The G-Protein Linked Receptor Facts Book
Book Details
Author(s)Steve Arkinstall
PublisherAcademic Press
ISBN / ASIN0127384405
ISBN-139780127384405
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank4,358,795
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
How do you keep track of basic information on the proteins you work with? Where do you find details of their physicochemical properties, amino acid sequences, gene organization? Are you tired of scanning review articles, primary papers and databases to locate that elusive fact?
The Academic Press FactsBook series will satisfy scientists and clinical researchers suffering from information overload. Each volume provides a catalogue of the essential properties of families of molecules. Gene organization, amino acid sequences, physicochemical properties, and biological activity are presented using a common , easy–to-follow format. Taken together they compile everything you wanted to know about proteins but were too busy to look for.
Key Features
* acetylcholine
* adrenaline
* dopamine
* glutamine
* 5-HT
* G-Proteins
* phospholipase
* adenylyl cyclase
Entries provide information on
* protein structure
molecular weights and glyosylation sites
* distribution
* receptors
* pharmacology
* effector pathways
* amino acid sequence, including transmembrane regions
* PIR, SWISSPROT, and EMBL/GenBank accession numbers
* Gene structure and organization
* Key references
The Academic Press FactsBook series will satisfy scientists and clinical researchers suffering from information overload. Each volume provides a catalogue of the essential properties of families of molecules. Gene organization, amino acid sequences, physicochemical properties, and biological activity are presented using a common , easy–to-follow format. Taken together they compile everything you wanted to know about proteins but were too busy to look for.
Key Features
* acetylcholine
* adrenaline
* dopamine
* glutamine
* 5-HT
* G-Proteins
* phospholipase
* adenylyl cyclase
Entries provide information on
* protein structure
molecular weights and glyosylation sites
* distribution
* receptors
* pharmacology
* effector pathways
* amino acid sequence, including transmembrane regions
* PIR, SWISSPROT, and EMBL/GenBank accession numbers
* Gene structure and organization
* Key references
