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J.A. Roth: Membrane-Bound Catechol-O-Methyltreansferase: A
Reevaluation of Its Role in the O-Methylation of the Catecholamine
Transmitters. D.J. Benos, S. Cunningham, R.R. Baker, K.B. Beason,
Y. Oh, and P.R. Smith: Molecular Characteristics of
Amiloride-Sensitive Sodium Channels. D. Pette and G. Vrbov :
Adaptation of Mammalian Skeletal Muscle Fibers to Chronic
Electrical Stimulation.
R. Levenson: Isoforms of the Na,K-ATPase: Family Members in Search
of Function.- E. Petzinger: Transport of Organic Anions in the
Liver. An Update on Bile Acid, Fatty Acid, Monocarboxylate, Anionic
Amino Acid, Cholephilic Organic Anion and Anionic Drug Transport.-
E. Schultz, K.M. McCormick: Skeletal Muscle Satellite Cells.
This special volume provides up-to-date information on research
dealing with the regulation of the biosynthesis and degradation of
cyclic GMP and with the regulation of physiological systems by
cyclic GMP. The publication of this volume could not have come at a
more appropriate time, with significant work in this area having
led to our current understanding of the role of nitric oxide in
signal transduction, and the 1998 Nobel Prize in Medicine and
Physiology for Furchgott, Murad and Ignarro. Moreover, the
introduction in early 1998 of sildenafil (Viagra), a selective
inhibitor of a cyclic GMP phosphodiesterase, for the treatment of
erectile dysfunction in men represents the first successful
therapeutic application of an agent designed to alter the activity
of a molecular target in a cyclic GMP pathway.
K.W. Bock: The Aryl Hydrocarbon or Dioxin Receptor: Biologic and
Toxic Responses.- K. Grieshaber, I. Hardewig, U. Kreutzer, and
H.-O. Poertner: Physiological and Metabolic Responses to Hypoxia in
Invertebrates.- K.-W. Koch: Calcium as Modulator of
Phototransduction in Vertebrate Photoreceptor Cells.
P.J. Pearson, P.M. Vanhoutte: Vasodilator and Vasoconstrictor
Substances Produced by the Endothelium. L. Dux: Muscle Relaxation
and Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Function in Different Muscle Types. C.C.
Ashley, P.J. Griffith, T.J. Lea, I.P. Mulligan, R.e. Palmer, and
S.J. Simnett: Barnacle Muscle: Ca2+ Activation and Mechanics.
Cook et al.: Phospholipases C and D in Mitogenic Signal
Transduction. Moolenaar et al: Lysophosphatidatic Acid: A Bioactive
Phospholipid with Growth Factor-Like Properties. Kozma et al.:
Serine/Threonine Kinases in thePropagation of the Early Mitogenic
Response. Diringer et al: A Retrospective on Transformation, Growth
Control, and some Peculiarities of Lipid Metabolism. Villereal et
al.: Calcium Signals in Growth Factor Signal Transduction.
Wakabayashi et al.: Structure Function of the Growth
Factor-Activatable Na+/H+ Exchanger. Herrlich et al.: DNA
Damage-Induces Gene Expression: Signal Transduction and Relation to
Growth Factor Signaling. Lucibello et al.: Transcription Factor
Encoding Oncogenes
Contents: R.L. Moss, G.M. Diffee, M.L. Greaser: Contractile
Properties of Skeletal Muscle Fibers in Relation to Myofibrillar
Protein Isoforms.- J.E. Wilson: Hexokinases.- J. Rassow, N.
Pfanner: Molecular Chaperones and Intracellular Protein
Translocation.- H. Fuder, E. Muscholl: Heteroreceptor-Mediated
Modulation of Noradrenaline and Acetylcholine Release from
Peripheral Nerves.
In this regular issue of Reviews of Physiology the first
contribution by Warth and Bleich is on K+ Channels and Colonic
Function, the second by Offermanns on Mammalian G-Protein Function
in vivo: New Insights Through Altered Expression, and the third
contribution by Tenenholz et al. (including one editor of the
series) on Structural Determinants of Scorpion Toxin Affinity: The
Charybdotoxin (alpha-KTX) Family of K+-channel Blocking Peptides.
Stjarne: The present review puts the emphasis on two important
developments: the discovery that individual postganglionic
sympathetic neurons may secrete multiple transmitter substances
from different classes of vesicles and by different mechanisms, and
the introduction of new techniques which may permit for the first
time direct impulse by impulse analysis of transmitter secretion in
individual sympathetic nerve varicosities. Illes: Exogenous and
endogen opioid peptides elicit a number of effects in the organism,
usually by modifying the function of transmitter and hormone
systems, for example, activation of multiple opioid receptors. The
effects of opioids on transmitter and hormone release have
frequently been reviewed. This review gives a detailed overview on
the involvement of multiple opioid receptors in these processes.
Rothstein: This article gives an overview of the exchange in
acidification and transepithelial salt and water transfer in
nonepithelial cells. Delineating the exchanger's most important,
common features, and concentrating particularly on its role in cell
pH and volume regulation.
In this second special issue on signal transduction leading
specialists in their fields again present overviews of topics
related to the highly topicalsubject of signal transduction. The
first contribution, by Keppler, deals with the biosynthesis,
transport, inactivation, and analysis of leukotrienes. Mohr et al.
present an excellent overview of the biology of the peptide hormone
oxytocin and its role in signal transduction.The review by Holzer
describes the significance of peptinergic sensory neurons in the
control of vascular functions. In the contribution by Wolf etal the
molecular biology of the Y chromosome is discussed.
W. Ulbricht: Effects of veratridine on sodium currents and fluxes.
W. Meyerhof: The elucidation of somatostatin receptor functions: a
current view.M. Leist, F. Gantner, g. Kunstle and A. Wendel:
Cytokine-mediated hepatic apoptosis.
The objectives in this special issue are (1) to critically review
current information on the mechanisms coupling extracellular
regulatory signals to regulation of cross-bridge cycling and
proliferation in smooth muscle, and (2) identify significant gaps
or unresolved issues that are important topics for future research.
The experimental and analytical difficulties discussed above are
increasingly recognized and surmounted. Elucidation of the
molecular and cellular events underlying the biologal properties of
smooth muscle is in the midst of a period of rapid progress. While
the reviews reveal many gaps to be filled and illustrate areas of
contention, they also capture the excitement of new discoveries.
Special Issue on the Tird Filament System
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