185 results on '"Klein, Janet D."'
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2. Aldosterone Contributes to Vasopressin Escape through Changes in Water and Urea Transport
3. Phosphatases Decrease Water and Urea Permeability in Rat Inner Medullary Collecting Ducts
4. UT (Urea Transporter)
5. Empagliflozin Accelerates Escape from Vasopressin in Rats
6. Aldosterone Regulates Vasopressin Escape through Changes in Water and Urea Transporters
7. UT (Urea Transporter)
8. Downregulation of let-7 by Electrical Acupuncture Increases Protein Synthesis in Mice
9. Expression of Urea Transporters and Their Regulation
10. An AMPK activator as a therapeutic option for congenital nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
11. Adaptive physiological water conservation explains hypertension and muscle catabolism in experimental chronic renal failure
12. Adrenomedullin Inhibits Osmotic Water Permeability in Rat Inner Medullary Collecting Ducts
13. uPAR
14. UT (Urea Transporter)
15. Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator Receptor
16. UP50
17. UT-B
18. uPA Receptor
19. UPH1
20. UT-A
21. Urokinase-Type Plasminogen Activator Receptor-Associated Protein (uPARAP)
22. Urea Transporter
23. 14-3-3γ, a novel regulator of the large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel
24. Inhibition of urea transporter ameliorates uremic cardiomyopathy in chronic kidney disease
25. UT-A1/A3 knockout mice show reduced fibrosis following unilateral ureteral obstruction
26. Aldosterone Decreases Vasopressin-Stimulated Water Reabsorption in Rat Inner Medullary Collecting Ducts
27. Rapid effects of aldosterone and phosphatase inhibition on water and urea permeabilities
28. Exogenous miR-29a Attenuates Muscle Atrophy and Kidney Fibrosis in Unilateral Ureteral Obstruction Mice
29. Electrical acupuncture increases protein synthesis through downregulation of let-7
30. Aestivation Motifs Explain Hypertension and Muscle Catabolism in Experimental Chronic Renal Failure
31. High glucose reduces expression of podocin in cultured human podocytes by stimulating TRPC6
32. Exogenous miR‐26a suppresses muscle wasting and renal fibrosis in obstructive kidney disease
33. Role of adrenomedullin in mediating water reabsorption in rat inner medullary collecting ducts
34. Electrically‐stimulated acupuncture improves muscle function and increases renal blood flow through exosomes‐carried miR‐181
35. Inner Medullary Urea Transporters Contribute to Development of Renal Fibrosis in Mice With Unilateral Ureteral Obstruction
36. Exosome-Mediated miR-29 Transfer Reduces Muscle Atrophy and Kidney Fibrosis in Mice
37. GDE5 inhibition accumulates intracellular glycerophosphocholine and suppresses adipogenesis at a mitotic clonal expansion stage
38. Exogenous miR-29a Attenuates Muscle Atrophy and Kidney Fibrosis in UUO Mice
39. miR-26a Limits Muscle Wasting and Cardiac Fibrosis through Exosome-Mediated microRNA Transfer in Chronic Kidney Disease
40. Electrically stimulated acupuncture increases renal blood flow through exosome-carried miR-181
41. Glucagon infusion alters the hyperpolarized13C-urea renal hemodynamic signature
42. The Role of Intercalated Cell Nedd4–2 in BP Regulation, Ion Transport, and Transporter Expression
43. miRNA-23a/27a attenuates muscle atrophy and renal fibrosis through muscle-kidney crosstalk
44. Protein kinase Cα deletion causes hypotension and decreased vascular contractility
45. Increased glucocorticoid hormone actions induce skin-specific Na+ and water loss in melanocortin 3 receptor knockout mice
46. Increased glucocorticoid hormone actions induce skin-specific Na+ and water loss in melanocortin 3 receptor knockout mice
47. GRHL2 Is Required for Collecting Duct Epithelial Barrier Function and Renal Osmoregulation
48. Ascending Vasa Recta Are Angiopoietin/Tie2-Dependent Lymphatic-Like Vessels
49. Abstract P499: Protein Kinase Cα Deletion Causes Hypotension Due to Decreased Vascular Contractility
50. Chronic kidney disease induces autophagy leading to dysfunction of mitochondria in skeletal muscle
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