Microbial Interactions
Series: Receptors and Recognition, Series B Volume 3 ; Published by : CHAPMAN (LONDON) ISBN:9781461596981; 9781461597001 (print). Year: 1977Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | KUFOS Central Library General Stacks | Non-fiction | 579 REI/MI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 09352 |
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579 PEL/MI Microbiology | 579 POM/AL Alcamo's Fundamentals of Microbiology | 579 POM/AL Alcamo's Fundamentals of Microbiology | 579 REI/MI Microbial Interactions | 579 REI/MI Microbial Interactions | 579 RHE/AQ Aquatic Microbiology | 579 RHO/BA Bacteria and plants / |
1 Aggregation and Cell Surface Receptors in Cellular Slime Molds -- 2 Bacterial Chemotaxis -- 3 Bacterial Receptors for Phages and Colicins as Constituents of Specific Transport Systems -- 4 The Attachment of Bacteria to the Surfaces of Animal Cells -- 5 Binding and Entry of DNA in Bacterial Transformation -- 6 A Redefinition of the Mating Phenomenon in Bacteria -- 7 Cell-Cell Interactions during Mating in Saccharomyces cerevisiae -- 8 Mating Interactions in Chlamydomonas -- Cell-Cell Interactions in Ciliates: Evolutionary and Genetic Constraints -- An Overview -- Thesaurus of Microbial Interactions.
Microbiology has undergone a number of metamorphoses in its relatively brief existence. It has been in approximate succession, morphology, epidemiology, biochemistry, genetics, and molecular biology. It is also becoming a significant parcel of cell surface studies. The one embodiment which has remained elusiv- particularly for bacteriology - is the taxonomic one. This may have been a blessing in disguise because it encouraged microbiologists to deal with the general rather than the particular; promoting a search for unitary explanations, in the manner of Kluyver and van Niel, long before anyone knew about the universality of the genetic code, or could trace the genealogy of enzymes from the study of amino acid substitutions. . This volume is predicated on the idea that deep analogies underly the mech anisms of cellular interaction, and therefore belongs in the unitary tradition of microbiology. It occupies itself with a wide variety of micro-organisms, considering them from vantage points of considerable diversity, ranging from taxonomic irreverence to keen evolutionary awareness, and is concerned with areas which have developed independently of each other.
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