J T VAN BRUGGEN
Overview
Explore the profile of J T VAN BRUGGEN including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles.
Author names and details appear as published. Due to indexing inconsistencies, multiple individuals may share a name, and a single author may have variations. MedLuna displays this data as publicly available, without modification or verification
Snapshot
Snapshot
Articles
39
Citations
139
Followers
0
Related Specialties
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Affiliations
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
2.
3.
Mullen T, Muller M, VAN BRUGGEN J
J Gen Physiol
. 1985 Mar;
85(3):347-63.
PMID: 3989502
This study presents experiments related to the role of solvent drag and solute drag in the transmembrane movement of nonelectrolytes in a perfused rat intestine preparation. Conditions were chosen to...
4.
VAN BRUGGEN J, Chalmers B, Muller M
J Gen Physiol
. 1982 Mar;
79(3):507-28.
PMID: 6804595
The present study compares and quantitates both solvent drag and solute drag forces in a system with both heteropore and homopore membranes. It is shown that tracer solute permeability can...
5.
BOYETT J, VAN BRUGGEN J
Biochim Biophys Acta
. 1976 Jul;
436(3):686-95.
PMID: 1085164
Frog skin has been used as a model epithelial sodium-transporting system to study the effect of ethanol on ion transport. Treatment of the outside of frog skin with ethanol decreased...
6.
VAN BRUGGEN J, BOYETT J, van Bueren A, Galey W
J Gen Physiol
. 1974 Jun;
63(6):639-56.
PMID: 4829523
Our previous studies on solute drag on frog skin and synthetic heteropore membranes have been extended to a synthetic homopore membrane. The 150-A radius pores of this membrane are formed...
7.
Alhadeff J, VAN BRUGGEN J, Daves Jr G
Biochim Biophys Acta
. 1972 Nov;
286(1):103-6.
PMID: 4659253
No abstract available.
8.
9.
Galey W, VAN BRUGGEN J
J Gen Physiol
. 1970 Feb;
55(2):220-42.
PMID: 5413079
Our previous description of solute drag on a synthetic membrane has been extended to include the solutes mannitol, sucrose, raffinose, inulin, and dextran. Labeled and nonlabeled forms of these solutes...
10.
Franz T, Galey W, VAN BRUGGEN J
J Gen Physiol
. 1968 Jan;
51(1):1-12.
PMID: 5642471
The permeability of frog skin under the influence of urea hyperosmolarity has been studied. Flux ratio asymmetry has been demonstrated again for tracer mannitol. The inhibitors DNP, CN(-), and ouabain...