05349oam 2200673I 450 991045876940332120200520144314.01-4398-5882-90-429-16593-51-4398-1604-210.1201/EBK1439816035 (CKB)2670000000035709(EBL)565951(OCoLC)670603145(SSID)ssj0000414005(PQKBManifestationID)11319722(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000414005(PQKBWorkID)10385121(PQKB)10354247(MiAaPQ)EBC565951(Au-PeEL)EBL565951(CaPaEBR)ebr10405052(CaONFJC)MIL693165(OCoLC)701521488(EXLCZ)99267000000003570920180331d2010 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrChitin, chitosan, oligosaccharides and their derivatives biological activities and applications /Se-Kwon KimBoca Raton :Taylor & Francis,2010.1 online resource (668 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-4398-5881-0 1-322-61883-6 1-4398-1603-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Front cover; Contents; Preface; Editor; About the Book; Contributors; Part I: The Sources and Productionof Chitin and Chitosan Derivatives; Chapter 1: Chitin and Chitosanfrom Terrestrial Organisms; Chapter 2: Chitin and Chitosan fromMarine Organisms; Chapter 3: Chitin and Chitosanfrom Microorganisms; Chapter 4: Enzymatic Productionof Chitin from Crustacean Shell Waste; Chapter 5: Continuous Productionof Chitooligosaccharidesby Enzymatic Hydrolysis; Chapter 6: Biosynthesis of Cellulose-Chitosan Composite; Part II: Physical and Chemical Aspectsof Chitin and Chitosan DerivativesChapter 7: Chemical Derivatizationof Chitosan for Plasmid DNADelivery: Present and FutureChapter 8: X-Ray Diffraction Studiesof Chitin, Chitosan, and Their Derivatives; Chapter 9: Mechanical Properties ofChitosan and Chitosan-Poly(Vinyl Alcohol) Blend Films; Chapter 10: Electrostatic Propertiesof Chitosan; Chapter 11: Applications of MassSpectrometry to AnalyzeStructure and Bioactivityof Chitooligosaccharides; Chapter 12: The Use of Various Typesof NMR and IR Spectroscopyfor Structural Characterizationof Chitin and Chitosan; Part III: Structural Modifications of Chitinand Chitosan DerivativesChapter 13: Chemical Modificationsof Chitosan Intended forBiomedical ApplicationsChapter 14: Enzymatic Modificationsof Chitin and Chitosan; Part IV: Biological Activities of Chitinand Chitosan Derivatives; Chapter 15: Antimicrobial Activityof Chitin, Chitosan,and Their Oligosaccharides; Chapter 16: Anti-Inflammatory Activityof Chitin, Chitosan, and Their Derivatives; Chapter 17: Chitosan Scaffolds forBone Regeneration; Chapter 18: Antioxidative Activity ofChitosan, Chitooligosaccharidesand Their Derivatives; Chapter 19: Effects of Chitin, Chitosan,and Their Derivatives onHuman HemostasisChapter 20: Antihypertensive Actions ofChitosan and Its DerivativesChapter 21: Anticancer Activity andTherapeutic Applicationsof Chitosan Nanoparticles; Chapter 22: Antidiabetic Activity andCholesterol-LoweringEffect of Chitin, Chitosan,and Their Derivatives; Part V: Biomedical Applications of Chitinand Chitosan Derivatives; Chapter 23: Chitin/ChitosanOligosaccharides: Effective Substrates for Functional Analysis of Chitinases/Chitosanases; Chapter 24: Low Molecular WeightWater-Soluble Chitosanwith Free Amine Groupfor Drug DeliveryChapter 25: Chitosan/ChitosanDerivatives as Carriersand Immunoadjuvantsin Vaccine DeliveryChapter 26: Chitosan-Conjugated DNANanoparticle DeliverySystems for Gene Therapy; Chapter 27: Chitinolytic Enzymes fromthe Moderately ThermophilicBacterium Ralstoniasp. A-471: Characterizationand Application; Chapter 28: Chitosan and ChitosanDerivatives as DNAand siRNA Carriers; Chapter 29: Metabolic Pathway of Chitinand Its Oligosaccharides inMarine Bacterium Vibrios; Chapter 30: Medical Applications of Chitinand Chitosan: Going ForwardChapter 31: Radiation Functionalizationand Applications of Chitosanand Its DerivativesBiopolymers found in marine animals and plants offer tremendous, largely untapped pharmaceutical potential. Research shows that these biopolymers can be used to combat