Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
The Rule of Law
Pietro Costa ; Danilo Zolo (eds.)
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No disponible.
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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2007 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-1-4020-5744-1
ISBN electrónico
978-1-4020-5745-8
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2007
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer Netherlands 2007
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
The Rule of Law: A Critical Reappraisal
Danilo Zolo
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part I - Introductory Essays | Pp. 3-71
The Rule of Law: A Historical Introduction
Pietro Costa
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part I - Introductory Essays | Pp. 73-149
The Rule of Law and the “Liberties of the English”: The Interpretation of Albert Venn Dicey
Emilio Santoro
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part II - The Rule of Law in Europe and The United States | Pp. 153-199
Popular Sovereignty, the Rule of Law, and the “Rule of Judges” in the United States
Brunella Casalini
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part II - The Rule of Law in Europe and The United States | Pp. 201-236
Rechtsstaat and Individual Rights in German Constitutional History
Gustavo Gozzi
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part II - The Rule of Law in Europe and The United States | Pp. 237-259
État de Droit and National Sovereignty in France
Alain Laquièze
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part II - The Rule of Law in Europe and The United States | Pp. 261-291
Rechtsstaat and Constitutional Justice in Austria: Hans Kelsen's Contribution
Giorgio Bongiovanni
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part II - The Rule of Law in Europe and The United States | Pp. 293-319
The Past and the Future of the Rule of Law
Luigi Ferrajoli
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part III - The Contemporary Debate | Pp. 323-352
Beyond the Rule of Law: Judges' Tyranny or Lawyers' Anarchy?
Pier Paolo Portinaro
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part III - The Contemporary Debate | Pp. 353-369
The Rule of Law and Gender Difference
Anna Loretoni
The rich mechanistic enzymology of the cytochrome P450s has occupied chemists, biochemists, pharmacologists, and toxicologists for over three decades. Are we near to a detailed molecular understanding? We have attempted to convey in this chapter of the recent discoveries that fill many of the lacunas in our understanding of P450-catalyzed substrate oxidations. We now have a precise three-dimensional structure of the ferrous-oxygenated state, and ample spectroscopic characterization of the ferric-peroxo anion and ferric-hydroperoxo intermediates. In the exogenous oxidant driven pathway, an archaeal P450 allowed facile observation of the formation and breakdown of the “Compound I” ferryl-oxo state. Yet much remains. Stabilization and characterization of the “Compound I” state in the dioxygen reaction has not yet been achieved. With the ability to separate, through time and temperature, the population of multiple “active oxygen” intermediates in P4 50 catalysis, it remains to precisely define the reactivity profiles of each state and thereby realize a mapping of observed metabolic profiles to specific states in the reaction cycle. An overriding revelation has been the subtle way in which Nature controls the reactivity of atmospheric dioxygen, electrons, and transition metal through delicate hydrogen-bonding interactions. Thus, in a Periclesian control of mechanism, the cytochromes P450 utilize a variety of proton pathways to finely tune this versatile catalyst for critical physiological processes.
Part III - The Contemporary Debate | Pp. 371-386