Chloride transport across cell membranes is broadly involved in epithelial fluid transport, cell volume and pH regulation, muscle contraction, membrane excitability, and organellar acidification. The human genome encodes at least 53 chloride-transporting proteins with expression in cell plasma or intracellular membranes, which include chloride channels, exchangers, and cotransporters, some having broad anion specificity. Loss-of-function mutations in chloride transporters cause a wide variety of human diseases, including cystic fibrosis, secretory diarrhea, kidney stones, salt-wasting nephropathy, myotonia, osteopetrosis, hearing loss, and goiter. Although impactful advances have been made in the past decade in drug treatment of cystic fibr...
Chloride channels are probably found in every cell, from bacteria to mammals. Their physiological ta...
Mutations in the gene-encoding cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) cause defe...
Cystic fibrosis is the most well-known of a variety of diseases termed channelopathies, in which the...
Chloride transport across cell membranes is broadly involved in epithelial fluid transport, cell vol...
Chloride channels represent a relatively under-explored target class for drug discovery as elucidati...
The Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) is a cAMP-activated chloride channel ...
Cystic fibrosis is a hereditary disease that originates from mutations in the epithelial chloride ch...
In recent decades, small molecules have been widely applied to the generation of functional ion tran...
Cystic fibrosis is caused by a genetic defect in the CFTR protein, whose main function is chloride t...
The solute carrier family 26, member 9 (SLC26A9) is an epithelial chloride channel that is expressed...
The solute carrier family 26, member 9 (SLC26A9) is an epithelial chloride channel that is expressed...
CLC genes are expressed in species from bacteria to human and encode Cl(-)-channels or Cl(-)/H(+)-ex...
Cl- channels reside both in the plasma membrane and in intracellular organelles. Their functions ran...
After a personal description of the convoluted path leading 25 years ago to the molecular identifica...
The transport of anions across cellular membranes is crucial for various functions, including the co...
Chloride channels are probably found in every cell, from bacteria to mammals. Their physiological ta...
Mutations in the gene-encoding cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) cause defe...
Cystic fibrosis is the most well-known of a variety of diseases termed channelopathies, in which the...
Chloride transport across cell membranes is broadly involved in epithelial fluid transport, cell vol...
Chloride channels represent a relatively under-explored target class for drug discovery as elucidati...
The Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) is a cAMP-activated chloride channel ...
Cystic fibrosis is a hereditary disease that originates from mutations in the epithelial chloride ch...
In recent decades, small molecules have been widely applied to the generation of functional ion tran...
Cystic fibrosis is caused by a genetic defect in the CFTR protein, whose main function is chloride t...
The solute carrier family 26, member 9 (SLC26A9) is an epithelial chloride channel that is expressed...
The solute carrier family 26, member 9 (SLC26A9) is an epithelial chloride channel that is expressed...
CLC genes are expressed in species from bacteria to human and encode Cl(-)-channels or Cl(-)/H(+)-ex...
Cl- channels reside both in the plasma membrane and in intracellular organelles. Their functions ran...
After a personal description of the convoluted path leading 25 years ago to the molecular identifica...
The transport of anions across cellular membranes is crucial for various functions, including the co...
Chloride channels are probably found in every cell, from bacteria to mammals. Their physiological ta...
Mutations in the gene-encoding cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) cause defe...
Cystic fibrosis is the most well-known of a variety of diseases termed channelopathies, in which the...