2 Edition. - Wiley, 2011. - 528 p. This new, fully revised second edition of Fundamentals of Molecular Virology is designed for university students learning about virology at the undergraduate or graduate level. Chapters cover most of the major virus families, emphasizing the unique features of each virus family. These chapters are designed to tell stories about the viruses...
2nd Edition. — Wiley, 2011. — 528 p. This new, fully revised second edition of Fundamentals of Molecular Virology is designed for university students learning about virology at the undergraduate or graduate level. Chapters cover most of the major virus families, emphasizing the unique features of each virus family. These chapters are designed to tell stories about the viruses...
CRC Press, 1996. — 226 p. — ISBN: 0849331269. This atlas presents more than 200 virus diagrams selected for their scientific content, clarity, originality, and historic, didactic, and aesthetic value. These diagrams represent the pathway of viral morphogenesis from cell infection to virus release, including in vitro assembly and formation of inclusion bodies. This is the first...
Interscience, 1959. - 620 p. - Recognized text without errors (OCR) Classical fundamental work on virology. Adams (1959) was published posthumously (p. vi, M. Delbrück): "Adams started writing this book several years ago, and even he, in spite of his tremendous knowledge, critical ability, and superb expository gifts, found the going very hard. On October 17, 1956, Mark Adams...
Academic Press, 2006. — 512 p. Advances in Virus Research, Volume 68 baculoviruses are perhaps unique among viruses in the breadth of their biotechnological applications: these insect specific viruses are used not only for insect pest management purposes, but also as laboratory research tools for production of recombinant proteins and for protein display, and as potential...
Wiley, 2013. — 402 p. Reverse genetics, the genetic manipulation of RNA viruses to create a wild-type or modified virus, has led to important advances in our understanding of viral gene function and interaction with host cells. Since many severe viral human and animal pathogens are RNA viruses, including those responsible for polio, measles, rotaviral diarrhoea and influenza...
Humana Press, 1998. — 431 p. The book comprises a wide range of experimental protocols that should be especially useful to new workers in herpes virology. Hopefully, it will also provide information for those with experience in the field, as well as those embarking on techniques that are new to them. Obviously the range of topics covered cannot be comprehensive, but we have...
2nd Ed. — Oxford University Press, Inc., 2006. — XIII+746 p. — ISBN13: 978-0-19-514850-3 This authoritative, timely, and comprehensively referenced compendium on the bacteriophages explores current views of how viruses infect bacteria. In combination with classical phage molecular genetics, new structural, genomic, and single-molecule technologies have rendered an explosion in...
Sixth Edition. - Elsevier, 2016. - 305 p. - ISBN: 978-0-12-801946-7 In the age of the Internet, why would anyone write a textbook about virology? Indeed, why would anyone write anything about virology? Virology isn’t dead yet (DiMaio, 2014), and neither are books. I encourage everyone to use the wonderful resource of the Internet to improve their knowledge of virology. I...
2nd Edition. — Wiley, 2013. — 512 p. The second edition of Virology is an accessible introduction designed to enable students to understand the principles of virus structure, replication and genetics. The aim of this book is to help the reader appreciate the relevance of virology in the modern world, including the fields of vaccines, anti-viral drugs and cancer. There is also a...
2nd Edition. — Wiley, 2013. — 512 p. The second edition of Virology is an accessible introduction designed to enable students to understand the principles of virus structure, replication and genetics. The aim of this book is to help the reader appreciate the relevance of virology in the modern world, including the fields of vaccines, anti-viral drugs and cancer. There is also a...
John Wiley & Sons, 2007. — 358 p. — ISBN: 0470023872. Virology: Principles and Applications is a clear and accessible introduction to this fast-moving field, providing a comprehensive resource enabling the reader to understand the key concepts surrounding this exciting subject. The reader is introduced to the principles of virus structure, replication and genetics, along with...
Springer, 2006. — 230 p. Structure and Replication of Hepatitis Delta Virus RNA HDV RNA Replication:Ancient Relic or Primer? HDV Ribozymes RNA Editing in Hepatitis Delta Virus Post-translational Modification of Delta Antigen of Hepatitis D Virus The Role of the HBV Envelope Proteins in the HDV Replication Cycle Prenylation of HDAg and Antiviral Drug Development Hepatitis Delta...
