Animal Virus Genetics
  1. 856 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

About this book

Animal Virus Genetics is a collection of scientific presentations of the ICN-UCLA Symposia on Molecular and Cellular Biology, held at the University of California, Los Angeles in 1980. The papers in the compendium focus on the basic genetic model systems; the uses of genetic approaches to study basic problems in molecular biology; and on the increasing application of genetic systems to the study of more complex viral-host interactions such as viral virulence and persistence. Microbiologists, cellular biologists, and virologists will find the book insightful.

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Yes, you can access Animal Virus Genetics by Bernard N. Fields, Rudolf Jaenisch, Bernard N. Fields,Rudolf Jaenisch in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & Evolution. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

  1. Front Cover
  2. Animal Virus Genetics
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Table of Contents
  5. CONTRIBUTORS
  6. PREFACE
  7. CHAPTER 1. IS-ELEMENTS AND TRANSPOSONS
  8. CHAPTER 2. A MODULAR THEORY OF VIRUS EVOLUTION
  9. CHAPTER 3. MOLECULAR CLONING OF THE HUMAN CYTOMEGALOVIRUS GENOME (STRAIN AD169)
  10. CHAPTER 4. STRUCTURAL ORGANIZATION OF THE DNA MOLECULES FROM HUMAN CYTOMEGALOVIRUS
  11. CHAPTER 5. THE NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCE OF THE HEPATITIS B VIRAL GENOME AND THE IDENTIFICATION OF THE MAJOR VIRAL GENES
  12. CHAPTER 6. CORRELATING GENETIC MUTATIONS OF A BACULOVIRUS WITH THE PHYSICAL MAP OF THE DNA GENOME
  13. CHAPTER 7. ANALYSIS OF VSV GLYCOPROTEIN STRUCTURE AND GENOME STRUCTURE USING CLONED DNA
  14. CHAPTER 8. RIBOSCME BINDING TO POLIO VIRUS RNA
  15. CHAPTER 9. SEQUENCE ANALYSIS OF THE POLIOVIRUS GENOME AND MAPPING OF THE GENOME-LINKED PROTEIN1
  16. CHAPTER 10. REOVIRUS GENOME RNA: COMMON 3'-TERMINAL NUCLEOTIDE SEQUENCES AND ASSIGNMENT OF mRNA RIBOSOME BINDING SITES TO VIRION GENOME SEGMENTS
  17. CHAPTER 11. TERMINAL SEQUENCE HOMOLOGIES IN REOVIRUS GENES
  18. CHAPTER 12. ATTEMPTS AT THE MOLECULAR CLONING OF A TRANSFORMING ALLELE FROM CHEMICALLY TRANSFORMED MOUSE CELLS
  19. CHAPTER 13. MECHANISMS OF DNA-MEDIATED TRANSFORMATION IN ANIMAL CELLS
  20. CHAPTER 14. CHROMOSOMAL MAPPING OF ECOTROPIC AND XENOTROPIC LEUKEMIA VIRUS-INDUCING LOCI IN THE MOUSE
  21. CHAPTER 15. CORRELATION BETWEEN THE DEVELOPMENT OF MURINE MAMMARY CANCER AND THE SEGREGATION OF ENDOGENOUS GENES
  22. CHAPTER 16. A STUDY OF THE ENDOGENOUS MOLONEY RELATED SEQUENCES OF MICE
  23. CHAPTER 17. STRUCTURAL AND GENETIC RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN AN ENDOGENOUS RETROVIRUS (M432) OF MUS CERVICOLOR AND INTRACISTERNAL A–PARTICLES OF MUS MUSCULUS
  24. CHAPTER 18. GENETIC CONTROL OF MuLV EXPRESSION AND SPONTANEOUS LYMPHOMA IN CROSSES OF HIGH- AND LOW-LYMPHOMA STRAINS
