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Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry Book

Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry
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Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, Authors Dave Nelson and Mike Cox combine the best of the laboratory and best of the classroom, introducing exciting new developments while communicating basic principles of biochemistry., Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry
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  • Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry
  • Written by author David L. Nelson
  • Published by Freeman, W. H. & Company, 11/21/2012
  • Authors Dave Nelson and Mike Cox combine the best of the laboratory and best of the classroom, introducing exciting new developments while communicating basic principles of biochemistry.
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1 The Foundations of Biochemistry
1.1 Cellular Foundations
1.2 Chemical Foundations
1.3 Physical Foundations
1.4 Genetic Foundations
1.5 Evolutionary Foundations Box 1–1 Molecular Weight, Molecular Mass, and Their Correct Units Box 1–2 Louis Pasteur and Optical Activity: In Vino, Veritas Box 1–3 Entropy: The Advantages of Being Disorganized
• Now introduces the concepts of proteomes and proteomics
• Updated section on how a new species evolves
• Increased emphasis on the interdependence of life forms in global cycles of energy
 I STRUCTURE AND CATALYSIS
2 Water
2.1 Weak Interactions in Aqueous Systems
2.2 Ionization of Water, Weak Acids, and Weak Bases
2.3 Buffering against pH Changes in Biological Systems
2.4 Water as a Reactant
2.5 The Fitness of the Aqueous Environment for Living Organisms Box 2–1 Medicine: On Being One’s Own Rabbit (Don’t Try This at Home!)
• Expanded discussion of blood pH buffering by the bicarbonate system,including a new box describing Haldane’s use of himself as a guinea pig    in experiments aimed at changing the acidity of blood
• New section on ketoacidosis in diabetes
 3 Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins
3.1 Amino Acids
3.2 Peptides and Proteins
3.3 Working with Proteins
3.4 The Structure of Proteins: Primary Structure Box 3–1 Methods: Absorption of Light by Molecules: The Lambert-Beer Law Box 3–2 Methods: Investigating Proteins with Mass Spectrometry Box 3–3 Medicine: Consensus Sequences and Sequence Logos
• Significant revision to bioinformatics
• More thorough explanation of consensus sequences, including an illustration of common ways to depict consensus sequences
 4 The Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins
4.1 Overview of Protein Structure
4.2 Protein Secondary Structure
4.3 Protein Tertiary and Quaternary Structures
4.4 Protein Denaturation and Folding Box 4–1 Methods: Knowing the Right Hand from the Left Box 4–2 Permanent Waving Is Biochemical Engineering Box 4–3 Medicine: Why Sailors, Explorers, and College Students Should  Eat Their Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Box 4–4 The Protein Data Bank Box 4–5 Methods: Methods for Determining the Three-Dimensional Structure of a Protein Box 4–6 Medicine: Death by Misfolding: The Prion Diseases
• New section, Defects in protein folding may be the molecular basis for a wide range of human genetic disorders, discusses a variety of amyloid    diseases
• New section on circular dichroism
 5 Protein Function
5.1 Reversible Binding of a Protein to a Ligand: Oxygen-Binding Proteins
5.2 Complementary Interactions between Proteins and Ligands: The Immune System and Immunoglobulins
5.3 Protein Interactions Modulated by Chemical Energy: Actin, Myosin, and Molecular Motors Box 5–1 Medicine: Carbon Monoxide: A Stealthy Killer
6 Enzymes
6.1 An Introduction to Enzymes
6.2 How Enzymes Work
6.3 Enzyme Kinetics as an Approach to Understanding Mechanism
6.4 Examples of Enzymatic Reactions
6.5 Regulatory Enzymes Box 6–1 Transformations of the Michaelis-Menten Equation: The Double-Reciprocal Plot Box 6–2 Kinetic Tests for Determining Inhibition Mechanisms Box 6–3 Evidence for Enzyme–Transition State Complementarity
• More explanatory text added to the mechanisms for the enolase and lysozyme reactions
• New section on pharmaceuticals developed from an understanding of enzyme mechanism, using penicillin and HIV protease inhibitors as examples
 7 Carbohydrates and Glycobiology
7.1 Monosaccharides and Disaccharides
7.2 Polysaccharides
7.3 Glycoconjugates: Proteoglycans, Glycoproteins, and Glycolipids
7.4 Carbohydrates as Informational Molecules: The Sugar Code
7.5 Working with Carbohydrates Box 7–1 Medicine: Blood Glucose Measurements in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Diabetes
• New medical box, introduces hemoglobin glycation and AGEs and their role in the pathology of advanced diabetes
• New section on sugar analogs as drugs that target viral neuraminidase
• Introduction to the new field of glycomics, including methods for determining oligosaccharide structure using MALDI-MS
 8 Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids
8.1 Some Basics
8.2 Nucleic Acid Structure
8.3 Nucleic Acid Chemistry
8.4 Other Functions of Nucleotides 9 DNA-Based Information Technologies
9.1 DNA Cloning: The Basics
9.2 From Genes to Genomes
9.3 From Genomes to Proteomes
9.4 Genome Alterations and New Products of Biotechnology Box 9–1 Medicine: A Potent Weapon in Forensic Medicine Box 9–2 Medicine: The Human Genome and Human Gene Therapy
• New material on the green fluorescent protein
• Thorough updating of genomics section
 10 Lipids
10.1 Storage Lipids
10.2 Structural Lipids in Membranes
10.3 Lipids as Signals, Cofactors, and Pigments
10.4 Working with Lipids Box 10–1 Sperm Whales: Fatheads of the Deep Box 10–2 Medicine: Abnormal Accumulations of Membrane Lipids: Some Inherited Human Diseases
• New medical section on the role of polyunsaturated fatty acids and trans fatty acids in cardiovascular disease
• New section on lipidomics
• New descriptions of volatile lipids used as signals by plants, and pigments of bird feathers derived from colored lipids in plant foods

