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The Epstein-Barr Virus

✍ Scribed by M. A. Epstein, B. G. Achong (auth.), M. A. Epstein M.A., M.D., Ph.D., D.Sc., F.R.C. Path., F.R.S., B. G. Achong M.B., B.Ch., B.A.O., M.D. (eds.)


Publisher
Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year
1979
Tongue
English
Leaves
466
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The Epstein-Barr virus was discovered 15 years ago. Since that time an immense body of information has been accumuΒ­ lated on this agent which has come to assume great signifiΒ­ cance in many different fields of biological science. Thus, the virus has very special relevance in human medicine and oncology, in tumor virology, in immunology, and in moleΒ­ cular virology, since it is the cause of infectious mononuΒ­ cleosis and also the first human cancer virus, etiologically related to endemic Burkitt's lymphoma and probably to nasopharyngeal carcinoma. In addition, continuous human lymphoid cell lines initiated and maintained by the transformΒ­ ing function of the virus genome provide a laboratory tool with wide and ever-growing applications. Innumerable papers on the Epstein-Barr virus have apΒ­ peared over recent years and reports of work with this agent now constitute a veritable flood. The present book provides the first and only comprehensive, authoritative over-view of all aspects of the virus by authors who have been the original and major contributors in their particular disciplines. A complete and up-to-date survey of this unique and important agent is thus provided which should be of great interest to experts, teachers, and students engaged in cancer research, virology, immunology, molecular biology, epideΒ­ miology, and cell culture. Where topics have been dealt with from more than one of these viewpoints, some inevitable overlap and duplication has resulted; although this has been kept to a minimum, it has been retained in some places because of positive usefulness.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages I-XVI
Introduction: Discovery and General Biology of the Virus....Pages 1-22
Morphology of the Virus and of Virus-Induced Cytopathologic Changes....Pages 23-37
EB Virus-Induced Antigens....Pages 39-60
Seroepidemiology of the Virus....Pages 61-78
Biochemistry of the Virus and Its Effects on the Metabolism of Infected Cells....Pages 79-108
Molecular Probes and Genome Homology....Pages 109-146
Biochemical Detection of the Virus Genome....Pages 147-153
The State of the Virus Genome in Transformed Cells and Its Relationship to Host Cell DNA....Pages 155-183
Early Events in Transformation of Human Lymphocytes by the Virus....Pages 185-204
Transformation by the Virus In Vitro....Pages 205-223
The Nature of Lymphoid Cell Lines and Their Relationship to the Virus....Pages 225-281
Activation of the Viral Genome In Vitro....Pages 283-295
The Virus as the Etiologic Agent of Infectious Mononucleosis....Pages 297-320
The Relationship of the Virus to Burkitt’s Lymphoma....Pages 321-337
The Relationship of the Virus to Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma....Pages 339-350
Experimental Carcinogenicity by the Virus In Vivo....Pages 351-372
Comparative Aspects: Oncogenic Animal Herpesviruses....Pages 373-415
Demographic Studies Implicating the Virus in the Causation of Burkitt’s Lymphoma; Prospects for Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma....Pages 417-437
Vaccine Control of EB Virus-Associated Tumors....Pages 439-448
Back Matter....Pages 449-462

✦ Subjects


Medical Microbiology; Medicine/Public Health, general


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