  25. CHAPTER 19. THE ANOMALOUS ANTIBODY RESPONSE OF HYBRID MICE TO IMMUNIZATION WITH AN ABELSON VIRUS LYMPHOMA
  26. CHAPTER 20. URINE LEUKEMIA VIRUS RESTRICTION GENE, SEGREGATES IN LEUKEMIA-PRONE WILD MICE
  27. CHAPTER 21. GENETIC CONTROL OF RESISTANCE OF MOUSE HEPATITIS VIRUS, STRAIN JHM, INDUCED ENCEPHALOMYELITIS
  28. CHAPTER 22. LEARNING ABOUT THE REPLICATION OF RETROVIRUSES FROM A SINGLE CLONED PROVIRUS OF MOUSE MAMMARY TUMOR VIRUS
  29. CHAPTER 23. OBSERVATIONS ON THE DNA SEQUENCE OF THE EXTENDED TERMINAL REDUNDANCY AND ADJACENT HOST SEQUENCES FOR INTEGRATED MOUSE MAMMARY TUMOR VIRUS
  30. CHAPTER 24. DERIVATION OF THREE MOUSE STRAINS CARRYING MOLONEY LEUKEMIA VIRUS IN THEIR GERM LINE AT DIFFERENT GENETIC LOCI
  31. CHAPTER 25. A HUMAN HEPATOMA CELL LINE CONTAINS HEPATITIS B DNA AND RNA SEQUENCES
  32. CHAPTER 26. POLYOMA VIRUS HR-T GENE PRODUCTS
  33. CHAPTER 27. COMPLEMENTATION STUDIES WITH TRANSFORMATION DEFECTIVE MUTANTS OF POLYOMA VIRUS
  34. CHAPTER 28. ANALYSIS OF ADENOVIRUS INDUCED CELLULAR DNA SYNTHESIS IN A ts MUTANT OF THE CELL CYCLE
  35. CHAPTER 29. REGULATION OF ADENOVIRUS EARLY GENE EXPRESSION
  36. CHAPTER 30. METHYLATION AND EXPRESSION OF ADENOVIRAL DNA IN INFECTED AND TRANSFORMED CELLS
  37. CHAPTER 31. SYNTHESIS OF ADENOVIRUS 2 RNA in vitro: PROPERTIES OF THE MAJOR LATER TRANSCRIPT AND ITS PROMOTER
  38. CHAPTER 32. A GENE FUNCTION OF HERPES SIMPLEX VIRUS REQUIRED FOR EXPRESSION OF ALL EARLY VIRAL GENES
  39. CHAPTER 33. A VARIANT VSV GENERATES DEFECTIVE INTERFERING PARTICLES WITH REPLICASE-LIKE ACTIVITY IN VITRO
  40. CHAPTER 34. SEPARATION OF FULL LENGTH TRANSCRIPTS AND GENOME RNA PLUS AND MINUS STRANDS FROM CYTOPLASMIC POLYHEDROSIS VIRUS OF BOMBYX MORI
  41. CHAPTER 35. DIFFERENTIAL METHYLATION OF ENDOGENOUS AND ACQUIRED MOUSE MAMMARY TUMOR VIRUS-SPECIFIC DNA
  42. CHAPTER 36. SFFV SPECIFIC GENE EXPRESSION IN INFECTED AND ERYTHROLEUKEMIA CELLS
  43. CHAPTER 37. MOLECULAR GENETICS AND CELL CULTURE ASSAYS FOR HELPER-INDEPENDENT AND REPLICATION-DEFECTIVE COMPONENTS OF THE FRIEND VIRUS COMPLEX
  44. CHAPTER 38. VIRAL ENVELOPE GENES AND c REGIONS IN NON-ACUTE AVIAN LEUKOSIS VIRUS ASSOCIATED DISEASE
  45. CHAPTER 39. TWO REGIONS OF THE MOLONEY LEUKEMIA VIRUS GENOME ARE REQUIRED FOR EFFICIENT TRANSFORMATION BY src/sarc
  46. CHAPTER 40. MOLECULAR CLONING OF MOLONEY MOUSE SARCOMA VIRUS SPECIFIC SEQUENCES FROM UNINFECTED MOUSE CELLS
  47. CHAPTER 41. CHARACTERIZATION OF MOLECULARLY CLONED SPLEEN FOCUS-FORMING VIRUS DNA
  48. CHAPTER 42. THE NATURE AND ORIGIN OF THE TRANSFORMING GENE OF AVIAN SARCOMA VIRUSES
  49. CHAPTER 43. PHOSPHORYLATION OF TYROSINE: A MECHANISM OF TRANSFORMATION SHARED BY A NUMBER OF OTHERWISE UNRELATED RNA TUMOR VIRUSES
  50. CHAPTER 44. PRCII, A NEW TYPE OF AVIAN SARCOMA VIRUS
  51. CHAPTER 45. FUJINAMI SARCOMA VIRUS AND SARCOMAGENIC, AVIAN ACUTE LEUKEMIA VIRUSES HAVE SIMILAR GENETIC STRUCTURES
