This note covers the following
topics: Protein Structure and Function, The Flow of Information: DNA to Protein,
Ribosome, mRNA, and tRNA direct the Synthesis of Proteins, Gene Regulation, DNA
Packing and Organization, Cell Cycle and Division, Cell Signaling, Cell
Junctions, Cell Adhesion and ECM, Nervous System.
This note covers Cell Structural Organization, Transport Across Cell Membrane, Receptors and
models of extra cellular signaling, Signal Transduction, Call Culture.
This book
represents an updated overview on selected topics related to mesenchymal stem
cells as well as induced pluripotent stem cells. The book is divided into three
main sections that cover several topics including: sources of both stem cell
types, their preparation and general properties, as well as their therapeutic
indications and clinical utilization with particular attention given to their
use in infectious diseases, osteoarthritis, as well as immunological disorders.
This volume is a valuable resource for basic biologists, translational
scientists, and clinicians.The chapters emphasize the emerging data confirming
the role of EVs in the pathogenesis of diseases and discuss the scientific
advances that have made it feasible to characterize and engineer EVs, leading to
their use as tools in biomarker discovery and disease diagnosis, prognosis,
therapeutic application, and theranostics.
This book is a science education booklet
that explores the interior design of cells and vividly describes the processes
that take place within its organelles and structures. Each chapter includes some
review questions.
Author(s): U.S.
Department Of Health And Human Service
This note describes the following topics: Membrane Channels and Signaling,
Ionic basis of the Resting Potential, Action Potential, Neurons as
Conductors,Electrical and Chemical Synaptic Transmission,Mechanisms of
Transmitter Release at Synapses, From Genes to Structure to Behavior, Nervous
System Development, Olfaction and Other Sensory Systems,Pain and Thermoreception.
Author(s): Prof. Troy Littleton and Prof. William
Quinn