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About Prof. Young-Bum Kim

Young-Bum Kim, Ph.D. Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School Principal Investigator, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) Dr. Kim’s research centers on the molecular control of glucose and energy homeostasis in conditions such as...

Laborum Repellendus Est Minima

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Dolores Velit Soluta Nemo

Impedit aliquid quas asperiores similique et. Dolores minus non qui deserunt. Sit Minima Eveniet Iusto Error. Quaerat eligendi occaecati nesciunt totam totam. Est ut commodi officiis. Dolor minus illo. Magnam eaque rerum suscipit sequi quae quisquam possimus. Rerum ipsum harum. Ea esse quis...

Highly Cited Research from the Core

Many discoveries have relied upon careful measurement of body composition and metabolic rates in un-anesthetized, freely moving mice. One metric to determine the impact of a scientific publication is how many times other scientific articles have referred to that work–or citations. Selected highly...

Pharmacologic induction of metabolic rate (T3)

C57Bl/6J male mice were monitored in the Promethion indirect calorimeter, and data were analyzed in CalR to compare energy expenditure between T3-treated and vehicle groups (Hochbaum et al., Cell, 2024).

Chemogenetic stimulation of metabolism

Mice expressing DREADDs and non-DREADD controls were monitored in the Promethion indirect calorimeter, with CNO administered at hour 4 and data plotted in CalR.

Induction of torpor

C57Bl/6J female mice were monitored for body temperature and metabolic rate during the dark photoperiod without food, with the blue trace representing a fed mouse and the red trace a fasted mouse exhibiting torpor (Hrvatin et al., Nature 2020). ​

Wheel running

Wheel-running activity was continuously recorded over several days, showing hourly running patterns and cumulative wheel counts across alternating light and dark cycles. ​

Contact

Alexander S. Banks Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Division Of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism Center for Life Sciences, 7th floor 330 Brookline Ave Boston, MA 02115 Email: asbanks [at] bidmc.harvard.edu