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The Springer Index of Viruses
Tidona, C.A., Waldbrunn, Heidelberg, Germany; Darai, G., University of Heidelberg, Germany (Eds
2001. XLVII, 1511 pp. 434 figs., 1449 tabs., with CD-ROM. Hardcover
3-540-67167-6
Prepublication price till 30.04.2002
This comprehensive Encyclopedic Reference systematically integrates the state-of-the-art knowledge on all virus genera in the standardized format of lists, tables and figures. Each chapter provides highly structured and condensed information on a single virus genus and was contributed by one of the worlds leading experts in that particular field. Each of the 241 taxonomically ordered chapters includes detailed information on individual genus members, historical events, virion morphology, genome properties, replication strategy, properties of individual transcripts and proteins, sequence accession numbers, biological properties, diseases, recombinant vector constructs, vaccine strains, key references, as well as a high-resolution particle image and a drawing of the genome organization. Its high content of easily accessible detail information makes this Encyclopedic Reference an indispensable tool for both researchers and lecturers.
Keywords: Viruses, Virus Taxonomy, Virology, Encyclopedic Reference, Index
"An excellent up-to-date compilation of all currently established virus genera." J. Maniloff, Ph.D., Professor, Dept. of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, USA
"Concisely organized in standardized format. Tables on viral history, genus members, nucleotide sequences, protein data, and vaccine strains are invaluable as they cannot been found elsewhere in the literature." H.-W. Ackermann, M.D., Professor, Faculty of Medicine, Laval University, Quebec, Canada
Contents: Covers all 241 officially recognised virus genera. Each chapter covers virus reserach history, virion morphology, electron microscopic images, genome properties, replication strategy, properties of individual transcripts and proteins, biological properties in vitro and in vivo, and specific information about the individual virus species.
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