11 Biological Membranes and Transport
11.1 The Composition and Architecture of Membranes
11.2 Membrane Dynamics
11.3 Solute Transport across Membranes Box 11–1 Methods: Atomic Force Microscopy to Visualize Membrane Proteins Box 11–2 Medicine: Defective Glucose and Water Transport in Two Forms of Diabetes Box 11–3 Medicine: A Defective Ion Channel in Cystic Fibrosis
• Expanded section on bilayer dynamics covers flippases, floppases, scramblases, and bilayer asymmetry
• Expanded and updated section on lipid rafts and caveolae includes new  material on membrane curvature and the proteins that influence it, and    introduces amphitropic proteins and annular lipids
• New information on the structural basis for voltage gating in a K+ channel
 12 Biosignaling
12.1 General Features of Signal Transduction
12.2 G Protein–Coupled Receptors and Second Messengers
12.3 Receptor Tyrosine Kinases
12.4 Receptor Guanylyl Cyclases, cGMP, and Protein Kinase G
12.5 Multivalent Scaffold Proteins and Membrane Rafts
12.6 Gated Ion Channels
12.7 Integrins: Bidirectional Cell Adhesion Receptors
12.8 Regulation of Transcription by Steroid Hormones
12.9 Signaling in Microorganisms and Plants
12.10 Sensory Transduction in Vision, Olfaction, and Gustation
12.11 Regulation of the Cell Cycle by Protein Kinases
12.12 Oncogenes, Tumor Suppressor Genes, and Programmed Cell Death Box 12–1 Methods: Scatchard Analysis Quantifies the Receptor-Ligand Interaction Box 12–2 Medicine: G Proteins: Binary Switches in Health and Disease Box 12–3 Methods: FRET: Biochemistry Visualized in a Living Cell Box 12–4 Medicine: Color Blindness: John Dalton’s Experiment from the Grave Box 12–5 Medicine: Development of Protein Kinase Inhibitors for Cancer Treatment
• New Medical section on G protein coupled receptors (GCPRs) discusses the range of diseases for which drugs target GPCRs
• New box on G proteins, proteins that regulate their GTPase activity, and the medical consequences of defective G protein function
• Expanded and integrated treatment of local signaling circuits, including AKAPs and signaling complexes that include protein kinase   A, adenylyl cyclase, and phosphodiesterase, and localized puffs and    waves of Ca2+
• New medical box on the use of protein kinase inhibitors in cancertherapy
 II BIOENERGETICS AND METABOLISM
13 Bioenergetics and Biochemical Reaction Types

