Research groups
Publications
Academic article
- Kathrine Sivertsen Åsrud; Line Pedersen; Reidun Aesoy et al. (2019). Mice depleted for Exchange Proteins Directly Activated by cAMP (Epac) exhibit irregular liver regeneration in response to partial hepatectomy. (external link)
- Cara Ellen Wogsland; Hilde Eide Lien; Line Pedersen et al. (2021). High-dimensional immunotyping of tumors grown in obese and non-obese mice. (external link)
- Kathrine Sivertsen Åsrud; Ronja Bjørnstad; Reidun Kristin Kopperud et al. (2020). Epac1 null mice have nephrogenic diabetes insipidus with deficient corticopapillary osmotic gradient and weaker collecting duct tight junctions. (external link)
- Xiaozheng Liu; Anastasiia Rulina; Man Hung Choi et al. (2022). C/EBPB-dependent adaptation to palmitic acid promotes tumor formation in hormone receptor negative breast cancer. (external link)
- Line Pedersen; Pouda Panahandeh; Muntequa Ishtiaq Siraji et al. (2020). Golgi-Localized PAQR4 Mediates Antiapoptotic Ceramidase Activity in Breast Cancer. (external link)
- Kelly Velasco Pinto; Johanna Lüdeke St-Louis; Henrikke Nilsen Hovland et al. (2020). Functional evaluation of 16 SCHAD missense variants: Only amino acid substitutions causing congenital hyperinsulinism of infancy lead to loss-of-function phenotypes in vitro. (external link)
- Qingzhang Zhu; Shiuhwei Chen; Jan-Bernd Funcke et al. (2024). PAQR4 regulates adipocyte function and systemic metabolic health by mediating ceramide levels. (external link)
Master’s thesis
- Sunniva Senum Brownrigg; Nils Henrik Halberg; Line Pedersen et al. (2025). Spatial Exploration of Obesity-Induced Effects on the Microenvironment of Pancreatic Neoplastic Lesions. (external link)
- Xiaozheng Liu; Nils Halberg; Line Pedersen (2017). Malignant Exploitation of the Altered Metabolic Landscape in Obese Hormone Receptor Negative Breast Cancer Patients. (external link)
- Susanne Helen Benjaminsen; Nils Halberg; Line Pedersen (2019). Development of an in vivo selection-based model system to study PDAC liver colonization in obese and non-obese microenvironments. (external link)