Protein Misfolding and Disease

“Protein Misfolding and Disease” by Peter Bross, published by Humana Press on November 10, 2010, is a softcover reprint of the hardcover first edition from 2003, comprising 318 pages. This book explores the complex processes of protein folding and the significance of structured conformations for the proper functioning of cellular proteins. It highlights the emerging understanding that disturbances in protein folding and conformational maintenance are critical mechanisms behind various diseases, leading to the concept of conformational diseases.
Readers will find a detailed examination of how mutations or environmental stresses can cause partial misfolding, resulting in alternative conformations that disrupt cellular processes. The text discusses various conditions, including prion and Alzheimer’s diseases, collagen diseases, cystic fibrosis, and enzyme deficiencies, illustrating the implications of protein misfolding in health and disease. The book also addresses the role of protein quality control mechanisms in maintaining proper protein folding and the pathological consequences of their deficiencies.
Official synopsis Publisher
For decades it has been known that structured conformations are important for the proper functioning of most cellular proteins. However, appreciation that protein folding to the functional conformations as well as the structural maintenance of protein molecules are very complex processes has only emerged during the last ten years. The intimate interplay uncovered by this scientific development led us to realize that perturbations of the protein folding process and disturbances of conformational maintenance are major disease mechanisms. This development has given rise to the concept of conformational diseases and the broader signature of protein folding diseases, comprising diseases in which mutations or environmental stresses may result in a partial misfolding that leads then to alternative conformations capable of disturbing cellular processes. This may happen by self-association (aggregation), as in prion and Alzheimer’s diseases, or by incorporation of alternatively folded subunits into structural entities, as in collagen diseases. Another possibility is that folding to the native structure is impaired or abolished, resulting in decreased stea- state levels of the correctly folded protein, as is observed in cystic fibrosis and 1-antitrypsin deficiency, as well as in many enzyme deficiencies. In addition, deficiencies of proteins that are engaged in assisting and supervising protein folding (protein quality control) may impair the folding of many other proteins, resulting in pathological phenotypes. Examples of this are the spastic paraplegia attributable to mutations in mitochondrial protease/chaperone complexes.
FAQ
What is “Protein Misfolding and Disease” about?
Who is the author of “Protein Misfolding and Disease”?
When was “Protein Misfolding and Disease” published?
What is the ISBN for “Protein Misfolding and Disease”?
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
