Guidebook to the Extracellular Matrix, Anchor, and Adhesion Proteins


Book Description

Intended for postgraduate and professional researchers in biochemistry, biomedical sciences and cell biology, this text offers a guide to the extracellular matrix and adhesion proteins.




Molecular cloning


Book Description




Molecular Cellular Microbiology


Book Description




At the Helm


Book Description

In this book, a successor to her best-selling manual for new recruits to experimental science, At The Bench,Kathy Barker provides a guide for newly appointed leaders of research teams, and those who aspire to that role.




Culture of Animal Cells


Book Description

This is the sixth edition of the leading text in the basic methodology of cell culture, worldwide. Rigorously revised, it features updates on specialized techniques in stem cell research and tissue engineering; updates on molecular hybridization, somatic cell fusion, hybridomas, and DNA transfer; new sections on vitrification and Organotypic Culture, and new chapters on epithelial, mesenchymal, neurectodermal, and hematopoietic cells; germs cells/stemcells/amniocytes; and non-mammalian/avian cells. It is written for graduate students, research and clinical scientists, and technicians and laboratory managers in cell and molecular biology labs and genetics labs. PowerPoint slides of the figures as well as other supplementary materials are available at a companion website: www.wiley.com/go/freshney/cellculture




Connexin Methods and Protocols


Book Description

Direct cell–cell communication is a common property of multicellular organisms that is achieved through membrane channels which are organized in gap junctions. The protein subunits of these intercellular channels, the connexins, form a multigene family that has been investigated in great detail in recent years. It has now become clear that, in different tissues, connexins speak several languages that control specific cellular functions. This progress has been made possible by the availability of new molecular tools and the improvement of basic techniques for the study of membrane channels, as well as by the use of genetic approaches to study protein function in vivo. More important, connexins have gained visibility because mutations in some connexin genes have been found to be linked to human genetic disorders. Connexin Methods and Protocols presents in detail a collection of te- niques currently used to study the cellular and molecular biology of connexins and their physiological properties. The field of gap junctions and connexin research has always been characterized by a multidisciplinary approach c- bining morphology, biochemistry, biophysics, and cellular and molecular biology. This book provides a series of cutting-edge protocols and includes a large spectrum of practical methods that are available to investigate the fu- tion of connexin channels. Connexin Methods and Protocols is divided into three main parts.




Insect Molecular Genetics


Book Description

Insect Molecular Genetics, 2nd edition, is a succinct book that briefly introduces graduate and undergraduate students to molecular genetics and the techniques used in this well established and important discipline. The book is written for two converging audiences: those familiar with insects that need to learn about molecular genetics, and those that are familiar with molecular genetics but not familiar with insects. Thus, this book is intended to fill the gap between two audiences that share a common middle ground. - Up-to-date references to important review articles, websites, and seminal citations in the disciplines - Well crafted and instructive illustrations integral to explaining the techniques of molecular genetics - Glossary of terms to help beginners learn the vocabulary of molecular biology




Cells


Book Description

Having identified a gene product, how do you determine what it does? The answer lies in Cells, a new manual designed to do for studies of cell biology what Cold Spring Harbor's Molecular Cloning has done for molecular biology. -- Sets the standard for techniques of proven bench reliability needed by all biomedical scientists studying cellular structure and function -- Delivers consistent, precisely crafted step-by-step protocols in an accessible format, with essential background details and in-depth advice on pitfalls and problem solving -- Created by three distinguished cell biologist/educators, from the contributions of over 180 leading cell biologists -- Complete with more than 300 expertly selected and superbly reproduced illustrations, over 70 in color




Signal Transduction Protocols


Book Description

In 1995, Signal Transduction Protocols, edited by David A. Kendall and Stephen J. Hill, was published in the Methods in Molecular Biology series. This second edition represents an update to that previous work with an emp- sis on new methodologies that have developed in the last few years. The goal, then and now, is to provide procedures written by experts with first-hand ex- rience in a detail that goes far beyond what is generally encountered in the “methods” section of most journals and thus actually permits a particular p- cedure to be replicated. In addition, we have had as a secondary goal the id- tification of protocols for the assay of general classes of signal transduction components that, ideally, can be adapted to the assay of any member of that class. The ability to do this has resulted in large part from the use of affini- based assays, the ease with which specific proteins can be specifically tagged, and an explosion in the availability of highly specific antibodies from comm- cial sources, especially antibodies raised against signaling proteins of human origin. The number of available approaches is, fortunately for those working in signaling research, far too great to fit within the confines of this volume, so hard choices as to what to include had to be made.