
Publications of Gerhard Rumrich
All genres
Journal Article (61)
1.
Journal Article
283 (3), pp. 1223 - 1229 (1997)
Interaction of Alkyl/Arylphosphonates, phosphonocarboxylates and diphosphonates with different anion transport systems in the proximal renal tubule. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 2.
Journal Article
433, pp. 735 - 743 (1997)
Luminal transport step of para-aminohippurate (PAH): transport from PAH-loaded proximal tubular cells into the tubular lumen of the rat kidney in vivo. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 3.
Journal Article
278 (1), pp. 31 - 36 (1996)
Stereospecificity in contraluminal and luminal transporters of organic cations in the rat renal proximal tubule. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 4.
Journal Article
432 (3), pp. 471 - 485 (1996)
Luminal transport system for choline+ in relation to the other organic cation transport systems in the rat proximal tubule. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 5.
Journal Article
430 (4), pp. 477 - 492 (1995)
Luminal transport system for H+/organic cations in the rat proximal tubule. Kinetics, dependence on pH; specificity as compared with the contraluminal organic cation-transport system. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 6.
Journal Article
5 (4), pp. 290 - 298 (1995)
Morphine Analogues: Relationship between Chemical Structure and Interaction with Proximal Tubular Transporters – Contraluminal Organic Cation and Anion Transporter, Luminal H+ /Organic Cation Exchanger, and Luminal Choline Transporter. Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry 7.
Journal Article
269 (2), pp. 684 - 692 (1994)
Polysubstrates: substances that interact with renal contraluminal PAH, sulfate, and NMeN transport: sulfamoyl-, sulfonylurea-, thiazide- and benzeneamino-carboxylate (nicotinate) compounds. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics 8.
Journal Article
425, pp. 280 - 299 (1993)
Bisubstrates: substances that interact with renal contraluminal organic anion and organic cation transport systems I. Amines, piperidines, piperazines, azepines, pyridines, quinolines, imidazoles, thiazoles, guanidines and hydrazines. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 9.
Journal Article
425, pp. 300 - 312 (1993)
Bisubstrates: substances that interact with renal contraluminal organic anion and organic cation transport systems II. Zwitterionic substrates: dipeptides, cephalosporins, quinolone-carboxylate gyrase inhibitors and phosphamide thiazine carboxylates; nonionizable substrates: steroid hormones and cyclophosphamides. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 10.
Journal Article
71 (10), pp. 843 - 848 (1993)
Renal transport mechanisms for xenobiotics: chemicals and drugs. The Clinical investigator 11.
Journal Article
16 (3), pp. 131 - 145 (1993)
Cisplatin nephrotoxicity: site of functional disturbance and correlation to loss of body weight. Renal Physiology and Biochemistry 12.
Journal Article
421 (2-3), pp. 286 - 288 (1992)
Renal contraluminal transport systems for organic anions (paraaminohippurate, PAH) and organic cations (N1-methyl-nicotinamide, NMeN) do not see the degree of substrate ionization. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 13.
Journal Article
420 (1), pp. 29 - 38 (1992)
Contraluminal transport of organic cations in the proximal tubule of the rat kidney. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 14.
Journal Article
419, p. 84–92 (1991)
Contraluminal transport of organic cations in the proximal tubule of the rat kidney. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 15.
Journal Article
418 (4), pp. 371 - 382 (1991)
Contraluminal p-aminohippurate transport in the proximal tubule of the rat kidney. VIII. Transport of corticosteroids. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 16.
Journal Article
418 (4), pp. 360 - 370 (1991)
Contraluminal p-aminohippurate transport in the proximal tubule of the rat kidney. VII. Specificity: cyclic nucleotides, eicosanoids. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 17.
Journal Article
53 (1-2), pp. 19 - 27 (1990)
Transformation and transport: how does metabolic transformation change the affinity of substrates for the renal contraluminal anion and cation transporters? TOXICOLOGY LETTERS 18.
Journal Article
415 (3), pp. 342 - 350 (1989)
Contraluminal para-aminohippurate (PAH) transport in the proximal tubule of the rat kidney. VI. Specificity: amino acids, their N-methyl-, N-acetyl- and N-benzoylderivatives; glutathione- and cysteine conjugates, di- and oligopeptides. Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology 19.
Journal Article
36 (1), p. 88 - 88 (1989)
Contraluminal organic anion and cation transport in the proximal renal tubule: V. Interaction with sulfamoyl- and phenoxy diuretics, and with beta-lactam antibiotics. Kidney International 20.
Journal Article
978 (2), pp. 249 - 256 (1989)
Anion transport through the contraluminal cell membrane of renal proximal tubule: The influence of hydrophobicity and molecular charge distribution on the inhibitory activity of organic anions. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta-Biomembranes