دانلود کتاب مبانی و اصول کلسیم داخل سلولی Anthony K. Campbell

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  • عنوان انگلیسی: Fundamentals of Intracellular Calcium
  • نویسنده(ها):  Anthony K. Campbell
  • ویرایش: 1
  • سال انتشار:  2017
  • تعداد صفحات: 589 صفحه
  • تعداد فصل ها:  13 فصل
  • فرمت فایل:  PDF
  • حجم فایل فشرده:  15.1 مگابایت

کتاب مبانی و اصول کلسیم داخل و درون سلولی ویرایش 1 اول Fundamentals of Intracellular Calcium از کتاب های مرجع و تخصصی بیوشیمی عمومی که توسط Anthony K. Campbell از سوی انتشارات wiley چاپ و منتشر شده است. این کتاب جامع، شواهدی از کلسیم داخل سلولی را به عنوان یک سوئیچ جهانی در تمام سلول های حیوانی، گیاهی، قارچی و میکروبی نشان می دهد. این نشان می دهد که اجزای مورد نیاز برای سیگنالینگ کلسیم نام و طبقه بندی می شوند. این تکنولوژی را که برای بررسی کلسیم داخل سلولی ساخته شده است پوشش می دهد. چگونگی تنظیم کلسیم داخل سلول ها و نحوه کارکرد آن برای ایجاد یک رویداد را توضیح می دهد. نقش کلسیم داخل سلولی در بیماری، آسیب سلولی و مرگ سلولی را توضیح می دهد. نشان می دهد که چگونه بسیاری از داروها از طریق سیستم سیگنالینگ کلسیم کار می کنند؛ و نشان می دهد که چگونه کلسیم داخل سلولی در اثر بسیاری از سموم طبیعی دخیل است. این کتاب همچنین نشان می دهد که سیستم سیگنالینگ داخل سلولی در طی میلیون ها سال تکامل یافته است و نشان می دهد چرا برای حیات حیاتی مهم است. علاوه بر این، این کتاب اهمیت تنوع مولکولی را که بر اساس آن سیستم سیگنالینگ کلسیم داخل سلولی بستگی دارد، ترویج می کند.

 

مشخصات کتاب

  • عنوان انگلیسی: Fundamentals of Intracellular Calcium
  • عنوان فارسی :  مبانی و اصول کلسیم داخل و درون سلولی
  • نویسنده(ها):  Anthony K. Campbell
  • ویرایش: 1
  • سال انتشار:  2017
  • زبان نوشتاری: انگلیسی
  • تعداد صفحات: 589 صفحه
  • تعداد فصل ها:  13 فصل
  • فرمت فایل:  PDF
  • حجم فایل فشرده:  15.1 مگابایت
  • نحوه دریافت : دریافت فوری و آنی لینک دانلود فایل بعد از پرداخت

 

فهرست مطالب و عناوین فصل های کتاب

 

Chapter 1 Calcium is special      

1.1 Calcium and everyday events

1.2 Discovery of calcium

1.3 A natural history of calcium

1.3.1 Calcium by the sea

1.3.2 Calcium in your wake-up call

1.4 The elements of life

1.5 The natural occurrence of calcium

1.5.1 Isotopes of calcium

1.5.2 Geology of calcium

1.5.3 Calcium outside cells

1.5.4 Calcium inside cells

1.6 Requirement of cells for Ca2+

1.6.1 Calcium in external fluids

1.6.2 Requirement of cell types for calcium

1.7 The four biological roles of calcium

1.7.1 Structural

1.7.2 Electrical across biological membranes

1.7.3 Extracellular cofactor

1.7.4 Intracellular regulator

1.8 The puzzle about Ca2+ inside cells

1.9 How important intracellular calcium has been in science

1.10 Darwin and intracellular Ca2+

1.11 The scene set

1.12 ‘Ja Kalzium, das ist alles!’

