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- expphysiol.2007.037523 author "Boyd CA".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 author "Boyd, C A R".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 date "March 2008".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 doi "10.1113/expphysiol.2007.037523".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 isCitedBy Active_transport.
- expphysiol.2007.037523 isCitedBy Bioenergetics.
- expphysiol.2007.037523 isCitedBy Sodium-glucose_transport_proteins.
- expphysiol.2007.037523 issue "3".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 journal "Exp. Physiol.".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 journal "Experimental Physiology".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 pages "303–14".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 pages "304".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 pmid "18192340".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 quote "p. 304. “the insight from this time that remains in all current text books is the notion of Robert Crane published originally as an appendix to a symposium paper published in 1960 . The key point here was 'flux coupling', the cotransport of sodium and glucose in the apical membrane of the small intestinal epithelial cell. Half a century later this idea has turned into one of the most studied of all transporter proteins , the sodium–glucose cotransporter.".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 quote "the insight from this time that remains in all current text books is the notion of Robert Crane published originally as an appendix to a symposium paper published in 1960 . The key point here was 'flux coupling', the cotransport of sodium and glucose in the apical membrane of the small intestinal epithelial cell. Half a century later this idea has turned into one of the most studied of all transporter proteins , the sodium–glucose cotransporter.".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 title "Facts, fantasies and fun in epithelial physiology".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 url b12.
- expphysiol.2007.037523 volume "93".
- expphysiol.2007.037523 year "2008".