作者: G Storz
出版社: American Society for Microbiology
出版年: 2010-12-22
页数: 580
定价: GBP 127.00
装帧: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781555816216
出版社: American Society for Microbiology
出版年: 2010-12-22
页数: 580
定价: GBP 127.00
装帧: Hardcover
ISBN: 9781555816216
内容简介 · · · · · ·
Product Description
The second edition of the highly acclaimed Bacterial Stress Responses incorporates and reviews the vast number of new findings that have greatly advanced the understanding of bacterial stress responses in the decade since the publication of the first edition. Readers will discover how this improved understanding not only enhances our knowledge of all cellula... (展开全部) Product Description
The second edition of the highly acclaimed Bacterial Stress Responses incorporates and reviews the vast number of new findings that have greatly advanced the understanding of bacterial stress responses in the decade since the publication of the first edition. Readers will discover how this improved understanding not only enhances our knowledge of all cellular regulation at the molecular level, but also provides new ammunition in the fight against pathogens and helps optimize the use of bacteria in biotechnology.
The first section explores general regulatory principles, including the latest findings from genomics studies. In the second and third sections readers will learn how much more researchers have discovered about both specific and general stress responses. Next, the fourth section reviews how stress responses affect the interactions between bacteria and host cells. The fifth section describes bacterial stress responses in different niches and communities, with an emphasis on extreme environments. The final section examines how our growing understanding of bacterial stress responses can be used to better combat bacterial infection with antibiotics and improve biofuel production and bioremediation.
All chapters have been contributed by leaders and pioneers in their respective fields and then carefully edited to ensure conciseness and clarity. With its coverage of a broad range of model organisms as well as biotechnologically, medically, and environmentally relevant bacteria, this new edition fully encapsulates our understanding of bacterial stress responses. Moreover, it serves as a springboard for new investigations and new applications.
New in the Second Edition
Incorporates new fields such as network analysis, metagenomics, and regulatory RNAs
Examines new findings from genomics studies that have changed our understanding of regulation
Explains how new findings from bacterial stress response studies facilitate the development of antibiotics
Discusses the latest efforts to exploit bacterial stress responses for biofuel production and bioremediation
Presents significant insights into how bacteria survive stress conditions by undergoing changes of state, morphology, or cell surface
More Key Features
Features contributors who are leaders in the investigation of bacterial stress responses and the development of new applications based on new findings
Serves as a gateway to the literature in the field
Highlights important directions for future research
(from amazon.co.uk)
The second edition of the highly acclaimed Bacterial Stress Responses incorporates and reviews the vast number of new findings that have greatly advanced the understanding of bacterial stress responses in the decade since the publication of the first edition. Readers will discover how this improved understanding not only enhances our knowledge of all cellula... (展开全部) Product Description
The second edition of the highly acclaimed Bacterial Stress Responses incorporates and reviews the vast number of new findings that have greatly advanced the understanding of bacterial stress responses in the decade since the publication of the first edition. Readers will discover how this improved understanding not only enhances our knowledge of all cellular regulation at the molecular level, but also provides new ammunition in the fight against pathogens and helps optimize the use of bacteria in biotechnology.
The first section explores general regulatory principles, including the latest findings from genomics studies. In the second and third sections readers will learn how much more researchers have discovered about both specific and general stress responses. Next, the fourth section reviews how stress responses affect the interactions between bacteria and host cells. The fifth section describes bacterial stress responses in different niches and communities, with an emphasis on extreme environments. The final section examines how our growing understanding of bacterial stress responses can be used to better combat bacterial infection with antibiotics and improve biofuel production and bioremediation.
All chapters have been contributed by leaders and pioneers in their respective fields and then carefully edited to ensure conciseness and clarity. With its coverage of a broad range of model organisms as well as biotechnologically, medically, and environmentally relevant bacteria, this new edition fully encapsulates our understanding of bacterial stress responses. Moreover, it serves as a springboard for new investigations and new applications.
New in the Second Edition
Incorporates new fields such as network analysis, metagenomics, and regulatory RNAs
Examines new findings from genomics studies that have changed our understanding of regulation
Explains how new findings from bacterial stress response studies facilitate the development of antibiotics
Discusses the latest efforts to exploit bacterial stress responses for biofuel production and bioremediation
Presents significant insights into how bacteria survive stress conditions by undergoing changes of state, morphology, or cell surface
More Key Features
Features contributors who are leaders in the investigation of bacterial stress responses and the development of new applications based on new findings
Serves as a gateway to the literature in the field
Highlights important directions for future research
(from amazon.co.uk)
目录 · · · · · ·
Table of Contents
I. Specific Stress Responses.
1. The Heat Shock Response: Regulation and Function.
2. Sensing and Responding to Envelope Stress.
3. Cold Shock Response.
4. Oxidative Stress.
· · · · · · (更多)
I. Specific Stress Responses.
1. The Heat Shock Response: Regulation and Function.
2. Sensing and Responding to Envelope Stress.
3. Cold Shock Response.
4. Oxidative Stress.
· · · · · · (更多)
Table of Contents
I. Specific Stress Responses.
1. The Heat Shock Response: Regulation and Function.
2. Sensing and Responding to Envelope Stress.
3. Cold Shock Response.
4. Oxidative Stress.
5. Mechanisms for Sensing and Responding to Oxygen Deprivation in Prokaryotic Organisms.
6. Coping with Osmotic Challenges: Osmoregulation through Accumulation and Release of Compatible Solutes in Bacteria.
7. Microbial Responses to Acid Stress.
8. Sodium Stress.
9. The SOS Response to DNA Damage.
10. Regulatory Systems at the Interface Between Bacterial Metal Homeostasis and Resistance.
II General Responses.
