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The progress in photosynthesis research has been transduction and
expression of photosynthetic genes quite dramatic during the last
two decades. The which occur both in the nuclear/cytosol
compartment Nobel prizes awarded to Peter Mitchel (1978), to and in
the chloroplast. Several chapters are devoted Johannes Deisenhofer,
Hartmut Michel and Robert to the transcription machinery and the
two plastid Huber (1988), to Rudolf Marcus (1992) and to Paul
RNA-polymerase complexes, to the regulation of Boyer and John
Walker (1997) have recognized photosynthesis genes by redox
signaling both in directly or indirectly the structural or
mechanistic chloroplasts and in the prokaryotic systems, as well
discoveries related to the photosynthetic energy as to the sugar
sensing mechanisms. Chapters also conversion. Actually,
photosynthesis may be the first cover important regulatory aspects
imposed by po- biological process described, not only in molecular
transcriptional modifications and degradation of terms, but even in
atomic terms. mRNA molecules, and the translational regulation Much
of the excitement around photosynthesis is mechanisms operating in
chloroplasts. based upon the connection between light and life.
Part III Biogenesis, turnover and senescence is closely connected
to the question of regulation. Light is an elusive substrate that
cannot be handled The chapters included emphasize how the c- in the
same way as conventional chemical substrates plicated membrane
structures, composed of both in biological metabolic reactions."
This series of concise essays on Enteroceptors is designed to
interest the gradu ate student and to stimulate research. Even
before the advent of electrophysiological studies, classical
physiological techniques had shown the essence of the role of many
of the enteroceptors. Thus the monitoring influence of the
cardiovascular mechanoreceptors on the heart and on the systemic
vascular resistance, the role of the arterial chemoreceptors in
hypoxia and the influence of the so-called Hering Breuer stretch
receptors on breathing had all been documented. The pioneering work
of ADRIAN, BRONK, ZOTTERMAN and others using electroneurographic
methods gave a remarkable impetus to the study of the enteroceptors
themselves. Nowhere is this better exemplificd than in the case of
the afferent end organs of the heart, the respiratory tract and the
abdominal and pelvic viscera. The remarkable development of our
knowledge of the multiplicity of types of nerve endings from the
thoracic and abdominal viscera acquired from electrophysiological
studies has refocussed our attention on the histological details of
the sites of such receptors. Once more research on the structural
side has been accelerated by the question raised by evidence
obtained from functional studies. This is well illustrated in the
case of the carotid body, where the long cherished belief that the
innervated epithelioid cells constitute the chemoreceptor complex
is now under attack. The detailed consideration of the functional
characteristics of each entero ceptor considered has not occupied
our whole attention."
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