Science is not a quiet life : unravelling the atomic mechanism of haemoglobin
著者
書誌事項
Science is not a quiet life : unravelling the atomic mechanism of haemoglobin
Imperial College Press , World Scientific, c1997
- : hard
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
-
: hard ISBN 9789810227746
内容説明
Linus Pauling called haemoglobin the most interesting and important of molecules. This important volume shows how X-ray crystallography was used to determine its bewilderingly complex atomic structure and to unravel the stereochemical mechanisms of its respiratory functions. It introduces isomorphous replacement with heavy atoms which led to the first protein structures, haemoglobin and its simpler relative myoglobin. Later papers deal with the stereochemistry of the cooperative effects of haemoglobin, with the relationships between the structures and impaired functions of abnormal haemoglobin, with species adaptation of haemoglobin, and with its action as a drug receptor and as an oxygen sensor. The final papers deal with amino acid repeats which act as polar zippers and their role in certain inherited neurodegenerative diseases.
目次
- Early studies
- the phase problem
- from the first molecular model to the allosteric mechanism
- the haemoglobin wars
- molecular pathology of human haemoglobin
- haemoglobin as a drug receptor
- species adaptations in haemoglobin
- early shots at the folding problem and factors contributing to protein stability
- polar zippers and human disease
- haemoglobin as an oxygen sensor that regulates expression of nitrogenase genes.
- 巻冊次
-
: pbk ISBN 9789810230579
内容説明
Linus Pauling called haemoglobin the most interesting and important of molecules. This important volume shows how X-ray crystallography was used to determine its bewilderingly complex atomic structure and to unravel the stereochemical mechanisms of its respiratory functions. It introduces isomorphous replacement with heavy atoms which led to the first protein structures, haemoglobin and its simpler relative myoglobin. Later papers deal with the stereochemistry of the cooperative effects of haemoglobin, with the relationships between the structures and impaired functions of abnormal haemoglobin, with species adaptation of haemoglobin, and with its action as a drug receptor and as an oxygen sensor. The final papers deal with amino acid repeats which act as polar zippers and their role in certain inherited neurodegenerative diseases.
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