James D. Watson was Director of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory from 1968 to 1993 and is now its President. He spent his undergraduate years at the University of Chicago and received his Ph.D. in 1950 from Indiana University. Between 1950 and 1953, he did postdoctoral research in Copenhagen and Cambridge, England. While at Cambridge, he began the collaboration that resulted in the elucidation of the double-helical structure of DNA in 1953. (For this discovery, Watson, Francis Crick, and Maurice Wilkins were awarded the Nobel Prize in 1962.) Later in1953, he went to the California Institute of Technology. He moved to Harvard in 1955, where he taught and did research on RNA synthesis and protein synthesis until 1976. He was the first Director of the National Center for Genome Research of the National Institutes of Health from 1989 to 1992. Dr. Watson was sole author of the first, second, and third editions of Molecular Biology of the Gene, and a co-author of the fourth edition. These were published in 1965, 1970, 1976, and 1987 respectively. Watson has also been involved in two other textbooks: he was one of the original authors of Molecular Biology of the Cell and is also an author of Recombinant DNA: a short course.
Tania A. Baker is the Whitehead Professor of Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. She received a B.S. in biochemistry from the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and a Ph.D. in biochemistry from Stanford University in 1988. Her graduate research was carried out in the laboratory of Professor Arthur Kornberg and focused on mechanisms of initiation of DNA replication. She did postdoctoral research in the laboratory of Dr. Kiyoshi Mizuuchi at the National Institutes of Health, studying the mechanism and regulation of DNA transposition. Her current research explores mechanisms and regulation of genetic recombination, enzyme-catalyzed protein unfolding, and ATP-dependent protein degradation. Professor Baker received the 2001 Eli Lilly Research Award from the American Society of Microbiology and the 2000 MIT School of Science Teaching Prize for Undergraduate Education. She is co-author (with Arthur Kornberg) of the book DNA Replication, Second Edition.
Stephen P. Bell is a Professor of Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an Assistant Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He received B.A. degrees from the Department of Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, and Cell Biology and the Integrated Sciences Program at Northwestern University and a Ph.D. in biochemistry at the University of California, Berkeley in 1991. His graduate research was carried out in the laboratory of Robert Tjian and focused on eukaryotic transcription. He did postdoctoral research in the laboratory of Dr. Bruce Stillman at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, working on the initiation of eukaryotic DNA replication. His current research focuses on the mechanisms controlling the duplication of eukaryotic chromosomes. Professor Bell received the 2001 ASBMB-Schering Plough Scientific Achievement Award, and the Everett Moore Baker Memorial Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching at MIT in 1998.
Alexander Gann is Editorial Director of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, and a faculty member of the Watson School of Biological Sciences at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. He received his B.Sc in microbiology from University College London and a Ph.D. in molecular biology from The University of Edinburgh in 1989. His graduate research was carried out in the laboratory of Noreen Murray and focused on DNA recognition by restriction enzymes. He did postdoctoral research in the laboratory of Mark Ptashne at Harvard, working on transcriptional regulation, and that of Jeremy Brockes at the Ludwig Institute of Cancer Research at University College London, where he worked on newt limb regeneration. He was a Lecturer at Lancaster University, England, from 1996 to 1999, before moving to Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. He is co-author (with Mark Ptashne) of the book Genes & Signals (2002).
Michael Levine is a Professor of Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of California, Berkeley, and is also Co-Director at the Center for Integrative Genomics. He received his B.A. from the Department of Genetics at U.C. Berkeley, and his Ph.D. with Alan Garen in the Department of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry from Yale Universityin 1981. As a postdoctoral fellow with Walter Gehring and Gerry Rubin from 1982- 1984, he studied the molecular genetics of Drosophila development. Professor Levine's research group currently studies the gene networks responsible for the gastrulation of the Drosophila these two species should be italicized and Ciona (sea squirt) embryos. He holds the F. Williams Chair in Genetics and Development at U.C. Berkeley. He was awarded the Monsanto Prize in Molecular Biology from the National Academy of Sciences in 1996, and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1996 and the National Academy of Sciences in 1998.
Richard M. Losick is the Maria Moors Cabot Professor of Biology, a Harvard College Professor, and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor in the Faculty of Arts & Sciences at Harvard University. He received his A.B. in chemistry at Princeton University and his Ph.D. in biochemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Upon completion of his graduate work, Professor Losick was named a Junior Fellow of the Harvard Society of Fellows when he began his studies on RNA polymerase and the regulation of gene transcription in bacteria. Professor Losick is a past Chairman of the Departments of Cellular and Developmental Biology and Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University. He received the Camille and Henry Dreyfuss Teacher-Scholar Award, is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology, and a former Visiting Scholar of the Phi Beta Kappa Society.
作为基础知识的梳理和学习之用,这本书无疑是很给力的。 从章节架构内含的相互联系可以看出作者和编辑很是努力了一把的。 任何具备一些常识的人想要进入分子生物学专业都可以从这本书的序章开始,一点一点,一步一步深入进去。 当合上书本,那些巧妙地机制原理生动地在脑中一一...
评分作为基础知识的梳理和学习之用,这本书无疑是很给力的。 从章节架构内含的相互联系可以看出作者和编辑很是努力了一把的。 任何具备一些常识的人想要进入分子生物学专业都可以从这本书的序章开始,一点一点,一步一步深入进去。 当合上书本,那些巧妙地机制原理生动地在脑中一一...
评分作为基础知识的梳理和学习之用,这本书无疑是很给力的。 从章节架构内含的相互联系可以看出作者和编辑很是努力了一把的。 任何具备一些常识的人想要进入分子生物学专业都可以从这本书的序章开始,一点一点,一步一步深入进去。 当合上书本,那些巧妙地机制原理生动地在脑中一一...
