Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 228 OF 1236

Main Title Cell-Cell Channels [electronic resource] /
Type EBOOK
Author Baluska, Frantisek.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Volkmann, Dieter.
Barlow, Peter W.
Publisher Springer New York,
Year Published 2006
Call Number QH573-671
ISBN 9780387469577
Subjects Life sciences ; Biochemistry ; Cytology ; Developmental biology
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-46957-7
Collation XVIII, 321 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
Cell-Cell Channels and Their Implications for Cell Theory -- Cell-Cell Channels and Their Implications for Cell Theory -- Prokaryotic Cells -- Mating Cell-Cell Channels in Conjugating Bacteria -- Ciliate Cells -- The Tetrahymena Conjugation Junction -- Algal Cells -- Cytoplasmic Bridges in Volvox and Its Relatives -- Fungal Cells -- Vegetative Hyphal Fusion in Filamentous Fungi -- Plant Cells -- Plasmodesmata: Cell-Cell Channels in Plants -- Sieve-Pore Plugging Mechanisms -- Actin and Myosin VIII in Plant Cell-Cell Channels -- Cell-Cell Communication in Wood -- TMV Movement Protein Targets Cell-Cell Channels in Plants and Prokaryotes -- Viral Movement Proteins Induce Tubule Formation in Plant and Insect Cells -- Cell-Cell Movements of Transcription Factors in Plants -- Animal Cells -- Gap Junctions -- Tunneling Nanotubes -- Cytoplasmic Bridges as Cell-Cell Channels of Germ Cells -- Fusome as a Cell-Cell Communication Channel of Drosophila Ovarian Cyst -- Cytonemes as Cell-Cell Channels in Human Blood Cells -- Paracellular Pores in Endothelial Barriers -- Channels across Endothelial Cells -- Molecular Transfers through Transient Lymphoid Cell-Cell Channels -- Cell-Cell Transport of Homeoproteins -- Virological Synapse for Cell-Cell Spread of Viruses -- Cell-Cell Fusion. he biological sciences are dominated by the idea that cells are the functionally autonomous, physically separated, discrete units of life. TThis concept was propounded in the 19th century by discoveries of the cellular structuring of both plants and animals. Moreover, the apparent autonomy of unicellular eukaryotes, as well as the cellular basis of the mammalian brain (an organ whose anatomy for a long while defied attempts to validate the idea of the cellular nature of its neurons), seemed to provide the final conclusive evidence for the completeness of *cell theory', a theory which has persisted in an almost dogmatic form up to the present day. However, it is very obvious that there are numerous observations which indicate that it is not the cells which serve as the basic units of biological life but that this property falls to some other, subcellular assemblage. To deal with this intricate problem concerning the fundamental unit of living matter, we proposed the so-called Cell Body concept which, in fact, develops an exceedingly original idea proposed by Julius Sachs at the end of the 19th century. In the case of eukaryotic cells, DNA-enriched nuclei are intimately associated with a microtubular cytoskeleton. In this configuration-as a Cell Body-these two items comprise the fundamental functional and structural unit of eukaryotic living matter. The Cell Body seems to be inherent to all cells in all organisms.