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Ashutosh A. Kulkarni

Researcher at Celgene

Publications -  20
Citations -  451

Ashutosh A. Kulkarni is an academic researcher from Celgene. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transmembrane domain & Cysteine. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 20 publications receiving 402 citations. Previous affiliations of Ashutosh A. Kulkarni include Allergan & University of Southern California.

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Efficiency in Drug Discovery: Liver S9 Fraction Assay As a Screen for Metabolic Stability

TL;DR: Replacing liver microsome and hepatocyte assays with S9 assay for high throughput metabolic screening purposes provides the combined benefit of comprehensive and high quality data at a reasonable expense for drug discovery programs.
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Ethanol differentially affects ATP-gated P2X(3) and P2X(4) receptor subtypes expressed in Xenopus oocytes.

TL;DR: Differences in ethanol response of P2X(3) and P2 X(4) receptors set the stage for future investigations that will use chimeric P2x receptors or other molecular manipulations of P 2X structure to investigate the molecular sites and mechanisms of action of ethanol.
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Pharmacological modulation of fluid secretion in the pigmented rabbit conjunctiva.

TL;DR: The pigmented rabbit conjunctiva appears to secrete fluid secondary to active Cl- secretion, and this net fluid secretion is subject to modulation by changes in activeCl- secretion rate and in mucosal fluid composition such as glucose concentration.
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Biophysical evidence for His57 as a proton-binding site in the mammalian intestinal transporter hPepT1.

TL;DR: H57R-hPepT1 is able to bind protons at a relatively basic pH, resulting in facilitation of transport of Gly-Sar by hPeps1 at higher pH, suggesting the binding of protons to H57R.
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Analysis of transmembrane segment 7 of the dipeptide transporter hPepT1 by cysteine-scanning mutagenesis.

TL;DR: TMS7 of hPepT1 is relatively solvent-accessible along most of its length but that the intracellular end of the transmembrane domain is particularly so, suggesting that the extracellularEnd of TMS7 may shift following substrate binding, providing the basis for channel opening and substrate translocation.