various infectious as well as inflammatory, oxidative, and carcinogenic factors. Chitin, Chitosan, Oligosaccharides and Their Derivatives: Biological Activities and Applications covers the key aspects of these therapeutically valuable biopolymers and their derivatives, namely, their properties, sources, production, and applications in food science and technology as well as biological, biomedical, indChitinChitosanElectronic books.Chitin.Chitosan.573.7/74Kim Se-Kwon.780947FlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910458769403321Chitin, chitosan, oligosaccharides and their derivatives1951983UNINA04267nam 2200733 a 450 991013964980332120240516053011.01-283-16552-X97866131655273-11-023434-310.1515/9783110234343(CKB)2550000000036067(EBL)689686(OCoLC)753966046(SSID)ssj0000621324(PQKBManifestationID)11429392(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000621324(PQKBWorkID)10616381(PQKB)11662831(MiAaPQ)EBC689686(WaSeSS)Ind00019043(DE-B1597)122468(OCoLC)747181036(DE-B1597)9783110234343(Au-PeEL)EBL689686(CaPaEBR)ebr10468350(CaONFJC)MIL316552(EXLCZ)99255000000003606720110603d2010 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtccrModality and mood in romance modal interpretation, mood selection, and mood alternation /edited by Martin G. Becker and Eva-Maria Remberger1st ed.Berlin De Gruyter20101 online resource (251 p.)Linguistische Arbeiten,0344-6727 ;533Description based upon print version of record.3-11-023433-5 Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Frontmatter -- Table of contents -- Modality and Mood in Romance: An introduction -- I. Modal interpretation -- Modal readings of sentence connectives in German and Portuguese -- 'Modal uses' of the Italian imperfetto and the Spanish imperfecto: a comparison -- Modal non-finite relatives in Romance -- Epistemic modality and evidentiality and their definition on a deictic basis -- Where mood, modality and illocution meet: the morphosyntax of Romance conjectures -- II. Mood selection and mood alternation -- Modality, context change potential and mood selection in European Portuguese -- On the (un)stability of mood distribution in Romance -- Grammaticalization and language comparison in the Romance mood system -- Principles of mood change in evaluative contexts: the case of French -- BackmatterDieser Sammelband enthält eine Auswahl von Forschungsbeiträgen, die auf dem 30. Deutschen Romanistentag 2007 in Wien innerhalb der Sektion "Modus und Modalität in den romanischen Sprachen" vorgestellt wurden. Dieser Titel nahm Bezug auf Palmers bekannte Monographie Mood and Modality, wobei für die Publikation nun die Reihenfolge umgekehrt und die Modalität als erstes Konjunkt vorangestellt wird, da sie als fundamentale Kategorie Ausgangspunkt der wissenschaftlichen Betrachtung sein soll. Die untersuchten Sprachen umfassen das Portugiesische, Italienische, Spanische, Rumänische, Katalanische und Französische. Der erste Teil des Bandes befasst sich mit den Interpretationsmöglichkeiten von Modalität sowohl einzelsprachlich als auch vergleichend und berücksichtigt dabei insbesondere ihre Beziehungen zur Kategorie Tempus, zu Satzkonnektoren, nicht-finiten Relativsätzen, Evidentialität und Epistemizität sowie zur Illokution. Der zweite Teil stellt Analysen einzelsprachlicher Phänomenbereiche der Modusselektion und Modusalternation vor. Alle Beiträge diskutieren den kategoriellen Status und die semantischen Effekte von Modalität und Modus sowie deren Wechselbeziehungen unter Bezugnahme auf eine Vielfalt neuerer theoretischer Ansätze. Linguistische Arbeiten (Max Niemeyer Verlag) ;533.Modality (Linguistics)Linguistics.Mode.Romance Languages and Literature.Semantics.Syntax.Modality (Linguistics)440/.045440.0456ET 470rvkBecker Martin G104503Remberger Eva-Maria1045128MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910139649803321Modality and mood in romance2471148UNINA