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Viral Molecular Machines

by Rossmann, Michael G.
Authors: Rao, Venigalla B.%editor. | SpringerLink (Online service) Series: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 0065-2598 ; . 726 Physical details: XIV, 687p. 221 illus., 192 illus. in color. online resource. ISBN: 1461409802 Subject(s): Medicine. | Immunology. | Medical virology. | Emerging infectious diseases. | Microbiology. | Biomedicine. | Virology. | Microbiology. | Infectious Diseases. | Immunology.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 616.9101 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Viruses: Sophistiated Biological Machines -- F1-Atpase: A Prototypical Molecular Motor -- Reconstructing Virus Structures From Nanometer To Near-Atomic Resolutions With Cryo-Electron Microscropy And Tomography -- Principles Of Virus Structural Organization -- Viral Entry Machines -- Genome Replication Machines -- Capsid Assembly And Maturation -- Genome Packaging Machines.

A biological organism can be viewed as a collection of molecular machines well integrated to function as a self-replicating unit. One of the principal goals in biology is to be able to fully understand the mechanisms of an organism in atomic detail. Viruses offer the best opportunities to achieve this goal. Written by leaders in the respective fields, this book examines a variety of viral molecular machines, using the best examples from bacteriophages and animal viruses, many causing infectious diseases of public health importance. Beginning with the viral entry into a host cell, the book takes the reader through replication of the genome, assembly of structural components, genome packaging and maturation into an infectious virion. The book conveys the state of the art knowledge of the topic generated by combining X-ray crystallography, high resolution electron microscopy, molecular genetics, biochemistry, and single molecule biophysics. Viral Molecular Machines is not only a “must-have” book for virologists but it will also be broadly useful for molecular biologists in academia and industry as well as an educational tool for teaching graduate and upper level undergraduate students.

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