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Rüdiger Göke

Researcher at University of Marburg

Publications -  96
Citations -  7289

Rüdiger Göke is an academic researcher from University of Marburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Receptor & Insulin. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 95 publications receiving 7056 citations. Previous affiliations of Rüdiger Göke include University of Göttingen & University of Michigan.

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Glucose-dependency of the insulin stimulatory effect of glucagon-like peptide-1(7–36)amide on the rat pancreas

TL;DR: A slight but not dose-dependent stimulation of insulin secretion by supramaximal GLP-1 loads under basal glucose levels was found, but the necessary GLp-1 concentrations to achieve this in vitro effect are beyond physiological or postprandial levels.
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Nuclear survivin is a powerful novel prognostic marker in gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumour disease

TL;DR: Nuclear survivin expression appears to be upregulated during progression of gastroenteropancreatic neuroendocrine tumors, which identifies subgroups in metastatic disease with good (survivin-) or with less favorable prognosis (Survivin+).
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Effects of islet-activating protein on insulin- and isoprenaline-stimulated glucose transport in isolated rat adipocytes.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the effect of insulin is unrelated to the regulation of adenylate cyclase, and isoprenaline may exert both stimulatory and inhibitory effects depending on activation of Ni, which may be a pivotal link in theregulation of glucose transport.
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Knockdown of Pdcd4 results in induction of proprotein convertase 1/3 and potent secretion of chromogranin A and secretogranin II in a neuroendocrine cell line

TL;DR: Pdcd4 (programmed cell death 4) is up‐regulated during apoptosis and seems to play an important role as a tumour suppressor, which is suppressed via siRNA (small interfering RNA) technology.
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Detection of the Human Glucagon-Like Peptide 1(7-36) Amide Receptor on Insulinoma-Derived Cell Membranes

TL;DR: The data provide the first direct evidence of the existence of GLP-1 receptors in human endocrine pancreatic tissue and a main hybridization signal at about 7 kb was found by Northern blotting.