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Protein Engineering Handbook, Volume 1 & Volume 2


Publisher
Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Leaves
992
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


Unparalleled in size and scope, this new major reference integrates academic and industrial knowledge into a single resource, allowing for a unique overview of the entire field. Adopting a systematic and practice-oriented approach, and including a wide range of technical and methodological information, this highly accessible handbook is an invaluable 'toolbox' for any bioengineer. In two massive volumes, it covers the full spectrum of current concepts, methods and application areas.

Content:
Chapter 1 Guidelines for the Functional Analysis of Engineered and Mutant Enzymes (pages 1โ€“13): Dale E. Edmondson and Giovanni Gadda
Chapter 2 Engineering Enantioselectivity in Enzyme?Catalyzed Reactions (pages 15โ€“46): Romas Kazlauskas
Chapter 3 Mechanism and Catalytic Promiscuity: Emerging Mechanistic Principles for Identification and Manipulation of Catalytically Promiscuous Enzymes (pages 47โ€“79): Stefanie Jonas and Florian Hollfelder
Chapter 4 ??Value Analysis of Protein Folding Transition States (pages 81โ€“120): Neil Ferguson and Alan R. Fersht
Chapter 5 Protein Folding and Solubility: Pathways and High?Throughput Assays (pages 121โ€“145): Adam C. Fisher, Thomas J. Mansell and Matthew P. DeLisa
Chapter 6 Protein Dynamics and the Evolution of Novel Protein Function (pages 147โ€“185): Jorg Zimmermann, Megan C. Thielges, Wayne Yu and Floyd E. Romesberg
Chapter 7 Gaining Insight into Enzyme Function through Correlation with Protein Motions (pages 187โ€“211): Nicolas Doucet and Joelle N. Pelletier
Chapter 8 Structural Frameworks Suitable for Engineering (pages 213โ€“232): Birte Hocker
Chapter 9 Microbes and Enzymes: Recent Trends and New Directions to Expand Protein Space (pages 233โ€“269): Ana Beloqui, Miren Zumarraga, Miguel Alcalde, Peter N. Golyshin and Manuel Ferrer
Chapter 10 Inteins in Protein Engineering (pages 271โ€“293): Alison R. Gillies and David W. Wood
Chapter 11 From Prospecting to Product โ€“ Industrial Metagenomics Is Coming of Age (pages 295โ€“323): Jurgen Eck, Esther Gabor, Klaus Liebeton, Guido Meurer and Frank Niehaus
Chapter 12 Computational Protein Design (pages 325โ€“342): Jeffery G. Saven
Chapter 13 Assessing and Exploiting the Persistence of Substrate Ambiguity in Modern Protein Catalysts (pages 343โ€“362): Kevin K. Desai and Brian G. Miller
Chapter 14 Designing Programmable Protein Switches (pages 363โ€“389): Martin Sagermann
Chapter 15 The Cyclization of Peptides and Proteins with Inteins (pages 391โ€“407): Blaise R. Boles and Alexander R. Horswill
Chapter 16 A Method for Rapid Directed Evolution (pages 409โ€“439): Manfred T. Reetz
Chapter 17 Evolution of Enantioselective Bacillus subtilis Lipase (pages 441โ€“451): Thorsten Eggert, Susanne A. Funke, Jennifer N. Andexer, Manfred T. Reetz and Karl?Erich Jaeger
Chapter 18 Circular Permutation of Proteins (pages 453โ€“471): Glenna E. Meister, Manu Kanwar and Marc Ostermeier
Chapter 19 Incorporating Synthetic Oligonucleotides via Gene Reassembly (ISOR): A Versatile Tool for Generating Targeted Libraries (pages 473โ€“480): Asael Herman and Dan S. Tawfik
Chapter 20 Protein Engineering by Structure?Guided SCHEMA Recombination (pages 481โ€“492): Gloria Saab?Rincon, Yougen Li, Michelle Meyer, Martina Carbone, Marco Landwehr and Frances H. Arnold
Chapter 21 Chimeragenesis in Protein Engineering (pages 493โ€“514): Manuela Trani and Prof. Dr. Stefan Lutz
Chapter 22 Protein Generation Using a Reconstituted System (pages 515โ€“535): Bei?Wen Ying and Takuya Ueda
Chapter 23 Equipping in vivo Selection Systems with Tunable Stringency (pages 537โ€“561): Martin Neuenschwander, Andreas C. Kleeb, Peter Kast and Donald Hilvert
Chapter 24 Protein Engineering by Phage Display (pages 563โ€“603): Agathe Urvoas, Philippe Minard and Patrice Soumillion
Chapter 25 Screening Methodologies for Glycosidic Bond Formation (pages 605โ€“620): Amir Aharoni and Stephen G. Withers
Chapter 26 Yeast Surface Display in Protein Engineering and Analysis (pages 621โ€“648): Benjamin J. Hackel and Dane Wittrup
Chapter 27 In Vitro Compartmentalization (IVC) and Other High?Throughput Screens of Enzyme Libraries (pages 649โ€“667): Amir Aharoni and Dan S. Tawfik
Chapter 28 Colorimetric and Fluorescence?Based Screening (pages 669โ€“711): Jean?Louis Reymond
Chapter 29 Confocal and Conventional Fluorescence?Based High Throughput Screening in Protein Engineering (pages 713โ€“751): Ulrich Haupts, Oliver Hesse, Michael Strerath, Peter J. Walla and Wayne M. Coco
Chapter 30 Alteration of Substrate Specificity and Stereoselectivity of Lipases and Esterases (pages 753โ€“775): Dominique Bottcher, Marlen Schmidt and Uwe T. Bornscheuer
Chapter 31 Altering Enzyme Substrate and Cofactor Specificity via Protein Engineering (pages 777โ€“796): Matthew DeSieno, Jing Du and Huimin Zhao
Chapter 32 Protein Engineering of Modular Polyketide Synthases (pages 797โ€“827): Alice Y. Chen and Chaitan Khosla
Chapter 33 Cyanophycin Synthetases (pages 829โ€“848): Anna Steinle and Alexander Steinbuchel
Chapter 34 Biosynthetic Pathway Engineering Strategies (pages 849โ€“876): Claudia Schmidt?Dannert and Alexander Pisarchik
Chapter 35 Natural Polyester?Related Proteins: Structure, Function, Evolution and Engineering (pages 877โ€“914): Seiichi Taguchi and Takeharu Tsuge
Chapter 36 Bioengineering of Sequence?Repetitive Polypeptides: Synthetic Routes to Protein?Based Materials of Novel Structure and Function (pages 915โ€“938): Sonha C. Payne, Melissa Patterson and Vincent P. Conticello
Chapter 37 Silk Proteins โ€“ Biomaterials and Bioengineering (pages 939โ€“959): Xiaoqin Wang, Peggy Cebe and David. L. Kaplan


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