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Echinodermata [electronic resource] /edited by Valeria Matranga.

by Matranga, Valeria [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Progress in Molecular and Subcellular Biology, Marine Molecular Biotechnology: 39Publisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2005.Description: XXIII, 275 p. online resource.ISBN: 9783540276838.Subject(s): Life sciences | Toxicology | Biotechnology | Biochemistry | Cytology | Invertebrates | Life Sciences | Animal Biochemistry | Biotechnology | Cell Biology | Invertebrates | Pharmacology/Toxicology | Environmental Engineering/BiotechnologyDDC classification: 573.44 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Are Echinoderms of Interest to Biotechnology? -- Cell Adhesion and Communication: A Lesson from Echinoderm Embryos for the Exploitation of New Therapeutic Tools -- Cell Signalling During Sea Urchin Development: A Model for Assessing Toxicity of Environmental Contaminants -- Echinoderm Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) Production Measured by Peroxidase, Luminol-Enhanced Chemiluminescence (PLCL) as an Immunotoxicological Tool -- Monitoring Chemical and Physical Stress Using Sea Urchin Immune Cells -- DNA Damage and Developmental Defects After Exposure to UV and Heavy Metals in Sea Urchin Cells and Embryos Compared to Other Invertebrates -- Echinoderms: Their Culture and Bioactive Compounds -- Regenerative Response and Endocrine Disrupters in Crinoid Echinoderms: An Old Experimental Model, a New Ecotoxicological Test -- Echinoderm Adhesive Secretions: From Experimental Characterization to Biotechnological Applications -- Mutable Collagenous Tissue: Overview and Biotechnological Perspective -- Bioresources from Echinoderms.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Members of the phylum Echinodermata are among the most familiar marine invertebrates. Forms such as the sea star have become virtually a symbol of sea life. Used in ancient oriental medicine as a source of bioactive compounds, sea cucumbers, sea stars and sea urchins are now used for the extraction and purification of cytotoxic, haemolytic, antiviral, antifungal, antifouling, antimicrobial and even anti-tumoural activities. In addition, of the five extant classes, sea urchins and sea cucumbers are important economic resources for current fishery and aquaculture. Molecular and cell biological techniques described in this book are, on the one hand, indicative of the improvements made over the years and, on the other, stress the need of their further exploitation for the sustainable production of bioactive compounds and their application in biomedicine.
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Are Echinoderms of Interest to Biotechnology? -- Cell Adhesion and Communication: A Lesson from Echinoderm Embryos for the Exploitation of New Therapeutic Tools -- Cell Signalling During Sea Urchin Development: A Model for Assessing Toxicity of Environmental Contaminants -- Echinoderm Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) Production Measured by Peroxidase, Luminol-Enhanced Chemiluminescence (PLCL) as an Immunotoxicological Tool -- Monitoring Chemical and Physical Stress Using Sea Urchin Immune Cells -- DNA Damage and Developmental Defects After Exposure to UV and Heavy Metals in Sea Urchin Cells and Embryos Compared to Other Invertebrates -- Echinoderms: Their Culture and Bioactive Compounds -- Regenerative Response and Endocrine Disrupters in Crinoid Echinoderms: An Old Experimental Model, a New Ecotoxicological Test -- Echinoderm Adhesive Secretions: From Experimental Characterization to Biotechnological Applications -- Mutable Collagenous Tissue: Overview and Biotechnological Perspective -- Bioresources from Echinoderms.

Members of the phylum Echinodermata are among the most familiar marine invertebrates. Forms such as the sea star have become virtually a symbol of sea life. Used in ancient oriental medicine as a source of bioactive compounds, sea cucumbers, sea stars and sea urchins are now used for the extraction and purification of cytotoxic, haemolytic, antiviral, antifungal, antifouling, antimicrobial and even anti-tumoural activities. In addition, of the five extant classes, sea urchins and sea cucumbers are important economic resources for current fishery and aquaculture. Molecular and cell biological techniques described in this book are, on the one hand, indicative of the improvements made over the years and, on the other, stress the need of their further exploitation for the sustainable production of bioactive compounds and their application in biomedicine.

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