Imperial College London

DrIanGodsland

Faculty of MedicineDepartment of Metabolism, Digestion and Reproduction

Wynn Reader in Human Metabolism
 
 
 
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Contact

 

+44 (0)20 3312 6573i.godsland

 
 
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Assistant

 

Mrs Heather Bones +44 (0)20 7594 2429

 
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Location

 

Room G1Norfolk PlaceSt Mary's Campus

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Summary

 

Publications

Publication Type
Year
to

342 results found

Bravis V, Kaur A, Walkey H, Godsland I, Dayan C, Peakman M, Bingley P, Dunger D, Oliver N, Johnston DGet al., 2016, The effect of ethnicity on the clinical presentation of people with Type 1 diabetes and on humoral autoimmunity of the cohort within ADDRESS-2 (After Diagnosis Diabetes Research Support System 2), Publisher: Wiley, Pages: 25-25, ISSN: 0742-3071

Conference paper

Seechurn S, Reddy M, Jugnee N, El Sharkawy M, Hesl P, Herrero-Vinias P, Godsland I, Toumazou C, Pantelis G, Oliver Net al., 2016, Does the addition of glucagon to a closed loop system impact on post exercise glycaemia?, ATTD 2016 9th International Conference on Advanced Technologies & Treatments for Diabetes, Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Pages: A60-A60, ISSN: 1520-9156

Conference paper

Seechurn S, Reddy M, Jugnee N, Herrero P, El Sharkawy M, Pesl P, Godsland I, Toumazo C, Pantelis G, Oliver Net al., 2016, Does the addition of glucagon to the closed loop insulin pump add any benefit?, ATTD 2016 9th International Conference on Advanced Technologies & Treatments for Diabetes, Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Pages: A61-A61, ISSN: 1520-9156

Conference paper

Pal A, Potjer TP, Thomsen SK, Ng HJ, Barrett A, Scharfmann R, James TJ, Bishop DT, Karpe F, Godsland IF, Vasen HFA, Newton-Bishop J, Pijl H, McCarthy MI, Gloyn ALet al., 2016, Loss-of-function mutations in the cell-cycle control gene CDKN2A impact on glucose homeostasis in humans, Diabetes, Vol: 65, Pages: 527-533, ISSN: 0012-1797

At the CDKN2A/B locus, three independent signals for type 2 diabetes risk are located in a noncoding region near CDKN2A. The disease-associated alleles have been implicated in reduced β-cell function, but the underlying mechanism remains elusive. In mice, β-cell–specific loss of Cdkn2a causes hyperplasia, while overexpression leads to diabetes, highlighting CDKN2A as a candidate effector transcript. Rare CDKN2A loss-of-function mutations are a cause of familial melanoma and offer the opportunity to determine the impact of CDKN2A haploinsufficiency on glucose homeostasis in humans. To test the hypothesis that such individuals have improved β-cell function, we performed oral and intravenous glucose tolerance tests on mutation carriers and matched control subjects. Compared with control subjects, carriers displayed increased insulin secretion, impaired insulin sensitivity, and reduced hepatic insulin clearance. These results are consistent with a model whereby CDKN2A loss affects a range of different tissues, including pancreatic β-cells and liver. To test for direct effects of CDKN2A-loss on β-cell function, we performed knockdown in a human β-cell line, EndoC-bH1. This revealed increased insulin secretion independent of proliferation. Overall, we demonstrated that CDKN2A is an important regulator of glucose homeostasis in humans, thus supporting its candidacy as an effector transcript for type 2 diabetes–associated alleles in the region.

Journal article

Godsland IF, Mehta S, Forbes S, Meienberg F, Yee M, Taylor-Robinson SD, Johnston DGet al., 2016, Is insulin resistance the principal cause of NAFLD?, CLINICAL DILEMMAS IN NON-ALCOHOLIC FATTY LIVER DISEASE, Editors: Williams, TaylorRobinson, Publisher: JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD, Pages: 15-28, ISBN: 978-1-118-91203-4

Book chapter

Anstee M, Argo CK, Brunt EM, Caldwell SH, Cobbold JF, Cordero P, Day CP, Dhawan A, Diehl AM, Dowman JK, Dufour JF, Fallowfiled J, Farrell GC, Finer N, Fitzpatrick E, Forbes S, Godsland IF, Harrison SA, Hazlehurst JM, Hussain HK, Jenkinson A, Johnston DG, Kleiner DE, Lefkowitch JH, Lessan N, Li J, Lim S, Liu YL, Maddur H, Margini C, McDonald N, Mehta S, Meienberg F, Neuschwander-Tetri B, Newsome P, Oben JA, Pinzani M, Ratziu V, Sanyal AJ, Siddiqui MB, Siddiqui MS, Syn WK, Taylor-Robinson SD, Tomlinson JW, Torres DM, Tsochatzis EA, Williams R, Yee M, Yilmaz Y, Yki-Jarvinen Het al., 2016, Clinical Dilemmas in Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease, Chichester, Publisher: Wiley, ISBN: 9781118912034

