; Magellan/U. Arizona/D. Clowe et al.
    Astronomy Lecture Series

    Shining a Light on Dark Matter

    Astronomy Lecture Series w/ Dr. Andrew Robertson

    March 31

    7:00pm PDT

    Colloquium

    Prof. Charli Sakari (San Francisco State University)

    The R-Process Alliance: Galactic Archaeology with Neutron-Capture Elements

    March 31

    11:00am PDT

    Lava exoplanet
    Seminar

    Ryan Rubenzahl (Flatiron Institute)

    Isolating astrophysical from instrumental variability at the pixel level in EPRV solar spectra

    April 3

    12:15pm PDT

  • News
    • Back
    • News
    • Search All News
      • Back
      • Biosphere Science & Engineering News
      • Earth & Planets Laboratory News
      • Observatories News
      • Carnegie Science News
    News

    Recent News

    News

    Latest

    • - Any -
    • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
    • Carnegie Science
    • Earth & Planets Laboratory
    • Observatories
    expand_more
    Read all News
    Ramsey Placenta Drawing by Crosby
    Breaking News
    March 17, 2026

    Object 5 | Elizabeth Ramsey's Placental Circulation Diagram

    A bookplate from the library of Carnegie Science biologist Joseph Gall
    Breaking News
    February 23, 2026

    Joe Gall’s Personal Papers and One-of-a-Kind Library Find a Home at American Philosophical Society

    Nettie Stevens Grant in Folder
    Breaking News
    February 11, 2026

    Object 3 | The Nettie Stevens Grant

  • Resources
    • Back
    • Resources
    • Search All
      • Back
      • Employee Resources
      • Scientific Resources
      • Postdoc Resources
      • Media Resources
      • Archival Resources
    • Quick Links
      • Back
      • Employee Intranet
      • Dayforce
      • Careers
      • Observing at LCO
      • Locations and Addresses
  • Donate
    • Back
    • Donate
      - ,

    • Make a Donation
      • Back
      • Support Scientific Research
      • The Impact of Your Gift
      • Carnegie Champions
      • Planned Giving
    Jo Ann Eder

    I feel passionately about the power of nonprofits to bolster healthy communities.

    - Jo Ann Eder , Astronomer and Alumna

    Header Text

    Postdoctoral alumna Jo Ann Eder is committed to making the world a better place by supporting organizations, like Carnegie, that create and foster STEM learning opportunities for all. 

