Overview
- Editors:
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E. Kendall Pye
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Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
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Lemuel B. Wingard
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Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA
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Table of contents (62 chapters)
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Developments and Challenge of Enzyme Engineering
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1973 Henniker Delphi Study
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Enzymes: Regulation and New Sources
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New Purification Techniques
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- N. G. Anderson, D. W. Holladay, J. E. Caton, J. W. Holleman
Pages 47-54
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- T. Maciag, M. K. Weibel, E. K. Pye
Pages 55-62
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New Immobilization Techniques and Supports
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- H. D. Brown, G. J. Bartling, S. K. Chattopadhyay
Pages 83-90
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- A. C. Olson, W. L. Stanley
Pages 91-96
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- L. Goldstein, A. Freeman, M. Sokolovsky
Pages 97-104
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About this book
Considerable worldwide interest has arisen in recent years in the controlled use of enzymes as catalysts in industrial processing, analytical chemistry and medical therapy. This interest has genera ted the new interdisciplinary field of Enzyme Engineering, which includes both the scientific and technologic aspects of the produc tion, purification, immobilization, and application of enzymes in a variety of situations and reactor configurations. A series of Engineering Foundation conferences on Enzyme Engineering was initia ted to provide an international forum for the exchange of ideas and information over the entire range of this new field. The outstanding success of the first two conferences attests to the vigor and poten tial of this field to contribute significantly to a better under standing and resolution of some of the major problems faced by man kind. The first conference, which was held August 9-13, 1971, at Henniker, New Hampshire, U. S. A. , aided significantly in molding the several traditional disciplines that interact to form the field of Enzyme Engineering. The conference was highly successful mainly because many of the key scientists and engineers from the several facets of Enzyme Engineering were brought together for the first time at a single residential meeting. The result was an exchange of ideas and "education" of one another in the pertinent principles of the diverse disciplines which contribute to this field. The second conference, held August 5-10, 1973, at Henniker, New Hampshire, U. S. A.
Editors and Affiliations
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Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
E. Kendall Pye
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Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA
Lemuel B. Wingard