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The annual Congress of the Italian Biochemical and Molecular
Biology Society (SIB) was held in September 1999 in Alghero,
Sardegna, Italy. The programme envisaged a symposium on molecular
adaptations of haemoglobin function in ver- tebrates. Haemoglobin
specialists from several countries were invited to speak at the
symposium and paved the way for wide-ranging and stimulating
discussions. The symposium contributions have been collected
together in this volume. The structure/function relationship in
haemoglobins from vertebrates (fishes populat- ing temperate and
polar environments, diving birds, marine and terrestrial mam- mals)
has been tackled from many angles, focusing on the adaptation of
the oxy- gen-transport system to the constraints dictated by the
environment. Eleven arti- cles review some of the most recent
developments of the studies on this ancient oxygen-transport
protein, characterized by high conservation during evolution. The
volume offers the reader an updated, state-of-the-art summary of a
field that is enjoying a true renaissance. Covering the topic from
several viewpoints, the volume includes protein chemistry (amino
acid sequence, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures,
thermodynamics of oxygen-binding features), molecular biology
(globin gene structure, sequence, organization, expression and
regulation) and evolution. In this representation of effective
multidisciplinary and multina- tional collaborative efforts,
reference is available to a wide range of disciplines and
biological systems. The tools of the investigators comprise
advanced and powerful methodologies developed in recent years, e.
g.
The annual Congress of the Italian Biochemical and Molecular
Biology Society (SIB) was held in September 1999 in Alghero,
Sardegna, Italy. The programme envisaged a symposium on molecular
adaptations of haemoglobin function in ver- tebrates. Haemoglobin
specialists from several countries were invited to speak at the
symposium and paved the way for wide-ranging and stimulating
discussions. The symposium contributions have been collected
together in this volume. The structure/function relationship in
haemoglobins from vertebrates (fishes populat- ing temperate and
polar environments, diving birds, marine and terrestrial mam- mals)
has been tackled from many angles, focusing on the adaptation of
the oxy- gen-transport system to the constraints dictated by the
environment. Eleven arti- cles review some of the most recent
developments of the studies on this ancient oxygen-transport
protein, characterized by high conservation during evolution. The
volume offers the reader an updated, state-of-the-art summary of a
field that is enjoying a true renaissance. Covering the topic from
several viewpoints, the volume includes protein chemistry (amino
acid sequence, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures,
thermodynamics of oxygen-binding features), molecular biology
(globin gene structure, sequence, organization, expression and
regulation) and evolution. In this representation of effective
multidisciplinary and multina- tional collaborative efforts,
reference is available to a wide range of disciplines and
biological systems. The tools of the investigators comprise
advanced and powerful methodologies developed in recent years, e.
g.
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