Microbial Globins – Status and Opportunities

Director of collection: Poole Robert K.

Language: English

150.91 €

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512 p. · 15x22.8 cm · Hardback
Advances in Microbial Physiology is one of the most successful and prestigious series from Academic Press, an imprint of Elsevier. It publishes topical and important reviews, interpreting physiology to include all material that contributes to our understanding of how microorganisms and their component parts work. First published in 1967, it is now in its 63rd volume. The Editors have always striven to interpret microbial physiology in the broadest context and have never restricted the contents to ?traditional” views of whole cell physiology. Now edited by Professor Robert Poole, University of Sheffield, Advances in Microbial Physiology continues to be an influential and very well reviewed series.
  1. Globin-coupled sensors
    Sylvia DeWilde and Luc Moens
  2. The diversity of 2/2 (truncated) globins
    Martino Bolognesi
  3. Protoglobin: structure and ligand-binding properties
    Martino Bolognesi and Marco Nardini   
  4. The globins of Campylobacter jejuni
    Mark Shepherd and Mariana Tinajero-Trejo
  5. The globins of Mycobacterium species
    Kanak Dikshit and Kelly Davidge
  6. The globins of cyanobacteria and algae
    Juliette Lecomte and Eric A. Johnson
  7. The Dos family of globin-related sensors
    Shigetoshi Aono
  8. The multiple globins of Antarctic bacteria
    Cinzia Verde, Daniela Coppola and Daniela Giordano
  9. The ever-expanding family of microbial globins – where are we going wrong?
    Serge Vinogradov, David Hoogewijs, Mariana Tinajero-Trejo and Robert Poole
Microbiologists, biochemists, biotechnologists, those interested in physiology, microbial biochemistry and its applications.
Professor Robert Poole is West Riding Professor of Microbiology at the University of Sheffield. He has >35 years’ experience of bacterial physiology and bioenergetics, in particular O2-, CO- and NO-reactive proteins, and has published >300 papers (h=48, 2013). He was Chairman of the Plant and Microbial Sciences Committee of the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and has held numerous grants from BBSRC, the Wellcome and Leverhulme Trusts and the EC. He coordinates an international SysMO systems biology consortium. He published pioneering studies of bacterial oxidases and globins and discovered the bacterial flavohaemoglobin gene (hmp) and its function in NO detoxification He recently published the first systems analyses of responses of bacteria to novel carbon monoxide-releasing molecules (CORMs) and is a world leader in NO, CO and CORM research.
  • Informs and updates on all the latest developments in the field
  • Contributions from leading authorities and industry experts