13.1 Bioenergetics and Thermodynamics
13.2 Chemical Logic and Common Biochemical Reactions
13.3 Phosphoryl Group Transfers and ATP
13.4 Biological Oxidation-Reduction Reactions Box 13–1 Firefly Flashes: Glowing Reports of ATP
• New section, Chemical logic and common biochemical reactions, discusses common biochemical reaction types 14 Glycolysis, Gluconeogenesis, and the Pentose Phosphate Pathway
14.1 Glycolysis
14.2 Feeder Pathways for Glycolysis
14.3 Fates of Pyruvate under Anaerobic Conditions: Fermentation
14.4 Gluconeogenesis
14.5 Pentose Phosphate Pathway of Glucose Oxidation Box 14–1 Medicine: High Rate of Glycolysis in Tumors Suggests Targets for Chemotherapy and Facilitates Diagnosis Box 14–2 Athletes, Alligators, and Coelacanths: Glycolysis at Limiting Concentrations of Oxygen Box 14–3 Ethanol Fermentations: Brewing Beer and Producing Biofuels Box 14–4 Medicine: Why Pythagoras Wouldn’t Eat Falafel: Glucose 6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Deficiency
• New medical box on glucose uptake deficiency in type 1 diabetes
• New medical box on how the high rate of glycolysis in cancerous tissue aids cancer diagnosis and treatment
 15 Principles of Metabolic Regulation
15.1 Regulation of Metabolic Pathways
15.2 Analysis of Metabolic Control
15.3 Coordinated Regulation of Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis
15.4 The Metabolism of Glycogen in Animals
15.5 Coordinated Regulation of Glycogen Synthesis and Breakdown Box 15–1 Methods: Metabolic Control Analysis: Quantitative Aspects Box 15–2 Isozymes: Different Proteins That Catalyze the Same Reaction Box 15–3 Medicine: Genetic Mutations That Lead to Rare Forms of Diabetes Box 15–4 Carl and Gerty Cori: Pioneers in Glycogen Metabolism and Disease
• New section on emerging role of ribulose 5-phosphate as central regulator of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis
• Expanded discussion of phosphoprotein phosphatases in metabolic regulation
• Expanded coverage of the role of transcriptional regulators in metabolic regulation
• New medical box on mutations that lead to rare forms of diabetes regulation (MODY)
 16 The Citric Acid Cycle
16.1 Production of Acetyl-CoA (Activated Acetate)
16.2 Reactions of the Citric Acid Cycle
16.3 Regulation of the Citric Acid Cycle
16.4 The Glyoxylate Cycle Box 16–1 Moonlighting Enzymes: Proteins with More Than One Job Box 16–2 Synthases and Synthetases; Ligases and Lyases; Kinases,Phosphatases, and Phosphorylases: Yes, the Names Are Confusing!
Box 16–3 Citrate: A Symmetric Molecule That Reacts Asymmetrically Box 16–4 Citrate Synthase, Soda Pop, and the World Food Supply
• New box on effect of diabetes on the citric acid cycle and ketone body formation
• Expanded discussion of substrate channeling
• New section on mutations in citric acid cycle that lead to cancer
• New box on moonlighting enzymes
 17 Fatty Acid Catabolism
17.1 Digestion, Mobilization, and Transport of Fats
17.2 Oxidation of Fatty Acids
17.3 Ketone Bodies Box 17–1 Fat Bears Carry Out b Oxidation in Their Sleep Box 17–2 Coenzyme B12: A Radical Solution to a Perplexing Problem
• New section on the role of transcription factors (PPARs) in regulation of lipid catabolism 18 Amino Acid Oxidation and the Production of Urea
18.1 Metabolic Fates of Amino Groups
18.2 Nitrogen Excretion and the Urea Cycle
18.3 Pathways of Amino Acid Degradation Box 18–1 Medicine: Assays for Tissue Damage Box 18–2 Medicine: Scientific Sleuths Solve a Murder Mystery
• New section on pernicious anemia and associated problems in strict vegetarians.
19 Oxidative Phosphorylation and Photophosphorylation Oxidative Phosphorylation
19.1 Electron-Transfer Reactions in Mitochondria
19.2 ATP Synthesis
19.3 Regulation of Oxidative Phosphorylation
19.4 Mitochondria in Thermogenesis, Steroid Synthesis, and Apoptosis
19.5 Mitochondrial Genes: Their Origin and the Effects of MutationsPhotosynthesis: Harvesting Light Energy
19.6 General Features of Photophosphorylation
19.7 Light Absorption
19.8 The Central Photochemical Event: Light-Driven Electron Flow
19.9 ATP Synthesis by Photophosphorylation
19.10 The Evolution of Oxygenic Photosynthesis Box 19–1 Hot, Stinking Plants and Alternative Respiratory Pathways
• Updated discussion of the structure of the electron transfer complexes of mitochondria and chloroplasts, and of the Fo complex
• Updated description of the water-splitting complex’s structure in chloroplasts
• Expanded description of mitochondrial diseases and mitochondrial role in diabetes
   20 Carbohydrate Biosynthesis in Plants and Bacteria
20.1 Photosynthetic Carbohydrate Synthesis
20.2 Photorespiration and the C4 and CAM Pathways
20.3 Biosynthesis of Starch and Sucrose
20.4 Synthesis of Cell Wall Polysaccharides: Plant Cellulose and Bacterial Peptidoglycan
20.5 Integration of Carbohydrate Metabolism in the Plant Cell

