1st Edition

Viruses Biology, Applications, and Control

By David Harper Copyright 2011
    346 Pages
    by Garland Science

    Viruses: Biology, Application, and Control is a concise textbook for advanced undergraduate and graduate students covering the essential aspects of virology included in biomedical science courses. It is an updated and expanded version of David Harper’s Molecular Virology, Second Edition. Focusing on key mechanisms and developments, Viruses presents many new recent scientific advances, including virus evolution, emerging infections, virus extinction, control of infections, antiviral drugs, gene therapy, bacteriophage therapy, and diagnostics.

    The first chapters introduce the reader to the structure and nature of viruses, including their classification and evolution. As viruses cause widespread and serious disease, the ensuing chapters explain how they interact with the immune system and the different ways we try to defeat them: vaccines, antiviral drugs, and immunotherapy. Laboratory methods for viral detection and laboratory diagnosis are also covered. While viruses do cause disease, many do not, and their special biology means they can have beneficial uses, and this aspect of viruses is emphasized. One of the most interesting areas in virology, given extensive coverage here, is how new viruses emerge and establish themselves.

    Viruses: Biology, Application, and Control is a rigorous treatment of the molecular side of virology and its conceptual approach makes it an essential text for students and non-specialists.

    1. Virus Structure and Infection
    2. Virus classification and evolution
    3. Virus Replication
    4. Immune response & evasion
    5. Vaccines and vaccination
    6. Antiviral Drugs
    7. Beneficial use of viruses
    8. Emergence, spread, and extinction
    9. Viruses, vectors, and genomics
    10. Culture, Detection and Diagnosis
    Appendix 1: Viral Replication Strategies
    Appendix 2: Current Antiviral Drugs

    Biography

    David Harper

    "...this is a recommended book for undergraduates studying virology and would provide a good source material for a lecture series on the topic." - Immunology News