Elsevier, 2003. — 501 p. Over 50% of known flaviviruses have been associated with human disease. The Flavivirus genus constitutes some of the most serious human pathogens including Japanese encephalitis, dengue and yellow fever. Flaviviruses are known for their complex life cycles and epidemic spread, and are considered a globally-emergent viral threat.
3rd edition. — Oxford University Press, 2006. — 327 p. — ISBN: 978-0198566601 The first part of the text deals with the general principles of virology, including the properties of viruses, replication and genetics, along with disease and resistance. This is followed by chapters dedicated to specific groups of viruses, then special syndromes associated with susceptible groups....
President and Fellows of Harvard College, USA, 2017. — 385 p. — ISBN: 0674972082. Viruses are the most abundant biological entities on Earth, and arguably the most successful. They are not technically alive, but - as infectious vehicles of genetic information - they have a remarkable capacity to invade, replicate, and evolve within living cells. Synthesizing a large body of...
Oxford University Press, 2011. — 176 p. — (Very Short Introductions). Viruses are big news. From pandemics such as HIV, swine flu, and SARS, we are constantly being bombarded with information about new lethal infections. In this Very Short Introduction Dorothy Crawford demonstrates how clever these entities really are. From their discovery and the unravelling of their intricate...
Humana Press, Springer Science+Business Media, New York, 2014, 331 p., ISBN: 1493904272 Herpes Simplex Virus: Methods and Protocols provides a wide collection of protocols employed in various levels of herpes virus research, including basic protocols on growing viruses in cell culture and cloning, manipulating and preparing viral DNA. Other chapters describe approaches to...
Blackwell Publishing, 2007. - 531 p. This book, now in its sixth edition, provides a rounded introduction to viruses and the infections that they cause, and is aimed at undergraduate students at all levels and postgraduates wishing to learn about virology for the first time. It approaches the subject on a concept by concept basis, rather than considering each virus in turn. In...
6th edition. — Blackwell Publishing, 2007. — 536 p. Introduction to Modern Virology has been an established student text for over 25 years. Providing an integrated account of the subject across different host systems, with an emphasis on human and animal viruses, this book covers the field of virology from molecular biology to disease processes using a unique systems approach....
John and Bartlett Publishers, 2010. — 102 p. — ISBN: 978-0763781620. Written by two expert physicians in the field, Questions & Answers About Human Papilloma Virus(HPV) provides authoritative answers to the most commonly asked questions about HPV. This concise guide features current, easy-to-understand information on the virus, related cancers and other diseases, vaccination,...
2nd Edition. — Academic Press, 2020. — 410 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-816331-3. This book, Second Edition, explains the fundamental concepts surrounding viruses as complex populations during replication in infected hosts. Fundamental phenomena in virus behavior, such as adaptation to changing environments, capacity to produce disease, and the probability to be transmitted or respond...
2nd Edition. - Elsevier, 2008 . - 530 p. New viral diseases are emerging continuously. Viruses adapt to new environments at astounding rates. Genetic variability of viruses jeopardizes vaccine efficacy. For many viruses mutants resistant to antiviral agents or host immune responses arise readily, for example, with HIV and influenza.These variations are all of utmost importance...
Academic Press, 2020. — 1125 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-819400-3. Emerging and Reemerging Viral Pathogens: Fundamental and Basic Virology Aspects of Human, Animal and Plant Pathogens, Volume One presents new research information on viruses and their impact on the scientific community. It provides a reference book on certain viruses in humans, animals and vegetal, along with a...
Academic Press, 2020. — 367 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-814966-9. This book, Volume Two presents new research information on viruses and their impact on the scientific community. It provides a reference book on certain viruses in humans, animals and vegetal, along with a comprehensive discussion on interspecies interactions. The book then looks at the drug, vaccine and bioinformatical...
4th edition. — American Society for Microbiology, 2015 — 1060 p. The Science of Virology. The Infectious Cycle. Genomes and Genetics. Structure. Attachment and Entry. Synthesis of RNA from RNA Templates. Reverse Transcription and Integration. Synthesis of RNA from DNA Templates. Replication of DNA Genomes. Processing of Viral Pre-mRNA. Protein Synthesis. Intracellular...
