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The HDL Handbook. Biological Functions and Clinical Implications. Edition No. 2

  • Book

  • October 2018
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5341962
The HDL Handbook: Biological Functions to Clinical Implications brings laboratory research in HDL from bench to bedside in this needed resource for researchers and clinicians studying cholesterol, lipids, epidemiology, biochemistry, molecular medicine, and pathophysiology of cardiovascular diseases. In addition, researchers and clinicians working with an aging population, corporate researchers, post-doctorates; medical students and graduate students will find this publication useful because the scope of coverage includes basic science, genetics, epidemiology, and treatment of HDL cholesterol as well as potential targets to modify HDL cholesterol.

Table of Contents

1. Role of phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP) in HDL remodelling and Atherosclerosis
2. The role of CETP in HDL metabolism
3. The physiological role of CETP in HDL molecule metabolism
4. HDL and reverse cholesterol transport: Physiological modulation
5. Serum Paraoxonase PON1 and its interactions with HDL: Relationship between PON1 and oxidative stress
6. Paraoxonase PON1 and its interaction with HDL: Molecular structures of PON1 and HDL
7. Apoliopoprotein A-I mutations
8. The Scavenger Receptor Class B Type I: An HDL Receptor Involved in Lipid Transport and HDL Dependent Signaling
9. HDL and its mimetic peptides: Novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of inflammatory vascular disease
10. Sterol efflux by ABCA1 and ABCG1
11. Possible roles of oxidized HDL: Structural change of HDL particle by oxidative modification and its contribution to vascular diseases
12. Pre?1-HDL: Conversion to and from spherical ?-migrating HDL in human plasma
13. Determination of circulating native and denaturated HDL concentrations and its clinical implications

Authors

Tsugikazu Komoda Visiting Professor, Toho University School of Medicine, Japan. Dr. Komoda is a visiting professor at Toho University School of Medicine in Japan. He has extensive expertise with research in alkaline phosphatase, amylase, and oxidized HDL. He co-operated the intestinal alkaline phosphatase at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. He is the recipient of the Kodama Memorial Award from Japanese Society of Electrophoresis.