1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910820293303321

Titolo

Chemistry of bioconjugates : synthesis, characterization, and biomedical applications / / edited by Ravin Narain

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Hoboken, New Jersey : , : Wiley, , 2014

©2014

ISBN

1-118-77637-2

1-118-77588-0

1-118-77640-2

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (495 p.)

Altri autori (Persone)

NarainRavin

Disciplina

612.1/111

Soggetti

Bioconjugates

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.

Nota di contenuto

CHEMISTRY OF BIOCONJUGATES; CONTENTS; PREFACE; CONTRIBUTORS; SECTION I GENERAL METHODS OF BIOCONJUGATION; 1 COVALENT AND NONCOVALENT BIOCONJUGATION STRATEGIES; 1.1 INTRODUCTION; 1.2 COVALENT BIOCONJUGATION STRATEGIES; 1.2.1 Carboxyl Modifications; 1.2.2 Carbonyl Functional Groups; 1.2.3 Amine Modifications; 1.2.4 Thiol Modifications; 1.2.5 Hydroxyl Modifications; 1.2.6 Native Chemical Ligation and Expressed Protein Ligation; 1.2.7 Cross-linking Reagents for Bioconjugation; 1.2.8 Bioorthogonal Reactions; 1.2.9 Bioconjugation Via Transition Metal-catalyzed/Mediated Reactions

1.2.10 Other Covalent Bioconjugation Methods1.3 NONCOVALENT BIOCONJUGATION STRATEGIES; 1.3.1 Biotin-(Strept)Avidin System; 1.3.2 Electrostatic Interactions; 1.3.3 Metal-mediated Non-covalent Conjugation; 1.3.4 Hybridization Method; 1.4 CONCLUSIONS AND OUTLOOK; REFERENCES; SECTION II POLYMER BIOCONJUGATES; 2 BIOCONJUGATES BASED ON POLY(ETHYLENE GLYCOL)S AND POLYGLYCEROLS; 2.1 INTRODUCTION; 2.2 POLYETHYLENE GLYCOL-BASED BIOCONJUGATES; 2.2.1 PEG-protein Conjugates; 2.2.2 PEG-peptide Conjugates; 2.2.3 PEG-antibody Conjugates; 2.2.4 PEGylation of Cells and Tissues



2.2.5 PEG Conjugates of Oligonucleotides, Aptamers, and siRNAs2.2.6 PEG-drug Conjugates (PEG prodrugs); 2.2.7 PEGylation of Viruses; 2.3 LIMITATIONS OF PEG CONJUGATES; 2.4 POLYGLYCEROL-BASED CONJUGATES; 2.4.1 HPG-drug Conjugates; 2.4.2 HPG-peptide and Protein Conjugates; 2.4.3 HPG Glycoconjugates; 2.4.4 HPG-Red Blood Cell Conjugates for Antigen Protection; 2.5 CONCLUSIONS; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; 3 SYNTHETIC POLYMER BIOCONJUGATE SYSTEMS; 3.1 INTRODUCTION; 3.2 PEPTIDE OR PROTEIN BIOCONJUGATION TECHNIQUES; 3.2.1 Conjugation with Amino Acid; 3.2.2 Conjugation with Peptide Chain

3.2.3 Conjugation with Proteins3.3 CARBOHYDRATE BIOCONJUGATION TECHNIQUES; 3.4 CONJUGATION WITH NUCLEIC ACID; 3.5 CONJUGATION WITH DRUGS; 3.6 CONJUGATION WITH CONTRAST AGENTS; 3.6.1 Polymers for Magnetic Resonance Imaging; 3.6.2 Polymers for Optical Imaging; 3.6.3 Polymers for Nuclear imaging; 3.7 CONCLUSION AND PERSPECTIVE; REFERENCES; 4 NATURAL POLYMER BIOCONJUGATE SYSTEMS; 4.1 INTRODUCTION; 4.2 NATURAL POLYMER SYSTEMS; 4.2.1 Protein-origin Polymer Bioconjugates; 4.2.2 Polysaccharidic Polymer Bioconjugates; 4.3 CONCLUSION AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS; ACKNOWLEDGMENT; REFERENCES

5 DENDRIMER BIOCONJUGATES: SYNTHESIS AND APPLICATIONS5.1 INTRODUCTION-DENDRIMERS FOR BIOCONJUGATE CHEMISTRY; 5.2 DENDRIMER-DRUG CONJUGATES; 5.2.1 Motivation for the Development of Dendrimer-Drug Conjugates; 5.2.2 Dendrimer-DOX Conjugates; 5.2.3 Dendrimer-MTX Conjugates; 5.2.4 Dendrimer-TAX Conjugates; 5.2.5 Dendrimer-NAC Conjugates; 5.2.6 Dendrimer-Sulfonic Acids; 5.3 DENDRIMER-CARBOHYDRATE CONJUGATES; 5.3.1 Motivation for the Development of Dendrimer-Carbohydrate Conjugates; 5.3.2 Dendrimer-Mannose Conjugates; 5.3.3 Dendrimer-Galactose Conjugates; 5.3.4 Dendrimer-AcNA Conjugates

5.4 DENDRIMER CONJUGATES WITH IMAGING AGENTS

Sommario/riassunto

This book describes the chemistries involved in bioconjugation followed by an extensive review of all types of bioconjugates (polymers, dendrimers, nanoparticles, carbon nanotubes) reported in the literature for different bio-related applications. A section is devoted to the physico-chemical and biochemical properties of bioconjugates and implications in their uses. Finally, the book also provides a comprehensive account about the significance of bioconjugation - coverage that is lacking in many of the current resources available.



2.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910349342003321

Autore

Oleksiyenko Anatoly V

Titolo

Academic Collaborations in the Global Marketplace / / by Anatoly V. Oleksiyenko

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2019

ISBN

9783030231415

3030231410

Edizione

[1st ed. 2019.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (248 pages)

Collana

Knowledge Studies in Higher Education, , 2566-8315 ; ; 6

Disciplina

808.02

378.007

Soggetti

Education, Higher

School management and organization

International education

Comparative education

Knowledge management

Globalization

Higher Education

Organization and Leadership

International and Comparative Education

Knowledge Management

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

1. Linking Globally, Acting Locally: Changes and Challenges -- 2. Major Research University: A Case of Glonacal U -- 3. The Bureaucracy of Change: More Bureaucracy Than Change? -- 4. “Steering Core”: Strategy-Makers and Competing Agendas -- 5. “Developmental Periphery”: Embracing Markets, Defying Hierarchies -- 6. “Academic Heartland”: Epistemic Pressures, Entrepreneurial Responses -- 7. Synergies and Conflicts: Stimuli, Logistics, and Costs  -- 8. Glonacality of Research Universities -- Appendices. .

Sommario/riassunto

This book explains why conflict between the institutional and human agencies is an unavoidable outcome of competing local, national and



global agendas at a major research university. It illustrates this by means of a case-study of Glonacal U, a university which belongs to the category of exceptional institutions that excel due to an established organizational culture of academic freedom, research excellence, shared governance, and intellectual leadership. The book shows how such a university may succumb to anxiety when neoliberal managers seek to exploit stakeholder doubts about university sufficiency, relevance, and performance in national and global markets and hierarchies of knowledge products and status goods. As top-down pressure for strategic choices in scientific partnerships increases at the world-class university, grassroots resistance to centralization increases also in order to remind the research university leaders that intellectual work and academic freedom are interdependent and central to building capacities for impactful global science. Productive global linkages are prerogative of academics who take full responsibility for success of project implementation and outcomes in scholarship and practice.