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دانلود کتاب Biomembranes Part I: Visual Pigments and Purple Membranes II

دانلود کتاب Biomembranes قسمت اول: رنگدانه های بصری و غشاء بنفش II

Biomembranes Part I: Visual Pigments and Purple Membranes II

مشخصات کتاب

Biomembranes Part I: Visual Pigments and Purple Membranes II

ویرایش: 1 
نویسندگان:   
سری: Methods in Enzymology 88 
ISBN (شابک) : 9780121819880, 0076687988 
ناشر: Academic Press 
سال نشر: 1982 
تعداد صفحات: 901 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 16 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 42,000



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توجه داشته باشید کتاب Biomembranes قسمت اول: رنگدانه های بصری و غشاء بنفش II نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Biomembranes قسمت اول: رنگدانه های بصری و غشاء بنفش II

استاندارد آزمایشگاهی تحسین شده، روش ها در آنزیمولوژی، یکی از معتبرترین انتشارات در زمینه بیوشیمی است. از سال 1955، هر جلد مشتاقانه مورد انتظار، مکرراً مورد مشورت قرار گرفته و توسط محققان و داوران به طور یکسان مورد ستایش قرار گرفته است. این مجموعه حاوی مطالب زیادی است که امروزه هنوز مرتبط است - واقعاً یک نشریه ضروری برای محققان در همه زمینه‌های علوم زیستی


توضیحاتی درمورد کتاب به خارجی

The critically acclaimed laboratory standard, Methods in Enzymology, is one of the most highly respected publications in the field of biochemistry. Since 1955, each volume has been eagerly awaited, frequently consulted, and praised by researchers and reviewers alike. The series contains much material still relevant today - truly an essential publication for researchers in all fields of life sciences



فهرست مطالب

Content: 
Editorial Board
Page iii

Contributors to volume 88
Pages xiii-xviii

Preface
Page xix
Lester Packer

Volume in series
Pages xx-xxvii

[1] The isolation of deuterated bacteriorhodopsin from fully deuterated Halobacterium halobium Original Research Article
Pages 3-5
Henry L. Crespi

[2] Preparation and properties of monomeric bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 5-10
Norbert A. Dencher, Maarten P. Heyn

[3] Reconstitution of the retinal proteins bacteriorhodopsin and halorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 10-17
Dieter Oesterhelt

[4] Bacteriorhodopsin in phospholipid vesicles Original Research Article
Pages 17-25
Piet W.M. van Duck, Karel van Dam

[5] Phospholipid substitution of the purple membrane Original Research Article
Pages 26-30
Evert P. Bakker, S.Roy Caplan

[6] Reconstitution of monomeric bacteriorhodopsin into phospholipid vesicles Original Research Article
Pages 31-35
Maarten P. Heyn, Norbert A. Dencher

[7] A single turnover study of photoelectric current-generating proteins Original Research Article
Pages 35-45
V.P. Skulachev

[8] The assembly of bacteriorhodopsin-containing planar membranes by the sequential transfer of air-water interface films Original Research Article
Pages 45-55
Juan I. Korenbrot

[9] Primary structure of bacteriorhodopsin: Sequencing methods for membrane proteins Original Research Article
Pages 56-74
Gerhard E. Gerber, H.Gobind Khoranat

[10] Delipidation, renaturation, and reconstitution of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 74-81
Hagan Bayley, Bo Höjeberg, Kuo-Sen Huang, H.Gobind Khorana, Mei-June Liao, Christina Lind, Erwin London

[11] The identification of helical segments in the polypeptide chain of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 81-88
D.M. Engelman, A. Goldman, T.A. Steitz

[12] Determination of modified positions in the polypeptide chain of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 89-98
Horst-Dieter Lemke, Jurgen Bergmeyer, Dieter Oesterhelt

[13] Lipids of purple membrane from extreme halophiles and of methanogenic bacteria Original Research Article
Pages 98-111
M. Kates, S.C. Kushwaha, G.D. Sprott

[14] Preparation of new two- and three-dimensional crystal forms of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 111-117
Hartmut Michel, Dieter Oesterhelt

[15] Freeze-substitution and freeze-etching method for studying the ultrastructure of photoreceptive membrane Original Research Article
Pages 118-123
Jiro Usukura, Eichi Yamada

[16] Analysis of bacteriorhodopsin structure by X-ray diffraction Original Research Article
Pages 124-132
A.E. Blaurock

[17] Rapid kinetic optical absorption spectroscopy of bacteriorhodopsin photocycles Original Research Article
Pages 133-162
Richard H. Lozier

[18] The photoreaction cycle of bacteriorhodopsin: Low-temperature spectrophotometry Original Research Article
Pages 163-167
Fumio Tokunaga, Tatsuo Iwasa

[19] Photochemistry and isomer determination of 13-cis-and trans-bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 167-174
Norbert A. Dencher, Charles N. Rafferty, Walter Sperling

[20] Spin labeling of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 175-177
Rosalie K. Crouch

[21] Heavy atom labeling of retinal in bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 178-180
Michael G. Motto, Koji Nakanishi