Book

Reddy M, Godsland IF, Barnard KD, Herrero P, Georgiou P, Thomson H, Johnston DG, Oliver NSet al., 2015, Glycemic variability and its impact on quality of life in adults with type 1 diabetes, Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology, Vol: 10, Pages: 60-66, ISSN: 1932-2968

BACKGROUND: There is evidence suggesting that glycemic variability reduces quality of life (QoL) in people with type 2 diabetes, but this association has not been explored in type 1 diabetes. We aimed to assess whether glycemic variability has an impact on QoL in adults with established type 1 diabetes using multiple daily injections (MDI) of insulin or continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII). METHODS: Participants wore a blinded continuous glucose monitor for up to 5 days and completed the diabetes quality of life (DQOL) questionnaire. Glycemic variability measures were calculated using the EasyGV version 9.0 software. A correlation analysis was performed to assess whether there was a relationship between glycemic variability and measures of QoL. RESULTS: In all, 57 participants with type 1 diabetes (51% male, 65% on CSII, 35% on MDI, mean [SD] age 41 [13] years, duration of diabetes 21 [12] years, HbA1c 63 [12] mmol/mol [7.9% (1.1)], body mass index 25.2 [4.0] kg/m(2)) were included in the analysis. No significant associations between glycemic variability and DQOL total or subscale scores were demonstrated. The glycemic variability was significantly higher for MDI participants compared to CSII participants (P < .05 for all glycemic variability measures), but no significant difference in QoL between the 2 treatment modality groups was observed. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment with CSII is associated with lower glycemic variability compared to MDI. Despite this, and contrary to findings in type 2 diabetes, this study did not find an association between glycemic variability and QoL in adults with relatively well-controlled type 1 diabetes, irrespective of whether they are on MDI or CSII.

Journal article

Priscilla S, Nanditha A, Simon M, Satheesh K, Kumar S, Shetty AS, Snehalatha C, Johnston DG, Godsland IF, Wareham NJ, Ramachandran Aet al., 2015, A pragmatic and scalable strategy using mobile technology to promote sustained lifestyle changes to prevent type 2 diabetes in India-Outcome of screening, DIABETES RESEARCH AND CLINICAL PRACTICE, Vol: 110, Pages: 335-340, ISSN: 0168-8227

Journal article

Ram J, Snehalatha C, Selvam S, Nanditha A, Shetty AS, Godsland IF, Johnston DG, Ramachandran Aet al., 2015, The oral disposition index is a strong predictor of incident diabetes in Asian Indian prediabetic men, ACTA DIABETOLOGICA, Vol: 52, Pages: 733-741, ISSN: 0940-5429

Journal article

Vinitha R, Ram J, Snehalatha C, Nanditha A, Shetty AS, Arun R, Godsland IF, Johnston DG, Ramachandran Aet al., 2015, Adiponectin, leptin, interleukin-6 and HbA1c in the prediction of incident type 2 diabetes: A nested case-control study in Asian Indian men with impaired glucose tolerance, DIABETES RESEARCH AND CLINICAL PRACTICE, Vol: 109, Pages: 340-346, ISSN: 0168-8227

Journal article

Thomsen SK, Pal A, Potjer TP, Barrett A, Ng HJ, Scharfmann R, Godsland IF, James TJ, Karpe F, Vasen HFA, Newton-Bishop J, Pijl H, Mccarthy MI, Gloyn ALet al., 2015, Loss-of-Function Mutations in the Cell-Cycle Control Gene CDKN2A Impact on Glucose Homeostasis in Humans, 75th Scientific Sessions of the American-Diabetes-Association, Publisher: AMER DIABETES ASSOC, Pages: A82-A83, ISSN: 0012-1797

Conference paper

Tillin T, Hughes AD, Wang Q, Wurtz P, Ala-Korpela M, Sattar N, Forouhi NG, Godsland IF, Eastwood SV, McKeigue PM, Chaturvedi Net al., 2015, Diabetes risk and amino acid profiles: cross-sectional and prospective analyses of ethnicity, amino acids and diabetes in a South Asian and European cohort from the SABRE (Southall And Brent REvisited) Study, DIABETOLOGIA, Vol: 58, Pages: 968-979, ISSN: 0012-186X