4th Edition. - American Society for Microbiology, 2015. - 1060 p. - Principles of Virology is the leading virology textbook because it does more than collect and present facts about individual viruses. Instead, it facilitates an understanding of basic virology by examining the shared processes and capabilities of viruses. Using a set of representative viruses to present the...
Nova Biomedical, 2010. — 283 p. — (Virology Research Progress). Herpesviruses are currently being researched for use in medical treatment, especially in the areas of gene therapy & oncology. Research is also being done into interactions between viral & host proteins, the mechanisms involved in gene regulation, & to find out how herpesviruses establish, maintain, and reactivate...
Academic Press, 2019. — 483 p. — ISBN: 9780128154229. This book presents in-depth study information on the structure and functions of polymerases and their roles in the lifecycle of viruses, and as drug targets. Viral polymerases constitute a vital component in the lifecycle of many viruses, such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), hepatitis viruses, influenza virus, and...
Nova Science Publishers, 2017. — 139 p. Bacteriophages of Pathogenic Vibrios, Identification, Differentiation Bacteriophages as Biocontrol Agents in Meat and Meat Products A Synthesis of the Divalent Cation Requirements for Efficient Adsorption of Bacteriophage onto Bacterial Cells Isolation and Evaluation of the Lytic Spectrum of Bacteriophages Active Against Food-Borne...
Springer, 2018. - 442 p. - Volume 88 of Subcellular Biochemistry. The Subcellular Biochemistry series has recently embarked upon an almost encyclopaedic coverage of topics relating to the structure and function of macromolecular complexes (Volumes 82, 83 and 87). The present multi-author text covers numerous aspects of current research into molecular virology, with emphasis...
Oxford University Press, 2009. — 267 p. This impressive monograph by Edward Holmes opens with a quotation from La Peste, by Albert Camus: “Everyone knows that pestilences have a way of recurring in the world; yet somehow we find it hard to believe in ones that crash down on our heads from a blue sky.” This apt quotation might lead the reader to believe that the evolution and...
Springer, 2017. — 254 p. — ISBN10: 3319540505. — ISBN13: 978-3319540504. Bacteriophages: Practical Applications for Nature's Biocontrol' presents the latest information on uses in healthcare settings as well as animal husbandry, management and care of farm animals by using enhanced phages to replace antibiotics for growth promotion in animal feed or to prevent, control and...
Springer, 2004. — 354 p. Negative-strand RNA viruses, so named because of the polarity of their genomic RNA to mRNA, include important human and non-human pathogens. Reverse genetics, a technique that allows generation of recombinant viruses, was first developed for negative-strand RNA viruses in 1989. Since then, it has accelerated the pace of research on these viruses,...
Elsevier/Academic Press, 2012. — 1338 p. Ninth Report of the International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses Edited by:Andrew M.Q. King, Elliot Lefkowitz, Michael J. Adams and Eric B. Carstens. The practical need to partition the world of viruses into distinguishable, universally agreed upon entities is the ultimate justification for developing a virus classification system....
4th ed. Lippincott Williams&Wilkins, 2001. - 1381 p. General Virology The Origin of Viropogy Principles of Virology Principkes of Virus Structure Virus Entry and Uncoating Replication Strategies of RNA Viruses Replication Strategies of DNA Viruses Virus-Host Cell Interactions Virus Assembly Pathogenesis of Viral Infections Cell Transformation by Viruses The Immune Responce to...
6th edition (volume I + II). — Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2013. — 2582 p. — ISBN13: 978-1-4511-0563-6 This book is the authoritative reference book for virology, providing definitive coverage of all aspects of virology, including thorough coverage of virus biology as well as replication and medical aspects of specific virus families. With the regular outbreaks of influenza,...
Academic Press, 1981. — 421 p. This book covers in separate chapters the infections caused by each DNA virus family, including slow viruses diseases, as well as the system of Virus Information of the World Health Organization. It provides a comparative description of the principal physicochemical, molecular, structural, genetic, immunological, and biological characteristics of...
InTech, Croatia. 2012. - 266 p. — Recognized text without errors (OCR). ISBN: 978-953-51-0272-4 Bacteriophages reveals information on the organisms ranging from their biology to their applications in agriculture and medicine. Contributors address a variety of topics capturing information on advancing technologies in the field. The book starts with the biology and classification...
