Immediate Early Genes and Inducible Transcription Factors in Mapping of the Central Nervous System Function and Dysfunction, Volume 19

Front Cover
L. Kaczmarek, Leszek Kaczmarek, H.A. Robertson
Gulf Professional Publishing, 2002 - 390 pages
That molecular neurobiology has become a dominant part of neuroscience research can be credited to the discovery of inducible gene expression in the brain and spinal cord. This volume deals with genes, whose expression patterns in the vertebrate central nervous system were the first to be revealed and then the most extensively investigated over the last 15 years. Immediate early genes (IEG) and their protein products, especially those acting as regulators of transcription (inducible transcription factors, ITF) have proven to be very valuable tools in functional neuroanatomy and neurophysiology, as they are rapidly and transiently induced in specific neurons in response to various modes of stimulation. Thus, they have been used to map neuronal populations selectively responsive to a variety of conditions, such as sensory and learning experience, electrical stimulation of specific circuits, seizures, and neurodegeneration.


This single volume, written by the most prominent authors in the field, brings together for the first time information about the most widely studied IEG/ITF in a whole variety of phenomena of neuronal activation. It starts with a critical appraisal of the technologies employed for the studies on gene, protein, and transcription factor activity in the nervous system. Several chapters present exhaustive examples of expression patterns of the ITF in "vocal" avian brain, mammalian brain sensory regions, areas involved in regulation of circadian rhythms, and the spinal cord. The next parts cover functional and regular aspects of individual IEG/ITF expression: c-fos in learning and memory, c-jun and others in neuropathology and neuronal stress responses, Elk-1, egr family, and CREB in neuronal plasticity and learning.

This volume will be useful as a major reference on this topic. Furthermore, it attempts to unravel the seemingly overwhelming complexity of the phenomena of gene expression in the central nervous system.

 

Contents

III
1
IV
3
V
4
VI
5
VII
6
VIII
7
IX
8
XI
17
CXXIX
184
CXXXI
189
CXXXII
191
CXXXIII
192
CXXXIV
194
CXXXV
195
CXXXVI
196
CXXXVII
198

XII
20
XIII
22
XIV
23
XV
24
XVI
25
XVII
28
XVIII
30
XIX
31
XXII
39
XXIII
43
XXVI
45
XXVII
46
XXVIII
47
XXIX
48
XXXI
49
XXXIII
50
XXXIV
51
XXXVI
55
XXXIX
59
XL
61
XLI
63
XLII
64
XLIV
65
XLV
66
XLVI
67
XLVII
68
L
69
LI
70
LIII
71
LIV
72
LVI
73
LVII
74
LVIII
76
LX
78
LXII
80
LXV
81
LXVI
82
LXVII
84
LXVIII
85
LXIX
86
LXX
87
LXXII
88
LXXIII
89
LXXIV
91
LXXVI
92
LXXVIII
93
LXXIX
94
LXXX
103
LXXXI
104
LXXXII
105
LXXXIII
107
LXXXV
110
LXXXVI
111
LXXXVII
113
LXXXIX
115
XC
116
XCI
117
XCII
118
XCIII
119
XCIV
120
XCV
121
XCVI
122
XCVII
123
XCIX
125
C
126
CI
127
CII
130
CIII
131
CV
133
CVII
147
CVIII
149
CIX
151
CXI
153
CXII
155
CXIII
156
CXIV
157
CXV
159
CXVI
162
CXVII
165
CXIX
166
CXX
171
CXXI
174
CXXII
177
CXXIII
178
CXXIV
179
CXXVI
181
CXXVII
183
CXXXVIII
199
CXXXIX
201
CXL
202
CXLI
203
CXLII
204
CXLV
205
CXLVI
206
CXLVII
208
CXLVIII
209
CXLIX
210
CLI
217
CLII
218
CLIV
219
CLV
220
CLVIII
221
CLIX
222
CLX
223
CLXI
224
CLXIII
226
CLXIV
227
CLXVI
229
CLXVIII
230
CLXIX
231
CLXXII
232
CLXXIV
233
CLXXVI
234
CLXXVIII
235
CLXXIX
236
CLXXXI
253
CLXXXII
256
CLXXXIII
257
CLXXXV
259
CLXXXVI
261
CLXXXIX
262
CXCI
263
CXCII
266
CXCIII
267
CXCIV
269
CXCV
270
CXCVII
273
CXCVIII
275
CC
278
CCII
287
CCIII
288
CCIV
289
CCVI
290
CCVII
291
CCIX
294
CCX
296
CCXI
297
CCXII
302
CCXIII
303
CCXVI
309
CCXVII
310
CCXX
311
CCXXI
312
CCXXII
313
CCXXIII
316
CCXXV
317
CCXXVI
318
CCXXX
319
CCXXXIII
320
CCXXXVII
321
CCXXXVIII
322
CCXXXIX
323
CCXL
329
CCXLI
330
CCXLIII
333
CCXLIV
334
CCXLV
335
CCXLVI
336
CCXLVII
337
CCXLVIII
338
CCLI
339
CCLII
340
CCLIV
341
CCLV
342
CCLVI
343
CCLVII
344
CCLVIII
345
CCLX
346
CCLXI
347
CCLXIII
349
CCLXIV
350
CCLXVI
351
CCLXVIII
363
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information