Peter Mark
University of Western Australia, WA, Australia
- This delegate is presenting an abstract at this event.
Peter Mark completed a PhD at the University of Western Australia and is currently a lecturer in reproductive biology at UWA. He researches how the placenta acts as a driver of fetal growth and development. Obesity during pregnancy can result in small for gestational age babies through placental dysfunction, which subsequently predisposes the offspring to adult-onset diseases such as hypertension, diabetes and obesity. Recent research has focussed on circadian rhythms in placental function and how these may impact on nutrient transfer to the developing fetus. Both obesity and disturbances in maternal circadian rhythms can alter fetal growth trajectories and program offspring for adverse health outcomes, but whether disruption of placental rhythms contributes to these effects is unknown.
Presentations this author is a contributor to:
Circadian regulation of hypothalamic Kiss1 and Kiss1r during mouse pregnancy (#264)
5:00 PM
Cassandra C.L Yap
SRB Poster Session - Pregnancy/Parturition/Placenta
Gestational changes in the placental glucocorticoid barrier in the spiny mouse: possible increased importance of P-glycoprotein near term. (#258)
5:00 PM
Peter J Mark
SRB Poster Session - Pregnancy/Parturition/Placenta
Maternal adaptation to pregnancy: changes in circadian expression of hepatic clock genes during mouse gestation (#182)
2:30 PM
Michaela D Wharfe
ESA-SRB Orals - Female Reproduction
Obesity reduces maternal core body temperature and alters the normal thermoregulatory changes of late pregnancy in the rat (#87)
10:45 AM
Rachael C Crew
ESA Basic orals - Metabolic Reprograming
Circadian variation in pregnancy: consequences for maternal adaptation, placental function and the response to obesity (#128)
3:00 PM
Brendan Waddell
Joint SRB - ANZPRA Symposium The placenta and pregnancy outcome