Textbook of Ion Channels Volume I

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5-HT3 Receptors
Acetylcholine Receptors
Acid Sensing Ion Channels
Acrosome Reaction
advanced ion channel regulation research
Alternative Splicing
AMPA Receptor
AP Repolarization
ATP Activity
ATP Bind
ATP Channel
ATP Hydrolysis
ATP Inhibition
BK Channel
BK Channels
Ca-Activated Cl- Channels
Calcium Channels
calcium signaling pathways
Calmodulin Regulation
CaM Regulation
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cellular excitability disorders
CFTR Anion Channels
CFTR Modulator
channelopathies
Chloride Channels
CLC-Related Proteins
CNBD
CNG Channel
CRAC
CRAC Channel
CRAC Channels
cryo-EM Structures
Cystic Fibrosis
DE Loop
Diseases
DRG Neuron
ENaC
ENaC Channel
ENaC channels
Epilepsy
Epilepsy Phenotypes
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ER Pm Junction
Fast Block
G-protein
GABAA Receptors
GIRK Channels
Glycine Receptors
HCN Channel
HCN channels
Heart
Immune Cells
Insulin
Ion Channel
Ion Channels
Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors
IQ Domain
K channels
K2P Channel
KATP Channels
KCNQ channels
Kv Channels
M2 Helix
membrane electrophysiology
Membrane Lipids
Nerve Injury
neuronal signaling mechanisms
Nucleotide-Gated Channels
P2X Receptors
Pain
Pentameric Ligand Gated Ion Channels
pharmacological modulation
Piezo Channels
Potassium Channels
Proteins
Proton Channels
Receptors
Regulation
Ryanodine Receptors
S4 S5 Linker
S4 Segment
SK Channel
Sodium Channels
Sperm and Eggs
SR Ca
Transporters
Trp Channel
TRPA1
TRPC Channel
TRPC Channels
TRPM Channels
TRPM8
TRPV Channels
TRPV1 Channel
Voltage Sensor
Voltage Sensor Domain
Voltage Sensor S4

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367560492
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Textbook of Ion Channels is a set of three volumes providing a wide-ranging reference source on ion channels for students, instructors and researchers. Ion channels are membrane proteins that control the electrical properties of neurons and cardiac cells; mediate the detection and response to sensory stimuli like light, sound, odor, and taste; and regulate the response to physical stimuli like temperature and pressure. In non-excitable tissues, ion channels are instrumental for the regulation of basic salt balance that is critical for homeostasis. Ion channels are located at the surface membrane of cells, giving them the unique ability to communicate with the environment, as well as the membrane of intracellular organelles, allowing them to regulate internal homeostasis. Ion channels are fundamentally important for human health and diseases, and are important targets for pharmaceuticals in mental illness, heart disease, anesthesia, pain and other clinical applications. The modern methods used in their study are powerful and diverse, ranging from single ion-channel measurement techniques to models of ion channel diseases in animals, and human clinical trials for ion channel drugs.

Volume I, Part 1 covers fundamental topics such as the basic principles of ion permeation and selectivity, voltage-dependent, ligand-dependent, and mechano-dependent ion channel activation mechanisms, the mechanisms for ion channel desensitization and inactivation, and basic ion channel pharmacology and inhibition. Volume I, Part 2 offers a practical guide of cardinal methods for researching ion channels, including heterologous expression and voltage-clamp and patch-clamp electrophysiology; isolation of native currents using patch clamping; modeling ion channel gating, structures, and its dynamics; crystallography and cryo-electron microscopy; fluorescence and paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy methods; and genetics approaches in model organisms.

All three volumes give the reader an introduction to fundamental concepts needed to understand the mechanism of ion channels; a guide to the technical aspects of ion channel research; a modern guide to the properties of major ion channel families; and includes coverage of key examples of regulatory, physiological and disease roles for ion channels.

Jie Zheng, PhD, is a professor at the University of California Davis School of Medicine, where he has served as a faculty member in the Department of Physiology and Membrane Biology since 2004. Dr. Zheng earned a bachelor’s degree in physiology and biophysics (1988) and a master’s degree in biophysics (1991) at Peking University. He earned a PhD in physiology (1998) at Yale University, where he studied with Dr. Fredrick J. Sigworth on patch-clamp recording, single-channel analysis, and voltage-dependent activation mechanisms. He received his postdoctoral training at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) and the University of Washington during 1999–2003, working with Dr. William N. Zagotta on the cyclic nucleotide-gated channels activation mechanism and novel fluorescence techniques for ion channel research. Currently, Dr. Zheng’s research focuses on temperature-sensitive TRP channels.

Matthew C. Trudeau, PhD, is a professor in the Department of Physiology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland. He earned a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry and molecular biology in 1992 and a PhD in physiology in 1998 while working with Gail Robertson, PhD, at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His thesis work was on the properties of voltage-gated potassium channels in the human ether-aì-go-go related gene (hERG) family and the role of these channels in heart disease. Dr. Trudeau was a postdoctoral fellow with William Zagotta, PhD, at the University of Washington and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) in Seattle from 1998 to 2004, where he focused on the molecular physiology of cyclic nucleotide-gated ion channels, the mechanism of their modulation by calcium-calmodulin, and their role in an inherited form of vision loss. Currently, Dr. Trudeau’s work focuses on hERG potassium channels, their biophysical mechanisms, and their role in cardiac physiology and cardiac arrhythmias.