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Synaptic Transmission: Cellular and Molecular Basis by Herbert Zimmermann — book cover
Physiology, Neuroscience, Biology - Molecular Biology, Human Anatomy - General & Miscellaneous, Physiology - Biochemical Agents - General & Miscellaneous, Neurology, Neuroanatomy, Physiology - Nervous System, Neurophysiology

Synaptic Transmission: Cellular and Molecular Basis

by Herbert Zimmermann
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Overview

A comprehensive, up-to-date review of synaptic transmission, covering all major aspects of the subject, from the biosynthesis of neurotransmitters through release mechanisms to receptors and signaling. Zimmermann also demonstrates the integration of recent discoveries about the nervous system of higher animals into a larger picture that notes functional and structural similarities between neurons and non-neuronal cells, primitive neurons and even plant systems. This area, which is advancing rapidly, is a topic taught at some length in all neurobiology courses, and could also be the subject of an advanced seminar course. An outstanding overview, the book cites virtually all of the important papers in the recent literature, and the accessible text is supported by numerous two-color illustrations and section summaries. This book would serve as a supplementary text or primer in this area for graduate students and for investigators in related fields. Because it gives more current coverage than is readily available in neuroscience textbooks, the work may also be useful as a monograph to some neurobiologists.

Synopsis

A comprehensive, up-to-date review of synaptic transmission, covering all major aspects of the subject, from the biosynthesis of neurotransmitters through release mechanisms to receptors and signaling. Zimmermann also demonstrates the integration of recent discoveries about the nervous system of higher animals into a larger picture that notes functional and structural similarities between neurons and non-neuronal cells, primitive neurons and even plant systems. This area, which is advancing rapidly, is a topic taught at some length in all neurobiology courses, and could also be the subject of an advanced seminar course. An outstanding overview, the book cites virtually all of the important papers in the recent literature, and the accessible text is supported by numerous two-color illustrations and section summaries. This book would serve as a supplementary text or primer in this area for graduate students and for investigators in related fields. Because it gives more current coverage than is readily available in neuroscience textbooks, the work may also be useful as a monograph to some neurobiologists.

About the Author, Herbert Zimmermann

Herbert Zimmermann is a Professor at Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universitat in Frankfurt, Germany.

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Book Details

Published
March 1, 1994
Publisher
Oxford University Press, USA
Pages
160
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780195210736

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