1.13 Calcium – the fundamentals

1.14 Recommended reading

Chapter 2 Intracellular calcium – principles    

2.1 Ca2+ and the concept of cell signalling

2.1.1 Primary signals and intracellular Ca2+

2.1.2 The source of intracellular Ca2+

2.2 The problem

2.3 Some key questions

2.3.1 Question 1 – what is the primary stimulus and secondary regular(s)

2.3.2 Question 2 – what is the intracellular signal

2.3.3 Question 3 – how do the secondary regulators work

2.4 The types of intracellular Ca2+ signal

2.4.1 Category of cell based on the Ca2+ signal

2.4.2 Types of Ca2+ signal

2.4.3 Ca2+ sparks, puffs and sparklets

2.5 The Rubicon principle

2.5.1 Digital versus analogue cell events

2.5.2 The Ca2+ signalling toolkit

2.5.3 Amplification mechansms

2.6 Key experiments to answer key questions

2.6.1 Raising cytosolic free Ca2+ artificially

2.6.2 Measurement of free Ca2+ in live cells

2.6.3 How the Ca2+ signal is generated

2.6.4 Identifying the Ca2+ target

2.6.5 How binding of Ca2+ to its target causes the cell event

2.6.6 How the cell returns to rest

2.7 Nomenclature – how things are named

2.7.1 English and etymology

2.7.2 Organisms

2.7.3 Acronyms, cells and biochemistry

2.7.4 Genes

2.7.5 Proteins and protein sequences

2.7.6 Enzymes

2.7.7 Ion channels

2.7.8 Agonists and antagonists

2.7.9 Chemicals

2.7.10 Toxins

2.7.11 Drugs

2.7.12 Ca2+ indicators

2.7.13 Units

2.8 Model systems

2.9 Darwin, Wallace and intracellular Ca2+

2.9.1 Natural Selection in real time

2.9.2 Small change by small change

2.10 New knowledge

2.11 Conclusions

2.12 Recommended reading

Chapter 3 A century plus of intracellular calcium    

3.1 Background

3.1.1 The pathway of discovery and invention for intracellular Ca2+

3.1.2 Model systems

3.2. Why study the history of science?

3.3 The tale of three pioneers, and what followed

3.3.1 Experiments of Sydney Ringer (1835 – 1910)

3.3.2 The vision of Lewis Victor Heilbrunn (1892 – 1959)

3.3.3 Setsuro Ebashi (1922 – 2006) pioneer of intracellular Ca2+ in muscle contraction

3.4 Ca2+ as an intracellular regulator

3.4.1 Cell theory

3.4.2 Origin of the use of Ca2+

3.4.3 Manipulation of Ca2+

3.4.4 Measurement and location of free Ca2+ in live cells

3.4.5 Identification of the components responsible for regulating free Ca2+ inside cells

3.4.6 The discovery of plasma membrane Ca2+ pumps and transporters

3.4.7 The discovery of how Ca2+ is released from the sarco-/endo- plasmic reticulum

3.4.8 Discovery of IP3 and its receptor

3.4.9 Discovery of the ryanodine receptor

3.4.10 Discovery of store operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE)

3.4.11 Discovery of Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane

3.4.12 Discovery of TRP channels

3.4.13 Discovery of G proteins

3.4.14 Ca2+ targets inside cells and how they work

3.4.15 Intracellular Ca2+ in plants

3.4.16 Intracellular Ca2+ in bacteria

3.4.17 Pathology of intracellular Ca2+

3.5 Conceptual development of Ca2+ as an intracellular regulator

3.6 Summary

3.7 Recommended reading

Chapter 4 How to study intracellular Ca2+ as a cell regulator  

4.1 Pathway to discover the role of intracellular Ca2+ in a cell event

4.2 Manipulation of intracellular Ca2+

4.3 Measurement of intracellular free Ca2+

4.3.1 Absorbing dyes

4.3.2 Fluorescent Ca2+ indicators

4.3.3 Calibration of fluors

4.3.4 Ca2+-activated photoproteins

4.3.5 Calibration of Ca2+-activated photoproteins

4.3.6 Ca2+ indicators from engineered GFP

4.3.7 Other free Ca2+ indicators for whole organs and organisms

4.4 Detecting and imaging photons

4.5 Measurement of total cell Ca2+

4.6 Calcium buffers

