Beschreibung:
The book provides a synthetic and exhaustive view of how proteins have evolved their structure to accommodate a variety of metal ions in order to accomplish the most demanding chemical reactions that sustain life. This book may be the subject of a monographic course on its own or may complement bioinorganic chemistry textbooks to obtain a comprehensive view of the structural aspects of this subject. It is directed at advanced undergraduate and graduate students, researchers, instructors, and professors teaching in protein science, biochemistry, cell biology.
Interactions of Main Transition Elements Present in Biological Systems: Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn with Proteins; Their Role in Catalysis and Their Transport from the Environment to Cells and Back; Role of Less Common Metal Ions in Life (V, Co, Ni, Mo); Role of Alkaline-Earth Group Metals in Biology: Mg(II), Ca(II); Toxic Metals and Semimetals; Biochemical Origin of Mineral Species; Mineralization and Dissolution.