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Receptor Subunits and Complexes

Receptor Subunits and Complexes

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Cambridge University Press, 6/18/1992
EAN 9780521366120, ISBN10: 0521366127

Hardcover, 480 pages, 23.6 x 15.7 x 2.7 cm
Language: English

This volume provides a wide-ranging review of the variety and specificity of receptors, including those for neurotransmitters, hormones, growth factors, oncogenes and antigens, and looks in depth at the fundamental features of multi-subunit complexes and their vital role in coordinating and controlling the functions of the body. These receptors for hormones and drugs are mostly constituted from protein subunits. They may be organised as ligand-operated ion channels in a cell membrane or they may be concerned with enzyme activation to generate second messengers or DNA transcription following a change in the association-disassociation state of the receptor complex. Advances at the molecular level have enabled scientists to relate the structure of these receptor subunits to their specific mode of action and their function and this in turn is leading the way forward to exciting new research with important medical consequences for the treatment of disease. The fourteen chapters in this volume summarise these advances across a wide range of disciplines and the resulting publication will therefore be of interest to research scientists in endocrinology, immunology, pharmacology, oncology and neurobiology.

Contributors
1. Introduction Arnold Burgen
2. Folding and assembly of multi-subunit proteins Nicholas C. Price
3. Allosteric proteins L. N. Johnson
4. Subunits of signal-transducing receptors
types, analysis and reconstitution Eric A. Barnard
5. The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor
towards the structure-function relationship Alfred Maelicke
6. Subunits of GABAA, glycine 5-HT3 and glutamate receptors Eric A. Barnard
7. The family of adrenergic and structurally related G protein-coupled receptors Brian F. O'Dowd
8. Structure and function of G proteins R. Tyler Miller and Henry R. Bourne
9. Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors Michael Schimerlik
10. The insulin receptor Kenneth Siddle
11. The ligand-dependent superfamily of transcriptional regulators Christopher K. Glass
12. The nerve growth factor receptors Ronald D. Vale
13. Oncogenes and their relation to growth regulating receptors Michael J. Fry
14. Structure and function of the T-cell antigen receptor Juan S. Bonifacino
Index.

‘ … a genuine attempt to cover all of the major receptor groups’ Febs Letters