G Protein-Coupled Receptors as Drug Targets: Analysis of Activation and Constitutive ActivityISBN: 978-3-527-30819-4
Hardcover
304 pages
December 2005
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"In conclusion, this volume can be highly useful resource for pharmaceuticals chemists, physiologists and medical researchers working both in academia and industry."
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules
"...extremely informative and generally easy to read and understand. It is an important reference book for researchers (medicinal chemists, physiologists, and pharmacologists) working on the most favorite group of drug targets - the GPCRs."
ChemMedChem
"This book is an excellent review of the body of evidence describing constitutive GPCR activity. It is of general interest to pharmacologists, structural biologists, biochemists, and medicinal chemists with an interest in GPCR signaling pathways and as such would be a good addition to personal or departmental libraries of many basic scientists."
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
"I can strongly recommend this book as the concepts and examples have mostly been poorly taken into account with the daily work in the laboratory. The book would have great use in pharmacologically oriented laboratories in academics as well as different stages in drug development in pharmaceutical industry. It is more or less a "must" in the libraries in academia and in industry looking on all kinds of GPCR research."
Arch. Pharm. Chem. Life Sci.
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules
"...extremely informative and generally easy to read and understand. It is an important reference book for researchers (medicinal chemists, physiologists, and pharmacologists) working on the most favorite group of drug targets - the GPCRs."
ChemMedChem
"This book is an excellent review of the body of evidence describing constitutive GPCR activity. It is of general interest to pharmacologists, structural biologists, biochemists, and medicinal chemists with an interest in GPCR signaling pathways and as such would be a good addition to personal or departmental libraries of many basic scientists."
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
"I can strongly recommend this book as the concepts and examples have mostly been poorly taken into account with the daily work in the laboratory. The book would have great use in pharmacologically oriented laboratories in academics as well as different stages in drug development in pharmaceutical industry. It is more or less a "must" in the libraries in academia and in industry looking on all kinds of GPCR research."
Arch. Pharm. Chem. Life Sci.