The Chlamydomonas sourcebook: 2 Organellar and metabolic processes
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
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Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam [u.a.]
Elsevier
2009
|
Ausgabe: | 2. ed. |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XLVII, 1071 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780123708755 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The Chlamydomonas sourcebook |n 2 |p Organellar and metabolic processes |c Elizabeth H. Harris, ed. in chief |
250 | |a 2. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Amsterdam [u.a.] |b Elsevier |c 2009 | |
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700 | 1 | |a Harris, Elizabeth H. |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
700 | 1 | |a Stern, David B. |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
700 | 1 | |a Witman, George B. |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents of Volume 2
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xix
List of Contributors xxi
Conventions Used xxv
Abbreviations xxvii
List of Tables xxxi
List of Figures xxxv
Contents of Volume 1 xli
Contents of Volume 3 xliii
CHAPTER 1 Starch Metabolism 1
Steven G. Ball and Philippe Deschamps
I. Starch structure and localization in the green algae 2
II. An outline of the starch metabolism pathway:
comparative biochemistry and genomics 5
III. The.geneticsof starch accumulation and
-n^obilization 18
¦ IV. Physiology of starch storage: circadian clock
.control, pyrenojdal starch synthesis and
?yhydroge reproduction 26
V. Conclusions 30
References 33
CHAPTER 2 Glycerolipid Biosynthesis 41
Wayne R. Riekhof and Christoph Benning
I. Introduction 41
II. Fatty acid biosynthesis and desaturation 44
III. Glycerolipid biosynthesis 49
IV. Compartmentalization of lipid biosynthesis 59
V. Perspectives 60
Acknowledgments 60
References 61
CHAPTER 3 Nitrogen Assimilation and its Regulation 69
Emilio Fernandez, Angel Llamas and Aurora Galvan
I. Introduction 70
II. Useful nitrogen sources for Chlamydomonas 70
III. Ammonium assimilation 81
IV. Assimilation of nitrate and nitrite 85
V. Regulation of nitrate assimilation 97
Acknowledgments 99
References 100
CHAPTER 4 Amino Acid Metabolism 115
Olivier Vallon and Martin H. Spalding
I. Introduction 116
II. Biosynthesis of amino acids: pathways, enzymes,
localization, inhibitors, mutants 116
III. Use of exogenous amino acids 142
IV. Role of amino acids as precursor of metabolites 146
V. Conclusions 150
References 150
CHAPTER 5 Sulfur: From Acquisition to Assimilation 159
David Gonzalez-Ballester and Arthur R. Grossman
I. Introduction 159
II. SO42~ acquisition and assimilation 160
III. S starvation responses 171
IV. Perspectives 178
Acknowledgments 179
References 179
CHAPTER 6 Phosphate Metabolism and Responses to
Phosphorus Deficiency 189
Jeffrey Moseley and Arthur R. Grossman
I. Introduction 190
II. Phosphorus acquisition 192
III. P storage, mobilization, and conservation 195
IV. Genetic control of phosphorus deprivation
responses 198
V. P deficiency and photosynthesis 205
VI. Regulatory model for P deprivation
responses 207
VII. Concluding remarks 208
Acknowledgments 209
References 209
CHAPTER 7 Hydrogenases, Hydrogen Production, and
Anoxia 217
Matthew C. Posewitz, Alexandra Dubini, Jonathan E. Meuser,
Michael Seibert and Maria L. Ghirardi
I. Background 218
II. Hydrogenases 220
III. Hydrogen metabolism 229
IV. Fermentative metabolism 236
V. Genomics and systems biology 239
VI. Sulfur deprivation 241
VII. Outlook 245
Acknowledgments 246
References 246
CHAPTER 8 The CO2-Concentrating Mechanism and Carbon
Assimilation 257
Martin H. Spalding
I. The carbon environment 257
II. Metabolism of carbon assimilation 269
III. Acquisition of inorganic carbon 278
References 290
CHAPTER 9 Rubisco 303
Katia Wostrikoff and David B. Stern
I. Introduction 303
II. Rubisco-encoding genes and enzyme structure 304
III. Site-directed mutagenesis 306
IV. Rubisco activase 320
V. Rubisco expression in response to physiological
cues 321
VI. Regulation of Rubisco LS expression 323
