Abstract
THE behaviour of rat liver slices incubated in media containing bromsulphthalein (BSP) and other dye substances, and the high in vitro binding of BSP to plasma proteins and various liver fractions, led Brauer and Pessotti1 to suggest that uptake of BSP was related to intracellular protein binding.
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References
Brauer, R. W., and Pessotti, R. L., J. Pharmacol., 97, 358 (1949).
Goldstein, A., Pharmacol. Rev., 1, 102 (1949).
Neurath, H., Greenstein, J. P., Putnam, F. W., and Erickson, J. O., Chem. Rev., 34, 157 (1944).
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BARBER-RILEY, G. Proportion of Bromsulphthalein Protein-bound within Incubated Rat Liver Slices. Nature 194, 184–185 (1962). https://doi.org/10.1038/194184a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/194184a0
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