Muscle contraction / C.R. Bagshaw.
By: Bagshaw, C. R. (Clive Richard)
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Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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General Lending | MTU Bishopstown Library Store Item | 591.1852 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00056690 |
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591.1 How animals work / | 591.1 Laboratory manual of mammalian physiology / | 591.166 Viviparity / | 591.1852 Muscle contraction / | 591.1852 Muscle / | 591.188 Nerves, brains and behaviour / | 591.188 Homeostasis / |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
The student of biolo,gical science in his final years as an undergraduate and his first years as a graduate is expected to gain some familiarity with current research at the frontiers of his discipline. New research work is published in a perplexing diversity of publications and is inevitably concerned with the minutiae of the subject. The sheer number of research journals and papers also causes confusion and difficulties of assimilation. Review articles usually presuppose a background knowledge of the field and are inevitably rather restricted in scope. There is thus a need for short but authoritative introductions to those areas of modern biological research which are either not dealt with in standard introductory textbooks or are not dealt with in sufficient detail to enable the student to go on from them to read scholarly reviews with profit. This series of books is designed to satisfy this need. The authors have been asked to produce a brief outline of their subject assuming that their readers will have read and remembered much of a standard introductory textbook of biology. This outline then sets out to provide by building on this basis, the conceptual framework within which modern research work is progressing and aims to give the reader an indication of the problems, both conceptual and practical, which must be overcome if progress is to be maintained.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Table of contents provided by Syndetics
- Introduction
- Gross anatomy and physiology
- Muscle cells
- Contractile proteins
- Mechanism of ATP hydrolysis
- Crossbridge structure and function
- Mechanochemical coupling
- Molecular basis of regulation
- In vitro motility assays
- Problems and prospects
- Appendix
- References
- Index