[22] Analysis of photocyle and orientation in thin layers Original Research Article
Pages 180-193
Rafi Koresntein, Benno Hess

[23] Cooperativity of photocycle in purple membrane Original Research Article
Pages 193-201
Rafi Korenstein, Benno Hess

[24] High-performance liquid chromatography method for isolation of membrane proteins from halobacterial membrane Original Research Article
Pages 202-207
Tetsuya Konishi

[25] Heterobifunctional cross-linking of bacteriorhodopsin by hydrophobic azidoarylisothiocyanates Original Research Article
Pages 207-213
Hans Sigrist, Peter Zahler

[26] Measurement of light-regulated phosphoproteins of Halobacterium halobium Original Research Article
Pages 213-216
Elena Negri Spudich, John Lee Spudich

[27] Emission spectroscopy of rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 217-229
Aaron Lewis, G.J. Perreault

[28] Preparation of planar membrane monolayers for spectroscopy and electron microscopy Original Research Article
Pages 230-235
Knute A. Fisher

[29] Metal decoration of the purple membrane Original Research Article
Pages 235-241
Dorothea-Ch. Neugebauer

[30] Neutron scattering of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 241-248
Glen I. King, Benno P. Schoenborn

[31] Transient dichroism of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 248-254
Richard J. Cherry

[32] Spectroscopic methods for protonation state determination Original Research Article
Pages 254-265
Dietrich Kuschmitz, Benno Hess

[33] Monitoring of protein conformation changes during photocycle Original Research Article
Pages 265-267
Brian Becher

[34] X-ray diffraction studies of purple membranes reconstituted from brown membrane Original Research Article
Pages 268-271
Toshiaki Hamanaka, Kenji Hiraki, Toshio Mitsui

[35] Light-induced volume changes Original Research Article
Pages 272-276
William W. Parson

[36] Application of nanosecond X-ray diffraction techniques to bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 276-281
Robert D. Frankel, James M. Forsyth

[37] X-ray diffraction studies of light interactions with bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 282-286
J. Stamatoff, R.H. Lozier, S. Gruner

[38] Orientation of purple membranes by electric field Original Research Article
Pages 287-297
Lajos Keszthelyi

[39] Effect of viscosity on the photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 297-305
Laura Eisenstein

[40] Time-resolved protein fluorescence measurements of intermediates in the photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 306-310
William D. Hopewell, Joseph M. Fukumoto

[41] Recent advances in the study of bacteriorhodopsin dynamic structure using high-field solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy Original Research Article
Pages 310-325
Eric Oldfield, Robert A. Kinsey, Augustin Kintanar

[42] Preparation of oriented multilamellar arrays of natural and artificial biological membranes Original Research Article
Pages 326-333
Noel A. Clark, Kenneth J. Rothschild

[43] Light-induced pH gradients measured with spin-labeled amine and carboxylic acid probes: Application to Halobacterium halobium cell envelope vesicles Original Research Article
Pages 334-344
R.J. Mehlhorn, I. Probst

[44] Secondary ion movements in Halobacterium halobium Original Research Article
Pages 344-349
Gottfried Wagner

[45] Photophosphorylation and reconstitution of photophosphorylation in halobacterial cells Original Research Article
Pages 349-355
Dieter Oesterhelt

[46] Simultaneous measurements of proton movement and membrane potential changes in the wild-type and mutant Halobacterium halobium vesicles Original Research Article
Pages 356-360
Naoki Kamo, Toni Racanelli, Lester Packer

[47] The classification of halobacteria Original Research Article
Pages 360-368
Terje Torsvik, Ian Dundas

[48] The Halobacterium group: Microbiological methods Original Research Article
Pages 369-373
Hans Jurgen Weber, Syam Sarma, Terrance Leighton

[49] Plasmids in halobacteria: Restriction maps Original Research Article
Pages 374-379
Gottfried Weidinger, Felicitas Pfeifer, Werner Goebel

[50] The isolation of Halobacterium mutant strains with defects in pigment synthesis Original Research Article
Pages 379-390
Hans Jurgen Weber, Roberto A. Bogomolni

[51] the brown membrane of Halobacterium halobium: The biosynthetic precursor of the purple membrane Original Research Article
Pages 391-395
Manfred Sumper

[52] Lipids of Thermoplasma Original Research Article
Pages 396-406
Thomas A. Langworthy

[53] Isolation of the white membrane of crystalline bacterio-opsin from Halobacterium halobium R1mW lacking carotenoid Original Research Article
Pages 407-411
Yasuo Mukohata, Yasuo Sugiyama

[54] Identification and detection of electron transfer components in methanogens Original Research Article
Pages 412-417
Jack R. Lancaster Jr.

