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The papillomaviruses have emerged as the best understood viruses that cause cancer in humans. This volume reviews the remarkable confluence of science, medicine, and public health that recently culminated in the approval of vaccines that prevent many human papillomavirus infections, the first vaccines specifically designed to prevent human cancer. Basic laboratory studies of viral DNA replication, gene expression, protein function, and virus-host interactions have provided fundamental insights into these important processes. Most importantly, human papillomavirus infection has been shown to be a crucial event in the development of several human cancers, most notably cervical cancer, a leading cause of cancer death in women. The Papillomaviruses is an ideal book for scientists, professionals, clinicians, and graduate students in the fields of immunology, infectious disease, virology, microbiology, cell biology, and cancer biology and research.
Papillomaviruses. --- Papillomavirus diseases. --- Papillomavirus vaccines. --- Viral vaccines --- Papillomavirus infections --- Virus diseases --- HPV (Virus) --- Human papilloma virus --- Human wart virus --- Infectious human wart virus --- Papilloma viruses --- Papillomaviridae --- Papillomavirus --- Papovaviruses --- Wart virus --- Oncogenic DNA viruses --- Immunology. --- Emerging infectious diseases. --- Medical virology. --- Microbiology. --- Oncology. --- Infectious Diseases. --- Virology. --- Cancer Research. --- Tumors --- Microbial biology --- Biology --- Microorganisms --- Medical microbiology --- Virology --- Emerging infections --- New infectious diseases --- Re-emerging infectious diseases --- Reemerging infectious diseases --- Communicable diseases --- Immunobiology --- Life sciences --- Serology --- Infectious diseases. --- Cancer research. --- Cancer research --- Microbiology
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General microbiology --- Immunology. Immunopathology --- Oncology. Neoplasms --- Medical microbiology, virology, parasitology --- Infectious diseases. Communicable diseases --- immunologie --- microbiologie --- virologie --- oncologie --- besmettelijke ziekten
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The papillomaviruses have emerged as the best understood viruses that cause cancer in humans. This volume reviews the remarkable confluence of science, medicine, and public health that recently culminated in the approval of vaccines that prevent many human papillomavirus infections, the first vaccines specifically designed to prevent human cancer. Basic laboratory studies of viral DNA replication, gene expression, protein function, and virus-host interactions have provided fundamental insights into these important processes. Most importantly, human papillomavirus infection has been shown to be a crucial event in the development of several human cancers, most notably cervical cancer, a leading cause of cancer death in women. The Papillomaviruses is an ideal book for scientists, professionals, clinicians, and graduate students in the fields of immunology, infectious disease, virology, microbiology, cell biology, and cancer biology and research.
General microbiology --- Immunology. Immunopathology --- Oncology. Neoplasms --- Medical microbiology, virology, parasitology --- Infectious diseases. Communicable diseases --- immunologie --- microbiologie --- virologie --- oncologie --- besmettelijke ziekten
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Historically, structural biology and virology have been separate disciplines, with the field of virology developing around particular virus families. However, recent advances in the techniques of structural biology, including high-performance computing and graphics visualization, X-ray crystallography, and electron microscopy, coupled with continued progress in molecular biology and virology have caused a major convergence of interests. "Structural virology" now provides some of the most outstanding examples of structure-function relationships in biology. Viruses encounter many common problems in their life cycles, and so the solutions that they have evolved provide instructive contrasts between different biological strategies for survival. These ideas are illustrated by each of the different chapters, most of which cover a viral system that well illustrates a particular biological function. The goal of this book is to unite the structural and biological aspects of virus function. With this in mind, each chapter has been written explicitly by experts to address a broad audience ranging from graduate students to researchers in structural biology, virology, molecular biology, and biochemistry.
Basic Sciences. Microbiology -- Virology --- Viruses --- Morphology.
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