The Cytokine Network

ISBN13: 9780199637027ISBN10: 0199637024 Paperback, 216 pages
Mar 2000,  In Stock

Price:

$85.00 (05)

See more from the series

Description

Cytokines are soluble mediators of intercellular communication. They contribute to a chemical signalling language that regulates development, tissue repair, haemopoiesis, inflammation and the immune response. Potent cytokine polypepides have pleiotropic activities and functional redundancy. They act in a complex network where one cytokine can influence the production of, and response to, many other cytokines. In the past five years, this bewildering array of more than 100 effector molecules and associated cell surface receptors has been simplified by study of cytokine and cytokine receptor structure; elucidation of convergent intracellular signalling pathways; and molecular genetics, and targeted gene disruption to 'knock-out' production of individual cytokines in mice. It is also now clear that the pathophysiology of infectious, autoimmune and malignant disease can be partially explained by the induction of cytokines and the subsequent cellular response. Viral homologues exist for many cytokines and receptors and genetic variations in cytokine production may influence response to pathogenic stimuli. Cytokine and cytokine antagonists have shown therapeutic potential in a number of chronic and acute diseases. The Cytokine Network: Frontiers in Molecular Biology is not a survey of individual cytokines, but guides the reader through the latest research on the cytokine network as a whole covering genomics, signalling pathways, control of the immune response, and therapeutics.

Product Details

216 pages; 31 halftone & line illus; ISBN13: 978-0-19-963702-7ISBN10: 0-19-963702-4

About the Author(s)

Edited by Fran Balkwill, Biological Therapeutics Laboratory, ICRF

Add to Cart button
Add to Cart button

Consider these titles...

Cytokine Cell Biology

$210.00 Hardback Dec 2000

Cell Adhesion

$199.00 Hardback Mar 2002

The Implicit Genome

$55.00 Paperback Jan 2006
A timely edited volume examining what information can be implied in a genome, thereby "highlighting some of the major challenges in contemporary genomics"--Dan Hartle, Harvard University