评分作为基础知识的梳理和学习之用,这本书无疑是很给力的。 从章节架构内含的相互联系可以看出作者和编辑很是努力了一把的。 任何具备一些常识的人想要进入分子生物学专业都可以从这本书的序章开始,一点一点,一步一步深入进去。 当合上书本,那些巧妙地机制原理生动地在脑中一一...
评分作为基础知识的梳理和学习之用,这本书无疑是很给力的。 从章节架构内含的相互联系可以看出作者和编辑很是努力了一把的。 任何具备一些常识的人想要进入分子生物学专业都可以从这本书的序章开始,一点一点,一步一步深入进去。 当合上书本,那些巧妙地机制原理生动地在脑中一一...
在我看来,一本优秀的参考书,其价值往往体现在它能陪伴你走过不同学习阶段。我最初是以期末考试为目标来阅读它的,那时候主要关注的是定义和核心机制的准确性。但随着时间的推移,当我开始接触更复杂的生物信息学分析和蛋白质工程项目时,我发现这本书又重新焕发了价值。我不再是去寻找某个特定的定义,而是回头去查阅它对某个信号通路在进化上保守性的讨论,或者它对某个经典实验设计思路的剖析。每次重读,总能从先前忽略的角落里发现新的洞见,仿佛这本书的每一页都蕴含着不止一层的含义。它就像是一部详尽的“分子世界百科全书”,其内容布局和组织逻辑,使得它能够持续地为不同层次的学习者提供深度支持,它的使用价值远远超出了一个普通教材的范畴,更像是一个可以随时查阅和参考的、可靠的知识基石。
评分这本书的语言风格,初看起来可能略显古板,充满了学术论文特有的精准和克制,但这恰恰是我所青睐的。它避免了那些为了吸引眼球而采取的夸张或模糊的表达,每一个句子都像是一个精心打磨的逻辑模块,直接有效地传递信息。我尤其喜欢它在处理那些尚未完全解决的科学争议或理论模型时的态度——它会公正地呈现不同的假说,并分析各自的优缺点和支持的证据,而不是强行给出一个“标准答案”。这种严谨的科学精神贯穿始终,培养了读者批判性思维的能力。它教导的不仅是分子生物学的知识,更是一种对待科学真理应有的审慎和求证的态度。对于一个希望将此领域作为自己未来研究方向的人来说,这种思维上的熏陶,比死记硬背的知识点要宝贵得多,它塑造了我对科学探索的底层认知框架。
评分说实话,我是在一个推荐列表中偶然看到它的,当时我正处于对基础生物化学感到迷茫的阶段,迫切需要一本能将“结构”与“功能”紧密结合起来的参考书。这本书的优势在于其强大的深度和广度并存的叙事能力。它不是那种只停留在概念表层的科普读物,而是深入到分子层面的每一个细节,却又时刻不忘将这些细节置于更宏大的生物学背景之下进行解读。比如,当它讨论到基因组的组织和变异时,作者不仅仅是描述了染色体的结构,而是结合了大量的实验证据和前沿研究成果,去解释为什么特定的结构会产生特定的功能,以及这些结构在进化过程中是如何被筛选和塑造的。阅读体验非常扎实,感觉每翻过一页,知识的密度都在悄无声息地增加,这对于我这种追求知识的“实用主义者”来说,简直是量身定制。唯一的挑战可能是,它要求读者有一定的预备知识基础,否则初次接触可能会感到信息量过载,需要反复阅读和标记重点。
评分我习惯于在阅读学术书籍时,频繁地在不同章节之间进行跳转和交叉引用,以建立更全面的认知网络。这本书在这方面做得非常出色。它的章节之间的衔接处理得非常自然流畅,使得知识的“迁移”成本极低。举个例子,当你读到关于修复机制的那一章时,你会发现作者在引入新概念的同时,会巧妙地回顾之前已经介绍过的酶促反应动力学或者蛋白质折叠的基础知识点,这种回顾不是简单的重复,而是基于新情境的深化理解。这种设计极大地帮助我巩固了记忆,避免了知识点的“孤岛化”。更让我欣赏的是,它对实验方法的介绍,不是简单地提及结果,而是会阐述背后的科学逻辑和技术原理,比如限制性内切酶是如何被发现和应用于基因克隆的,这种对“如何知道”的强调,极大地激发了我对实验科学的兴趣,让我不再满足于“是什么”的表面认知。
评分这本书的封面设计就透露出一种严谨而深邃的气息,那种经典的深蓝色调,配上精美的分子结构图,让人一看就知道这是一部硬核的学术著作。我是在为我的分子生物学课程做准备时接触到它的,一开始还有些担心内容会过于晦涩难懂,毕竟“分子生物学”这个领域本身就充满了复杂的机制和令人头疼的术语。然而,初读之下,我发现作者在处理这些复杂概念时,展现出了惊人的清晰度和条理性。他们似乎有一种魔力,能将那些原本在教科书上读起来像天书一样的DNA复制、转录、翻译过程,一步步拆解,用非常直观的类比和精妙的图示,将它们组织成一个逻辑严密的叙事链条。特别是对于基因调控网络那几章,我花了很长时间去消化,但最终发现,正是通过这本书详尽的阐述,我才真正理解了生命体内部那个精妙的、动态平衡的控制系统是如何运作的。它不仅仅是在罗列事实,更是在构建一个完整的、可推演的知识体系,让人在学习的过程中,不断感受到探索未知的兴奋感。
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