[55] Anaerobic growth of halobacteria Original Research Article
Pages 417-420
Dieter Oesterhelt

[56]Photobehavior of Halobacterium halobium Original Research Article
Pages 420-426
Norbert A. Dencher, Eilo Hildebrand

[57]Demonstration of primary sodium transport activity in Halobacterium halobium envelope vesicles Original Research Article
Pages 426-433
Edward V. Lindley, Phillip N. Howles, Russell E. MacDonald

[58]Assay of pigment P588 and its discrimination from bacteriorhodopsin by flash spectroscopy techniques Original Research Article
Pages 434-439
Roberto A. Bogomolni, Hans Jurgenweber

[59] Spectrophotometric determination of halorhodopsin in Halobacterium halobium Membranes Original Research Article
Pages 439-443
Janos K. Lanyi

[60] Comparison of bacteriorhodopsin and rhodopsin molecular structure Original Research Article
Pages 447-462
B.A. Wallace

[61] Protein- chromophore interactions as spectroscopic and photochemical determinants Original Research Article
Pages 462-470
Barry Honig, Thomas G. Ebrey

[62] Molecular aspects of the photocycles of rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin: A comparative overview Original Research Article
Pages 470-491
Michael Ottolenghi

[63] Use of high-performance liquid chromatography to separate and identify retinals Original Research Article
Pages 491-496
Richard A. Blatchly, Koji Nakanishi

[64] Synthetic analogs of retinal, bacteriorhodopsin, and bovine rhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 496-506
Valeria Balogh-Nair, Koji Nakanishi

[65] Synthesis and photochemistry of stereoisomers of retinal Original Research Article
Pages 506-516
Robert S.H. Liu, Alfred E. Asato

[66] Synthetic pigments of rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 516-521
Thomas G. Ebrey

[67] Energy levels of the visual chromophores by two-photon spectroscopy Original Research Article
Pages 522-532
Robert R. Birge

[68] Photoisomerization kinetics of retinal analogs Original Research Article
Pages 533-542
David S. Kliger

[69] Isolation and purification of retinals from purple membranes for mass spectral analysis Original Research Article
Pages 542-546
Stanley Seltzer, Mow Lin

[70] Identification of cis/trans isomers of retinal analogs by high-performance proton NMR method Original Research Article
Pages 546-552
Paul Towner, Wolfgang Gärtner

[71] Methods for extraction of pigment chromophore Original Research Article
Pages 552-561
Motoyuki Tsuda

[72] Resonance raman spectroscopy of rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin: An overview Original Research Article
Pages 561-617
Aaron Lewis

[73] Time-resolved chromophore resonance raman and protein fluorescence of the intermediates of the proton pump photocycle of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 617-625
M.A. El-Sayed

[74] Resonance raman techniques for photolabile samples: Pump-probe and flow Original Research Article
Pages 625-633
Robert Callender

[75] Resonance raman spectroscopy of rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin isotopic analogs Original Research Article
Pages 633-643
Richard Mathies

[76] Kinetic resonance raman spectroscopy of purple membrane using rotating sample Original Research Article
Pages 643-648
Pramod V. Argade, Kenneth J. Rothschild

[77] Spinning sample raman spectroscopy at 77°°K: Bacteriorhodopsin's primary photoproduct Original Research Article
Pages 648-659
Mark Braiman, Richard Mathies

[78] Kinetic resonance raman spectroscopy with microsampling rotating cells Original Research Article
Pages 659-666
Aaron Lewis

[79] Calorimetric measurements of light-induced processes Original Research Article
Pages 667-673
Alan Cooper

[80] Tritium-hydrogen exchange kinetics Original Research Article
Pages 673-676
Nancy W. Downer, Joan J. Englander

[81] Infrared measurement of peptide hydrogen exchange in rhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 676-680
H.Beverley Osborne, Eliane Nabedryk-Viala

[82] A comparison of hydrogen exchange methods applied to rhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 681-682
Nancy W. Downer, H. Beverley Osborne

[83] Spin-label probes of light-induced electrical potentials in rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 682-696
David S. Cafiso, Wayne L. Hubel, Alexandre Quintanilha

[84] Infrared absorption of photoreceptor and purple membranes Original Research Article
Pages 696-714
K.J. Rothschild, R. Sanches, Noel A. Clard

[85] Effect of pressure on visual pigment and purple membrane Original Research Article
Pages 714-722
Motoyuki Tsuda

[86] Some approaches to determining the primary structure of membrane proteins Original Research Article
Pages 723-729
N.G. Abdulaev, Yu.A. Ovchinnikov

[87] Kinetic properties of rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin measured by kinetic infrared spectroscopy (KIS) Original Research Article
Pages 729-740
Werner Mäntele, Fritz Siebert, W. Kreutz

[88] Photodichroism and the rotational motions of rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 741-750
Patrick L. Ahl, Richard A. Cone

[89] Measurements of volumes and electrochemical gradients with spin probes in membrane vesicles Original Research Article
Pages 751-762
Rolf J. Mehlhorn, Pedro Landau, Lester Packer

[90] Diffusible spin labels used to study lipid-protein interactions with rhodopsin and bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 762-772
Derek Marsh, Anthony Watts

[91] A computer technique for structural studies of bacteriorhodopsin Original Research Article
Pages 772-784
Hayward Zwerling, Rolf Mehlhorn, Lester Packer, Robert Macelroy

Author index
Pages 785-812

Subject index
Pages 813-836





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