Biophysics of Mitochondria, 1st ed. 2019
Auteur : Vekshin Nikolai
In this monograph, the author -Head researcher at the Institute of Cell Biophysics of Russian Academy of Sciences- discusses the results of his own long-term studies of mitochondria as well as alternative points of view and experiments of other important researchers in the field. The monograph contains the main aspects of mitochondrial research by a number of physical methods: fluorescence spectroscopy, UV-vis spectrophotometry, IR spectroscopy, light-scattering, optical microscopy, fluorescence microscopy, colorimetry, photobleaching, polarography, among others. The monograph is very useful for researchers and graduate students specializing in mitochondrial biophysics, biochemistry, molecular biology and cytology. The book was published in Russian in 2019 by Photon Publishers (Pushchino, Moscow region).
N.L Vekshin is a specialist in biophysical methods and mitochondria. He has authored approximately 200 papers and 8 books (in Russian and English), including "Energy Transfer in Macromolecules" (SPIE, Bellingham, 1997), "Photonics of Biopolymers" (Springer, Berlin, 2002), "Biophysics of DNA-antibiotic complexes" (Nova, N.Y. 2011), "Fluorescence Spectroscopy of Biomacromolecules" (Lambert, 2012).
N.L. Vekshin was decorated by 25 medals at scientific exhibitions for his inventions. He has 6 patents. His job was supported by CNRS post-doc fellowship (France, 1992), FEBS fellowship (The Netherlands, 1996), NSF fellowship (USA, 2000), NWO grant (1999-2001), NATO Linkage grant (2000-2001), CRDF grant (2000-2001), NATO Linkage grant (2002-2003), and many Russian grants (2005-2019).
Summarizes the most important and latest findings of mitochondria research by a number of physical methods, with emphasis on optical methods and methodological issues
Presents long-term studies and experimental data
Analyses alternative points of view, new hypothesis and interesting contradictions in the field
Date de parution : 02-2021
Ouvrage de 197 p.
15.5x23.5 cm
Date de parution : 02-2020
Ouvrage de 197 p.
15.5x23.5 cm