<p><P>Since the discovery of a collagen-degrading protease in the tadpole tail in 1962, matrix metalloproteinase research has led to the discovery of more than twenty distinct vertebrate MMPs, along with a variety of homologues from diverse organisms such as the sea urchin, plants, insects, and nema
Matrix Metalloproteinase Protocols. Chapter 7 is absent
β Scribed by Ian M. Clark
- Publisher
- Humana Press
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 576
- Series
- Methods in Molecular Biology, vol.151
- Edition
- 1st
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
An excellent book that reviews the basic concepts and the protocols to detect and purify all the members of MMPs family and their inhibitors- It is useful for new and old reserchers in the area, describing in a clear form the last techniques you have to use in this field. I recommend it. Marta Marco
An excellent book that reviews the basic concepts and the protocols to detect and purify all the members of MMPs family and their inhibitors- It is useful for new and old reserchers in the area, describing in a clear form the last techniques you have to use in this field. I recommend it. Marta Marco
<p><P>Since the discovery of a collagen-degrading protease in the tadpole tail in 1962, matrix metalloproteinase research has led to the discovery of more than twenty distinct vertebrate MMPs, along with a variety of homologues from diverse organisms such as the sea urchin, plants, insects, and nema
From the simple discovery in 1962 that resorbing tadpole tail expressed an enzyme (MMP) that could degrade collagen gels, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) research has advanced to discover more than twenty distinct vertebrate MMPs and four specific inhibitors (TIMPS), a veritable family of enzymes inv