Robert A. Waterland
Department of Pediatrics
Baylor College of Medicine
USDA Children's Nutrition Research Center
Houston
USA
Name/email consistency: high
- Epigenomic profiling indicates a role for DNA methylation in early postnatal liver development. Waterland, R.A., Kellermayer, R., Rached, M.T., Tatevian, N., Gomes, M.V., Zhang, J., Zhang, L., Chakravarty, A., Zhu, W., Laritsky, E., Zhang, W., Wang, X., Shen, L. Hum. Mol. Genet. (2009)
- Methyl donor supplementation prevents transgenerational amplification of obesity. Waterland, R.A., Travisano, M., Tahiliani, K.G., Rached, M.T., Mirza, S. Int. J. Obes. (Lond) (2008)
- Epigenetic epidemiology of obesity: application of epigenomic technology. Waterland, R.A. Nutr. Rev. (2008)
- Diet-induced hypermethylation at agouti viable yellow is not inherited transgenerationally through the female. Waterland, R.A., Travisano, M., Tahiliani, K.G. FASEB J. (2007)
- Epigenetic epidemiology of the developmental origins hypothesis. Waterland, R.A., Michels, K.B. Annu. Rev. Nutr. (2007)
- Post-weaning diet affects genomic imprinting at the insulin-like growth factor 2 (Igf2) locus. Waterland, R.A., Lin, J.R., Smith, C.A., Jirtle, R.L. Hum. Mol. Genet. (2006)
- Assessing the effects of high methionine intake on DNA methylation. Waterland, R.A. J. Nutr. (2006)
- Maternal methyl supplements increase offspring DNA methylation at Axin Fused. Waterland, R.A., Dolinoy, D.C., Lin, J.R., Smith, C.A., Shi, X., Tahiliani, K.G. Genesis (2006)
- Epigenetic mechanisms and gastrointestinal development. Waterland, R.A. J. Pediatr. (2006)