CRC-Press, 2005, 485 p., ISBN: 0849313368, PDF+OCR In response to the emergence of pathogenic bacteria that cannot be treated with current antibiotics, many researchers are revisiting the use of bacteriophages, or phages, to fight multidrug-resistant bacteria. Bacteriophages: Biology and Applications provides unparalleled, comprehensive information on bacteriophages and their...
Springer, 2013. — 358 p. — ISBN: 978-1-4614-7290-2 The Reverse Transcriptase (RT) of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) arguably ranks amongst one of the most extensively studied retroviral enzymes. Heterologous expression and purification of HIV-1 RT in the early eighties, approval of the first nucleoside analogue RT inhibitor (NRTI) in 1987, discovery of resistance...
World Scientific, 2010. - 502 p. There are three major types of human retroviruses, namely HIV, HTLV, and endogenous human retroviruses. This book presents the latest findings on the replication of these human retroviruses. This book is unique in that there has been no comparable book that integrates the findings from the three known classes of human retroviruses. Other books...
Academic Press, 2016. — 330 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-800947-5 Essential Human Virology is written for the undergraduate level with case studies integrated into each chapter. The structure and classification of viruses will be covered, as well as virus transmission and virus replication strategies based upon type of viral nucleic acid. Several chapters will focus on notable and...
Academic Press, 2016. — 330 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-800947-5 Essential Human Virology is written for the undergraduate level with case studies integrated into each chapter. The structure and classification of viruses will be covered, as well as virus transmission and virus replication strategies based upon type of viral nucleic acid. Several chapters will focus on notable and...
Caister Academic Press, 2016. — 195 p. — ISBN10: 1910190152, ISBN13: 978-1910190159. Alphaviruses comprise a fascinating group of small, enveloped single-stranded positive-sense RNA viruses. They are usually transmitted by arthropod vectors (usually mosquitoes). Of the thirty known species, eight are important human pathogens (e.g. Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus) whilst...
Springer, 2013. - 728 p. This book contemplates the structure, dynamics and physics of virus particles: From the moment they come into existence by self-assembly from viral components produced in the infected cell, through their extracellular stage, until they recognize and infect a new host cell and cease to exist by losing their physical integrity to start a new infectious...
Elsevier, 2002. — 202 p. — ISBN: 978-0444506269. This book describes up-to-date information on the pathogenesis and molecular biology of human papillomaviruses and describes the mechanistic role of the viruses in epithelial cancers. Included in the book are chapters on the epidemiology of human papillomaviruses, the factors that control replication and transcription and the...
Springer, 2013. - 1013 p. - The book gives a comprehensive overview on the knowledge of virus infection relevant for humans and animals. For each virus family the molecular details of the virus particle and the viral replication cycle are described. In the case of virus types with relevance for human and/or animal health the data on molecular biology, genetics and virus-cell...
Lippincott Williams and Wilkins, 2002. — 220 p. Essential of pathogenesis Host response to viral infection Rus-host interaction Prevention of viral infection
2nd Edition. — Academic Press, 2007. — 279 p. Based on the highly successful reference work Viral Pathogenesis published in 1997, this concise, economical version can be used both as an introductory text or for self-education by medical students and biologists alike. This latest edition provides a completely revised overview of the subject with new chapters on innate immunity,...
ASM Press, 2010. - 751 p. Enables students and professionals to develop a deep understanding of fundamental virology by emphasizing principles and discussing virusesorganized by virus family. - Examines individual virus families within the context of the Baltimore classification system, a key unifying theme that allows readers to assume basic facts about the replication...
Academic Press, 2018. — 601 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-811185-7. This book provides an up-to-date review of the interactions between retroviruses and the cells they infect, offering a comprehensive understanding of how retroviruses hijack cellular factors to facilitate virus replication. Drugs targeting viral enzymes have been developed to treat HIV; the next challenge is to inhibit...
Academic Press, 2020. — 190 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-818270-3. This book provides a detailed accounting of one of the world's fastest growing infections. According to the World Health Organization, Dengue virus incidence has increased 30-fold over the past 50 years, with up to 50 to 100 million infections occurring annually in over 100 endemic countries. This estimate puts nearly...
Springer, 2012. - 869 p. The acknowledgment that viruses are potent biological factors in driving many cancers have seen a dramatic upsurge in recent years in large part to the success of the human papilloma virus vaccine against invasive cervical carcinomas and followed by the awarding of the noble prize in medicine in 2008 to Dr. Harald zurHausen who identified the link...