    Learn more arrow_forward
  • Home

Abstract
The zebrafish larva is a powerful tool for the study of dietary triglyceride (TG) digestion and how fatty acids (FA) derived from dietary lipids are absorbed, metabolized and distributed to the body. While fluorescent FA analogues have enabled visualization of FA metabolism, methods for specifically assaying TG digestion are badly needed. Here we present a novel High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) method that quantitatively differentiates TG and phospholipid (PL) molecules with one or two fluorescent FA analogues. We show how this tool may be used to discriminate between undigested and digested TG or phosphatidylcholine (PC), and also the products of TG or PC that have been digested, absorbed and re-synthesized into new lipid molecules. Using this approach, we explored the dietary requirement of zebrafish larvae for phospholipids. Here we demonstrate that dietary TG is digested and absorbed in the intestinal epithelium, but without dietary PC, TG accumulates and is not transported out of the enterocytes. Consequently, intestinal ER stress increases and the ingested lipid is not available support the energy and metabolic needs of other tissues. In TG diets with PC, TG is readily transported from the intestine and subsequently metabolized.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
EZ2111h low-fat fed 6.5 dpf zebrafish larvae (low-fat cohort) Reads were mapped to the zebrafish genome Zv9 by Tophat2.Refseq annotation was used as known GTF.bedgrah files for visualization were generated by custom scripts.reads falling on genes were counted by custom scripts and differentially expressed genes were called by edgeR.Genome_build: Zv9Supplementary_files_format_and_content: bedgraph files for read densities along the genome (RPKM) were generated using custom scripts.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
EZ203Unfed 6.5 dpf zebrafish larvae (low-fat cohort) Reads were mapped to the zebrafish genome Zv9 by Tophat2.Refseq annotation was used as known GTF.bedgrah files for visualization were generated by custom scripts.reads falling on genes were counted by custom scripts and differentially expressed genes were called by edgeR.Genome_build: Zv9Supplementary_files_format_and_content: bedgraph files for read densities along the genome (RPKM) were generated using custom scripts.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
EZ101Unfed 6.5 dpf zebrafish larvae (high-fat cohort) Reads were mapped to the zebrafish genome Zv9 by Tophat2.Refseq annotation was used as known GTF.bedgrah files for visualization were generated by custom scripts.reads falling on genes were counted by custom scripts and differentially expressed genes were called by edgeR.Genome_build: Zv9Supplementary_files_format_and_content: bedgraph files for read densities along the genome (RPKM) were generated using custom scripts.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
Responding to a high-fat meal requires an interplay between multiple digestive tissues, sympathetic response pathways, and the gut microbiome. The epithelial enterocytes of the intestine are responsible for absorbing dietary nutrients and preparing them for circulation to distal tissues, which requires significant changes in cellular activity, including both morphological and transcriptional responses. Following a high-fat meal, we observe morphological changes in the enterocytes of larval zebrafish, including elongation of mitochondria, formation and expansion of lipid droplets, and the rapid and transient ruffling of the nuclear periphery. Dietary and pharmacological manipulation of zebrafish larvae demonstrated that these subcellular changes are specific to triglyceride absorption. The transcriptional changes that occur simultaneously with these morphological changes were determined using RNA sequencing, revealing a cohort of up-regulated genes associated with lipid droplet formation and lipid transport via lipoprotein particles. Using a microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP) inhibitor to block -lipoprotein particle formation, we demonstrate that the transcriptional response to a high-fat meal is associated with the transfer of ER triglyceride to nascent -lipoproteins, possibly through the activation of Creb3l3/cyclic AMP-responsive element-binding protein. These data suggest that a transient increase in ER lipids is the likely mediator of the initial physiological response of intestinal enterocytes to dietary lipid.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
EZ2424h low-fat fed 6.5 dpf zebrafish larvae (low-fat cohort) Reads were mapped to the zebrafish genome Zv9 by Tophat2.Refseq annotation was used as known GTF.bedgrah files for visualization were generated by custom scripts.reads falling on genes were counted by custom scripts and differentially expressed genes were called by edgeR.Genome_build: Zv9Supplementary_files_format_and_content: bedgraph files for read densities along the genome (RPKM) were generated using custom scripts.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
EZ1414h high-fat fed 6.5 dpf zebrafish larvae (high-fat cohort) Reads were mapped to the zebrafish genome Zv9 by Tophat2.Refseq annotation was used as known GTF.bedgrah files for visualization were generated by custom scripts.reads falling on genes were counted by custom scripts and differentially expressed genes were called by edgeR.Genome_build: Zv9Supplementary_files_format_and_content: bedgraph files for read densities along the genome (RPKM) were generated using custom scripts.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
EZ202Unfed 6.5 dpf zebrafish larvae (low-fat cohort) Reads were mapped to the zebrafish genome Zv9 by Tophat2.Refseq annotation was used as known GTF.bedgrah files for visualization were generated by custom scripts.reads falling on genes were counted by custom scripts and differentially expressed genes were called by edgeR.Genome_build: Zv9Supplementary_files_format_and_content: bedgraph files for read densities along the genome (RPKM) were generated using custom scripts.
View Full Publication open_in_new
Abstract
EZ1131h high-fat fed 6.5 dpf zebrafish larvae (high-fat cohort) Reads were mapped to the zebrafish genome Zv9 by Tophat2.Refseq annotation was used as known GTF.bedgrah files for visualization were generated by custom scripts.reads falling on genes were counted by custom scripts and differentially expressed genes were called by edgeR.Genome_build: Zv9Supplementary_files_format_and_content: bedgraph files for read densities along the genome (RPKM) were generated using custom scripts.
View Full Publication open_in_new

Pagination

  • Previous page chevron_left
  • …
  • Page 793
  • Page 794
  • Page 795
  • Page 796
  • Current page 797
  • Page 798
  • Page 799
  • Page 800
  • Page 801
  • …
  • Next page chevron_right
Subscribe to

Get the latest

Subscribe to our newsletters.

Privacy Policy
Home
  • Instagram instagram
  • Twitter twitter
  • Youtube youtube
  • Facebook facebook

Science

  • Biosphere Sciences & Engineering
  • Earth & Planets Laboratory
  • Observatories
  • Our Research Areas
  • Our Blueprint For Discovery

Legal

  • Financial Statements
  • Conflict of Interest Policy
  • Privacy Policy

Careers

  • Working at Carnegie
  • Scientific and Technical Jobs
  • Administrative & Support Jobs
  • Postdoctoral Program
  • Carnegie Connect (For Employees)

Contact Us

  • Contact Administration
  • Media Contacts

Business Address

5241 Broad Branch Rd. NW

Washington, DC 20015

place Map

© Copyright Carnegie Science 2026