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Yuriy Kirichok

Researcher at University of California, San Francisco

Publications -  42
Citations -  6215

Yuriy Kirichok is an academic researcher from University of California, San Francisco. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sperm & Inner mitochondrial membrane. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 38 publications receiving 5328 citations. Previous affiliations of Yuriy Kirichok include University of California & Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The mitochondrial calcium uniporter is a highly selective ion channel

TL;DR: By patch-clamping the inner mitochondrial membrane, it is concluded that the properties of the current mediated by this novel channel are those of the MCU, enabling high Ca2+ selectivity despite relatively low cytoplasmic Ca 2+ concentrations.
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Mechanism of Fatty-Acid-Dependent UCP1 Uncoupling in Brown Fat Mitochondria

TL;DR: It is shown that UCP1 is an LCFA anion/H(+) symporter that effectively operates as an H(+) carrier activated by LCFA, and a similar LCFA-dependent mechanism of transmembrane H(+, transport may be employed by other SLC25 members and be responsible for mitochondrial uncoupling and regulation of metabolic efficiency in various tissues.
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Progesterone activates the principal Ca2+ channel of human sperm.

TL;DR: It is found that nanomolar concentrations of progesterone dramatically potentiate CatSper, a pH-dependent Ca2+ channel of the sperm flagellum, which represents a promising target for the development of a new class of non-hormonal contraceptives.
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All four CatSper ion channel proteins are required for male fertility and sperm cell hyperactivated motility

TL;DR: Direct protein interactions among CatSpers, the sperm specificity of these proteins, and loss of ICatSper in each of the four CatSper−/− mice indicate that CatSper are highly specialized flagellar proteins.
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Whole-cell patch-clamp measurements of spermatozoa reveal an alkaline-activated Ca2+ channel.

TL;DR: It is suggested that intracellular alkalinization potentiates CatSper current to increase intraflagellar calcium and induce sperm hyperactivation, and is identified as a component of the key flageLLar calcium channel.