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    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Milton :CRC Press LLC,
    Keywords: Biophysics. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Physical Biology of the Cell is a textbook for a first course in physical biology or biophysics for undergraduate or graduate students. It maps the huge and complex landscape of cell and molecular biology from the distinct perspective of physical biology. As a key organizing principle, the proximity of topics is based on the physical concepts that unite a given set of biological phenomena. Herein lies the central premise: that the appropriate application of a few fundamental physical models can serve as the foundation of whole bodies of quantitative biological intuition, useful across a wide range of biological problems. The Second Edition features full-color illustrations throughout, two new chapters, a significantly expanded set of end-of-chapter problems, and is available in a variety of e-book formats.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (1089 pages)
    Edition: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 9781000026498
    DDC: 571.6
    Language: English
    Note: Intro -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Contents in Detail -- Special Sections -- Map of the Maps -- Part 1: The Facts of Life -- Chapter 1: Why: Biology by the Numbers -- 1.1 Biological Cartography -- 1.2 Physical Biology of the Cell -- Model Building Requires a Substrate of Biological Facts and Physical (or Chemical) Principles -- 1.3 The Stuff of Life -- Organisms Are Constructed from Four Great Classes of Macromolecules -- Nucleic Acids and Proteins Are Polymer Languages with Different Alphabets -- 1.4 Model Building in Biology -- 1.4.1 Models as Idealizations -- Biological Stuff Can Be Idealized Using Many Different Physical Models -- 1.4.2 Cartoons and Models -- Biological Cartoons Select Those Features of the Problem Thought to Be Essential -- Quantitative Models Can Be Built by Mathematicizing the Cartoons -- 1.5 Quantitative Models and the Power of Idealization -- 1.5.1 On the Springiness of Stuff -- 1.5.2 The Toolbox of Fundamental Physical Models -- 1.5.3 The Unifying Ideas of Biology -- 1.5.4 Mathematical Toolkit -- 1.5.5 The Role of Estimates -- 1.5.6 On Being Wrong -- 1.5.7 Rules of Thumb: Biology by the Numbers -- 1.6 Summary and Conclusions -- 1.7 Further Reading -- 1.8 References -- Chapter 2: What and Where: Construction Plans for Cells and Organisms -- 2.1 An Ode to E. coli -- 2.1.1 The Bacterial Standard Ruler -- The Bacterium E. coli Will Serve as Our Standard Ruler -- 2.1.2 Taking the Molecular Census -- The Cellular Interior Is Highly Crowded, with Mean Spacings Between Molecules That Are Comparable to Molecular Dimensions -- 2.1.3 Looking Inside Cells -- 2.1.4 Where Does E. coli Fit? -- Biological Structures Exist Over a Huge Range of Scales -- 2.2 Cells and Structures within Them -- 2.2.1 Cells: A Rogue's Gallery. , Cells Come in a Wide Variety of Shapes and Sizes and with a Huge Range of Functions -- Cells from Humans Have a Huge Diversity of Structure and Function -- 2.2.2 The Cellular Interior: Organelles -- 2.2.3 Macromolecular Assemblies: The Whole is Greater than the Sum of the Parts -- Macromolecules Come Together to Form Assemblies -- Helical Motifs Are Seen Repeatedly in Molecular Assemblies -- Macromolecular Assemblies Are Arranged in Superstructures -- 2.2.4 Viruses as Assemblies -- 2.2.5 The Molecular Architecture of Cells: From Protein Data Bank (PDB) Files to Ribbon Diagrams -- Macromolecular Structure Is Characterized Fundamentally by Atomic Coordinates -- Chemical Groups Allow Us to Classify Parts of the Structure of Macromolecules -- 2.3 Telescoping Up in Scale: Cells Don't Go It Alone -- 2.3.1 Multicellularity as One of Evolution's Great Inventions -- Teaming Up in a Crisis: Lifestyle of Dictyostelium discoideum -- Multicellular Organisms Have Many Distinct Communities of Cells -- 2.3.2 Cellular Structures from Tissues to Nerve Networks -- One Class of Multicellular Structures is the Epithelial Sheets -- Tissues Are Collections of Cells and Extracellular Matrix -- Nerve Cells Form Complex, Multicellular Complexes -- 2.3.3 Multicellular Organisms -- Cells Differentiate During Development Leading to Entire Organisms -- The Cells of the Nematode Worm, Caenorhabditis Elegans, Have Been Charted, Yielding a Cell-by-Cell Picture of the Organism -- Higher-Level Structures Exist as Colonies of Organisms -- 2.4 Summary and Conclusions -- 2.5 Problems -- 2.6 Further Reading -- 2.7 References -- Chapter 3: When: Stopwatches at Many Scales -- 3.1 The Hierarchy of Temporal Scales -- 3.1.1 The Pageant of Biological Processes -- Biological Processes Are Characterized by a Huge Diversity of Time Scales -- 3.1.2 The Evolutionary Stopwatch. , 3.1.3 The Cell Cycle and the Standard Clock -- The E. coli Cell Cycle Will Serve as Our Standard Stopwatch -- 3.1.4 Three Views of Time in Biology -- 3.2 Procedural Time -- 3.2.1 The Machines (or Processes) of the Central Dogma -- The Central Dogma Describes the Processes Whereby the Genetic Information Is Expressed Chemically -- The Processes of the Central Dogma Are Carried Out by Sophisticated Molecular Machines -- 3.2.2 Clocks and Oscillators -- Developing Embryos Divide on a Regular Schedule Dictated by an Internal Clock -- Diurnal Clocks Allow Cells and Organisms to Be on Time Everyday -- 3.3 Relative Time -- 3.3.1 Checkpoints and the Cell Cycle -- The Eukaryotic Cell Cycle Consists of Four Phases Involving Molecular Synthesis and Organization -- 3.3.2 Measuring Relative Time -- Genetic Networks Are Collections of Genes Whose Expression Is Interrelated -- The Formation of the Bacterial Flagellum Is Intricately Organized in Space and Time -- 3.3.3 Killing the Cell: The Life Cycles of Viruses -- Viral Life Cycles Include a Series of Self-Assembly Processes -- 3.3.4 The Process of Development -- 3.4 Manipulated Time -- 3.4.1 Chemical Kinetics and Enzyme Turnover -- 3.4.2 Beating the Diffusive Speed Limit -- Diffusion Is the Random Motion of Microscopic Particles in Solution -- Diffusion Times Depend upon the Length Scale -- Diffusive Transport at the Synaptic Junction Is the Dynamical Mechanism for Neuronal Communication -- Molecular Motors Move Cargo over Large Distances in a Directed Way -- Membrane-Bound Proteins Transport Molecules from One Side of a Membrane to the Other -- 3.4.3 Beating the Replication Limit -- 3.4.4 Eggs and Spores: Planning for the Next Generation -- 3.5 Summary and Conclusions -- 3.6 Problems -- 3.7 Further Reading -- 3.8 References -- Chapter 4: Who: "Bless the Little Beasties" -- 4.1 Choosing a Grain of Sand. , Modern Genetics Began with the Use of Peas as a Model System -- 4.1.1 Biochemistry and Genetics -- 4.2 Hemoglobin as a Model Protein -- 4.2.1 Hemoglobin, Receptor-Ligand Binding, and the Other Bohr -- The Binding of Oxygen to Hemoglobin Has Served as a Model System for Ligand-Receptor Interactions More Generally -- Quantitative Analysis of Hemoglobin Is Based upon Measuring the Fractional Occupancy of the Oxygen-Binding Sites as a Function o -- 4.2.2 Hemoglobin and the Origins of Structural Biology -- The Study of the Mass of Hemoglobin Was Central in the Development of Centrifugation -- Structural Biology Has Its Roots in the Determination of the Structure of Hemoglobin -- 4.2.3 Hemoglobin and Molecular Models of Disease -- 4.2.4 The Rise of Allostery and Cooperativity -- 4.3 Bacteriophages and Molecular Biology -- 4.3.1 Bacteriophages and the Origins of Molecular Biology -- Bacteriophages Have Sometimes Been Called the "Hydrogen Atoms of Biology" -- Experiments on Phages and Their Bacterial Hosts Demonstrated That Natural Selection Is Operative in Microscopic Organisms -- The Hershey-Chase Experiment Both Confirmed the Nature of Genetic Material and Elucidated One of the Mechanisms of Viral DNA Ent -- Experiments on Phage T4 Demonstrated the Sequence Hypothesis of Collinearity of DNA and Proteins -- The Triplet Nature of the Genetic Code and DNA Sequencing Were Carried Out on Phage Systems -- Phages Were Instrumental in Elucidating the Existence of mRNA -- General Ideas about Gene Regulation Were Learned from the Study of Viruses as a Model System -- 4.3.2 Bacteriophages and Modern Biophysics -- Many Single-Molecule Studies of Molecular Motors Have Been Performed on Motors from Bacteriophages -- 4.4 A Tale of Two Cells: E. coli As a Model System -- 4.4.1 Bacteria and Molecular Biology -- 4.4.2 E. coli and the Central Dogma. , The Hypothesis of Conservative Replication Has Falsifiable Consequences -- Extracts from E. coli Were Used to Perform In Vitro Synthesis of DNA, mRNA, and Proteins -- 4.4.3 The lac Operon as the "Hydrogen Atom" of Genetic Circuits -- Gene Regulation in E. coli Serves as a Model for Genetic Circuits in General -- The lac Operon Is a Genetic Network That Controls the Production of the Enzymes Responsible for Digesting the Sugar Lactose -- 4.4.4 Signaling and Motility: The Case of Bacterial Chemotaxis -- E. coli Has Served as a Model System for the Analysis of Cell Motility -- 4.5 Yeast: From Biochemistry to the Cell Cycle -- Yeast Has Served as a Model System Leading to Insights in Contexts Ranging from Vitalism to the Functioning of Enzymes to Eukary -- 4.5.1 Yeast and the Rise of Biochemistry -- 4.5.2 Dissecting the Cell Cycle -- 4.5.3 Deciding Which Way Is Up: Yeast and Polarity -- 4.5.4 Dissecting Membrane Traffic -- 4.5.5 Genomics and Proteomics -- 4.6 Flies and Modern Biology -- 4.6.1 Flies and the Rise of Modern Genetics -- Drosophila melanogaster Has Served as a Model System for Studies Ranging from Genetics to Development to the Functioning of the Brain and Even Behavior -- 4.6.2 How the Fly Got His Stripes -- 4.7 Of Mice and Men -- 4.8 The Case for Exotica -- 4.8.1 Specialists and Experts -- 4.8.2 The Squid Giant Axon and Biological Electricity -- There Is a Steady-State Potential Difference Across the Membrane of Nerve Cells -- Nerve Cells Propagate Electrical Signals and Use Them to Communicate with Each Other -- 4.8.3 Exotica Toolkit -- 4.9 Summary and Conclusions -- 4.10 Problems -- 4.11 Further reading -- 4.12 References -- Part 2: Life at Rest -- Chapter 5: Mechanical and Chemical Equilibrium in the Living Cell -- 5.1 Energy and the Life of Cells -- 5.1.1 The Interplay of Deterministic and Thermal Forces. , Thermal Jostling of Particles Must Be Accounted for in Biological Systems.
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