Physiological Importance of Aquaporin Water Channels
| Title: | Physiological Importance of Aquaporin Water Channels |
|---|---|
| Author: | Verkman, Alan S. |
| Publisher: | Annals of Medicine |
| Date Published: | January 01, 2002 |
| Reference Number: | 564 |
| Title: | Physiological Importance of Aquaporin Water Channels |
|---|---|
| Author: | Verkman, Alan S. |
| Publisher: | Annals of Medicine |
| Date Published: | January 01, 2002 |
| Reference Number: | 564 |
A family of membrane channel proteins that serve as selective pores through which water crosses the plasma membranes of many human tissues and cell types.
Abbreviation for aquaporin.
1. Corresponding in structure, position, origin, etc., as (a) the feathers of a bird and the scales of a fish, (b) antigen and its specific antibody, (c) allelic chromosomes.
2. Allogeneic.
3. Pertaining to an antibody and the antigen that elicited its production.
Proteins that bind to water and provide a transport system for it.
1. Showing a detectable effect of a gene.
2. Made known; shown.
3. Squeezed out; extracted by pressing.
Pertaining to or composed of epithelium.
Pertaining to or made up of endothelium.
See definitions under "tissue."
1. The quality or fact of being abnormal.
2. Malformations, deformities, or anomalies.
Aquaporins.
1. Of or pertaining to physiology.
2. Characteristic of or appropriate to an organism's healthy or normal functioning.
3. Differing in, involving, or affecting physiological factors.
Aquaporin-1.
Aquaporin-2.
1. Readily perceived by the senses and especially by the sight.
2. Easily understood; obvious.
3. To make evident or certain by showing or displaying; demonstrate; exhibit.
4. A list of passengers or an invoice of cargo for a ship or plane.
The passage of a large volume of urine in a given period, a characteristic of diabetes.
This is the extent to which the kidneys are able to manufacture urine rich in dissolved wastes yet low in water. The ability to form concentrated urine protects the body from hypertonic dehydration. Conversely, the kidney’s ability to produce dilute, or hypotonic, urine defends the body fluids from hypotonic overhydration (Crawford).
1. Changes in form, quality, or some other characteristic.
2. In genetics, permanent transmissible changes in the genetic material, usually in a single gene.
See definitions for individual types of mutations under "mutation."
Maximum inspiratory pressure (Dorland).
Intrinsic membrane proteins (See Abstract 550).
Aquaporin-1.
Aquaporin-3.
Pertaining to the passage of a large volume of urine in a given period, a characteristic of diabetes.
1. Indicating the flow of genetic information from gene to protein.
2. Regulating the process by which the effects of a gene are manifested.
3. Manifesting a heritable trait in an individual carrying the gene or genes that determine it.
A syndrome of polyuria and hyposthenuria caused by the failure of the renal tubules to reabsorb water in response to antidiuretic hormone, without disturbance in the renal filtration and solute excretion rates; the condition does not respond to exogenous vasopressin. It may be inherited as a rare X-linked trait or be acquired as a result of drug therapy or systemic disease.
Pertaining to the first four weeks after birth.
An impression conveyed by an afferent nerve to the sensorium.
Within the eye.
Aquaporin-1.
Aquaporin-3.
Aquaporin-4.
The process of segregating, elaborating, and releasing some material either functionally specialized (as saliva) or isolated for excretion (as urine).
Pertaining to the saliva.
1. The entire physical, biochemical, and physiological makeup of an individual as determined both genetically and environmentally, as opposed to genotype.
2. The expression of a single gene or gene pair.
1. Marked by denial, prohibition, or refusal.
2. Not positive or constructive.
3. Less than zero.
4. Being, relating to, or charged with electricity of which the electron is the elementary unit.
5. Having the light and dark parts opposite to what they were in the original photographic subject.
Abbreviation for aquaporin.
1. The aspect or appearance of the face (or surface of a cell) as determined by the physical or emotional state.
2. The act of squeezing or evacuating by pressure; a term used in pharmacy, surgery, and obstetrics.
3. The detectable effect of a gene.
4. A representation of value, relation, or the like (e.g., ratio).
A family of membrane channel proteins that serve as selective pores through which water crosses the plasma membranes of many human tissues and cell types.
1. The aspect or appearance of the face (or surface of a cell) as determined by the physical or emotional state.
2. The act of squeezing or evacuating by pressure; a term used in pharmacy, surgery, and obstetrics.
3. The detectable effect of a gene.
4. A representation of value, relation, or the like (e.g., ratio).
1. Of or pertaining to physiology.
2. Characteristic of or appropriate to an organism's healthy or normal functioning.
3. Differing in, involving, or affecting physiological factors.
Model, pattern.
Pertaining to the experimental splicing of a segment of DNA from one genome onto DNA of a different genome.
Abbreviation for aquaporin.
In genetics, the loss of any portion of the genetic material on a chromosome, ranging from loss of a single nucleotide within, which can throw the reading frame out of register and cause a frameshift mutation if it is within a coding sequence, to loss of part or all of a gene, to loss of a microscopically visible portion of the chromosome, possibly involving multiple genes.
Aquaporins.
1. The uptake of substances into or across tissues, e.g., skin, intestine, and kidney tubules.
2. In radiology, the taking up of energy by matter with which the radiation interacts.
The process of segregating, elaborating, and releasing some material either functionally specialized (as saliva) or isolated for excretion (as urine).
Of, relating to, or having the properties of osmosis.
Pertaining to the experimental splicing of a segment of DNA from one genome onto DNA of a different genome.
A family of membrane channel proteins that serve as selective pores through which water crosses the plasma membranes of many human tissues and cell types.
1. Any substance that interferes with a chemical reaction, growth, or other biological activity.
2. Chemical substances that inhibit enzyme reactions.
Within the eye.
A tendency to stability in the normal body states (internal environment) of the organism.