Nova Science Publishers, 2017. — 297 p. — (Virology Research Progress) — ISBN: 978-1-53611-939-8 Noroviruses are responsible for approximately 90% of epidemics worldwide; in particular, non-bacterial outbreaks of gastroenteritis in humans around the world, causing approximately 200,000 deaths annually in developing countries. In addition, after the introduction of rotavirus...
AvE4EvA, 2013. — 292 p. This book is a collection of chapters dealing with examples of RNA and DNA viruses, and issues such as how these gene packages have learnt to take advantage of their hosts, molecular recognition events that hosts may use to counterattack the viruses, and how researchers have developed strategies to use viruses or their parts as tools for different...
3rd.ed. — Princeton University Press, 2016. — 272 p. — ISBN: 978-0691166964. This stunningly illustrated book provides a rare window into the amazing, varied, and often beautiful world of viruses. Contrary to popular belief, not all viruses are bad for you. In fact, several are beneficial to their hosts, and many are crucial to the health of our planet. Virus offers an...
3rd.ed. — Princeton University Press, 2016. — 272 p. — ISBN: 978-0691166964. This stunningly illustrated book provides a rare window into the amazing, varied, and often beautiful world of viruses. Contrary to popular belief, not all viruses are bad for you. In fact, several are beneficial to their hosts, and many are crucial to the health of our planet. Virus offers an...
Intech, 2013. — 148 p. This book provides a collection of in-depth reviews broadly related to the mechanisms of viral replication as applied to various viruses of critical relevance for human or animal disease. Specifically, this book contains six different chapters: 1) Influenza A Virus Multiplication and the Cellular SUMOylation System; 2) West Nile Virus: Basic Principles,...
Karger, 2001. — 171 p. Approximately 15% of human cancer incidence can be attributed to virus infection, i.e. viruses represent the second most important risk factor (after tobacco consumption) for cancer development in humans. Today, five virus types are known to be involved in causing human cancer: papillomaviruses, retroviruses, herpesviruses, hepadnaviruses, and...
Academic Press, 2017. — 412 p. — ISBN: 978-0-12-800838-6. This book presents robust coverage of the key principles of molecular virology while emphasizing virus family structure and providing key context points for topical advances in the field. The book is organized in a logical manner to aid in student discoverability and comprehension and is based on the author's more than...
MJP Publishers, 2017. — 436 p. — ISBN: 978-81-8094-017-0. The concept of viruses as a natural phenomenon separate fromother infectious agents is more than 100 years old. Recognitionof the fact that many diverse diseases of plants and animals canbe attributed to this newly recognized type of agent came morelately. So did the recognition of phages that kill bacteria. In...
Chelsea House Publishers, 2009. — 124 p. In 1999, a deadly strain of West Nile virus struck parts of the northeastern United States. Caused by a virus from the family Flaviridae, genus Flavivirus, the disease was common in Africa and the Middle East. This title looks at the origins of this disease, how it is transmitted, how it is treated, and what measures are being taken to...
Caister Academic Press, Norfolk, UK, 2012. — 358 p. — ISBN: 9781904455929 Flaviviruses are a diverse group of small RNA enveloped viruses, many of which are important human and animal pathogens. The best known include dengue virus, yellow fever virus, Japanese encephalitis virus, and West Nile virus. These viruses are endemic in many tropical and sub-tropical regions of the...
Springer, 1995. — 424 p. — (The Viruses) — ISBN: 978-0-306-44972-7 Coronaviruses were recognized as a group of enveloped, RNA viruses in 1968 and accepted by the International Committee on the Taxonomy of Viruses as a separate family, the Coronaviridae, in 1975. By 1978, it had become evident that the coronavirus genomic RNA was infectious (i. e. , positive strand), and by...
CRC Press, 2015. — 564 p. The book provides a comprehensive view of the impact and promise of phage display in drug discovery and biotechnology. Building on the success of its previous edition, the book discusses current theories, principles, and methods in the field and demonstrates applications for peptide phage display, protein phage display, and the development of novel...
Springer, 2018. — 253 p. — ISBN: 978-3-030-02815-2. This volume summarizes recent advances in understanding the mechanisms of HIV-1 latency, in characterizing residual viral reservoirs, and in developing targeted interventions to reduce HIV-1 persistence during antiretroviral therapy. Specific chapters address the molecular mechanisms that govern and regulate HIV-1...
