312 Pages 8 Color & 128 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    312 Pages 8 Color & 128 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    For the past four decades, University College London has offered a renowned course on receptor pharmacology. Originating from this course, the perennially bestselling Textbook of Receptor Pharmacology has presented in-depth coverage of this rapidly expanding area of research. This third edition continues to combine current understanding of classical quantitative pharmacology and drug-receptor interactions with the basics of receptor structure and signal transduction mechanisms, providing an integrated analysis of the mechanisms of drug action at membrane receptors.



    The hallmark of this popular text is the uniting of four major approaches to the study of receptors:







    • Molecular investigation of receptor structure


    • Quantitative functional studies of agonists and antagonists


    • Ligand binding


    • Signal transduction at the cell membrane




    Maintaining the second edition’s focus on cell membrane receptors and the immediate signal transduction events at the membrane, this edition includes updated chapters on receptor structure and signal transduction by G-proteins and tyrosine kinases as well as enhancements to the quantitative treatment of drug-receptor interactions. Several chapters contain problems and worked-out solutions, giving students the ability to test their comprehension of the material. Hundreds of diagrams and figures further enhance the text.



    A time-saving resource and comprehensive learning tool, Textbook of Receptor Pharmacology, Third Edition carries on the tradition of providing in-depth, up-to-date coverage of this critical area that is both fundamental to the science of pharmacology and on the cutting edge of new drug development.

    Drug-Receptor Interactions

    Classical Approaches to the Study of Drug-Receptor Interactions, Donald H. Jenkinson

    Molecular Structure of Receptors

    Structure and Function 7-TM G-Protein Coupled Receptors, Alasdair J. Gibb

    The Structure of Ligand-Gated Ion Channels, Jan Egebjerg

    Molecular Structure of Receptor Tyrosine Kinases, IJsbrand Kramer and Michel Laguerre

    Ligand-Binding Studies of Receptors

    Direct Measurement of Drug Binding to Receptors, Dennis G. Haylett

    Transduction of the Receptor Signal

    Receptors Linked to Ion Channels: Mechanisms of Activation and Block, Alasdair J. Gibb

    G-Proteins, David A. Brown

    Signal Transduction through Protein Tyrosine Kinases, IJsbrand Kramer and Elisabeth Genot

    Receptors as Pharmaceutical Targets

    Receptors as Pharmaceutical Targets, James W. Black

    Biography

    John C. Foreman, Ph.D., D.Sc., M.B., B.S., F.R.C.P., is emeritus professor of pharmacology at University College London. His research interests have included the role of bradykinin receptors in the human nasal airway, the control of microvascular circulation in human skin, and the mechanism of activation of dendritic cells. He has published reviews, contributions to books, and 170 research papers.



    Torben Johansen, M.D., Dr. Med. Sci. is a docent of pharmacology at the University of Southern Denmark. He has published 70 research papers in refereed journals. His current major research interests are N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors in the stubstantia nigra in relation to cell death in Parkinson’s disease and also ion transport and signaling in mast cells in relation to intracellular pH and volume regulation.



    Alasdair Gibb, B.Sc., Ph.D., is reader in pharmacology at University College London. He currently leads the General and Advanced Receptor Theory Workshop of the British Pharmacological Society Diploma in Pharmacology and is a course leader on the British Pharmacological Society short course on Translational Pharmacology.

    " … very well written and informative. This edition updates and refines earlier versions of what is an excellent, interesting, and very informative text on receptor pharmacology, but what else would one expect with contributions from such giants in the discipline? This book is ideal for budding pharmacologists and cell physiologists, both at the undergraduate and postgraduate level, who have an interest in receptor structure and function … would also be of value to students and academics of pharmacy, physiology, medicinal chemistry, and related disciplines."
    Chromatographia