2 minute read
MICROBIOLOGY / VIROLOGY RESEARCH
Textbook HUMAN PARASITES
From Organisms to Molecular Biology
Advertisement
by Dunne Fong (Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, USA) & Marion M Chan (Temple University, USA) Why does the World Health Organization (WHO) put emphasis on neglected tropical diseases (NTDs)? What are the NTDs? Are NTDs found in the United States? Is there any relationship between coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and NTDs? These are some of the questions being addressed in the book. The aim of this textbook is to introduce a modern synthesis on human parasites of medical importance. Species of parasitic protozoa and helminths are presented in detail, from history and discovery to aspects of genomes and molecular biology, together with life cycle, therapy, drug resistance, and case studies of parasitic diseases useful to the clinicians.
Featured Contents: Introduction of Parasites and Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs); Evolution of Parasites and Potential Novel Therapies from Their Genomes; Immunity and Immunopathology of Host-Parasite Interactions; Classification of Eukaryotes and Introduction to Protozoa; Trypanosomiasis and Leishmaniasis by Kinetoplastid Flagellates; Giardiasis and Trichomoniasis by Other Flagellates; Amoebiasis and Other Infections by Amoebae and Amoeboflagellates; Balantidiasis by a Ciliate and Blastocystis Infection by a Stramenopile; and others. Readership: Upper level undergraduates and beginning graduate students.
650pp Mar 2022 978-981-123-626-6 US$138 £120 MAN VERSUS MICROBE
What Will It Take to Win?
by Brian Bremner (Bloomberg LP, UK) Man Versus Microbe is about humanity’s competitive, symbiotic and precarious relationship with the microbial world. Brian Bremner (Executive Editor, Bloomberg) offers a book on the exhilarating fields of synthetic biology and genetics, abundant with material on emerging technologies to deepen one’s understanding of how virus hunters chase bugs or how geneticists unlock the workings of a microbe’s constituent DNA. This book is for readers who want to learn more about humanity’s fight to contain future pandemics and better understand the risks and opportunities of living in the world of microbes. After navigating through a disruptive pandemic, we are all amateur epidemiologists now. Contents: Introduction: Man Versus Microbe; The Risks: ; Global System Failure; Surveillance for a Pandemic Age; Hacking Mother Nature; Vaccines Unbound; Rethinking the WHO The Opportunities: ; The Microbiome Inside Us; Food Security One Microbe At a Time; The Tiny Things Clearing Our Seas; Carbon Eaters Might Save the Planet The Deep Future: ; The Synthetic Biology Paradox; Existential Risks: Bioterrorists and Lab Security; Microbial Eve: A Creation Story; Microbes and Space’s Final Frontier; What the Microbial World is Telling Us Acknowledgements; Index. Readership: General readership, businessminded readers, policymakers and university leaders.