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
Introduction to Virology
β Scribed by K. M. Smith C.B.E., D.Sc., Ph.D., F.R.S. (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1980
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 219
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
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 'filter-passing agents', or viruses, has developed into a separate science which rivals, if it does not excel, in importance the whole of bacteriology. The importance of viruses lies not only in the diseases they cause in every type of living organism, but also because of their intimate relationship with the living cell, in which alone they can reproduce. Their study has influenced the whole of biology by greatly increasing our knowledge of the gene, genetics, and molecular structure; there is also the possible connexion of viruses with human cancer, in view of the occurrence of many viral cancers in other animals. The book attempts to give a comprehensive but necessarily superficial survey of the subject as a whole and should help senior undergraduates and postgraduate students who wish to gain some knowledge of virology. Further information is available from the extensive bibliography.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-viii
Introduction....Pages 1-4
Some representative viruses β size, morphology, ultrastructure and replication....Pages 5-37
Purification of viruses....Pages 38-45
Classification and nomenclature....Pages 46-53
Some virus diseases in man and other animals....Pages 54-72
Some virus diseases in plants and micro-organisms....Pages 73-88
The spread of viruses from host to host....Pages 89-103
Latency, satellite and incomplete viruses, viroids and virus-like particles....Pages 104-114
The replication of viruses....Pages 115-142
Virus genetics....Pages 143-156
Tumour viruses....Pages 157-169
Tissue and cell culture of viruses....Pages 170-179
Virus assay....Pages 180-187
Control of virus diseases....Pages 188-196
Back Matter....Pages 197-212
β¦ Subjects
Virology; Science, general
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