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Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease Martin Beckerman

Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease By Martin Beckerman

Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease by Martin Beckerman


Summary

Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease summarizes our current understanding of these regulatory networks in the healthy and diseased states, showing which molecular components might be prime targets for drug interventions.

Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease Summary

Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease by Martin Beckerman

In today's world, three great classes of non-infectious diseases - the metabolic syndromes (such as type 2 diabetes and atherosclerosis), the cancers, and the neurodegenerative disorders - have risen to the fore. These diseases, all associated with increasing age of an individual, have proven to be remarkably complex and difficult to treat. This is because, in large measure, when the cellular signaling pathways responsible for maintaining homeostasis and health of the body become dysregulated, they generate equally stable disease states. As a result the body may respond positively to a drug, but only for a while and then revert back to the disease state. Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease summarizes our current understanding of these regulatory networks in the healthy and diseased states, showing which molecular components might be prime targets for drug interventions. This is accomplished by presenting models that explain in mechanistic, molecular detail how a particular part of the cellular signaling web operates properly in health and improperly in disease.

The stability of the health- and disease-associated states is dynamic and supported by multiple feedback loops acting positively and negatively along with linkages between pathways. During the past few years an ongoing series of important discoveries have been made that advance our understanding of how the body works and may guide us on how to better deal with these diseases. These include the discovery of chronic inflammation as a causal factor in all of these disease classes, the appearance of reactive oxygen species as a messenger molecule that can act both positively and negatively, the propensity of proteins to misfold into aggregation- and disease-prone forms, and the rise of epigenetics including the emergence of small non-coding RNA with important regulatory functions out of the so-called junk RNA. Chapters are devoted to each of these classes of findings with additional details integrated into the chapters dealing directly with the diseases. The connections responsible for maintaining stability are explored in depth.

Table of Contents

Part I: Metabolic Syndromes 1. Introduction 2. Energy Balance 3. Insulin Signaling and Type 2 Diabetes 4. Metabolic Program Execution and Switching 5. Cholesterol 6. Atherosclerosis 7. Chronic Inflation 8. Redox Signaling Part II: Cancer 9. The Cell Cycle 10. Cell Cycle Checkpoints and DNA Damage Repair 11. Apoptosis and Senecence 12. Epigenetics 13. Tumor Growth 14. Tumor Metabolism 15. Metastatis Part III: Neurodegeneration 16. Protein Folding, Misfolding, and Aggregation 17. Alzeheimer's Disease 18. Chaperones, Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress, and the Unfolded Protein Response 19. Parkinson's Disease 20. Huntington's Disease and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Additional information

NPB9780387981727
9780387981727
0387981721
Cellular Signaling in Health and Disease by Martin Beckerman
New
Hardback
Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
2009-06-22
470
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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