4.7 Measurement of Ca2+ fluxes

4.8 How to study Ca2+ channels

4.9 Discovering how the rise in cytosolic free Ca2+ occurs, and then returns to rest

4.10 Discovering the intracellular Ca2+ target, and how it works

4.11 Other ions

4.12 Summary

4.13 Recommended reading

Chapter 5 How Ca2+ is regulated inside cells  

5.1 Principles

5.2 How resting cells maintain their Ca2+ balance

5.3 Electrophysiology of intracellular Ca2+

5.4 Primary stimuli that produce a cytosolic free Ca2+ signal

5.5 Plasma membrane Ca2+ channels

5.5.1 Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels

5.5.2 TRP channels

5.5.3 Receptor-activated Ca2+ channels

5.5.4 Mechanosensitive channels

5.5.5 Store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE)

5.5.6 Ca2+ receptor

5.6 Regulation of intracellular Ca2+ by, and within, organelles

5.6.1 Endo- and sarco- plasmic reticulum (ER/SR)

5.6.1.1 Ryanodine receptor

5.6.1.2 Inositol trisphosphate (IP3) receptor

5.6.2 Mitochondrial Ca2+

5.6.3 Lysosomal and endosomal Ca2+

5.6.4 Secretory vesicle Ca2+

5.6.5 Peroxisomal Ca2+

5.6.6 Control of Ca2+ by the Golgi

5.6.7 Nucleus and Ca2+

5.6.8 Plant organelles and Ca2+

5.6.9 Acidocalcisomes

5.7 Second messengers and regulation of Ca2+ signaling in the cytosol

5.8 Pore formers and intracellular Ca2+

5.9 Gap junctions and connexins

5.10 Other ion channels and Ca2+

5.11 Conclusions

5.12 Summary – how Ca2+ is regulated inside cells

5.13 Recommended reading

Chapter 6 How Ca2+ works inside cells  

6.1 Biological chemistry of Ca2+

6.1.1 The special biological chemistry of Ca2+

6.1.2 Key chemical properties of Ca2+

6.1.3 Ca2+ ligands

6.1.4 Solvation

6.1.5 Problem of activity coefficients

6.1.6 Fractional Ca2+ binding after a Ca2+ signal

6.1.7 Kinetics

6.1.8 Diffusion

6.1.9 Solubility

6.2 Ca2+ binding proteins

6.2.1 Types of Ca2+ binding protein inside cells

6.2.2 Proteins with the EF-hand motif

6.2.2.1 Troponin C

6.2.2.2 Leiotonin

6.2.2.3 Calmodulin

6.2.24 Calmodulin-dependent kinases

6.2.2.5 Calcineurin

6.2.2.6 Calpains

6.2.27 Calsenilin and DREAM

6.2.2.8 Calbindin

6.2.2.9 S-100 proteins

6.2.2.110 STIM 1 and 2

6.2.2.11 Caldendrin/calbrain/calponin and caldesmon

6.2.3 Proteins with the C2 motif

6.2.3.1 Synaptotagmins

6.2.3.2 Copines

6.2.3.3 Phospholipases and intracellular Ca2+

6.2.4 Proteins with a cluster of acidic residues

6.2.4.1 Calsequestrin

6.2.4.2 Calreticulin

6.2.5 Proteins forming a cluster of oxygen ligands from the 3D structure

6.2.5.1 Annexins

6.2.5.2 Calcimedins

6.2.5.3 Calelectrin

6.2.5.4 Gelsolin

6.2.5.5 Calcium homeostatic regulator (CALHM1)

6.2.5.6 Regucalcin

6.2.5.7 Other Ca2+-binding proteins in the SR/ER

6.2.5.8 Ca2+ pumps and exchangers

6.3 Ca2+ and other intracellular signals

6.3.1 Cyclic nucleotides and Ca2+

6.3.1.1 Ca2+ and adenylate cyclase

6.3.1.2 Ca2+ and guanylate cyclase

6.3.2 Ca2+ and protein kinase C (PKC)

6.3.3 Nitric oxide and Ca2+

6.3.4 Ca2+, inositol phosphates and other intracellular signals

6.4 Ca2+ and monovalent ions

6.4.1 Intracellular Ca2+ and K+ conductance

6.4.1 Intracellular Ca2+ and Na+ conductance

6.4.3 Ca2+ and chloride channels (CACC)

6.5 Other cations and intracellular Ca2+

6.6 Anions intracellular Ca2+

6.7 Summary

6.8 Recommended reading

Chapter 7 How Ca2+ regulates animal cell physiology   

7.1 Principles

7.2 Ca2+ and how nerves work

7.3 Ca2+ and cell movement

7.4 Muscle contraction

7.5 Chemotaxis and Ca2+

7.6 Intracellular Ca2+ and secretion

7.6.1 Principles

7.6.2 Neurosecretion

7.6.3 Ca2+, the endocrine pancreas and insulin secretion

7.6.4 Ca2+ and the salivary gland

