Machina carnis : the biochemistry of muscular contraction in its historical development

Bibliographic Information

Machina carnis : the biochemistry of muscular contraction in its historical development

by Dorothy M. Needham

University Press, 1971

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Note

Bibliography: p. 603-742

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Originally published in 1971, this is an account of the centuries of experiment and speculation that have led to our understanding of how muscles work. The book traces all the developments in the field since 1600 and devotes special attention to the breakthroughs made in the last century. It considers the nature of the muscle machine and its fuel, as well as the intricate regulation of energy supply under different conditions. It also examines the very varied kinds of muscle and the effects of some diseases on their structure and function. Finally it shows how the energy metabolism first elucidated for the mechanical work of muscle has been found to explain most of the other kinds of work done by cells, as in light production, secretion, ionic transport and electrical discharge. The biochemistry of muscle, carbohydrate metabolism and phosphorylations was the author's chosen field of research for over forty years.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • 1. Bringing muscles into focus: the first two millennia
  • 2. Muscle metabolism after the Chemical Revolution
  • 3. the relationship between mechanical events, heat production and metabolism
  • 4. The influence of brewing science on the study of muscle glycolysis
  • 5. The discovery of phosphagen and adenosinetriphosphate
  • 6. Adenosinetriphosphate as fuel and as phosphate-carrier
  • 7. Early studies of msucle structure and theories of contraction
  • 8. Interaction of actomyosin and ATP
  • 9. Some theories of contraction mechanism
  • 10. On myosin, actin and tropomyoson
  • 11. The sliding mechanism
  • 12. How does the sliding mechanism work?
  • 13. Excitation, excitation-contraction coupling and relaxation
  • 14. Happenings in intact muscle
  • 15. Rigor and the chemical
  • changes responsible for its onset
  • 16. Respiration
  • 17. Oxidative phosphorylation
  • 18. The regulation of carbohydrate metabolism for energy supply to the muscle machine
  • 19. A comparative study of the striated muscle of vertebrates
  • 20. Enzymic and other effects of denervation, cross-innervation and repeated stimulation
  • 21. some aspects of muscle disease
  • 22. Contraction in muscles of invertebrates
  • 23. Vertebrate smooth muscle
  • 24. Energy provision and contactile proteins in non-muscular functions
  • References.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA09884338
  • ISBN
    • 0521079748
  • LCCN
    75142959
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Cambridge [Eng.]
  • Pages/Volumes
    xv, 782 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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