Springer, 2010. - 237 p. - Extracellular nucleic acids have recently emerged as important players in the fields of biology and the medical sciences. In the last several years, extracellular nucleic acids have been shown to be involved in not only microbial evolution as genetic elements but also to have structural roles in bacterial communities, such as biofilms. Circulating DNA and RNA have been found in human blood and expected to be useful as non-invasive markers for the diagnosis of several diseases. In addition, extracellular nucleic acids have attracted attention as active modulators of the immune system of higher organisms, including humans. This book covers nearly all of the newly developing fields related to extracellular nucleic acids, including those of basic biology, ecology and the medical sciences, and provides readers with the latest knowledge on them.
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Springer, 2012. - 2077 p. - Biological processes are driven by complex systems of functionally interacting signaling molecules. Thus, understanding signaling molecules is essential to explain normal or pathological biological phenomena. A large body of clinical and experimental data has been accumulated over these years, albeit in fragmented state. Hence, systems biological...
Elsevier, 2012. - 641 p. - Research on dyneins has a direct impact on human diseases, such as viruses and cancer. With an accompanying website showing over 100 streaming videos of cell dynamic behavior for best comprehension of material, Dynein: Structure, Biology and Disease is the only reference covering the structure, biology and application of dynein research to human disease....
New Science Press, 2004. - 184 pp. The genomics revolution is providing gene sequences in exponentially increasing numbers. Converting this sequence information into functional information for the gene products coded by these sequences is the challenge for post-genomic biology. The first step in this process will often be the interpretation of a protein sequence in terms of the...
Wiley, 2011. - 443 p. - Designed as a research-level guide to current strategies and methods of membrane protein production on the small to intermediate scale, this practice-oriented book provides detailed, step-by-step laboratory protocols as well as an explanation of the principles behind each method, together with a discussion of its relative advantages and disadvantages....
Humana Press, 2012. - 644 p. - Through many recent remarkable developments, perhaps the most significant advancements in the study of transcriptional regulation are the development of genome-wide approaches for measuring gene expression, exemplified by gene chips (chip), and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays (ChIP) for measuring in vivo protein-DNA interactions at any...
Chelsea House, 2012. - 155 p. - The scientist featured in the Times story was J. Craig Venter (1946– ). The article explained that Venter proposed to determine the order, or sequence, of the 6 billion small molecules that make up the DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, in the nucleus, or central body, of each human cell. DNA contains the instructions for carrying out cell functions...