2nd edition. — Facultas.WUV, 2009. — 198 p. Our knowledge of viruses and their relevance to disease is enormous. The diversity of viruses is fascinating, yet at the same time overwhelming. How can undergraduates of science and medicine begin to come to terms with detailed scientific knowledge and viral diversity? „Coffee House Notes On Virology“ is an attempt to support such...
Chapman and Hall, 1980. — 220 p. — ISBN: 978-0-412-21970-2 The study of viruses, or virology as it is now called, had its origin in 1892 when a Russian botanist, Iwanawsky, showed that sap from a tobacco plant with an infectious disease was still highly infectious after passage through a filter capable of retaining bacterial cells. From such humble beginnings the study of these...
2nd Edition. - Elsevier, 2008. - 476 p. Completely revised and updated, the new edition of this groundbreaking text integrates basic virology with pathophysiological conditions to examine the connection between virology and human disease. Most virology textbooks focus on the molecular biology involved without adequate reference to physiology. This text focuses on viruses that...
Springer International Publishing, 2014. — 430 p. Milton Taylor, Indiana University, offers an easy-to-read and fascinating text describing the impact of viruses on human society. The book starts with an analysis of the profound effect that viral epidemics had on world history resulting in demographic upheavals by destroying total populations. It also provides a brief history...
105 p. The Big Picture Book of Viruses is intended to serve as both a catalog of virus pictures as an educational resource to those seeking more information about viruses. First and foremost, we show you what they look like, either by electron microscopy or by computerassisted imaging. The viral images are listed by their taxonomic groups.
105 p. The Big Picture Book of Viruses is intended to serve as both a catalog of virus pictures as an educational resource to those seeking more information about viruses. First and foremost, we show you what they look like, either by electron microscopy or by computerassisted imaging. The viral images are listed by their taxonomic groups.
2nd Edition. – Springer ScienceþBusiness Media, LLC, 2011. — 2110 p. — ISBN: 978-0-387-95918-4. Virus taxonomy represents the basic framework that allows an understanding of the complex evolutionary process that continuously takes place among viruses and their hosts. Each of the 300 taxonomically ordered chapters includes detailed information on individual genus members,...
Springer, 2002. - 1556 p. This encyclopedic reference contains the latest knowledge on all virus genera in the standardized format of lists, tables and figures. Each of the 241 taxonomically ordered chapters provides highly structured and condensed information on a single virus genus from a leading world expert. The data covers individual genus members, historical events,...
Taylor & Francis, 2006. — 429 p. Filling a gap in the literature, this guide analyzes EBV infection and all of its associated disorders including infectious mononucleosis, Burkitt lymphoma, and Hodgkin's disease. Opening with a historical introduction, the reference progresses from molecular virology, epidemiology, immunology, and pathology to clinical presentation, diagnosis,...
3rd edition. — Wiley-Blackwell, 2008. — 581 p. Ideal for the student seeking a solid understanding of the basic principles in this rapidly developing field, this best-selling text offers a comprehensive introduction to the fundamentals of virology. Featuring an enhanced art program now in full-color, the new edition has been updated throughout. Virology and Viral Disease. Basic...
CAB International, 2017. — 378 p. — ISBN: 978-1-78064-778-4. Taking a disease-based approach, Fish Viruses and Bacteria: Pathobiology and Protection focuses on the pathobiology of and protective strategies against the most common, major microbial pathogens of economically important marine and freshwater fish. The book covers well-studied, notifiable piscine viruses and...
World Scientific, 2009. - 722 p. This is the first comprehensive book on human/animal gene responses to RNA viral infections, including prevalent, emerging and re-emerging RNA viruses such as HIV, SARS-CoV, West Nile virus, influenza virus and many others. Human gene responses are reviewed by leading virologists worldwide in the following aspects: the altered gene expression...
Springer, 2015. — 366 p. — (Focus on Structural Biology 09). — ISBN: 9401773173. This monograph is the first easy-to-read-and-understand book on prion proteins' molecular dynamics (MD) simulations and on prions' molecular modeling (MM) constructions. It enables researchers to see what is crucial to the conformational change from normal cellular prion protein (PrPC) to diseased...
Comments