3rd Edition

The Structure of Biological Membranes

Edited By Philip L. Yeagle Copyright 2012
    398 Pages 115 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Biological membranes provide the fundamental structure of cells and viruses. Because much of what happens in a cell or in a virus occurs on, in, or across biological membranes, the study of membranes has rapidly permeated the fields of biology, pharmaceutical chemistry, and materials science. The Structure of Biological Membranes, Third Edition provides readers with an understanding of membrane structure and function that is rooted in the history of the field and brought to the forefront of current knowledge.

    The first part of the book focuses on the fundamentals of lipid bilayers and membrane proteins. Three introductory chapters supply those new to the field with the tools and conceptual framework with which to approach the state-of-the-art chapters that follow. The second part of the book presents in-depth analyses of focused subjects within the study of membranes, covering topics that include:

    • Phase behavior of lipid bilayers
    • Lipid bilayers as an isolated structure
    • Cholesterol’s role in cell biology
    • Lateral organization of membranes
    • The role of membrane lipids in initial membrane protein folding
    • Membrane protein synthesis and assembly of oligomeric membrane proteins
    • Membrane protein stability with relationships to function and protein turnover
    • Membrane protein function using a transport protein
    • Interactions between membrane proteins and membrane lipids

    A final chapter pulls together many of the topics, examining in detail the complexity inherent in the synthesis and assembly of lipids and proteins in mitochondrial membranes. With contributions from leading researchers, this completely revised and updated third edition reflects recent advances in the field of biological membranes. It offers a valuable resource for students, as well as structural biologists, biophysicists, cell biologists, biochemists, and researchers in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries.

    What’s New in This Edition:

    • Three accessible chapters introduce students to the field of biological membranes
    • Completely revised and updated chapters present current topics in membrane research

     

    Introduction to Lipid Bilayers; Philip L. Yeagle

    Membrane Proteins; Philip L. Yeagle

    Introduction to Lipid–Protein Interactions in Biological Membranes; Philip L. Yeagle

    The Mesomorphic Phase Behavior of Lipid Bilayers; Ruthven N.A.H. Lewis and Ronald N. McElhaney

    IR Spectroscopy of Lipid Chains: Theoretical Background and Applications to Phase Transitions, Membranes, Cells, and Tissues; Richard Mendelsohn

    The Roles of Cholesterol in the Biology of Cells; Philip L. Yeagle

    Functional Consequences of the Lateral Organization of Biological Membranes; Richard M. Epand and Raquel F. Epand

    Mechanisms by Which Pathogens Hijack and Utilize Membrane Domains to Mediate Cytotoxicity; Claude Krummenacher, Angela Brown, Thomas Edrington V, and Kathleen Boesze-Battaglia

    Lipid-Assisted Membrane Protein Folding and Topogenesis; William Dowhan and Mikhail Bogdanov

    Membrane Protein Biogenesis and Assembly at the Endoplasmic Reticulum Membrane; K. Meera Bhanu and Debra A. Kendall

    Thermal Denaturation of Membrane Proteins; Arlene D. Albert

    Mass Action Kinetic Analysis of Multidrug Resistance Transporters Expressed in Confluent Cell Monolayers; Annie Albin Lumen, Deborah Silverman, Esteban Martinez, Zeba Ahmed, Deep Agnani, Poulomi Acharya, and Joe Bentz

    How to Understand Lipid–Protein Interactions in Biological Membranes; Anthony G. Lee

    Biogenesis of Lipids and Proteins within Mitochondrial Membranes; Nathan Alder

    Index

    Biography

    Philip L. Yeagle is dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and chief academic research officer at Rutgers University, Newark, New Jersey. He obtained his PhD at Duke University in 1974. As a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Virginia, he started his studies of membrane structure and dynamics, supported by an NIH postdoctoral fellowship. There he was one of the first investigators to discover and exploit the opportunities for 31P NMR studies of model and biological membranes.

    He began his faculty career in the School of Medicine, University at Buffalo, supported by an NIH RCDA, during which time he was able to define the molecular basis of an essential role of cholesterol in mammalian cell membranes. In 1985, he was a visiting scientist at the CSIRO, New South Wales, Australia, and in 1988 he developed the first in a series of FASEB Summer Research Conferences on membrane structure. In 1993, and again in 2003, he was a visiting professor in the Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford. He moved in 1997 to the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of Connecticut as head of department and pursued studies of membrane protein structure. He was elected member of the Council of the Biophysical Society and chair of the Membrane Structure and Assembly subgroup that he helped form.

    He was executive editor of Biochemica et Biophysica Acta Biomembranes for a decade and a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Biological Chemistry. He has published over 150 papers and reviews and is the author or editor of seven books.

    Praise for previous editions:

    "Among the seemingly limitless universe of specialist/specialized monographs in biochemistry this one clearly stands out. The overall verdict must be: very recommendable to anyone wishing to go beyond the biochemistry/ cell biology textbook. A good, practical purchase for every laboratory library."
    Cell Biochemistry and Function, Vol. 23, No. 4, July-August 2005

    "I am confident that this book will be useful for students of chemical, biological, and bioorganic faculties of universities, and also to a wide audience of biochemists, molecular and cell biologists, and biotechnologists."
    —G. Ya. Wiederschain, Ph.D., Shire Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 2006