VII. Conclusions and perspectives 324
Acknowledgments 325
References 325
CHAPTER 10 Transition Metal Nutrition: A Balance Between
Deficiency and Toxicity 333
Marc Hanikenne, Sabeeha S. Merchant and Patrice Hamel
I. Introduction 334
II. Components of the metal homeostasis network 335
III. Metal tolerance 354
IV. Metal nutrition and deficiency response 359
V. Conclusions and perspectives 376
Acknowledgments 379
References 379
CHAPTER 11 Thioredoxins and Related Proteins 401
Laure Michelet, Mirko Zaffagnini and Stephane D. Lemaire
I. Introduction 401
II. Thioredoxins 403
III. Glutaredoxins 421
IV. Protein disulfide isomerases 427
V. Conclusions 430
Acknowledgments 431
References 432
CHAPTER 12 The Mitochondrial Genome 445
Pierre Cardol and Claire Remade
I. Introduction 446
II. Characteristics of the mitochondrial genome 447
III. Mutations affecting the mitochondrial genome 450
IV. Mitochondrial genome transmission 457
V. Mitochondrial transformation 460
Acknowledgments 461
References 461
CHAPTER 13 Oxidative Phosphorylation: Building Blocks and
Related Components 469
Pierre Cardol, Francisco Figueroa, Claire Remade,
Lars-Gunnar Franzen and Diego Gonzalez-Halphen
I. Introduction 470
II. Complexes of the mitochondrial respiratory
chain 471
III. Import of nucleus-encoded OXPHOS proteins 487
IV. Conclusions and perspectives 490
Acknowledgments 491
References 491
CHAPTER 14 Light-Harvesting Proteins 503
Jun Minagawa
I. Introduction 504
II. Structure and composition of the light-harvesting
apparatus 505
III. Light-harvesting proteins 513
IV. LHC-like proteins 521
V. Regulation of the light-harvesting complex 525
Acknowledgments 528
References 529
CHAPTER 15 Photosystem 1 541
Kevin E. Redding
I. Introduction 542
II. Composition of PS I 545
III. Energy transfer and electron transfer within PS 1 548
IV. Electron transfer to and from PS I 559
V. Assembly and disassembly of PS 1 564
VI. Frontiers of PS I research using the
Chlamydomonas system 565
Acknowledgments 565
References 565
CHAPTER 16 Photosystem II, a Structural Perspective 573
Zoee Gokhale and Richard T. Sayre
I. Introduction 573
II. Overview of the photosystem II complex 574
III. Beyond the photosystem II crystal structure 594
References 594
CHAPTER 17 The Cytochrome b6f Complex 603
Catherine de Vitry and Richard Kuras
I. Introduction 604
II. Structure of the b6f complex 604
III. The b6f complex at the crossroads of electron
transport and signal transduction 611
IV. Biogenesis of the b6f complex 619
V. Conclusion 627
Acknowledgments 628
References 628
CHAPTER 18 The CFOFX ATP Synthase Complex of
Photosynthesis 639
Giovanni Finazzi, Dominique Drapier and
Fabrice Rappaport
I. Introduction 640
II. Composition, structure and specific features of
the ATP synthase 640
III. Mechanistic aspects of the synthesis/hydrolysis
of ATP 649
IV. Concluding remarks 661
References 662
CHAPTER 19 Chaperones and Proteases 671
Michael Schroda and Olivier Vallon
I. Introduction 672
II. Regulation of the heat shock response 673
III. Small HSPs 674
IV. HSP33: a redox-regulated chaperone 676
V. HSP60s 677
VI. HSP70s 678
VII. HSP90s 692
VIII. Elevated levels of sHSPs, HSP60, and HSP70
in Chlamydomonas acidophila 695
IX. HSP100 proteins function as chaperones and/or
components of ATP-dependent proteases 695
X. FtsH proteases 699
XI. Lon 700
XII. DegP and C-terminal processing peptidases 700
XIII. N-terminal maturation of organelle-encoded
proteins 703
XIV. Peptidases in organellar import and membrane
translocation 704
XV. Intramembrane proteases: Site2 peptidase,
PARL/rhomboid, Spp, SppA 706
XVI. Proteolytic processes in the organelles of
Chlamydomonas: whodunnit? 709
XVII. Conclusion 712
References 712
CHAPTER 20 Biosynthesis of Chlorophylls and Hemes 731
Samuel I. Beale
I. Introduction 732
II. Outline of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis 733
III. ALA formation from glutamate 733
IV. Steps common to the biosynthesis of all
tetrapyrroles 742
V. Steps from uroporphyrinogen III to
protoporphyrin IX 745
VI. Steps specific to chlorophyll formation 748
VII. Biosynthesis of chlorophyll b 760
VIII. Minor chlorophyll a derivatives in reaction
