Overview
- Editors:
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Anna Catania
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Fondazione IRCCS, Center for Preclinical Investigation, Milano, Italy
- The volume spans information on chemistry, pharmacology, distribution, and therapeutic potential of melanocortins
- Role played by distinct melanocortin receptors in mediating melanocortin effects
- The reader gets the latest perspectives on all aspects of the melanocortin molecules: from their amino acid sequences, their receptors, the mechanisms of their action, their roles in physiological and pathological processes
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Table of contents (12 chapters)
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- Anamika Singh, Erica M. Haslach, Carrie Haskell-Luevano
Pages 1-18
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- Paula C. Eves, John W. Haycock
Pages 19-28
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- Jay W. Schaub, Erin B. Bruce, Carrie Haskell-Luevano
Pages 49-60
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- Ruta Muceniece, Maija Dambrova
Pages 61-70
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- Daniela Giuliani, Alessandra Ottani, Domenica Altavilla, Carla Bazzani, Francesco Squadrito, Salvatore Guarini
Pages 71-87
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- Hetal B. Patel, Giovanna Leoni, Trinidad Montero Melendez, André L. F. Sampaio, Mauro Perretti
Pages 88-106
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- Thomas Brzoska, Markus Böhm, Andreas Lügering, Karin Loser, Thomas A. Luger
Pages 107-116
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- Stefano Gatti, Caterina Lonati, Andrea Sordi, Anna Catania
Pages 117-125
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- Alex N. Eberle, Jean-Philippe Bapst, Martine Calame, Heidi Tanner, Sylvie Froidevaux
Pages 133-142
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- Andrew W. Taylor, Darren Lee
Pages 143-149
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Back Matter
Pages 151-153
About this book
It is clear that the melanocortins are of immense academic interest. Further, these molecules have remarkable potential as pharmaceutical agents for treatment of multiple human and veterinary disorders and diseases. The evidence to support academic interest and clinical applications lies in significant part within the chapters of this book, chapters written by noted experts in the field who have worked diligently to understand the molecules and to move them toward clinical applications. I personally believe that the - MSH molecule and its derivatives will be used as routine therapeutics in the very near future. My belief is so strong that I left academia to form a company based on -MSH analogs and have caused millions of dollars to be spent on melanocortin research. Now why would a sane professor pick up such a challenge and enter business, an essential step toward any clinical application? It is the - MSH story that drove me. Consider that - MSH occurs in exactly the same amino acid sequence in humans and in the sea lamprey, an organism unchanged since its appearance during the Pennsylvanian period of the Paleozoic era (about 300 million years ago—way before dinosaurs were to be considered). There is unpublished evidence that the stability of the molecule can be traced back a half billion years. Frankly, I believe that the molecule existed even when single cells began to live together.
Editors and Affiliations
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Fondazione IRCCS, Center for Preclinical Investigation, Milano, Italy
Anna Catania
About the editor
ANNA CATA NIA, MD, PhD is a director of Center for Preclinical Investigation at Fondazione Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico, Mangiagalli e Regina Elena, Milano, Italy. She received her degree in Medicine and Surgery at the University of Milan and postdoctoral degree in Endocrinology and Metabolism at the University of Genoa,
Italy. For over a decade she has been visiting scientist at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Texas.
During the past 20 years, her research activity has been focused on molecular biology and preclinical testing of melanocortins.