Overview
- Editors:
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David A. Kendall
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Queen’s Medical Centre, University of Nottingham, UK
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Stephen J. Hill
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Queen’s Medical Centre, University of Nottingham, UK
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Table of contents (24 protocols)
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- Jeremy M. Henley, David M. Kirkham
Pages 17-24
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- Roger J. Summers, Peter Molenaar
Pages 25-39
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- Robert J. Williams, Eamonn Kelly
Pages 63-77
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- Jeffrey K. Horton, Peter M. Baxendale
Pages 91-105
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- Takayoshi Kuno, Hideyuki Mukai
Pages 123-127
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- Mohammed Shahid, C. David Nicholson
Pages 129-150
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- Enrique Claro, Elisabet Sarri, Fernando Picatoste
Pages 177-188
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- Michael R. Boarder, John R Purkiss
Pages 189-202
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- Philip A Iredale, John M. Dickenson
Pages 203-213
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- Robert A. Wilcox, James Strupish, Stefan R. Nahorski
Pages 215-227
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About this book
As our understanding of the biological sciences expands, the bou- aries between traditional disciplines tend to blur at the edges. Physio- gists and pharmacologists, for instance, now need to embrace techniques that until recently were the strict preserves of biochemists and mole- lar biologists. However, the acquisition of new technologies can be a time-consuming and frustrating business, and unless an expert is on hand to give instruction, precious hours can be spent poring over half-described Methods sections with no guarantee of eventual success. The aim of Signal Transduction Protocols has been to get experts with "hands-on" experience in particular techniques to give detailed accounts of experimental protocols in a recipe-type format, which we hope will circumvent the problems of ambiguity often encountered when reading the literature. The techniques described in Signal Transduction Protocols are those that we think will be most useful in addressing questions in the area of receptor-mediated cell signaling, with particular regard to those receptors that are part of the G-protein-linked superfamily. To keep it to a manageable size, we have omitted any reference to electrophysi- ogy and have instead concentrated on more biochemical approaches.
Reviews
...this well-organized volume is clearly among the most viable protocol books published in this field and will turn out to be a helpful tool for many laboratories.-FEBS Letters
...well organzied...up to date...should be in each laboratory or at least in your department library for easy reference. -Biopharm