centers 761
IX. Chlorophyll degradation and interconversion of
chlorophylls a and b 761
X. The branch from uroporphyrinogen III to siroheme.... 763
XI. The branch from protoporphyrin IX to hemes 765
XII. Heme catabolism 769
XIII. Regulation 770
References 775
CHAPTER 21 Carotenoids 799
Martin Lohr
I. Introduction 799
II. Occurrence and analysis 800
III. Biosynthesis 803
IV. Localization and functional significance 808
V. Carotenoids as biosynthetic precursors 810
VI. Outlook 810
Acknowledgments 811
References 811
CHAPTER 22 State Transitions 819
Jean-David Rochaix
I. Introduction 820
II. What are state transitions? 820
III. Phosphorylation and mobility of LHCII
polypeptides 822
IV. Regulation of phosphorylation 828
V. Thylakoid protein kinases 830
VI. Maintenance of ATP levels through state
transitions 836
VII. Genetic approaches 837
VIII. Role of state transitions 839
IX. Conclusions and prospects 839
Acknowledgments 840
References 840
CHAPTER 23 Photoprotection and High Light Responses 847
Krishna K. Niyogi
I. Introduction 847
II. High light-induced damage and repair 849
III. Regulation of photosynthetic light harvesting
by nonphotochemical quenching 853
IV. Regulation of gene expression and acclimation
to high light 856
Acknowledgments 861
References 862
CHAPTER 24 The Chloroplast Genome 871
David C. Higgs
I. Introduction 871
II. Genome structure and sequence 872
III. Gene content 878
IV. DNA replication 880
V. Genome evolution 882
VI. Conclusions and perspectives 885
References 886
CHAPTER 25 Chloroplast Transcription 893
Uwe Klein
I. Introduction 893
II. Transcription units: single genes and gene
clusters 894
III. The transcription machinery 895
IV. Initiation and termination of transcription 902
V. Regulation of chloroplast transcription 907
VI. Perspectives 909
Acknowledgments 909
References 909
CHAPTER 26 Chloroplast RNA Splicing 915
Michel Goldschmidt-Clermont
I. Introduction 915
II. Group I introns 916
III. Group II intron splicing 921
IV. Are splicing and its regulation essential? 928
V. Conclusions 929
Acknowledgments 930
References 930
CHAPTER 27 Chloroplast RNA Processing and Stability 937
David L. Herrin
I. Chloroplast RNA processing 938
II. Chloroplast RNA stability and degradation 949
III. Conclusions and perspectives 958
Acknowledgments 959
References 959
CHAPTER 28 Protein Synthesis in the Chloroplast 967
William Zerges and Charles Hauser
I. Introduction 968
II. Methodologies used in studies of chloroplast
translation 969
III. Chloroplast ribosomes 971
IV. General chloroplast translation factors 984
V. The regulation of translation by light 988
VI. Genetic approaches that have identified
chloroplast translation factors 995
VII. C/s-acting translation elements in chloroplast
5 UTRs 1000
VIII. mRNA termini may interact during translation 1005
IX. The localization of protein synthesis 1006
X. Translation and protein targeting 1008
XI. Future perspectives 1008
Acknowledgments 1009
References 1009
CHAPTER 29 The CES Process 1027
Yves Choquet and Francis-Andre Wollman
I. Introduction 1028
II. Assembly of multisubunit photosynthetic
protein complexes 1029
III. CES, a major control step in the biogenesis of
photosynthetic proteins 1033
IV. CES cascades and assembly of multimeric
protein complexes 1040
V. Is CES central to organelle protein
expression? 1044
VI. CES and the nuclear control of chloroplast
gene expression 1049
VII. Conclusion 1053
Acknowledgments 1053
References 1053
Index 1065
|
adam_txt |
Contents of Volume 2
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xix
List of Contributors xxi
Conventions Used xxv
Abbreviations xxvii
List of Tables xxxi
List of Figures xxxv
Contents of Volume 1 xli
Contents of Volume 3 xliii
CHAPTER 1 Starch Metabolism 1
Steven G. Ball and Philippe Deschamps
I. Starch structure and localization in the green algae 2
II. An outline of the starch metabolism pathway:
comparative biochemistry and genomics 5
III. The.geneticsof starch accumulation and
-n^obilization 18
¦ IV. Physiology of starch storage: circadian clock
.control, pyrenojdal starch synthesis and
?yhydroge reproduction 26
V. Conclusions 30
References 33
