Eleanor R. Schrems Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

Researcher

University of Arkansas at Fayetteville

faculty

8 h-index 31 pubs 166 cited

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Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Eleanor R. Schrems investigates the mechanisms underlying cancer cachexia, a complex metabolic syndrome characterized by involuntary weight loss and muscle wasting. Her research has focused on the temporal progression of cachexia in skeletal muscle, identifying biphasic transcriptional disruptions that differ between sexes. Schrems has examined the impact of factors such as diet-induced obesity and mitochondrial antioxidants on muscle quality and function during cachexia. Her work also explores the role of specific microRNAs, like miR-16, in regulating insulin sensitivity and contractile function in a sex-dependent manner. Additionally, her research has delved into extracellular matrix remodeling and the myogenic response during skeletal muscle regeneration. Schrems is affiliated with the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville and has a publication record of 31 articles, with an h-index of 8 and 166 citations.

Metrics

  • h-index: 8
  • Publications: 31
  • Citations: 166

Selected Publications

  • Skeletal muscle methylome-transcriptome disruptions during the onset and progression of colorectal cancer-induced cachexia (2025) DOI
  • Transcriptomic analysis demonstrates moderators of muscle quality are altered in age-related sarcopenic obesity (2025) DOI
  • Aerobic Exercise Training Does Not Attenuate Fibrosis In Autologous Repaired Vml-injured Skeletal Muscle (2025) DOI
  • Skeletal Muscle Damage and Inflammation (2025) DOI
  • Promoting mitochondrial fusion is protective against cancer-induced muscle detriments in males and females (2025) DOI
  • Global mitophagy inhibition via BNIP3 ablation is not sufficient to alleviate skeletal muscle impairments in male and female tumor-bearing mice (2025) DOI
  • Myocellular adaptations to short‐term weighted wheel‐running exercise are largely conserved during C26‐tumour induction in male and female mice (2025) DOI
  • Transcriptional analysis of cancer cachexia: conserved and unique features across preclinical models and biological sex (2024) DOI
  • Mitochondrial antioxidant SkQ1 attenuates C26 cancer-induced muscle wasting in males and improves muscle contractility in female tumor-bearing mice (2024) DOI
  • Supplemental table 6 (2023) DOI
  • Supplemental table 1 (2023) DOI
  • Supplemental table 3 (2023) DOI
  • Supplemental table 2 (2023) DOI
  • Supplemental table 4 (2023) DOI
  • Supplemental table 5 (2023) DOI

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