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This new se ries is concerned with intercellular communication and
recognition. It is now widely appreciated that these processes
playa crucial role in virtually all biological systems and
functions. These encompass fertilisation, embryonic development,
infectious interactions, the activity of the nervous system, the
regulation of growth and develop ment by hormones and the immune
response to foreign or 'non-self antigens. Historically as
described in the first review in this volume, the general concept
of cell-associated receptors as the molecular entity primarily
responsible for the specificity of signal recognition arose
independently in the fields of immunology, pharmacology and
developmental biology. From an early stage the analogy between
cellular recognition and the discriminatory activity of antibodies
and enzymes was emphasised. A vital conceptual advance, expressed
most c1early by Linus Pauling and Paul Weiss, was the idea that
non-covalent molecular interactions (of proteins in particular)
were responsible forbiological specificity in in general. In the
last decade several major advances have led to a new level of
understanding of the molecular basis of cellular recognition. In
several systems (in particular with neurotransmitters, hormones and
antigens) it is possible to direct1y demonstrate the existence of
receptors - associated in each case with the cell surface. These
studies have been paralleled by equally important insights into the
general structure and organisation of cell membranes and the
possible ways in which signals arriving from the 'outside' can be
transduced across the cell surface membrane to induce or regulate
the cell's programmed responses."
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