CHAPTER 2 Glycerolipid Biosynthesis 41
Wayne R. Riekhof and Christoph Benning
I. Introduction 41
II. Fatty acid biosynthesis and desaturation 44
III. Glycerolipid biosynthesis 49
IV. Compartmentalization of lipid biosynthesis 59
V. Perspectives 60
Acknowledgments 60
References 61
CHAPTER 3 Nitrogen Assimilation and its Regulation 69
Emilio Fernandez, Angel Llamas and Aurora Galvan
I. Introduction 70
II. Useful nitrogen sources for Chlamydomonas 70
III. Ammonium assimilation 81
IV. Assimilation of nitrate and nitrite 85
V. Regulation of nitrate assimilation 97
Acknowledgments 99
References 100
CHAPTER 4 Amino Acid Metabolism 115
Olivier Vallon and Martin H. Spalding
I. Introduction 116
II. Biosynthesis of amino acids: pathways, enzymes,
localization, inhibitors, mutants 116
III. Use of exogenous amino acids 142
IV. Role of amino acids as precursor of metabolites 146
V. Conclusions 150
References 150
CHAPTER 5 Sulfur: From Acquisition to Assimilation 159
David Gonzalez-Ballester and Arthur R. Grossman
I. Introduction 159
II. SO42~ acquisition and assimilation 160
III. S starvation responses 171
IV. Perspectives 178
Acknowledgments 179
References 179
CHAPTER 6 Phosphate Metabolism and Responses to
Phosphorus Deficiency 189
Jeffrey Moseley and Arthur R. Grossman
I. Introduction 190
II. Phosphorus acquisition 192
III. P storage, mobilization, and conservation 195
IV. Genetic control of phosphorus deprivation
responses 198
V. P deficiency and photosynthesis 205
VI. Regulatory model for P deprivation
responses 207
VII. Concluding remarks 208
Acknowledgments 209
References 209
CHAPTER 7 Hydrogenases, Hydrogen Production, and
Anoxia 217
Matthew C. Posewitz, Alexandra Dubini, Jonathan E. Meuser,
Michael Seibert and Maria L. Ghirardi
I. Background 218
II. Hydrogenases 220
III. Hydrogen metabolism 229
IV. Fermentative metabolism 236
V. Genomics and systems biology 239
VI. Sulfur deprivation 241
VII. Outlook 245
Acknowledgments 246
References 246
CHAPTER 8 The CO2-Concentrating Mechanism and Carbon
Assimilation 257
Martin H. Spalding
I. The carbon environment 257
II. Metabolism of carbon assimilation 269
III. Acquisition of inorganic carbon 278
References 290
CHAPTER 9 Rubisco 303
Katia Wostrikoff and David B. Stern
I. Introduction 303
II. Rubisco-encoding genes and enzyme structure 304
III. Site-directed mutagenesis 306
IV. Rubisco activase 320
V. Rubisco expression in response to physiological
cues 321
VI. Regulation of Rubisco LS expression 323
VII. Conclusions and perspectives 324
Acknowledgments 325
References 325
CHAPTER 10 Transition Metal Nutrition: A Balance Between
Deficiency and Toxicity 333
Marc Hanikenne, Sabeeha S. Merchant and Patrice Hamel
I. Introduction 334
II. Components of the metal homeostasis network 335
III. Metal tolerance 354
IV. Metal nutrition and deficiency response 359
V. Conclusions and perspectives 376
Acknowledgments 379
References 379
CHAPTER 11 Thioredoxins and Related Proteins 401
Laure Michelet, Mirko Zaffagnini and Stephane D. Lemaire
I. Introduction 401
II. Thioredoxins 403
III. Glutaredoxins 421
IV. Protein disulfide isomerases 427
V. Conclusions 430
Acknowledgments 431
References 432
CHAPTER 12 The Mitochondrial Genome 445
Pierre Cardol and Claire Remade
I. Introduction 446
II. Characteristics of the mitochondrial genome 447
III. Mutations affecting the mitochondrial genome 450
IV. Mitochondrial genome transmission 457
V. Mitochondrial transformation 460
Acknowledgments 461
References 461
CHAPTER 13 Oxidative Phosphorylation: Building Blocks and
Related Components 469
Pierre Cardol, Francisco Figueroa, Claire Remade,
Lars-Gunnar Franzen and Diego Gonzalez-Halphen
I. Introduction 470
II. Complexes of the mitochondrial respiratory
chain 471
III. Import of nucleus-encoded OXPHOS proteins 487
IV. Conclusions and perspectives 490
Acknowledgments 491
References 491
CHAPTER 14 Light-Harvesting Proteins 503
Jun Minagawa
I. Introduction 504
II. Structure and composition of the light-harvesting
apparatus 505
III. Light-harvesting proteins 513
IV. LHC-like proteins 521
V. Regulation of the light-harvesting complex 525
Acknowledgments 528
