Overview
- Editors:
-
-
Nader G. Abraham
-
New York Medical College, Valhalla, USA
Access this book
Other ways to access
Table of contents (43 chapters)
-
-
Physiology/Pathology of Heme Oxygenase and its Products, Carbon Monoxide and Bilirubin
-
-
-
- Stefan W. Ryter, Leo E. Otterbein, Danielle Morse, Augustine M. K. Choi
Pages 19-29
-
- Rui Wang, Xianfeng Sun, Lingyun Wu, Zunzhe Wang, Salma Toma Hanna, Robert Peterson-Wakeman
Pages 31-41
-
- Toshisuke Morita, Yuko Togane, Makoto Suematsu, Jun-ichi Yamazaki, Shigehiro Katayama
Pages 43-54
-
- Daniel S. Seidman, Micha Baum, Doron Kreiser, Israel Hendler, Eyal Schiff, Maurice Druzin et al.
Pages 55-65
-
-
- Mutsuo Yamaya, Shoji Okinaga, Kiyohisa Sekizawa, Mizue Monma, Hidetada Sasaki
Pages 83-95
-
- Józef Dulak, Roberto Motterlini, Ihor Huk, Otmar Pachinger, Franz Weidinger, Alicja Józkowicz
Pages 97-107
-
Physiological Function of Heme Oxygenase and the Central Nervous System
-
Front Matter
Pages 109-109
-
- Charles W. Leffler, Jonathan H. Jaggar, Zheng Fan
Pages 111-119
-
- G. Scapagnini, A. M. Giuffrida Stella, N. G. Abraham, D. Alkon, V. Calabrese
Pages 121-134
-
- Atsushi Takeda, Yasuto Itoyama, Teiko Kimpara, R. Krishnan Kutty, Nader G. Abraham, Barney E. Dwyer et al.
Pages 135-143
-
- Yogesh Mawal, Daniel Berlin, Steven Kravitz, Hyman M. Schipper
Pages 145-155
-
- Kenneth Maiese, Shi-Hua Lin, Zhao Zhong Chong
Pages 157-167
-
- Martin H. Deininger, Richard Meyermann, Hermann J. Schluesener
Pages 169-180
-
Clinical Implications of Heme Oxygenase System in Inflammation
-
Front Matter
Pages 181-181
-
- Michael W. Dunn, Michal Laniado-Schwartzman
Pages 183-192
-
- Stella Kourembanas, Tohru Minamino, Helen Christou, Chung-Ming Hsieh, Yuxiang Liu, Vijender Dhawan et al.
Pages 193-204
About this book
Heme oxygenase is rapidly taking its place as the centerpiece of multiple inter acting metabolic systems. Only 25 years ago heme oxygenase and its metabolic prod ucts appeared to be merely a simple metabolic system-one substrate, heme; one enzyme, heme oxygenase; and one set of products, iron to be recycled, and bilirubin and carbon monoxide to be disposed. From a group of about 25 people in 1974, as judged by attendance at various Gordon conferences, heme oxygenase has, in the year 2000, attracted working scientists-and clinicians I might add-by the hundreds and has produced referenced publications by the thousands. It is well-deserved attention. Heme oxygenase system is now similar to the metabolic networks surrounding glucose in those complex maps of glycolytic and non-glycolytic metabolic pathways, which we had to memorize as students. The relevance of heme oxygenase to regulatory biology was recognized many years ago, but the work conducted over the past five years has created a new wave of emphasis focusing on genetic manipulation to alter heme oxygenase gene expression, the regulatory actions of heme oxygenase products including carbon monoxide, and the significance of changes in the heme oxygenase system. The physiological and pathological relevance of heme oxygenase in the brain, heart, liver, bone marrow, organ transplant, lung and kidney, opens many areas of investigation in various dis ciplines. Advances in the pharmacology of bilirubin and its ability as an antioxidant have provided a new avenue in clinical research.
Editors and Affiliations
-
New York Medical College, Valhalla, USA
Nader G. Abraham