21 Lipid Biosynthesis
21.1 Biosynthesis of Fatty Acids and Eicosanoids
21.2 Biosynthesis of Triacylglycerols
21.3 Biosynthesis of Membrane Phospholipids
21.4 Biosynthesis of Cholesterol, Steroids, and Isoprenoids Box 21–1 Mixed-Function Oxidases, Oxygenases, and Cytochrome P-450
• Revised and updated section on fatty acid synthase includes new structural information on FAS I
• Updated information on cyclooxygenase inhibitors (pain relievers Vioxx, Celebrex, Bextra)
• New information on HMG-CoA reductase and new m
edical box on statins 22 Biosynthesis of Amino Acids, Nucleotides, and Related Molecules
22.1 Overview of Nitrogen Metabolism
22.2 Biosynthesis of Amino Acids
22.3 Molecules Derived from Amino Acids
22.4 Biosynthesis and Degradation of Nucleotides Box 22–1 Unusual lifestyles of the obscure but abundant Box 22–2 Medicine: On Kings and Vampires Box 22–3 Medicine: Curing African Sleeping Sickness with a Biochemical Trojan Horse
• Updated coverage of nitrogen cycle section includes a new box on anammox bacteria
• New information on therapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia
• New information on folic acid deficiency
 23 Hormonal Regulation and Integration of Mammalian Metabolism
23.1 Hormones: Diverse Structures for Diverse Functions
23.2 Tissue-Specific Metabolism: The Division of Labor
23.3 Hormonal Regulation of Fuel Metabolism
23.4 Obesity and the Regulation of Body Mass
23.5 Obesity, the Metabolic Syndrome, and Type 2 Diabetes Box 23–1 Medicine: How Is a Hormone Discovered? The Arduous Path to Purified Insulin
• Expanded coverage and updating of the biochemical connections between obesity, metabolic syndrome, and type 2 diabetes
• Updated discussion of the integration of fuel metabolism in fed and starved states in diabetes
 III INFORMATION PATHWAYS
24 Genes and Chromosomes

24.1 Chromosomal Elements
24.2 DNA Supercoiling
24.3 The Structure of Chromosomes Box 24–1 Medicine: Curing Disease by Inhibiting Topoisomerases Box 24–2 Medicine: Epigenetics, Nucleosome Structure, and Histone Variants
• New material on histone modification, histone variants, and nucleosome deposition
• New medical box on the use of topoisomerase inhibitors in the treatment of bacterial infections and cancer, includes material on ciprofloxacin (the    antibiotic effective for anthrax)
• New box on the role of histone modification and nucleosome deposition in the transmission of epigenetic information in heredity
 25 DNA Metabolism
25.1 DNA Replication
25.2 DNA Repair
25.3 DNA Recombination Box 25–1 Medicine: DNA Repair and Cancer
• New information on the initiation of replication and the dynamics at the replication fork, introducing AAA+ ATPases and their functions in replication and other aspects of DNA metabolism 26 RNA Metabolism
26.1 DNA-Dependent Synthesis of RNA
26.2 RNA Processing
26.3 RNA-Dependent Synthesis of RNA and DNA Box 26–1 Methods: RNA Polymerase Leaves Its Footprint on a Promoter Box 26–2 Fighting AIDS with Inhibitors of HIV Reverse Transcriptase Box 26–3 Methods: The SELEX Method for Generating RNA Polymers with New Functions Box 26–4 An Expanding RNA Universe Filled with TUF RNAs
• New section on the expanding roles of RNA in cells 27 Protein Metabolism
27.1 The Genetic Code
27.2 Protein Synthesis
27.3 Protein Targeting and Degradation Box 27–1 Exceptions That Prove the Rule: Natural Variations in the Genetic Code Box 27–2 From an RNA World to a Protein World Box 27–3 Natural and Unnatural Expansion of the Genetic Code Box 27–4 Induced Variation in the Genetic Code: Nonsense Suppression
• Expanded section on protein synthesis coupled to the advances in ribosome structure
• New information on the roles of RNA in protein biosynthesis
 28 Regulation of Gene Expression
28.1 Principles of Gene Regulation
28.2 Regulation of Gene Expression in Bacteria
28.3 Regulation of Gene Expression in Eukaryotes Box 28–1 Of Fins, Wings, Beaks, and Things
• New information about roles of RNA in gene regulation
• New box on the connections between evolution and development

Appendix A Common Abbreviations in the Biochemical Research Literature Appendix B Abbreviated Solutions to Problems Glossary Credits Index


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Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, 
Authors Dave Nelson and Mike Cox combine the best of the laboratory and best of the classroom, introducing exciting new developments while communicating basic principles of biochemistry., Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry

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Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, 
Authors Dave Nelson and Mike Cox combine the best of the laboratory and best of the classroom, introducing exciting new developments while communicating basic principles of biochemistry., Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry

Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry

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Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry, 
Authors Dave Nelson and Mike Cox combine the best of the laboratory and best of the classroom, introducing exciting new developments while communicating basic principles of biochemistry., Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry

Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry

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