Molecular Biology of Steroid and Nuclear Hormone Receptors
Intracellular Receptors: New Instruments for a Symphony of Signals In the late eighteenth century, it was proposed on theoretical grounds that each of the body's organs, beginning with the brain, must be "a factory and laboratory of a specific humor which it returns to the blood", and that these circulating signals "are indispensable for the life of the whole" (Bordeu 1775). During the nineteenth cen- tury, some remarkable physiological experiments revealed the actions of humoral factors that affected the for and function of multiple tissues, organs and organ sys- tems within the body (Berthold 1849); much later, the chemical and molecular na- ture of some of those factors was determined. Against this deep historical backdrop of the founding studies of intercellular signaling, molecular biology sprang into existence a mere forty years ago, rooted in the revelation of regulable gene expression in bacteria. But contemporaneous with those classical analyses of transcriptional regulation of the lactose operon, the mod- em era of signal transduction was inaugurated by the identification of cAMP as a second messenger --- an intracellular mediator of hormonal activation of glycogen catabolism (Sutherland and RaIl 1960). Later in that same decade, it emerged that cAMP is a critical signal not only in metazoans, but even in bacteria, where it serves an analogous function as a critical switch that activates expression of genes re- quired for catabolism of complex carbon sources, including those of the lactose operon.
1003193856
Molecular Biology of Steroid and Nuclear Hormone Receptors
Intracellular Receptors: New Instruments for a Symphony of Signals In the late eighteenth century, it was proposed on theoretical grounds that each of the body's organs, beginning with the brain, must be "a factory and laboratory of a specific humor which it returns to the blood", and that these circulating signals "are indispensable for the life of the whole" (Bordeu 1775). During the nineteenth cen- tury, some remarkable physiological experiments revealed the actions of humoral factors that affected the for and function of multiple tissues, organs and organ sys- tems within the body (Berthold 1849); much later, the chemical and molecular na- ture of some of those factors was determined. Against this deep historical backdrop of the founding studies of intercellular signaling, molecular biology sprang into existence a mere forty years ago, rooted in the revelation of regulable gene expression in bacteria. But contemporaneous with those classical analyses of transcriptional regulation of the lactose operon, the mod- em era of signal transduction was inaugurated by the identification of cAMP as a second messenger --- an intracellular mediator of hormonal activation of glycogen catabolism (Sutherland and RaIl 1960). Later in that same decade, it emerged that cAMP is a critical signal not only in metazoans, but even in bacteria, where it serves an analogous function as a critical switch that activates expression of genes re- quired for catabolism of complex carbon sources, including those of the lactose operon.
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Molecular Biology of Steroid and Nuclear Hormone Receptors

Molecular Biology of Steroid and Nuclear Hormone Receptors

by Leonard Freedman (Editor)
Molecular Biology of Steroid and Nuclear Hormone Receptors

Molecular Biology of Steroid and Nuclear Hormone Receptors

by Leonard Freedman (Editor)

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1998)

$54.99 
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Overview

Intracellular Receptors: New Instruments for a Symphony of Signals In the late eighteenth century, it was proposed on theoretical grounds that each of the body's organs, beginning with the brain, must be "a factory and laboratory of a specific humor which it returns to the blood", and that these circulating signals "are indispensable for the life of the whole" (Bordeu 1775). During the nineteenth cen- tury, some remarkable physiological experiments revealed the actions of humoral factors that affected the for and function of multiple tissues, organs and organ sys- tems within the body (Berthold 1849); much later, the chemical and molecular na- ture of some of those factors was determined. Against this deep historical backdrop of the founding studies of intercellular signaling, molecular biology sprang into existence a mere forty years ago, rooted in the revelation of regulable gene expression in bacteria. But contemporaneous with those classical analyses of transcriptional regulation of the lactose operon, the mod- em era of signal transduction was inaugurated by the identification of cAMP as a second messenger --- an intracellular mediator of hormonal activation of glycogen catabolism (Sutherland and RaIl 1960). Later in that same decade, it emerged that cAMP is a critical signal not only in metazoans, but even in bacteria, where it serves an analogous function as a critical switch that activates expression of genes re- quired for catabolism of complex carbon sources, including those of the lactose operon.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781461272717
Publisher: Birkhäuser Boston
Publication date: 10/23/2012
Series: Progress in Gene Expression
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1998
Pages: 319
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.03(d)

Table of Contents

1. The Role of Heat Shock Proteins in the Regulation of Steroid Receptor Function.- 2. Subcellular and Subnuclear Trafficking of Steroid Receptors.- 3. Structure and Function of the Steroid and Nuclear Receptor Ligand-Binding Domain.- 4. Structure and Function of the Steroid and Nuclear Receptor DNA Binding Domain.- 5. Modulation of Steroid/Nuclear Receptor Dimerization and DNA Binding by Ligands.- 6. Molecular Mechanisms of Nuclear-Receptor-Mediated Transcriptional Activation and Basal Repression.- 7. Transcriptional Cross-Talk by Steroid Hormone Receptors.- 8. Chromatin and Steroid-Receptor-Mediated Transcription.- 9. Regulation of Glucocorticoid and Estrogen Receptor Activity by Phosphorylation.- 10. Monomeric Nuclear Receptors.- 11. Orphan Nuclear Receptors and Their Ligands.
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