References 529
CHAPTER 15 Photosystem 1 541
Kevin E. Redding
I. Introduction 542
II. Composition of PS I 545
III. Energy transfer and electron transfer within PS 1 548
IV. Electron transfer to and from PS I 559
V. Assembly and disassembly of PS 1 564
VI. Frontiers of PS I research using the
Chlamydomonas system 565
Acknowledgments 565
References 565
CHAPTER 16 Photosystem II, a Structural Perspective 573
Zoee Gokhale and Richard T. Sayre
I. Introduction 573
II. Overview of the photosystem II complex 574
III. Beyond the photosystem II crystal structure 594
References 594
CHAPTER 17 The Cytochrome b6f Complex 603
Catherine de Vitry and Richard Kuras
I. Introduction 604
II. Structure of the b6f complex 604
III. The b6f complex at the crossroads of electron
transport and signal transduction 611
IV. Biogenesis of the b6f complex 619
V. Conclusion 627
Acknowledgments 628
References 628
CHAPTER 18 The CFOFX ATP Synthase Complex of
Photosynthesis 639
Giovanni Finazzi, Dominique Drapier and
Fabrice Rappaport
I. Introduction 640
II. Composition, structure and specific features of
the ATP synthase 640
III. Mechanistic aspects of the synthesis/hydrolysis
of ATP 649
IV. Concluding remarks 661
References 662
CHAPTER 19 Chaperones and Proteases 671
Michael Schroda and Olivier Vallon
I. Introduction 672
II. Regulation of the heat shock response 673
III. Small HSPs 674
IV. HSP33: a redox-regulated chaperone 676
V. HSP60s 677
VI. HSP70s 678
VII. HSP90s 692
VIII. Elevated levels of sHSPs, HSP60, and HSP70
in Chlamydomonas acidophila 695
IX. HSP100 proteins function as chaperones and/or
components of ATP-dependent proteases 695
X. FtsH proteases 699
XI. Lon 700
XII. DegP and C-terminal processing peptidases 700
XIII. N-terminal maturation of organelle-encoded
proteins 703
XIV. Peptidases in organellar import and membrane
translocation 704
XV. Intramembrane proteases: Site2 peptidase,
PARL/rhomboid, Spp, SppA 706
XVI. Proteolytic processes in the organelles of
Chlamydomonas: whodunnit? 709
XVII. Conclusion 712
References 712
CHAPTER 20 Biosynthesis of Chlorophylls and Hemes 731
Samuel I. Beale
I. Introduction 732
II. Outline of tetrapyrrole biosynthesis 733
III. ALA formation from glutamate 733
IV. Steps common to the biosynthesis of all
tetrapyrroles 742
V. Steps from uroporphyrinogen III to
protoporphyrin IX 745
VI. Steps specific to chlorophyll formation 748
VII. Biosynthesis of chlorophyll b 760
VIII. Minor chlorophyll a derivatives in reaction
centers 761
IX. Chlorophyll degradation and interconversion of
chlorophylls a and b 761
X. The branch from uroporphyrinogen III to siroheme. 763
XI. The branch from protoporphyrin IX to hemes 765
XII. Heme catabolism 769
XIII. Regulation 770
References 775
CHAPTER 21 Carotenoids 799
Martin Lohr
I. Introduction 799
II. Occurrence and analysis 800
III. Biosynthesis 803
IV. Localization and functional significance 808
V. Carotenoids as biosynthetic precursors 810
VI. Outlook 810
Acknowledgments 811
References 811
CHAPTER 22 State Transitions 819
Jean-David Rochaix
I. Introduction 820
II. What are state transitions? 820
III. Phosphorylation and mobility of LHCII
polypeptides 822
IV. Regulation of phosphorylation 828
V. Thylakoid protein kinases 830
VI. Maintenance of ATP levels through state
transitions 836
VII. Genetic approaches 837
VIII. Role of state transitions 839
IX. Conclusions and prospects 839
Acknowledgments 840
References 840
CHAPTER 23 Photoprotection and High Light Responses 847
Krishna K. Niyogi
I. Introduction 847
II. High light-induced damage and repair 849
III. Regulation of photosynthetic light harvesting
by nonphotochemical quenching 853
IV. Regulation of gene expression and acclimation
to high light 856
Acknowledgments 861
References 862
CHAPTER 24 The Chloroplast Genome 871
David C. Higgs
I. Introduction 871
II. Genome structure and sequence 872
III. Gene content 878
IV. DNA replication 880
V. Genome evolution 882
VI. Conclusions and perspectives 885
References 886
CHAPTER 25 Chloroplast Transcription 893
Uwe Klein
I. Introduction 893
II. Transcription units: single genes and gene
clusters 894
III. The transcription machinery 895
