Signal transduction : a practical approach
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Signal transduction : a practical approach
(The practical approach series)
IRL Press, c1992
- : hb.
- : pb.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Cellular trans-membrane signalling mechanisms are amongst the most highly studied processes in the biological sciences. G-proteins provide transduction components to allow communication between receptors for hormones and neurotransmitters and their effector systems which include enzymes involved in the generation of intracellular secondary messengers and a variety of ion channels. "Signal Transduction: A Practical Approach" details the experimental approaches which are used to define the contacts between receptors and G-proteins and between these G-proteins and their effector systems. While much emphasis in the cellular signalling field remains on the measurement of adenylyl cyclase and of phosphoinositidase C activities, it is now clear that activation of G-protein linked to receptors can also cause the regulation of phospholipases of the D and A2 classes. Thus, assays used to measure the activities of these enzyme systems are detailed in this book. The use of mutagenesis to define functional domains of G-proteins themselves has undergone considerable progress recently and examples of this approach are also provided.
This volume is designed to provide a useful guide to the newcomer to the subject, as well as allowing workers already in the field to expand the range of approaches in use in their laboratories.
Table of Contents
- Methods for the study of receptor/G-protein interaction, A. Graeser and R.R. Neubig
- basic techniques to study G-protein function, F.R. McKenzie
- reconstruction of cyc membranes by in vitro translated Gs-alpha - a model for studying functional domains of Gs-alpha subunit, Y. Audigier
- adenylate cyclase and cAMP, R.W. Farndale et al
- G-protein-mediated signal transduction - a practical approach on inositol lipids and phosphates, P.P. Godfrey
- phosphatidylcholine hydrolosis by phospholipases C and D, R.W. Bonser and N.T. Thompson
- determination of phospholipase A2 activity in stimulated cells, M.J.O. Wakelam and S. Currie
- electrophysiological approaches to G-protein function, I. McFadzean and D.A. Brown.
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