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Molecular Biology of the Cell Reviews

October 13, 2011 by biotechbillboard.com 

Molecular Biology of the Cell

For nearly a quarter century Molecular Biology of the Cell has been the leading cell biology textbook. This tradition continues with the new Fifth Edition, which has been completely revised and updated to describe our current, rapidly advancing understanding of cell biology. To list but a few examples, a large amount of new material is presented on epigenetics; stem cells; RNAi; comparative genomics; the latest cancer therapies; apoptosis (now its own separate chapter); and cell cycle control and the mechanics of M phase (now integrated into one chapter).

The hallmark features of Molecular Biology of the Cell have been retained, such as its consistent and comprehensive art program, clear concept headings, and succinct section summaries. Additionally, in response to extensive feedback from readers, the Fifth Edition now includes several new features.

It is now more portable. Chapters 1-20 are printed and Chapters 21-25, covering multicellular systems, are provided as PDF files on the free Media DVD-ROM which accompanies the book.* And for the first time, Molecular Biology of the Cell now contains end-of-chapter questions. These problems, written by John Wilson and Tim Hunt, emphasize a quantitative approach and the art of reasoning from experiments, and they will help students review and extend their knowledge derived from reading the textbook. The Media DVD-ROM, which is packaged with every copy of the book, contains PowerPoint® presentations with all of the figures, tables and micrographs from the text (available as JPEGs too). Also included is the Media Player, which plays over 125 movies—animations, videos, and molecular models—all with voice-over narration. A new reader-friendly feature is the integration of media codes throughout the text that link directly to relevant videos and animations. The Media DVD-ROM holds the multicellular systems chapters (21-25) of the text as well.

By skillfully extracting the fundamental concepts from this enormous and ever-growing field, the authors tell the story of cell biology, and thereby create a coherent framework through which readers may approach and enjoy this subject that is so central to all of biology.

* There is also a reference edition of Molecular Biology of the Cell, Fifth Edition (ISBN 978-0-8153-4111-6) that contains Chapters 1-25 entirely in printed format.

List Price: $ 155.00

Price: $ 130.00

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Comments

3 Responses to “Molecular Biology of the Cell Reviews”

  1. A. LUJAN on October 13th, 2011 8:05 pm
    30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Great, but Last 5 Chapters are Electronic, January 12, 2008
    By 
    A. LUJAN (USA) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Molecular Biology of the Cell (Hardcover)

    GREAT book, but the only problem is that the last 5 chapters are in PDF format on an attached CD rather than in print (they did this to make the book more portable). If you want the full print version, buy the Reference edition.

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  2. Bob Carpenter on October 13th, 2011 8:56 pm
    20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Comprehensible by Non-Specialist, September 16, 2009
    By 
    Bob Carpenter (New York, NY) –
    This review is from: Molecular Biology of the Cell (Hardcover)

    [Reviewing 5th Edition, Chapters 1-7] I’m a Ph.D. computer scientist working on an NIH grant in text mining biomedical literature, so I thought I should bone up on the underlying science. The first seven chapters of this book are just what I needed. The first overview chapter is an excellent standalone introduction to the cell and genomics/proteomics and their ilk. After a two-chapter very comprehensible introduction to biochemistry (strong emphasis on thermodynamics/energy and bonding/structure) and protein structures, the next chapters lay out the entire process from DNA to protein, including expression control.

    It’s slow reading (it takes me an hour or more to read 10 pages), but very clearly written, and very thorough. The diagrams and accompanying text are amazingly clear and helpful. (There are also animations, but I’ve never looked at the DVD.) The diagrams and their long captions are often supplementary in that they add details that are not in the body of the text.

    I had read the same sections of the 4th Edition a few years ago. The 5th edition adds substantial new material starting with the chapter on proteins. Ironically, the 5th edition is more speculative, because the more we find out about gene expression, the further away full understanding seems to be. The book does a nice job of balancing what’s known fairly certainly with speculative guesses about things like chromatin structure.

    This time, I think I’ll keep going. The sections of the rest of the book I’ve browsed when they’ve been cross-referenced are also excellent.

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  3. Doc Dave "Doc Dave" on October 13th, 2011 9:18 pm
    77 of 92 people found the following review helpful:
    2.0 out of 5 stars
    another part of the problem with academic book publishing, February 11, 2008
    By 

    The publishers have made the standard edition (ISBN-10: 0815341059) of MBOTC more “portable” by not printing the final 5 chapters of the book, but including them as electronic files on the DVD. While these chapters are included, in print, in this reference edition (0815341113), take a look at the price differential between the two. If, as publishers might like us to believe, portability is such a great feature for a textbook, then why should students be expected to pay a premium for this less than portable reference edition?

    The chapters in question are:
    21-Sexual Reproduction: Meiosis, Germ Cells, and Fertilization
    22-Development of Multicellular Organisms
    23-Specialized Tissues, Stem Cells, and Tissue Renewal
    24-Pathogens, Infection, and Innate Immunity
    25-The Adaptive Immune System

    With the 4th edition there were 25 printed chapters and 1616 pages: $5.68/printed chapter, or ~8.8 cents/page based on my calculations using list price info. With the regular 5th edition, 20 printed chapters, 1268 pages: $7.10/printed chapter, or ~11.2 cents/page. And with the reference edtition, 25 printed chapters and 1728 pages: $8.36/printed chapter, or ~12.1 cents/page. So the page cost for this reference edition has increased by over 1/3 as compared to the last edition, and is about 8% higher than for the regular 5th edition. Admittedly, I am a major geek for actually doing these calculations.

    I am giving the book 2 stars for content, because it really is a solid resource for learning molecular biology. However, with so many students carrying a heavy burden of debt upon graduation, it’s a shame to see the continuing trend of exorbitant prices for the best texts, making them just another contributor to the problems with education today.

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