Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells

With important discoveries being made in archaea as well as bacteria, the field has expanded enormously to warrant the dedication of a whole book to known prokaryotic filament structures, together with current theories and controversies regarding the mechanisms by which the filaments carry out their...

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Chi tiết về thư mục
Những tác giả chính: Löwe, Jan, ed., Amos, Linda A., ed.
Định dạng: Sách
Ngôn ngữ:en_US
Được phát hành: Springer 2020
Những chủ đề:
DNA
Truy cập trực tuyến:http://thuvien.ued.udn.vn/handle/TVDHSPDN_123456789/57215
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Thư viện lưu trữ: Trung tâm Học liệu và E-Learning, Trường Đại học Sư phạm – Đại học Đà Nẵng
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spelling oai:localhost:TVDHSPDN_123456789-572152022-10-14T08:17:46Z Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells Löwe, Jan, ed. Amos, Linda A., ed. Biochemistry DNA Bacteria With important discoveries being made in archaea as well as bacteria, the field has expanded enormously to warrant the dedication of a whole book to known prokaryotic filament structures, together with current theories and controversies regarding the mechanisms by which the filaments carry out their diverse functions, that go well beyond what similarities with eukaryotic homologues would suggest. 2020-09-14T02:53:06Z 2020-09-14T02:53:06Z 2017 Book 978-3-319-53047-5 http://thuvien.ued.udn.vn/handle/TVDHSPDN_123456789/57215 en_US Subcellular Biochemistry;V. 84 Springer
institution Trung tâm Học liệu và E-Learning, Trường Đại học Sư phạm – Đại học Đà Nẵng
collection Thư viện số
language en_US
topic Biochemistry
DNA
Bacteria
spellingShingle Biochemistry
DNA
Bacteria
Löwe, Jan, ed.
Amos, Linda A., ed.
Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells
description With important discoveries being made in archaea as well as bacteria, the field has expanded enormously to warrant the dedication of a whole book to known prokaryotic filament structures, together with current theories and controversies regarding the mechanisms by which the filaments carry out their diverse functions, that go well beyond what similarities with eukaryotic homologues would suggest.
format Book
author Löwe, Jan, ed.
Amos, Linda A., ed.
author_facet Löwe, Jan, ed.
Amos, Linda A., ed.
author_sort Löwe, Jan, ed.
title Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells
title_short Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells
title_full Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells
title_fullStr Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells
title_full_unstemmed Prokaryotic Cytoskeletons: Filamentous Protein Polymers Active in the Cytoplasm of Bacterial and Archaeal Cells
title_sort prokaryotic cytoskeletons: filamentous protein polymers active in the cytoplasm of bacterial and archaeal cells
publisher Springer
publishDate 2020
url http://thuvien.ued.udn.vn/handle/TVDHSPDN_123456789/57215
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