7.6.5 Ca2+ and the exocrine pancreas

7.6.6 Ca2+ and the adrenal medulla

7.6.7 Ca2+ and mast cells

7.6 8 Ca2+, neutrophils and other phagocytes

7.6.9 Ca2+ and platelets

7.6.10 Ca2+ and nematocysts

7.6.11 Ca2+ and coccolithophores

7.6.12 Conclusions about secretion and intracellular Ca2+

7.7 Ca2+ and endocytosis

7.7.1 Principles

7.7.2 Phagocytosis

7.8 Intracellular Ca2+ and intermediary metabolism

7.8.1 Ca2+ activation of glucose metabolism

7.8.2 Ca2+ and mitochondrial intermediary metabolism

7.8.3 Ca2+ and lipolysis and lipogenesis

7.9 Intracellular Ca2+ and cell growth

7.9.1 Principles

7.9.2 Cell cycle and Ca2+

7.9.3 Fertilisation and intracellular Ca2+

7.9.4 Differentiation and intracellular Ca2+

7.10 Intracellular Ca2+ and the immune response

7.11 Intracellular Ca2+ and vision

7.11.1 Ca2+ and vertebrate vision

7.11.2 Ca2+ and invertebrate vision

7.12 Intracellular Ca2+ and other senses

7.13 Ca2+ and bioluminescence

7.14 Intracellular Ca2+ and gene expression

7.15 Conclusions

7.16 Recommended reading

Chapter 8 Intracellular Ca2+, microbes and viruses     

8.1 The puzzle

8.2 What microbes do

8.3 Indirect evidence of a role for intracellular calcium

8.4 Direct evidence for a role of intracellular calcium

8.5 How much Ca2+ is there in bacteria?

8.6 How bacteria regulate their intracellular Ca2+

8.6.1 Ca2+ influx into bacteria

8.6.2 Ca2+ efflux out of bacteria

8.7 Regulation of bacterial events by intracellular Ca2+

8.7.1 Ca2+ and growth of bacteria

8.7.2 Ca2+ and bacterial movement

8.7.2.1 Chemotaxis

8.7.2.2 Gliding

8.7.2.3 Swarming

8.7.3 Quorum sensing and gene expression

8.7.4 Ca2+ and bacterial metabolism

8.7.5 Bacterial defence – dormancy, spore formation and germination

8.7.6 Bacterial infection – virulence, competence and defence

8.7.7 Development of bacterial structures

8.7.7.1 Heterocysts

8.7.7.2 Inclusion bodies

8.7.8 Ca2+ and gene expression in bacteria

8.7.9 Uptake of nucleic acid by bacteria

8.7.10 The bacterial metabolic toxin hypothesis

8.7.11 Intracellular Ca2+ in bacterial – conclusions

8.8 Role of intracellular Ca2+ in Archaea

8.9 Intracellular Ca2+ and viruses

8.9.1 Eukaryotic viruses

8.9.2 Bacterial viruses – bacteriophages

8.10 Intracellular Ca2+ and eukaryotic microbes

8.10.1 Yeast

8.10.2 Paramecium and related ciliates

8.10.3 Slime moulds

8.10.4 Luminous radiolarians

8.11 Summary

8.12 Recommended reading

Chapter 9 Role of intracellular Ca2+ in plants and fungi  

9.1 Role of Ca2+ in plants

9.2 What stimulates plants?

9.2.1 Plant cell stimuli

9.2.2 Plant hormones

9.2.3 Intracellular signals in plants

9.3 Requirement of plants for Ca2+

9.4 Where Ca2+ is stored in plants

9.5 Measurement of cytosolic free Ca2+ in plants

9.6 Components of the Ca2+ signalling in plants

9.6.1 Ca2+ pumps and exchangers

9.6.2 Ca2+ channels in the plasma membrane

9.6.3 Plant organelles and Ca2+

9.6.4 Ca2+ binding proteins in plants

9.6.5 Ca2+ sensitive genes in plants

9.7 How intracellular Ca2+ can provoke cellular events in plants

9.7.1 Light and intracellular Ca2+ in plants

9.7.2 Control of opening and closing of stoma/stomata

9.7.3 Wind and mechanical stimulation in plants

9.7.4 Gravity sensing and growth

9.7.5 Fertilisation, germination and differentiation

9.7.6 Legumes

9.7.7 Intermediary metabolism

9.7.8 Transport by phloem

9.7.9 Defence against stress

9.7.9.1 Wind

9.7.9.2 Water – drought or excess

9.7.9.3 High salinity

9.7.9.4 Low temperature

9.8 Fungal elicitors

9.9 Apoptosis

9.10 Intracellular Ca2+ and plant pathology

9.11 Ca2+ in mosses, liverworts and ferns

9.12 Ca2+ in fungi

9.12.1 Fungi and intracellular Ca2+

