VOLUME 514. Ghrelin: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
m Fix broken external PDF/book links (pdfdrive, epdf, zlibrary, dead PDFs) |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Available [https:// | Available at [https://openlibrary.org/search?q=Methods%20in%20Enzymology%20Volume%20514%20Ghrelin Open Library] or [https://archive.org/search?q=Methods%20in%20Enzymology%20Volume%20514%20Ghrelin Internet Archive]. | ||
"Although the discovery of ghrelin is dated back to 1999, it has a long history since 1950s when Dr. Davis reported the gastric cells similar to the pancreatic alpha cells. These A-like cells turned out to be ghrelin cells. The first GHS (growth hormone secretagogue), a synthetic ghrelin mimetic, was discovered in 1976 by Dr. Bowers and led to the identification of the GHS | "Although the discovery of ghrelin is dated back to 1999, it has a long history since 1950s when Dr. Davis reported the gastric cells similar to the pancreatic alpha cells. These A-like cells turned out to be ghrelin cells. The first GHS (growth hormone secretagogue), a synthetic ghrelin mimetic, was discovered in 1976 by Dr. Bowers and led to the identification of the GHS | ||
receptor, which was the key strategic molecule for the discovery of ghrelin. Among the authors in this volume, we sincerely thank Dr. Bowers because he is the father of ghrelin and contributes the history before ghrelin discovery. This volume provides descriptions of several aspects of ghrelin, from its structure to clinical applications." | receptor, which was the key strategic molecule for the discovery of ghrelin. Among the authors in this volume, we sincerely thank Dr. Bowers because he is the father of ghrelin and contributes the history before ghrelin discovery. This volume provides descriptions of several aspects of ghrelin, from its structure to clinical applications." | ||
Latest revision as of 15:20, 7 July 2026
Available at Open Library or Internet Archive.
"Although the discovery of ghrelin is dated back to 1999, it has a long history since 1950s when Dr. Davis reported the gastric cells similar to the pancreatic alpha cells. These A-like cells turned out to be ghrelin cells. The first GHS (growth hormone secretagogue), a synthetic ghrelin mimetic, was discovered in 1976 by Dr. Bowers and led to the identification of the GHS receptor, which was the key strategic molecule for the discovery of ghrelin. Among the authors in this volume, we sincerely thank Dr. Bowers because he is the father of ghrelin and contributes the history before ghrelin discovery. This volume provides descriptions of several aspects of ghrelin, from its structure to clinical applications."