IV. Initiation and termination of transcription 902
V. Regulation of chloroplast transcription 907
VI. Perspectives 909
Acknowledgments 909
References 909
CHAPTER 26 Chloroplast RNA Splicing 915
Michel Goldschmidt-Clermont
I. Introduction 915
II. Group I introns 916
III. Group II intron splicing 921
IV. Are splicing and its regulation essential? 928
V. Conclusions 929
Acknowledgments 930
References 930
CHAPTER 27 Chloroplast RNA Processing and Stability 937
David L. Herrin
I. Chloroplast RNA processing 938
II. Chloroplast RNA stability and degradation 949
III. Conclusions and perspectives 958
Acknowledgments 959
References 959
CHAPTER 28 Protein Synthesis in the Chloroplast 967
William Zerges and Charles Hauser
I. Introduction 968
II. Methodologies used in studies of chloroplast
translation 969
III. Chloroplast ribosomes 971
IV. General chloroplast translation factors 984
V. The regulation of translation by light 988
VI. Genetic approaches that have identified
chloroplast translation factors 995
VII. C/s-acting translation elements in chloroplast
5' UTRs 1000
VIII. mRNA termini may interact during translation 1005
IX. The localization of protein synthesis 1006
X. Translation and protein targeting 1008
XI. Future perspectives 1008
Acknowledgments 1009
References 1009
CHAPTER 29 The CES Process 1027
Yves Choquet and Francis-Andre Wollman
I. Introduction 1028
II. Assembly of multisubunit photosynthetic
protein complexes 1029
III. CES, a major control step in the biogenesis of
photosynthetic proteins 1033
IV. CES cascades and assembly of multimeric
protein complexes 1040
V. Is CES central to organelle protein
expression? 1044
VI. CES and the nuclear control of chloroplast
gene expression 1049
VII. Conclusion 1053
Acknowledgments 1053
References 1053
Index 1065 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035102805 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)635319781 (DE-599)BVBBV035102805 |
edition | 2. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035102805 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T22:14:47Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:22:16Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780123708755 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016770759 |
oclc_num | 635319781 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-29T DE-703 DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-29T DE-703 DE-11 |
physical | XLVII, 1071 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2009 |
publishDateSearch | 2009 |
publishDateSort | 2009 |
publisher | Elsevier |
record_format | marc |
spelling | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook 2 Organellar and metabolic processes Elizabeth H. Harris, ed. in chief 2. ed. Amsterdam [u.a.] Elsevier 2009 XLVII, 1071 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Harris, Elizabeth H. Sonstige oth Stern, David B. Sonstige oth Witman, George B. Sonstige oth (DE-604)BV035102784 2 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016770759&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook |
title | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook |
title_auth | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook |
title_exact_search | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook |
title_exact_search_txtP | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook |
title_full | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook 2 Organellar and metabolic processes Elizabeth H. Harris, ed. in chief |
title_fullStr | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook 2 Organellar and metabolic processes Elizabeth H. Harris, ed. in chief |
title_full_unstemmed | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook 2 Organellar and metabolic processes Elizabeth H. Harris, ed. in chief |
title_short | The Chlamydomonas sourcebook |
title_sort | the chlamydomonas sourcebook organellar and metabolic processes |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016770759&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV035102784 |
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