11. The General Stress Response in Escherichia coli.
12. Protective Function and Regulation of the General Stress Response in Bacillus subtilis and Related Gram Positive Bacteria.
13. Bacterial Sporulation: A Response to Environmental Signals.
14. Resistance of Bacterial Spores.
15. Long–term Survival and Evolution in Stationary Phase.
16. Mutation Under Stress: Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli.
17. The Regulation of Competence in Bacillus subtilis and its Relation to Stress Response.
18. The Roles of Cell–Cell Communication in Confronting the Limitations and Opportunities of High Population Densities.
III Pathogenic Responses.
19. The Art of Keeping Low and High Iron in Balance.
20. Identification and Analysis of Proteins Expressed by Bacterial Pathogens in Response to Host Tissues.
21. Environmental Control of Pili Gene Expression.
22. Drug Resistance.
IV Bacteria Thriving in Stressful Environments.
23 Thermal Stress in Hyperthermophiles.
24 The Stress Responses of Deinococcus radiodurans.
25. Mechanisms of Organic Solvent Tolerance in Bacteria.
26. Bacteria Adapted to Industrial biotopes: The Metal Resistant Ralstonia.
V Applications of Stress Response Analysis.
27. A Comparative–Genomic View of the Microbial Stress Response.
28. Proteomic Analysis of Bacterial Stress Response.
29. Applications of stress Responses for Environmental Monitoring and Molecular Toxicology
· · · · · · (收起)
I. Specific Stress Responses.
1. The Heat Shock Response: Regulation and Function.
2. Sensing and Responding to Envelope Stress.
3. Cold Shock Response.
4. Oxidative Stress.
5. Mechanisms for Sensing and Responding to Oxygen Deprivation in Prokaryotic Organisms.
6. Coping with Osmotic Challenges: Osmoregulation through Accumulation and Release of Compatible Solutes in Bacteria.
7. Microbial Responses to Acid Stress.
8. Sodium Stress.
9. The SOS Response to DNA Damage.
10. Regulatory Systems at the Interface Between Bacterial Metal Homeostasis and Resistance.
II General Responses.
11. The General Stress Response in Escherichia coli.
12. Protective Function and Regulation of the General Stress Response in Bacillus subtilis and Related Gram Positive Bacteria.
13. Bacterial Sporulation: A Response to Environmental Signals.
14. Resistance of Bacterial Spores.
15. Long–term Survival and Evolution in Stationary Phase.
16. Mutation Under Stress: Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli.
17. The Regulation of Competence in Bacillus subtilis and its Relation to Stress Response.
18. The Roles of Cell–Cell Communication in Confronting the Limitations and Opportunities of High Population Densities.
III Pathogenic Responses.
19. The Art of Keeping Low and High Iron in Balance.
20. Identification and Analysis of Proteins Expressed by Bacterial Pathogens in Response to Host Tissues.
21. Environmental Control of Pili Gene Expression.
22. Drug Resistance.
IV Bacteria Thriving in Stressful Environments.
23 Thermal Stress in Hyperthermophiles.
24 The Stress Responses of Deinococcus radiodurans.
25. Mechanisms of Organic Solvent Tolerance in Bacteria.
26. Bacteria Adapted to Industrial biotopes: The Metal Resistant Ralstonia.
V Applications of Stress Response Analysis.
27. A Comparative–Genomic View of the Microbial Stress Response.
28. Proteomic Analysis of Bacterial Stress Response.
29. Applications of stress Responses for Environmental Monitoring and Molecular Toxicology
· · · · · · (收起)
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第252页
The general stress response, which in fact was discovered as a stationary phase response, is tightly interconnected with the E.coli growth cycle and its regulatory circuits. Key players in these circuits are at least four sigma subunits of RNAP (σ70, σFliA, σS, σE), the flagellar master regulator FlhDC, as well as the second messengers cAMP, (p)ppGpp, and c-di-GMP. (更多)
(收起)The general stress response, which in fact was discovered as a stationary phase response, is tightly interconnected with the E.coli growth cycle and its regulatory circuits. Key players in these circuits are at least four sigma subunits of RNAP (σ70, σFliA, σS, σE), the flagellar master regulator FlhDC, as well as the second messengers cAMP, (p)ppGpp, and c-di-GMP.
2012-02-21 18:06:18 回应
-
第252页
The general stress response, which in fact was discovered as a stationary phase response, is tightly interconnected with the E.coli growth cycle and its regulatory circuits. Key players in these circuits are at least four sigma subunits of RNAP (σ70, σFliA, σS, σE), the flagellar master regulator FlhDC, as well as the second messengers cAMP, (p)ppGpp, and c-di-GMP. (更多)
(收起)The general stress response, which in fact was discovered as a stationary phase response, is tightly interconnected with the E.coli growth cycle and its regulatory circuits. Key players in these circuits are at least four sigma subunits of RNAP (σ70, σFliA, σS, σE), the flagellar master regulator FlhDC, as well as the second messengers cAMP, (p)ppGpp, and c-di-GMP.
2012-02-21 18:06:18 回应
-
第252页
The general stress response, which in fact was discovered as a stationary phase response, is tightly interconnected with the E.coli growth cycle and its regulatory circuits. Key players in these circuits are at least four sigma subunits of RNAP (σ70, σFliA, σS, σE), the flagellar master regulator FlhDC, as well as the second messengers cAMP, (p)ppGpp, and c-di-GMP. (更多)
(收起)The general stress response, which in fact was discovered as a stationary phase response, is tightly interconnected with the E.coli growth cycle and its regulatory circuits. Key players in these circuits are at least four sigma subunits of RNAP (σ70, σFliA, σS, σE), the flagellar master regulator FlhDC, as well as the second messengers cAMP, (p)ppGpp, and c-di-GMP.
2012-02-21 18:06:18 回应
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