Journal article

Anagnostis P, Godsland IF, 2015, Cardiovascular disease risk in type 1 diabetes, Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, Vol: 3, Pages: 316-317, ISSN: 2213-8587

Journal article

Anagnostis P, Stevenson JC, Crook D, Johnston DG, Godsland IFet al., 2015, Effects of menopause, gender and age on lipids and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol subfractions, MATURITAS, Vol: 81, Pages: 62-68, ISSN: 0378-5122

Journal article

Jagannathan R, Snehalatha C, Selvam S, Nanditha A, Shetty AS, Godsland IF, Johnston DG, Ramachandran Aet al., 2015, Retinol binding protein-4 predicts incident diabetes in Asian Indian men with prediabetes, BIOFACTORS, Vol: 41, Pages: 160-165, ISSN: 0951-6433

Journal article

Eastwood SV, Tillin T, Dehbi HM, Wright A, Forouhi NG, Godsland I, Whincup P, Sattar N, Hughes AD, Chaturvedi Net al., 2015, Ethnic Differences in Associations Between Fat Deposition and Incident Diabetes and Underlying Mechanisms: The SABRE Study, Obesity, Vol: 23, Pages: 699-706, ISSN: 1930-7381

ObjectiveTo examine ethnic differences in ectopic fat and associations with incident diabetes.MethodsIn a UK cohort study, 1338 Europeans, 838 South Asians, and 330 African Caribbeans living in London were aged 40-69 years at baseline. Baseline assessment included blood tests, anthropometry, and questionnaires. Anthropometry-based prediction equations estimated baseline visceral adipose tissue (VAT). Incident diabetes was ascertained from record review, self-report, or oral glucose tolerance testing.ResultsSouth Asians had more and African Caribbeans less estimated VAT than Europeans. Both ethnic minorities had larger truncal skinfolds than Europeans. In men, adjustment for risk factors (BMI, smoking, systolic blood pressure, and HDL-cholesterol) markedly attenuated the association between estimated VAT and diabetes in Europeans (standardized subhazard ratios [95% CI]: from 1.74 [1.49, 2.03] to 1.16 [0.77, 1.76]) and African Caribbeans (1.72 [1.26, 2.35] to 1.44 [0.69, 3.02]) but not South Asians (1.60 [1.38, 1.86] to 1.90 [1.37, 2.64]). In women, attenuation was observed only for South Asians (1.80 [1.01, 3.23] to 1.07 [0.49, 2.31]). Associations between truncal skinfolds and diabetes appeared less affected by multivariable adjustment in South Asians and African Caribbeans than Europeans (1.24 [0.97, 1.57] and 1.28 [0.89, 1.82] versus 1.02 [0.77, 1.36] in men; 1.91 [1.03, 3.56] and 1.42 [0.86, 2.34] versus 1.23 [0.74, 2.05] in women).ConclusionsDifferences in overall truncal fat, as well as VAT, may contribute to the excess of diabetes in South Asian and African Caribbean groups, particularly for women.

Journal article

Tillin T, Hughes AD, Wang Q, Wurtz P, Ala-Korpela M, Sattar N, Forouhi NG, Godsland IF, Eastwood S, Chaturvedi Net al., 2015, Amino acid profiles show a stronger relationship with incident diabetes in South Asian compared with European men, Publisher: WILEY-BLACKWELL, Pages: 29-29, ISSN: 0742-3071

Conference paper

Bravis V, Kaur A, Walkey H, Godsland IF, Dayan C, Peakman M, Bingley PJ, Dunger D, Oliver N, Johnston DGet al., 2015, An incident and high risk Type 1 diabetes cohort, After Diagnosis Diabetes Research Support System (ADDRESS-2): initial clinical description of a multi-ethnic cohort in the UK, Publisher: WILEY-BLACKWELL, Pages: 85-85, ISSN: 0742-3071

Conference paper

Bravis V, Kaur A, Walkey H, Godsland IF, Dayan C, Peakman M, Bingley PJ, Dunger D, Oliver N, Johnston DGet al., 2015, An incident and high risk Type 1 diabetes cohort, After Diagnosis Diabetes Research Support System (ADDRESS-2): description and comparison of clinical characteristics and presentation of patients with and without evidence of humoral autoimmunity, Publisher: WILEY-BLACKWELL, Pages: 86-86, ISSN: 0742-3071

