Descripción del título
In this book the first three chapters outline the chemistry of nickel and heme largely associated with anaerobic life and believed to represent reactions which took place some 3-4x109years ago. Nickel has disappeared from the chemistry of man. The fascinating detail of the "primitive" catalysts is of interest to industrial society since very simple feed-stock is used, hydrogen, carbon monoxide and sulphate for example. The fourth chapter switches attention to a metal which became valuable later in evolution, copper, and which is involved with the use of dioxygen. It also has extremely interesting catalytic sites in enzymes. The essence of the volume lies in an appreciation of metallo- enzymes and their changing roles as the environment changed
Monografía
monografia Rebiun05076995 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun05076995 121227s1998 gw | s |||| 0|eng d 9783540695950 978-3-540-69595-0 10.1007/BFb0103372 doi UAM 991007780930904211 UPM 991005575996304212 UCAR 991007918469704213 BUC Bioinorganic Chemistry recurso electrónico] Trace Element Evolution from Anaerobes to Aerobes edited by Michael J. Clarke, John B. Goodenough, Christian K. Jrgensen, David M. P. Mingos, Graham A. Palmer, Peter J. Sadler, Raymond Weiss, Robert J. P. Williams Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg 1998 Berlin, Heidelberg Berlin, Heidelberg Springer Berlin Heidelberg X, 209 p. online resource X, 209 p. Chemistry and Materials Science (Springer-11644) Structure and Bonding 0081-5993 91 Biological Nickel -- Nickel in F430 -- Hemeproteins in anaerobes -- Evolutionary aspects of copper binding centers in copper proteins In this book the first three chapters outline the chemistry of nickel and heme largely associated with anaerobic life and believed to represent reactions which took place some 3-4x109years ago. Nickel has disappeared from the chemistry of man. The fascinating detail of the "primitive" catalysts is of interest to industrial society since very simple feed-stock is used, hydrogen, carbon monoxide and sulphate for example. The fourth chapter switches attention to a metal which became valuable later in evolution, copper, and which is involved with the use of dioxygen. It also has extremely interesting catalytic sites in enzymes. The essence of the volume lies in an appreciation of metallo- enzymes and their changing roles as the environment changed Animal Physiology Biochemistry Chemistry, inorganic Cytology Life sciences Libros electrónicos Goodenough, John B. editor Jrgensen, Christian K. editor Mingos, David M. P. editor Palmer, Graham A. editor Sadler, Peter J. editor Weiss, Raymond. editor Williams, Robert J. P. editor Clarke, Michael J. editor SpringerLink (Online service) SpringerLink eBooks (Servicio en línea) Springer eBooks Springer eBooks Printed edition 9783540635482