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E-book

Title Molecular mechanisms in visual transduction / editors, D.G. Stavenga, W.J. DeGrip, E.N. Pugh, Jr
Edition 1st ed
Published Amsterdam ; New York : Elsevier, 2000

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Description 1 online resource (xiv, 581 pages) : illustrations (some color)
Series Handbook of biological physics, 1383-8121 ; v. 3
Handbook of biological physics ; v. 3. 1383-8121
Contents Structure and mechanism of vertebrate visual pigments / W.J. DeGrip and K.J. Rothschild -- The primary photoreaction of rhodopsin / R.A. Mathies and J. Lugtenburg -- Late photoproducts and signaling states of bovine rhodopsin / K.P. Hofmann -- Ion channels of vertebrate photoreceptors / R.S. Molday and U.B. Kaupp -- Phototransduction in vertebrate rods and cones : molecular mechanisms of amplification, recovery and light adaptation / E.N. Pugh Jr and T.D. Lamb -- Comparative molecular biology of visual pigments / S. Yokoyama and R. Yokoyama -- Invertebrate visual pigments / W. Gärtner -- Phototransduction mechanisms in microvillar and ciliary photoreceptors of invertebrates / E. Nasi, M. del Pilar Gomez and R. Payne -- Genetic dissection of Drosophila phototransduction / B. Minke and R.C. Hardie -- Modeling primary visual processes in insect photoreceptors / D.G. Stavenga, J. Oberwinkler and M. Postma
Summary Molecular mechanisms in visual transduction is presently one of the most intensely studied areas in the field of signal transduction research in biological cells. Because the sense of vision plays a primary role in animal biology, and thus has been subject to long evolutionary development, the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying vision have a high degree of sensitivity and versatility. The aims of visual transduction research are first to determine which molecules participate, and then to understand how they act in concert to produce the exquisite electrical responses of the photoreceptor cells. Since the 1940s [1] we have known that rod vision begins with the capture of a quantum of energy, a photon, by a visual pigment molecule, rhodopsin. As the function of photon absorption is to convert the visual pigment molecule into a G-protein activating state, the structural details of the visual pigments must be explained from the perspective of their role in activating their specific G-proteins. Thus, Chapters 1-3 of this Handbook extensively cover the physico-chemical molecular characteristics of the vertebrate rhodopsins. Following photoconversion and G-protein activation, the phototransduction cascade leads to modifications of the population of closed and open ion channels in the photoreceptor plasma membrane, and thereby to the electrical response. The nature of the channels of vertebrate photoreceptors is examined in Chapter 4, and Chapter 5 integrates the present body of knowledge of the activation steps in the cascade into a quantitative framework. Once the phototransduction cascade is activated, it must be subsequently silenced. The various molecular mechanisms participating in inactivation are treated in Chapters 1-4 and especially Chapter 5. Molecular biology is now an indispensable tool in signal transduction studies. Numerous vertebrate (Chapter 6) and invertebrate (Chapter 7) visual pigments have been characterized and cloned. The genetics and evolutionary aspects of this great subfamily of G-protein activating receptors are intriguing as they present a natural probe for the intimate relationship between structure and function of the visual pigments. Understanding the spectral characteristics from the molecular composition can be expected to
Analysis gezichtspigmenten
visual pigments
rhodopsine
rhodopsin
fotochemie
photochemistry
Photochemistry and Photophysics
Fotochemie en fotofysica
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Visual pigments -- Mechanism of action
Cellular control mechanisms.
Cellular signal transduction.
Visual pigments.
Signal Transduction
Photoreceptors
Light Signal Transduction
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Physical.
Visual pigments
Cellular control mechanisms
Cellular signal transduction
Form Electronic book
Author DeGrip, W. J.
Pugh, E. N. (Edward N.)
Stavenga, D. G. (Doekele Gerben), 1942-
LC no. 2001274678
ISBN 9780444501028
0444501029
9780080536774
0080536778
9786611071035
6611071032