Conference paper

Tillin T, Wang Q, Wurtz P, Ala-Korpela M, Forouhi NG, Godsland IF, Sattar N, Eastwood S, Hughes AD, Chaturvedi Net al., 2015, Associations between low molecular weight metabolites and insulin resistance are stronger in South Asian compared with European women, Publisher: WILEY-BLACKWELL, Pages: 28-28, ISSN: 0742-3071

Conference paper

Bligh HFJ, Godsland IF, Frost G, Hunter KJ, Murray P, MacAulay K, Hyliands D, Talbot DCS, Casey J, Mulder TPJ, Berry MJet al., 2015, Plant-rich mixed meals based on Palaeolithic diet principles have a dramatic impact on incretin, peptide YY and satiety response, but show little effect on glucose and insulin homeostasis: an acute-effects randomised study, BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, Vol: 113, Pages: 574-584, ISSN: 0007-1145

Journal article

El-Laboudi A, Godsland I, Johnston D, Oliver Net al., 2015, EFFECT OF REAL-TIME CONTINUOUS GLUCOSE MONITORING ON MEASURES OF GLYCEMIC VARIABILITY AND QUALITY OF GLYCEMIC CONTROL IN TYPE 1 DIABETES, Publisher: MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC, Pages: A76-A76, ISSN: 1520-9156

Conference paper

Reddy M, Herrero P, El Sharkawy M, Pesl P, Jugnee N, Godsland I, Toumazou C, Johnston D, Georgiou P, Oliver Net al., 2015, METABOLIC CONTROL WITH THE BIO-INSPIRED ARTIFICIAL PANCREAS (BIAP) IN ADULTS WITH TYPE 1 DIABETES: A 24-HOUR RANDOMISED CONTROLLED CROSSOVER STUDY, Publisher: MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC, Pages: A20-A21, ISSN: 1520-9156

Conference paper

El-Laboudi A, Godsland I, Johnston D, Oliver Net al., 2015, FACTORS PREDICTIVE OF EFFECT OF REAL-TIME CONTINUOUS GLUCOSE MONITORING ON MEASURES OF GLYCEMIC VARIABILITY AND QUALITY OF GLYCEMIC CONTROL IN TYPE 1 DIABETES, Publisher: MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC, Pages: A76-A77, ISSN: 1520-9156

Conference paper

Bravis V, Kaur A, Walkey H, Godsland I, Dayan C, Peakman M, Bingley P, Dunger D, Oliver N, Johnston DGet al., 2015, AN INCIDENT AND HIGH RISK TYPE 1 DIABETES COHORT - ADDRESS-2: CLINICAL PRESENTATION OF A MULTI-ETHNIC COHORT IN THE UK AND EFFECTS OF HUMORAL AUTOIMMUNITY, Publisher: MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC, Pages: A156-A156, ISSN: 1520-9156

Conference paper

Tillin T, Sattar N, Godsland IF, Hughes AD, Chaturvedi N, Forouhi NGet al., 2015, Ethnicity-specific obesity cut-points in the development of Type 2 diabetes - a prospective study including three ethnic groups in the United Kingdom, DIABETIC MEDICINE, Vol: 32, Pages: 226-234, ISSN: 0742-3071

Journal article

Pérez-Pevida B, Sancho L, Guillén Valderrama F, Escalada J, García Velloso MJ, Pascual Corrales E, Gutiérrez-Buey G, Llavero Valero M, Galofré JC, Richter J, Salvador Jet al., 2015, Optimization of metformin discontinuation in diabetic patients explored with 18F-FDG PET/CT, Pages: 1-607

Conference paper

Ram J, Selvam S, Snehalatha C, Nanditha A, Simon M, Shetty AS, Godsland IF, Johnston DG, Ramachandran Aet al., 2014, Improvement in diet habits, independent of physical activity helps to reduce incident diabetes among prediabetic Asian Indian men, DIABETES RESEARCH AND CLINICAL PRACTICE, Vol: 106, Pages: 491-495, ISSN: 0168-8227

Journal article

Anagnostis P, Majeed A, Johnston DG, Godsland IFet al., 2014, Cardiovascular risk in women with type 2 diabetes mellitus and prediabetes: is it indeed higher than men?, EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGY, Vol: 171, Pages: R245-R255, ISSN: 0804-4643

Journal article

Ram J, Snehalatha C, Nanditha A, Selvam S, Shetty SA, Godsland IF, Johnston DG, Ramachandran Aet al., 2014, Hypertriglyceridaemic waist phenotype as a simple predictive marker of incident diabetes in Asian-Indian men with prediabetes, DIABETIC MEDICINE, Vol: 31, Pages: 1542-1549, ISSN: 0742-3071

Journal article

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