Acetylcholinrezeptor : Receptor and ion-channel trafficking : cell biology of ligand-gated and voltage-sensitive ion channels (molecular and cellular neurobiology) / edited by Stephen J. Moss, Jeremy Henley
2002
1
Acetylcysteine -- therapeutic use : The therapeutic use of N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) in medicine / Richard Eugene Frye, Michael Berk, editors
2019
1
Acetylene : Polyynes : synthesis, properties, and applications / edited by Franco Cataldo
An organic compound used often as a reagent in organic synthesis, as a flavoring agent, and in tanning. It has been demonstrated as an intermediate in the metabolism of acetone and its derivatives in isolated cell preparations, in various culture media, and in vivo in certain animals
Cell surface proteins that bind acetylcholine with high affinity and trigger intracellular changes influencing the behavior of cells. Cholinergic receptors are divided into two major classes, muscarinic and nicotinic, based originally on their affinity for nicotine and muscarine. Each group is further subdivided based on pharmacology, location, mode of action, and/or molecular biology
Funeral rites and ceremonies -- Greece -- Achaia : Towards a social bioarchaeology of the Mycenaean period : a biocultural analysis of human remains from the Voudeni Cemetery, Achaea, Greece / Ioanna Moutafi
Achaia (Greece) -- Antiquities : Towards a social bioarchaeology of the Mycenaean period : a biocultural analysis of human remains from the Voudeni Cemetery, Achaea, Greece / Ioanna Moutafi
Human remains (Archaeology) -- Greece -- Achaia : Towards a social bioarchaeology of the Mycenaean period : a biocultural analysis of human remains from the Voudeni Cemetery, Achaea, Greece / Ioanna Moutafi
Achaia (Roman province) -- Antiquities : The Mycenaean Cemetery at Agios Vasileios, Chalandritsa, in Achaea / Konstantina Aktypi with contributions by Olivia A. Jones and Vivian Staikou
Tombs -- Greece -- Achaia (Roman province) : The Mycenaean Cemetery at Agios Vasileios, Chalandritsa, in Achaea / Konstantina Aktypi with contributions by Olivia A. Jones and Vivian Staikou