Principles of Biochemistry, 5th edition

Published by Pearson (September 1, 2011) © 2012
  • Laurence A. Moran
  • Robert A Horton
  • Gray Scrimgeour
  • Marc Perry

Title overview

For junior/senior-level courses in Fish Biology/Ecology, Ichthyology, and Fish Physiology.

One of the most comprehensive and current general sources of information on fishes, this text covers a broad number of topics such as including the structure and physiology, evolution, otaxanomy, zoogeography, ecology, and conservation of fishes. While providing the basic background of fish biology, the conservation approach and up-to-date coverage conveys the excitement being generated by recent research on fishes.

  • NEW - Completely updated chapters.
    • Over 300 new references keep students and instructors abreast of the latest, exciting developments in the field.

  • NEW - Web Connections links listed at the end of each chapter—Topical internet links listed at the end of each chapter.
    • Encourages students to use the internet sites that allow them to dig deeper into topics of interest.

  • NEW - Over 70 new boxed features—1-3 per chapter, these boxes supplement discussions within the text by highlighting new and interesting facts and recent information or discoveries in the field to supplement discussions within the text.
  • NEW - Expanded use of international examples.
    • Provides more global comprehensive examples for a broader perspective of fishes.

  • Conservation orientation—Includes references to applied problems in all chapters that reflect the interests of the authors in real-world issues.
    • Sustains students' interest and takes the subject matter beyond the classroom.

  • “Lessons” from the chapter—Appear in the text at the end of each chapter.
    • Provides students with the most important concepts and key ideas from the chapter. Offers instructors a good basis for essay-type questions.

  • Unique system-by-system coverage of ecology—Provides detailed examinations of specific habitats, their fish assemblages, and the special physical, chemical, and biological factors that characterize them.
    • Gives students solid, thorough coverage of the unique ecologies of many different fish habitats.

  • Updated fish classification system.
    • Provides students with the latest version of Nelson's book on fish classification.

  • Completely updated chapters.
    • Over 300 new references keep students and instructors abreast of the latest, exciting developments in the field.

  • Web Connections links listed at the end of each chapter—Topical internet links listed at the end of each chapter.
    • Encourages students to use the internet sites that allow them to dig deeper into topics of interest.

  • Over 70 new boxed features—1-3 per chapter, these boxes supplement discussions within the text by highlighting new and interesting facts and recent information or discoveries in the field to supplement discussions within the text.
  • Expanded use of international examples.
    • Provides more global comprehensive examples for a broader perspective of fishes.

Table of contents

  • 1. Biochemistry and the Language of Chemistry
  • 2. The Chemical Foundation of Life: Weak Interactions in an Aqueous Environment
  • 3. The Energetics of Life
  • 4. Nucleic Acids
  • 5. Introduction to Proteins: The Primary Level of Protein Structure
  • 6. The Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins
  • 7. Protein Function and Evolution
  • 8. Enzymes: Biological Catalysts
  • 9. Carbohydrates: Sugars, Saccharides, Glycans
  • 10. Lipids, Membranes, and Cellular Transport
  • 11. Chemical Logic of Metabolism
  • 12. Carbohydrate Metabolism: Glycolysis, Gluconeogenesis, Glycogen Metabolism, and the Pentose Phosphate Pathway
  • 13. The Citric Acid Cycle
  • 14. Electron Transport, Oxidative Phosphorylation, and Oxygen Metabolism
  • 15. Photosynthesis
  • 16. Lipid Metabolism
  • 17. Interorgan and Intracellular Coordination of Energy Metabolism in Vertebrates
  • 18. Amino Acid and Nitrogen Metabolism
  • 19. Nucleotide Metabolism
  • 20. Mechanisms of Signal Transduction
  • 21. Genes, Genomes, and Chromosomes
  • 22. DNA Replication
  • 23. DNA Repair, Recombination, and Rearrangement
  • 24. Transcription and Posttranscriptional Processing
  • 25. Information Decoding: Translation and Posttranslational Protein Processing
  • 26. Regulation of Gene Expression

APPENDICES

  • I: ANSWERS TO SELECTED PROBLEMS
  • II: REFERENCES

Author bios

Laurence A. Moran
After earning his PhD from Princeton University in 1974, Professor Moran spent four years at the Université dè Geneve in Switzerland. He has been a member of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Toronto since 1978, specializing in molecular biology and molecular evolution. His research findings on heat-shock genes have been published in many scholarly journals.

H. Robert Horton
Dr. Horton, who received his PhD from the University of Missouri in 1962, is William Neal Reynolds Professor Emeritus and Alumni Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the Department of Biochemistry at North Carolina State University, where he served on the faculty for over 30 years. Most of Professor Horton's research was in protein and enzyme mechanisms.

K. Gray Scrimgeour
Professor Scrimgeour received his doctorate from the University of Washington in 1961 and has been a faculty member at the University of Toronto since 1967. He is the author of The Chemistry and Control of Enzymatic Reactions (1977, Academic Press), and his work on enzymatic systems has been published in more than 50 professional journal articles during the past 40 years. From 1984-1992, he was editor of the journal Biochemistry and Cell Biology.

Marc D. Perry
After earning his PhD from the University of Toronto in 1988, Dr. Perry trained at the University of Colorado, where he studied sex determination in the nematode C. elegans. In 1994 he returned to the University of Toronto as a faculty member in the department of Molecular and Medical Genetics. His research has focused on developmental genetics, meiosis and bioinformatics. In 2004 he joined the Heart & Stroke / Richard Lewar Centre of Excellence in Cardiovascular Research in the University of Toronto's Faculty of Medicine.

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