Fr. 135.00

Nuclear Receptors: From Structure to the Clinic

English · Hardback

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Description

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Nuclear Receptors focuses on the structural analysis of nuclear receptors from the initial work using isolated protein domains to the more recent exciting developments investigating the conformational shape of full-length receptor complexes. The book also reviews the structure of key nuclear receptor co-regulatory proteins. It brings together, for the first time, a comprehensive review of nuclear receptor structure and the importance of receptor conformation underpinning allosteric regulation by different ligands (hormone, drugs, DNA response elements, protein-protein interactions) and receptor activity.
The nuclear receptor superfamily, including receptors for steroid hormones and non-steroid ligands, are pivotal to normal physiology, regulating processes as diverse as reproduction, metabolism, the immune system and brain development. The first members of the family were cloned over 25 years ago, which heralded in the idea of a superfamily of intracellular receptor proteins that bound small molecule ligands: classical steroid hormones, vitamins, fatty acids and other products of metabolism. These signals are then transmitted through multiprotein receptor-DNA complexes, leading to the regulation of target genes, often in a cell-selective manner. The cloning of the receptor cDNAs also ushered in an era of unparalleled analysis of the mechanisms of action of these ligand-activated transcription factors.

List of contents

1. Twenty-five Years of Nuclear Receptor Structure Analysis: From the Laboratory to the Clinic.- Part A. ALLOSTERIC REGULATION AND NUCLEAR RECEPTOR COMPLEX DYNAMICS. -2. Corticosteroid Receptors.- 3. Glucocorticoid Receptor Structure and Function.- 4. What Determines the Difference in DNA Binding Between the Androgen and the Glucocorticoid Receptors?.- 5. Allosteric Regulation and Intrinsic Disorder in Nuclear Hormone Receptors.- 6. Structural Analyses of Ordered and Disordered Regions in Ecdysteroid Receptor.- 7. Structural Analysis of Heterodimeric Nuclear Receptors.- Part B. NUCLEAR RECEPTOR CO-REGULATORY PROTEIN INTERACTIONS.- 8. Primate-specific Multi-functional Androgen Receptor Coregulator and Proto-oncogene Melanoma Antigen-A11 (MAGE-A11).- 9. Assembly and Regulation of Nuclear Receptor Corepressor Complexes.- Part C. TAKING NUCLEAR RECEPTOR STRUCTURE INTO THE CLINIC.- 10. Thinking Outside the Box: Alternative Binding Sites in the Ligand Binding Domain of Nuclear Receptors.-11. Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators (SERMs) and Selective Androgen Receptor Modulators (SARMs).

Summary

Nuclear Receptors focuses on the structural analysis of nuclear receptors from the initial work using isolated protein domains to the more recent exciting developments investigating the conformational shape of full-length receptor complexes. The book also reviews the structure of key nuclear receptor co-regulatory proteins. It brings together, for the first time, a comprehensive review of nuclear receptor structure and the importance of receptor conformation underpinning allosteric regulation by different ligands (hormone, drugs, DNA response elements, protein-protein interactions) and receptor activity.
The nuclear receptor superfamily, including receptors for steroid hormones and non-steroid ligands, are pivotal to normal physiology, regulating processes as diverse as reproduction, metabolism, the immune system and brain development. The first members of the family were cloned over 25 years ago, which heralded in the idea of a superfamily of intracellular receptor proteins that bound small molecule ligands: classical steroid hormones, vitamins, fatty acids and other products of metabolism. These signals are then transmitted through multiprotein receptor-DNA complexes, leading to the regulation of target genes, often in a cell-selective manner. The cloning of the receptor cDNAs also ushered in an era of unparalleled analysis of the mechanisms of action of these ligand-activated transcription factors.   

Additional text

“Given the rapid advances in the field of nuclear
receptor research, especially their role in cell proliferation, metabolism, and
homeostasis, which make them prime targets for a wide range of diseases such as
cancer and metabolic diseases, this book does an excellent job of covering
their structure and function and translational opportunities for drug
discovery. … The book targets students, scientists, and other clinicians such
as oncologists and endocrinologists interested in the field of nuclear
receptors.” (Omer Iqbal, Doody’s Book Reviews, October, 2015)

Report

"Given the rapid advances in the field of nuclear receptor research, especially their role in cell proliferation, metabolism, and homeostasis, which make them prime targets for a wide range of diseases such as cancer and metabolic diseases, this book does an excellent job of covering their structure and function and translational opportunities for drug discovery. ... The book targets students, scientists, and other clinicians such as oncologists and endocrinologists interested in the field of nuclear receptors." (Omer Iqbal, Doody's Book Reviews, October, 2015)

Product details

Assisted by Iai J McEwan (Editor), Iain J McEwan (Editor), Kumar (Editor), Kumar (Editor), PhD Kumar (Editor), Raj Kumar (Editor), Iain J. McEwan (Editor), PhD McEwan (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2015
 
EAN 9783319187280
ISBN 978-3-31-918728-0
No. of pages 236
Dimensions 161 mm x 19 mm x 243 mm
Weight 485 g
Illustrations XI, 236 p. 43 illus., 33 illus. in color.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > Clinical medicine

Physiologie, Endokrinologie, B, HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY, PHYSIOLOGY, INTERNAL MEDICINE, Endocrinology, Human Genetics, Biomedical and Life Sciences, Medical Genetics

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