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Ehrlich, John

P. Ehrlich, John Wiley Sons, London, 1906. Chap. 36. [Pg.580]

Keywords Receptors Receptor history Paul Ehrlich John Newton Langley Emil Fischer Louis Pasteur Drug-receptor interactions Stereoselectivity Receptor diseases Receptor regulation Receptor structure... [Pg.10]

Ehrlich P. fiber die Beziehungen von chemischer Konstitution, Verteilung und pharmakologischer Wirkung. In Collected Studies in Immunity. New York John Wiley Sons 1906, 567-595. [Pg.332]

Varadan V, Jiang X, Varadan VV (2001) Microstereolithography and other Fabrication Techniques for 3D MEMS. John WUey and Sons, Chichester Cumpston BH, Ananthavel SP, Barlow S, Dyer DL, Ehrlich JE, Erskine LL, HeUcal AA, Kuebler SM, Lee lYS, McCord-Maughon D, Qin J, Rockel H, Rumi M, Wu X-L, Marder SR, Perry JW (1999) Nature 398 51... [Pg.156]

Ehrlich, P. (1906) Collected Studies on Immunity. John Wiley, New-York, Vol. II, pp. 442 147. [Pg.330]

Ehrlich P. Collected Studies on Immunity. London and New York John Wiley Sons, 1906. [Pg.381]

The definition of receptors as specific sites for drug action owes much to the work of John Newton Langley [ 1852-1925 ] and Paul Ehrlich [ 1854-1915 ]. Their separate work on the autonomic nervous system and toxins and chemotherapeutic agents led to the concept of a receptor that possesses both recognition and transduction components and of chemotherapeutic molecules possessing discrete molecular features subserving specific functions ... [Pg.2]

Ann M. Arvin, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California Jeffrey L. Bennetzen, University of Georgia, Athens Ruth Berkelman, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia Deborah Blum, University of Wisconsin, Madison R. Alta Charo, University of Wisconsin, Madison Jeffery L. Dangl, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill Paul R. Ehrlich, Stanford University, Stanford, California Mark D. Fitzsimmons, John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Chicago, Illinois... [Pg.145]

Despite its experimental failings, medical opposition, linkage to homeopathy, difficulty to prove, and lack of understanding, scientists continued to publish a flow of papers throughout the decades of the twentieth century that were consistent with the hormesis hypothesis. During this first half of the twentieth century the hormesis concept became embodied in the terms Arndt-Schulz Law or Hueppe s Rule. However, in 1943 Chester Southam and John Ehrlich, apparently... [Pg.82]

Calcium Oxide. Lime burnt lime calx quicklime. GO mol wt 56.08. Ca 71.47%, O 28.53%. Properly stored line of commerce contains 90-95% free CaO. Commercial production from limestone W. L. Faith et al. Industrial Chemicals (John Wiley, New York, 3rd ed, 1965) pp 482-411. Ub prepn by ignition of CaCO, Ehrlich in Handbook si Preparative Inorganic Chemistry ml. 1, G. Brauer, Ed. (Academic Press, New York, 2nd ed., 1963) p 931. Review R, S. Boynton in Kirk -Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Ttthealogy voL 14 (Wiley-Interscience, New York, 3rd ed.. Iffl) pp 343-382. [Pg.255]

In 1905, John Newport Langley (1852-1925) reported on his experiments, carried out at Cambridge University, with nicotine and curare on the skeletal muscles of frogs and chickens, where he formulated the concept of cellular receptive substances (we would say structures ), which mediate the activity of these agents. [123] This represents the actual foundation of a neuronal receptor theory (Fig. 8.32), and led Paul Ehrlich two years later to propose more generally the existence of chemoreceptors for drugs. [Pg.727]

Ehrlich, H.L. and Hohnes, D.S. (Eds.)- 1986. Workshop on Biotechnology for the Mining. Metal Refining and EossU Fuel FTocessing Industries. John Wiley Sons, Inc., New York. [Pg.388]

Ehrlich, P. Studies on immunity. John Wiley and Sons, New York, 1906. [Pg.109]

The concept of a receptor was independently proposed in the nineteenth century by both John N. Langley and Paul Ehrlich. Ehrlich expressed the concept as Corpora non agunt nisi fixata (molecules cannot act unless they are bound). [Pg.65]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.29 , Pg.116 , Pg.123 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.77 , Pg.79 ]




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