  52. CHAPTER 46. A MODEL FOR FOCMA EXPRESSION IN CELLS TRANSFORMED BY FELINE LEUKEMIA AND SARCOMA VIRUSES
  53. CHAPTER 47. TRANSFORMATION DEFECTIVE MUTANTS OF AEV AND MC29 AVIAN LEUKEMIA VIRUSES SYNTHESIZE SMALLER GAG-RELATED PROTEINS
  54. CHAPTER 48. ISOLATION AND CHARACTERIZATION OF PHENOTYPIC REVERTANTS FROM MOLONEY MURINE SARCOMA VIRUS-TRANSFORMED CELLS
  55. CHAPTER 49. GENETICS OF ACYCLOGUANOSINE RESISTANCE AND THE THYMIDINE KINASE GENE IN HSV-1
  56. CHAPTER 50. STUDY OF GENETIC VARIABILITY OF VIRUSES THROUGH THE USE OF MONOCLONAL ANTIBODIES
  57. CHAPTER 51. VESICULAR STOMATITIS VIRUS MORPHOGENESIS IS ACCOMPANIED BY COVALENT PROTEIN MODIFICATIONS
  58. CHAPTER 52. UNCOUPLING OF THE HEMAGGLUTINATING AND NEURAMINIDASE ACTIVITIES OF NEWCASTLE DISEASE VIRUS (NDV)
  59. CHAPTER 53. SUPPRESSION OF TEMPERATURE-SENSITIVE PHENOTYPE IN REOVIRUS: AN ALTERNATE PATHWAY FROM ts TO ts + PHENOTYPE
  60. CHAPTER 54. TRANSLATION PRODUCTS OF THE 124 STRAIN OF MOLONEY MURINE SARCOMA VIRUS (Mo-MuSV) : CHARACTERIZATION OF A 23,000 DALTON CANDIDATE "src' GENE PRODUCT
  61. CHAPTER 55. CHARACTERIZATION AND GENETIC ANALYSIS OF RETROVIRUS MATURATION: A ROLE FOR Prl80gag-pol
  62. CHAPTER 56. THE MOLECULAR BASIS OF REOVIRUS VIRULENCE
  63. CHAPTER 57. A GENETIC APPROACH TO CYTOPATHOGENICITY, VIRUS SPREAD, AND VIRULENCE OF NEWCASTLE DISEASE VIRUS (NDV)
  64. CHAPTER 58. IN VITRO SELECTION OF AN ATTENUATED VARIANT OF SINDBIS VIRUS
  65. CHAPTER 59. VIRAL MUTATION IN PERSISTENT INFECTION
  66. CHAPTER 60. ANTIGENIC VARIATION OF VISNA VIRUS
  67. CHAPTER 61. POSSIBLE MECHANISM OF ROTAVIRUS PERSISTENCE
  68. CHAPTER 62. NEUROVIRULENCE AND PERSISTENCY OF MOUSE HEPATITIS VIRUSES IN RATS
  69. CHAPTER 63. PERSISTENT INFECTIONS OF BUNYAVIRUSES IN AEDES ALBOPICTUS
  70. CHAPTER 64. EXPERIMENTAL RELAPSING MYELITIS IN HAMSTERS ASSOCIATED WITH A VARIANT OF MEASLES VIRUS
  71. CHAPTER 65. ANTIBODY-INDUCED MODULATION OF VIRAL ANTIGENS FROM INFECTED CELLS: BIOLOGICAL AND MOLECULAR STUDIES OF MEASLES VIRUS INFECTION AND IMPLICATIONS FOR UNDERSTANDING VIRUS PERSISTENCE AND RECEPTOR DISEASES
  72. CHAPTER 66. WORKSHOP SUMMARY: HERPES AND POX VIRUS
  73. CHAPTER 67. WORKSHOP #3 SUMMARY: ADENOVIRUSES /SV40/POLYOMA II
  74. CHAPTER 68. WORKSHOP ON PICORNAVIRUSES/TOGAVIRUSES/HEPATITIS/ CORONAVI RUSES
  75. CHAPTER 69. WORKSHOP ON RHABDOVIRUSES AND PARAMYXOVIRUSES
  76. CHAPTER 70. WORKSHOP SUMMARY: Segmented RNA Viruses, Dr. W. K. Joklik, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
  77. CHAPTER 71. WORKSHOP SUMMARY: CELL GENES AND VIRAL TRANSFORMATION
  78. CHAPTER 72. WORKSHOP SUMMARY: Segmented RNA Viruses, Dr. W. K. Joklik, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
  79. CHAPTER 73. WORKSHOP SUMMARY: CELL GENES AND VIRAL TRANSFORMATION
  80. CHAPTER 74. WORKSHOP SUMMARY
  81. INDEX
  82. FROM ACADEMIC PRESS, INC