Saltar al contenido principal

Libros en Microbiología y Virología

  • Current Topics in Membranes

    • 1 Edición
    • Volumen 38
    • Inglés
  • Advances in Virus Research

    • 1 Edición
    • Volumen 40
    • Inglés
  • Advances in Immunology

    • 1 Edición
    • Volumen 50
    • Inglés
  • Advances in Applied Microbiology

    • 1 Edición
    • Volumen 36
    • Inglés
  • The Human Retroviruses

    • 1 Edición
    • Robert C. Gallo + 1 más
    • Inglés
    This book presents twenty-four tightly focused reviews on the biology, molecular biology, pathology, and epidemiology of the human retroviruses, particularly HIV and HTLV (Types I and II), as well as animal model systems (simian retroviruses, STLV and SIV, and mouse models).Editor Robert C. Gallo is recognized as a co-discoverer of the AIDS virus.
  • Advances in Virus Research

    • 1 Edición
    • Volumen 39
    • Inglés
  • Advances in Parasitology

    • 1 Edición
    • Volumen 30
    • Inglés
  • Guide to Yeast Genetics and Molecular Biology

    • 1 Edición
    • Volumen 194
    • Christine Guthrie
    • Inglés
    Guide to Yeast Genetics and Molecular Biology presents, for the first time, a comprehensive compilation of the protocols and procedures that have made Saccharomyces cerevisiae such a facile system for all researchers in molecular and cell biology. Whether you are an established yeast biologist or a newcomer to the field, this volume contains all the up-to-date methods you will need to study "Your Favorite Gene" in yeast.
  • Bacterial Growth and Division

    Biochemistry and Regulation of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Division Cycles
    • 1 Edición
    • Stephen Cooper
    • Inglés
    How does a bacterial cell grow during the division cycle? This question is answered by the codeveloper of the Cooper-Helmstetter model of DNA replication. In a unique analysis of the bacterial division cycle, Cooper considers the major cell categories (cytoplasm, DNA, and cell surface) and presents a lucid description of bacterial growth during the division cycle. The concepts of bacterial physiology from Ole Maaløe's Copenhagen school are presented throughout the book and are applied to such topics as the origin of variability, the pattern of DNA segregation, and the principles underlying growth transitions. The results of research on E. coli are used to explain the division cycles of Caulobacter, Bacilli, Streptococci, and eukaryotes. Insightful reanalysis highlights significant similarities between these cells and E.coli. With over 25 years of experience in the study of the bacterial division cycle, Cooper has synthesized his ideas and research into an exciting presentation. He manages to write a comprehensive volume that will be of great interest to microbiologists, cell physiologists, cell and molecular biologists, researchers in cell-cycle studies, and mathematicians and engineering scientists interested in modeling cell growth.