<p><p>Systems biology can now be considered an established and fundamental field in life sciences. It has moved from the identification of molecular 'parts lists' for living organisms towards synthesising information from different 'omics'-based approaches to generate and test new hypotheses about h
Silicon and Siliceous Structures in Biological Systems
β Scribed by T. L. Simpson, B. E. Volcani (auth.), Tracy L. Simpson, Benjamin E. Volcani (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag New York
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 588
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The publication of this book was undertaken with two purposes in view: to bring together informatian on the deposition by living organΒ isms of unique skeletal structures composed of amorphous silica, and to review recent data on the involvement of silicon in physiological and biochemical processes. Although widely varying viewpoints are represented, all the contributors are very interested in the events inΒ volved in the formatian of siliceaus structures and their function. Data presented deal with these questions in a variety of plant and animal systems, and at levels ranging from the evolutionary to the biochemical and ultrastructural. Innovations in electron microscopy and, indeed, the advent of electron microscopy itself, have stimulated many ultraΒ structural studies of silica deposition, work which has deepened and widened the interest in those organisms which routinely produce "glassy skeletons. " The question of how silicon participates in biological systems inΒ volves a spectrum of fields that indudes the chemistry of silicon per se, its biogeochemistry, biochemistry, ecology, and so forth. In this book, however, attention is focused up on the biological aspects of silicon and siliceous structures, with emphasis on the evolutian, phylogeny, morphology, and distribution of siliceaus structures, on the cellular asΒ peets of silica deposition, and on the physiological and biochemical roles of silicon. This volume represents the first compilatian of such data. Because such a variety of subjects and fields are covered, the reader will have to glean for himself some of the comparative aspects of the data.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-XVI
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Introduction....Pages 3-12
Front Matter....Pages 13-13
Silicon in the Cellular Metabolism of Diatoms....Pages 15-42
Germanium-Silicon Interactions in Biological Systems....Pages 43-67
Silicon in Bone Formation....Pages 69-94
Front Matter....Pages 95-95
Morphology and Phyletic Relationships of the Silicified Algae and the Archetypal Diatom β Monophyly or Polyphyly....Pages 97-128
The Siliceous Components of the Diatom Cell Wall and Their Morphological Variation....Pages 129-156
Cell Wall Formation in Diatoms: Morphogenesis and Biochemistry....Pages 157-200
Ultrastructure and Deposition of Silica in the Chrysophyceae....Pages 201-230
Distribution and Forms of Siliceous Structures Among Protozoa....Pages 233-279
Ultrastructure and Deposition of Silica in Rhizopod Amebae....Pages 281-294
Ultrastructure and Deposition of Silica in Loricate Choanoflagellates....Pages 295-322
Evolution and Diversity of Form in Radiolaria....Pages 323-346
Radiolarian Fine Structure and Silica Deposition....Pages 347-379
Ultrastructure of Silica Deposits in Higher Plants....Pages 383-407
Silica in Shoots of Higher Plants....Pages 409-449
Form and Distribution of Silica in Sponges....Pages 453-493
Ultrastructure and Deposition of Silica in Sponges....Pages 495-525
Effects of Germanium on Silica Deposition in Sponges....Pages 527-550
Back Matter....Pages 551-587
β¦ Subjects
Cell Biology
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><p>Systems biology can now be considered an established and fundamental field in life sciences. It has moved from the identification of molecular 'parts lists' for living organisms towards synthesising information from different 'omics'-based approaches to generate and test new hypotheses about h
<p><p>Systems biology can now be considered an established and fundamental field in life sciences. It has moved from the identification of molecular 'parts lists' for living organisms towards synthesising information from different 'omics'-based approaches to generate and test new hypotheses about h
This book includes advanced materials and nanocomposites based on silica and layered silicates obtained from resources in China. Using nanotechnology, these inorganic materials can be filled, in-situ polymerised and combined with polymers with nanoscale dispersions. In this book, many practical exam