9.12.2 Intracellular Ca2+ and yeast

9.12.Lichens

9.13 Ca2+ and slime moulds

9.14 Summary

9.15 Recommended reading

Chapter 10 Pathology of intracellular Ca2+     

10.1 What is pathology?

10.2 Types of pathology

10.3 Intracellular Ca2+ – friend or foe?

10.4 Intracellular Ca2+ and cell death

10.4.1 Necrosis

10.4.2 Apoptosis

10.4.3 Autophagy

10.4.4 Lysis

10.4.5 Cell death conclusions

10.5 Genetic abnormalities in Ca2+ signalling proteins

10.5.1 Ca2+ channelopathies

10.5.2 Ca2+ pumpopathies

10.5.3 Mutations in ER Ca2+ release proteins

10.5.4 Mutations in Ca2+ target proteins

10.5.5 Proteins associated with Ca2+ signalling

10.6 Oxygen and cell pathology

10.6.1 The Ca2+ paradox

10.6.2 Oxidative damage and intracellular Ca2+

10.7 Inappropriate Ca2+ signalling

10.7.1 Cramp

10.7.2 The immune system and other organs in disease

10.7.3 Bacterial metabolic toxins

10.8 The ER stress response

10.9 Summary

10.10 Recommended reading

Chapter 11 Pharmacology of intracellular Ca2+  

11.1 Background

11.2 Pharmacological targets for intracellular Ca2+

11.3 Drugs used clinically and intracellular Ca2+

11.4 Anaesthetics

11.5 Ca2+ channel effectors

11.5.1. Classes of Ca2+ channel blocker

11.5.2. Dihydropyridines

11.5.3 Phenylalkylamines

11.5.4 Benzothiazapines

11.6 Hypertension

11.7 Arrhythmia, tachycardia and bradycardia

11.8 Angina

11.9 Heart failure

11.10 Agents that affect adrenergic receptors

11.11 Cardiac glycosides

11.12 Benzodiazapines

11.13 Antipsychotic drugs

11.14 Stimulants and drugs of abuse

11.15 Analgesics

11.16 Anti-depressants and manic depression

11.17 Diabetes

11.18 Muscle relaxants

11.19 Anti-allergics and immune compounds

11.20 Xanthines

11.21 Substances used experimentally to interfere with intracellular Ca2+

11.21.1. Ca2+ buffers and ionophores

11.21.2 Ca2+ channels

11.21.3. Agents which open or close voltage-gated Ca2+ channels

11.21.4 IP3 receptor activators and blockers

11.21.5 Ryanodine receptor agonists and antagonists

11.21.6 Plasma membrane Ca2+ pump and exchanger inhibitors

11.21.7 SERCA pump inhibitors

11.21.8 Compounds which affect SOCE

11.21.9 Mitochondrial blockers

11.21.10 Ca2+ target inhibitors

11.22. Natural toxins and poisons

11.23 Plant toxins and intracellular Ca2+

11.24 Drugs and the Ca2+ receptor

11.25 Bacteria

11.26 Ions and intracellular calcium

11.27 Antibodies and intracellular Ca2+

11.28 Manipulation of mRNA

11.29 Summary

11.30 Recommended reading

Chapter 12 Darwin and 4000 million years of intracellular Ca2+

12.1 Darwin and calcium

12.2 Evolution and Ca2+

12.3 What is evolution?

12.3.1 The word evolution

12.3.2 The process

12.3.3 Sequence of evolution

12.3.4 Ca2+ and primaeval life

12.3.5 Ca2+ and the origin of the three fundamental cell types

12.3.6 Time scale

12.4 Evolution of Ca2+ signalling

12.4.1 Origin of Ca2+ signalling

12.4.2 Membrane potential

12.4.3 Evolution of Ca2+ signalling based on phylogenetic comparisons

12.4.4 Evolution of Ca2+-binding sites

12.4.5 The origin of the EF-hand

12.5 Darwin and knock-outs

12.6 Summary

12.7 Recommended reading

Chapter 13 They think it’s all over!         

13.1 Calcium and the beauty of Nature

13.2 What we know about the details of intracellular Ca2+

13.2.1 Principles

13.2.2 The pathway of discovery

13.3 What we don’t know about intracellular Ca2+

13.4 Intracellular Ca2+ at school and University

13.5 The inspiration of intracellular Ca2+

13.6 Communicating the story of intracellular Ca2+ to others

13.7 The end of the beginning

13.8 Recommended reading

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