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Nuclear Envelope in Freeze-Etching - 45/1 (Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1971.)

Part of the Advances in Anatomy, Embryology and Cell Biology series
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During the past twenty years the structure of the nuclear envelope, and in particular, that of its most distinct elements, the nuclear pore complexes, has been described from thin section electron microscopy (e,g. , Brettschneider, 1952; Hartmann, 1953; Bahr and Beermann, 1954; Watson, 1954; Kautz and de Marsh, 1955; Watson, 1955), from metal-shadowed (e. g. , Callan and Tomlin, 1950; Gall, 1954, 1956) and negatively stained (e. g. , Franke, 1966, 1967; Gall, 1967; Yoo and Bayley, 1967) preparations of isolated nuclear membranes as revealing characte­ ristics common to euka. ryotic cells in general (recently reviewed, e. g. , in Gouran­ ton, 1969; Stevens and Andre, 1969; Franke, 1970).

In the recent years the freeze-etch technique (Steere, 1957) has proved to be a particularly useful tool in studying membraneous structures (e. g. , Moor and Miihlethaler, 1963; Branton and Moor, 1964; Branton, 1966; Koehler, 1968b; Staehelin, l968a; Northcote, 1968a; Branton, 1969; Moor, 1969a).

So this method has especially broadened the knowledge, e. g. , on bacterial membranes (Bayer and Remsen, 1970; Nanninga, 1970), on erythrocyte plasma membranes (Weinstein and Bullivant, 1967; Meyer and Winkelmann, 1970; da Silva and Branton, 1970; Tillack and Marchesi, 1970), on liver cell membranes (Chalcroft and Bullivant, 1970), on Golgi membranes (Werz and Kellner, 1970; Staehelin and Kiermayer, 1970), on synaptic vesicles (Moor et al.

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Product Details
Springer
3662103907 / 9783662103906
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
29/06/2013
English
55 pages
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