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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
This
book examines how the growing knowledge of the huge range of animal-bacterial
interactions, whether in shared ecosystems or intimate symbioses, is
fundamentally altering our understanding of animal biology. Individuals from
simple invertebrates to human are not solitary, homogenous entities but consist
of complex communities of many species that likely evolved during a billion
years of coexistence. Defining the individual microbe-host conversations in
these consortia, is a challenging but necessary step on the path to
understanding the function of the associations as a whole. The hologenome
theory of evolution considers the holobiont with its hologenome as a unit of
selection in evolution. This new view may have profound impact on understanding
a strictly microbe/symbiont-dependent life style and its evolutionary
consequences. It may also affect the way how we approach complex environmental
diseases from corals (coral bleaching) to human (inflammatory bowel disease
etc). The book is written for scientists as well as medically interested
persons in the field of immunobiology, microbiology, evolutionary biology,
evolutionary medicine and corals.
Contents:
1. Introduction.- 2. The diversity of animal life.- 3. Origin stories.- 4. Phylosymbiosis from Hydra to man: novel genomic approaches discover the holobiont.- 5. Negotiations between evolving animals and symbionts.- 6. The Hydra holobiont.- 7. Microbes are part of the innate immune system.- 8. Rethinking the origin of immunity.- 9. The coral holobiont.- 10. Are coral reefs doomed?.- 11. Lessons from Hydra and corals.- 12. Hidden impact of viruses.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Springer (Springer Verlag GmbH)
Publication date: March, 2016
Pages: None
Weight: 3783g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Immunology