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Nature's Robota: A History of Protenins

Proteins are amazing molecules. They spark the chemical reactions that form the basis for life, transmit signals in the body, identify and kill foreign invaders, form the engines that make us move, record visual images. For every task in a living organism, there is a protein designed to carry it out...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Charles Tanford
Other Authors: Jacqueline A Reynolds
Format: Printed Book
Published: Oxford University Press 2001
Subjects:
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100 |a  Charles Tanford 
245 |a Nature's Robota: A History of Protenins 
260 |b Oxford University Press  |c 2001 
300 |a 304 pages : illustrations  
505 |a  CHEMISTRY ; 1. The naming ; 2. Crystallinity, haemaglobin ; 3. The peptide bond ; 4. Proteins are true macromolecules ; 5. Bristling with charges ; 6. Fibrous proteins ; 7. Analytical imperative ; 8. Amino acid sequence ; 9. Subunits and domains ; DETAILED STRUCTURE ; 10. Early approaches to protein folding ; 11. Hydrogen bonds and the alpha-helix ; 12. Irving Langmuir and the hydrophobic factor ; 13. Three-dimensional structure ; PHYSIOLOGICAL FUNCTION ; 14. An ancient and many-sided science ; 15. Are enzymes proteins? ; 16. Antibodies ; 17. Colour vision ; 18. Muscle contraction ; 19. Cell membranes ; HOW ARE PROTEINS MADE? ; 20. The link to genetics ; 21. After the double helix: the triple code ; 22. The new alchemy ; NOTES AND REFERENCES ; INDEXES 
520 |a Proteins are amazing molecules. They spark the chemical reactions that form the basis for life, transmit signals in the body, identify and kill foreign invaders, form the engines that make us move, record visual images. For every task in a living organism, there is a protein designed to carry it out. Nature's Robots is an authoritative history of protein science, from the earliest research in the nineteenth century to the most recent findings today. Tanford and Reynolds, who themselves made major contributions to the golden age of protein science, have written a remarkably vivid account of this history. The authors begin with the research of Berzelius and Mulder into "albumins," the early name for proteins, and the range all the way up to the findings of James Watson and Francis Crick. It is a fascinating story, involving heroes from the past, working mostly alone or in small groups, usually with little support from formal research grants. They capture the growing excitement among scientists as the mysteries of protein structure and function--the core of all the mysteries of life--are revealed little by little. And they include vivid portraits of scientists at work--two researchers, stranded by fog in a Moscow airport, strike up a conversation that leads to a major discovery; a chemist working in a small lab, with little funding, on a problem no one else would tackle, proves that enzymes are proteins--and wins the Nobel Prize. 
650 |a  Proteins. 
700 |a Jacqueline A Reynolds 
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