Functioning of transmembrane receptors in cell signaling
Title
Functioning of transmembrane receptors in cell signaling

Edition
1st ed.

Publication Information
Amsterdam ; Boston : Academic Press, 2011

Physical Description
xvi, 442 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 28 cm.

ISBN
9780123822116

Abstract
"Cell signaling, which is also often referred to as signal transduction or, in more specialized cases, transmembrane signaling, is the process by which cells communicate with their environment and respond temporally to external cues that they sense there. All cells have the capacity to achieve this to some degree, albeit with a wide variation in purpose, mechanism, and response. At the same time, there is a remarkable degree of similarity over quite a range of species, particularly in the eukaryotic kingdom, and comparative physiology has been a useful tool in the development of this field. The central importance of this general phenomenon (sensing of external stimuli by cells) has been appreciated for a long time, but it has truly become a dominant part of cell and molecular biology research in the past three decades, in part because a description of the dynamic responses of cells to external stimuli is, in essence, a description of the life process itself. This approach lies at the core of the developing fields of proteomics and metabolomics, and its importance to human and animal health is already plainly evident"--Provided by publisher.

Subject Term
Cell interaction
 
Membrane proteins
 
Cellular signal transduction

Added Author
Bradshaw, Ralph A., 1941-
 
Dennis, Edward A.


LibraryItem BarcodeCall NumberMaterial TypeItem Category 1
PSZ JB30000010263885QR96.5 F86 2011 fOpen Access BookBook