Nucleic acids are the fundamental building blocks of DNA and RNA and are found in virtually every living cell. Molecular biology is a branch of science that studies the physicochemical properties of molecules in a cell, including nucleic acids, proteins, and enzymes.
Increased understanding of nucleic acids and their role in molecular biology will further many of the biological sciences including genetics, biochemistry, and cell biology.
Progress in Nucleic Acid Research and Molecular Biology provides a forum for discussion of new discoveries, approaches, and ideas in molecular biology. It contains contributions from leaders in their fields and abundant references.
- Provides a forum for discussion of new discoveries, approaches, and ideas in molecular biology
- Features contributions from leaders in their fields
- Contains abundant references
Structure, Mechanism, and Evolution of the mRNA Capping Apparatus,
S. Shuman.
Folding of a Nascent Peptide on the Ribosome,
B. Hardesty and G. Kramer.
Exoribonucleases and Their Multiple Roles in RNA Metabolism,
M.P. Deutscher and Z. Li.
Protein Traffic in Bacteria: Multiple Routes From the Ribosome To and Across the Membrane,
M. Hüller, H.-G. Koch, K. Beck, and U. Sch?fer.
The Intrinsically Unstable Life of DNA Triple Repeats Associated with Human Hereditary Disorders,
R.P. Bowater and R.D. Wells.
Molecular and Cell Biology of Acid
b-Glucosidase and Prosaposin.
Regulation and Function of the Cyclic Nucleotide Phosphodiesterase (PDE3) Gene Family,
Y. Shakur, L.S. Holst, T.R. Landstrom, M. Movsesian, E. Degerman, and V. Manganiello.
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