The last few years have witnessed an explosion of both interest and knowledge about apoptosis, the process by which a cell actively commits suicide. It is now well recognised that apoptosis is essential in many aspects of normal development and is required for maintaining tissue homeostasis. The
Subcellular Biochemistry
β Scribed by John H. Hartwig, Richard Niederman, Stuart E. Lind (auth.), Donald B. Roodyn (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer US
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 303
- Series
- Subcellular Biochemistry 11
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
Cortical Actin Structures and Their Relationship to Mammalian Cell Movements....Pages 1-49
Fluorescence Probes Unravel Asymmetric Structure of Membranes....Pages 51-101
Functional Aspects of Gram-Negative Cell Surfaces....Pages 103-180
Biochemistry of the Sarcolemma....Pages 181-193
Membrane Fusion....Pages 195-286
Back Matter....Pages 287-294
β¦ Subjects
Biochemistry, general; Cell Biology
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>This volume continues the tradition of SUBCELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY of trying to break down interdisciplinary barriers in the study of cell function and of bringing the reader's attention to less well studied, but nevertheless useful, biological systems. We start with an extensive article by T. P. Ka
<p>The broad aim of SUBCELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY is to present an inteΒ grated view of the cell in which artificial barriers between disciplines are broΒ ken down. The contents of Volume 7 illustrate the interconnections between initially unrelated fields of study and show strikingly how advances along
<p>In this volume of SUBCELLULAR BIOCHEMISTRY we cover a wide range of topics of considerable biological importance and have continued in our policy of letting authors, rather than editors, decide the "natural" length of their articles. Thus, we have some short but nevertheless significant contribut