|
Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
This book addresses the therapeutic strategies to target
mitochondrial metabolism in diseases where the function of that
organelle is compromised, and it discusses the effective strategies
used to create mitochondrial-targeted agents that can become
commercially available drug delivery platforms. The consistent
growth of research focused in understanding the multifaceted role
of mitochondria in cellular metabolism, controlling pathways
related with cell death, and ionic/redox regulation has extended
the research of mitochondrial chemical-biological interactions to
include various pharmacological and toxicological applications. Not
only does the book extensively cover basic mitochondrial
physiology, but it also links the molecular interactions within
these pathways to a variety of diseases. It is one of the first
books to combine state-of-the-art reviews regarding basic
mitochondrial biology, the role of mitochondrial alterations in
different diseases, and the importance of that organelle as a
target for pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions to
improve human health. The different chapters highlight the
chemical-biological linkages of the mitochondria in context with
drug development and clinical applications.
Aging: From Fundamental Biology to Societal Impact examines the
interconnection of the cellular and molecular basis of aging and
societal-based challenges and innovative interventions. Sections
take a societal-based angle on aging, describing several flagship
initiatives for healthy living and active aging in different
regions, cover the biology of aging which includes the hallmarks of
aging, explain the pathophysiology of aging, describing different
comorbidities associated with aging and possible interventions to
decrease the impact of aging, and envision future and innovative
measures to tackle aging-related morbidities. Contributions from an
interdisciplinary panel of experts cover such topics as the biology
of aging to physical activity, nutrition, psychology, pharmacology,
health care, social care and urban planning.
The present volume of reprints are what I consider to be my most
interesting and influential papers on algebra and topology. To tie
them together, and to place them in context, I have supplemented
them by a series of brief essays sketching their historieal
background (as I see it). In addition to these I have listed some
subsequent papers by others which have further developed some of my
key ideas. The papers on universal algebra, lattice theory, and
general topology collected in the present volume concern ideas
which have become familiar to all working mathematicians. It may be
helpful to make them readily accessible in one volume. I have tried
in the introduction to each part to state the most significant
features of ea ch paper reprinted there, and to indieate later
developments. The background that shaped and stimulated my early
work on universal algebra, lattice theory, and topology may be of
some interest. As a Harvard undergraduate in 1928-32, I was
encouraged to do independent reading and to write an original
thesis. My tutorial reading included de la Vallee-Poussin's
beautiful Cours d'Analyse Infinitesimale, Hausdorff's Grundzuge der
Mengenlehre, and Frechet's Espaces Abstraits. In addition, I
discovered Caratheodory's 1912 paper "Vber das lineare Mass von
Punktmengen" and Hausdorff's 1919 paper on "Dimension und Ausseres
Mass," and derived much inspiration from them. A fragment of my
thesis, analyzing axiom systems for separable metrizable spaces,
was later published 2]. * This background led to the work
summarized in Part IV."
This book addresses the therapeutic strategies to target
mitochondrial metabolism in diseases where the function of that
organelle is compromised, and it discusses the effective strategies
used to create mitochondrial-targeted agents that can become
commercially available drug delivery platforms. The consistent
growth of research focused in understanding the multifaceted role
of mitochondria in cellular metabolism, controlling pathways
related with cell death, and ionic/redox regulation has extended
the research of mitochondrial chemical-biological interactions to
include various pharmacological and toxicological applications. Not
only does the book extensively cover basic mitochondrial
physiology, but it also links the molecular interactions within
these pathways to a variety of diseases. It is one of the first
books to combine state-of-the-art reviews regarding basic
mitochondrial biology, the role of mitochondrial alterations in
different diseases, and the importance of that organelle as a
target for pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions to
improve human health. The different chapters highlight the
chemical-biological linkages of the mitochondria in context with
drug development and clinical applications.
The present volume of reprints are what I consider to be my most
interesting and influential papers on algebra and topology. To tie
them together, and to place them in context, I have supplemented
them by a series of brief essays sketching their historieal
background (as I see it). In addition to these I have listed some
subsequent papers by others which have further developed some of my
key ideas. The papers on universal algebra, lattice theory, and
general topology collected in the present volume concern ideas
which have become familiar to all working mathematicians. It may be
helpful to make them readily accessible in one volume. I have tried
in the introduction to each part to state the most significant
features of ea ch paper reprinted there, and to indieate later
developments. The background that shaped and stimulated my early
work on universal algebra, lattice theory, and topology may be of
some interest. As a Harvard undergraduate in 1928-32, I was
encouraged to do independent reading and to write an original
thesis. My tutorial reading included de la Vallee-Poussin's
beautiful Cours d'Analyse Infinitesimale, Hausdorff's Grundzuge der
Mengenlehre, and Frechet's Espaces Abstraits. In addition, I
discovered Caratheodory's 1912 paper "Vber das lineare Mass von
Punktmengen" and Hausdorff's 1919 paper on "Dimension und Ausseres
Mass," and derived much inspiration from them. A fragment of my
thesis, analyzing axiom systems for separable metrizable spaces,
was later published 2]. * This background led to the work
summarized in Part IV."
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|