Emerging and endemic pthogens advances in surveillance, detection and identification / [electronic resource] :
- 作者: NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Advances in Surveillance, Detection and Identification of Emerging and Endemic Pathogens (2008 : Tbilisi, Georgia)
- 其他作者:
- 出版: Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
- 叢書名: NATO science for peace and security series A, chemistry and biology,00
- 主題: Communicable diseases--Congresses. , Communicable diseases--Epidemiology--Congresses. , Medical microbiology--Congresses. , Life sciences , Microbiology , Public Health/Gesundheitswesen. , Environmental Monitoring/Analysis. , Microbial Genetics and Genomics. , Epidemiology
- ISBN: 9789048196371 (electronic bk.) 、 9789048196364 (paper)
- FIND@SFXID: CGU
- 資料類型: 電子書
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讀者標籤:
- 系統號: 005063962 | 機讀編目格式
館藏資訊
It is a truism among biologists that an organism’s phenotype is the product of both its genotype and its environment. An organism’s genotype contains the total informational potential of the individual, while its environment shapes the expression of the ge- type, influences the rate of mutation and occurrence of modifications, and ultimately determines the likelihood that the genotype (or fractions thereof) will survive into the next generation. In the relationship between host and pathogen, therefore, each forms a part of the environment of the other, mutually influencing the biology of both partners on scales ranging from the life history of individuals to the fate of populations or entire species. Molecular biologists working on problems in pathogenesis generally think of the host organism as the pathogen’s environment and perhaps occasionally consider the pathogen as part of the host’s environment. However, because “environment” can be defined at many scales, so, too, can phenotypes: if a pathogen, as a species, is c- sidered to exist in a host, as a species, then among its phenotypes is the nature of the pandemic disease it can cause within the host community. The contributors to the proceedings of this NATO Advanced Research Workshop have treated the interplay of environment and genotype in the host–pathogen relationship and its relationship to the problem of emerging infectious disease at both the macroscopic and microscopic/ molecular levels along this continuum of scale (with some human history thrown in at times for good measure).