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Memoirs of the Society for Endocrinology. No. II: Cell Mechanisms in Hormone Production and Action

Memoirs of the Society for Endocrinology. No. II: Cell Mechanisms in Hormone Production and Action This article is only available in the PDF format. Download the PDF to view the article, as well as its associated figures and tables. Abstract This book is an eclectic and of necessity more extensive than intensive survey of a wide-ranging field, conducted at a symposium of the Zoological Society of London in 1960. Sylvia Fitton Jackson admirably summarizes the fundamental features of cellular organization, with special emphasis on the structural basis of secretion. Her skepticism with regard to the Golgi body as a site of production of secretion granules is particularly interesting. L. Weiss discusses current (and partly at least ephemeral) concepts of the plasma membrane. Genetic effects on hormone synthesis are treated in W. R. Trotter's brief summary of thyroidal metabolic aberrations. Two of these, Pendred's syndrome (goiter combined with high-tone deafness) and deficient iodotyrosine deiodinase activity, are inherited as recessively determined autosomal defects, possibly of a single gene. A. C. Allison, whose research is primarily concerned with abnormal hemoglobins, outlines the fundamental concepts of the regulation of protein synthesis by DNA via http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Archives of Internal Medicine American Medical Association

Memoirs of the Society for Endocrinology. No. II: Cell Mechanisms in Hormone Production and Action

Archives of Internal Medicine , Volume 110 (1) – Jul 1, 1962

Memoirs of the Society for Endocrinology. No. II: Cell Mechanisms in Hormone Production and Action

Abstract

This article is only available in the PDF format. Download the PDF to view the article, as well as its associated figures and tables. Abstract This book is an eclectic and of necessity more extensive than intensive survey of a wide-ranging field, conducted at a symposium of the Zoological Society of London in 1960. Sylvia Fitton Jackson admirably summarizes the fundamental features of cellular organization, with special emphasis on the structural basis of secretion. Her skepticism with regard...
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Publisher
American Medical Association
Copyright
Copyright © 1962 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.
ISSN
0003-9926
eISSN
1538-3679
DOI
10.1001/archinte.1962.03620190139032
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This article is only available in the PDF format. Download the PDF to view the article, as well as its associated figures and tables. Abstract This book is an eclectic and of necessity more extensive than intensive survey of a wide-ranging field, conducted at a symposium of the Zoological Society of London in 1960. Sylvia Fitton Jackson admirably summarizes the fundamental features of cellular organization, with special emphasis on the structural basis of secretion. Her skepticism with regard to the Golgi body as a site of production of secretion granules is particularly interesting. L. Weiss discusses current (and partly at least ephemeral) concepts of the plasma membrane. Genetic effects on hormone synthesis are treated in W. R. Trotter's brief summary of thyroidal metabolic aberrations. Two of these, Pendred's syndrome (goiter combined with high-tone deafness) and deficient iodotyrosine deiodinase activity, are inherited as recessively determined autosomal defects, possibly of a single gene. A. C. Allison, whose research is primarily concerned with abnormal hemoglobins, outlines the fundamental concepts of the regulation of protein synthesis by DNA via

Journal

Archives of Internal MedicineAmerican Medical Association

Published: Jul 1, 1962

There are no references for this article.