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Contents for Genetics.
VOLUME 1.
Contents for Genomics.
Contents for Proteomics.
Contents for Bioinformatics.
List of Contributors to Genetics.
Preface.
1. Genetic Variation and Evolution.
2. Cytogenetics.
3. Epigenetics.
4. Gene Mapping.
VOLUME 2.
5. Comlex Triats and Deseases.
6. Genetic Medicine and Clinical Genetics.
7. Gene Theory.
Contents for Genomics.
VOLUME 3.
1. Genome Sequencing.
2. Mapping.
3. The Human Genome.
4. Model Organisms: Functional and Comparative Genomics.
VOLUME 4.
1. Bacteria and Other Pathogens.
2. SNPs/Haplotypes.
3. ESTs: Cancer Genes and the Anatomy Project.
4. Expression Profiling.
Contents for Proteomics.
VOLUME 5.
1. Core Methodologies.
2. Expression Protemics.
3. Mapping of Biochemical Networks.
4. Functional Proteomics.
VOLUME 6.
5. Proteome Diversity.
6. Proteome Families.
7. Structural Proteomics.
8. System Biology.
Contents for Bioinformatics.
VOLUME 7.
1. Genome Assembly and Sequencing.
2. Gene Finding and Gene Structure.
3.Protein Function and Annotation.
4. Comparative Analysis and Phylogeny.
5. Computational Methods for High-throughput Genetic Analysis: Expression Profiling.
6. Methods for Structure and Prediction.
VOLUME 8.
1. Structuring and Integrating Data.
2. Modern Programming Paradigms in Biology.
Volume Editors:
Dr. Lynn Jorde is a Professor in the Department of
Human Genetics at the University of Utah School of Medicine,
USA.
Dr. Jorde's laboratory is actively involved in studies of human
genetic variation and in studies of the genetic basis of human limb
malformations. He has published more than 150 scientific articles
and is the lead author of Medical Genetics, a textbook that is used
widely in North America and elsewhere.
Dr. Jorde has served on several advisory panels for the National
Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. He
recently completed a 4-year term as a member of the Mammalian
Genetics review panel at the National Institutes of Health. He is
on the Board of Directors of the American Society of Human Genetics
and has served on the editorial boards of Human Biology, the
American Journal of Human Biology, and the American Journal of
Human Genetics.
Peter Little is the Professor of Medical
Biochemistry and Head of the School of Biotechnology and
Biomolecular Sciences at the University of New South Wales, Sydney,
Australia.
Peter Little obtained his PhD in 1976 from Edinburgh University,
studying with Edwin Southern and Peter Walker. He carried out
postdoctoral research between 1976 and 1980 at St. Mary's Hospital
Medical School, from 1980 to 1981 at the California Institute of
Technology and from 1981 to 1982 at Harvard University. From
1982-1987 he was a staff scientist at the Institute of Cancer
Research, London and from 1987 to 2000 a Lecturer, then Reader, at
the Imperial College of Science Technology and Medicine. He
accepted his current position and moved to Australia in 2000.
Peter Little's research has been at the interface of molecular
genetics, genetics and computational biology and he has published
over 100 papers in these areas. He is a widely read commentator on
molecular genetics and genomics and has a present research interest
in the effects of genetic variation upon transcription.
He has a long experience in the administration of science, working
with national and international agencies and corporations and is on
the editorial board of a number of Genomics and Biochemistry
journals.
Dr. Michael J. Dunn is?SFI Research Professor
of Biomedical Proteomics at University College Dublin, Ireland.Dr
Mike Dunn has recently been appointed Professor of Proteomics at
the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London, UK. His
research team have moved to the new state-of-the-art proteomics
facility that has been established as a joint facility between the
Institute of Psychiatry and Proteome Sciences Plc. Before this
move, Dr Dunn was a senior staff member in the National Heart and
Lung Institute Division of Imperial College of Science, Technology
and Medicine, London, UK for 13 years (1988-2001). His proteomics
research group was based in the Heart Science Centre at Harefield
Hospital, London, where research focused on laboratory and clinical
studies of heart disease and transplantation. Dr Dunn's group has
considerable experience in applying the proteomics approach to
characterise alterations in protein expression associated with
myocardial dysfunction in heart disease and to investigate
processes of acute and chronic rejection following cardiac
transplantation. Since the move to the Institute of Psychiatry, Dr
Dunn's research focus includes neuroscience, with emphasis on the
application of proteomics to the study of neurodegenerative
disease.
Dr Dunn has used gel electrophoretic techniques for many years,
beginning with his post-doctoral studies of erythrocyte membrane
proteins at the University of Edinburgh (1970-1976), and then
applied to the study of alterations in protein expression in
muscular dystrophy (1978-1988) and heart disease (since 1988). Much
of his research has involved the use of two-dimensional gel
electrophoresis combined with quantitative computer analysis of
protein expression profiles, followed by protein identification and
characterisation using a range of techniques including Western
immunoblotting, N-terminal microsequencing, amino acid
compositional analysis and, more recently, mass spectrometry.
Dr Dunn is the current President of the British Electrophoresis
Society and a former President of the international Electrophoresis
society (1984-1986). He has an extensive bibliography and has
contributed to many texts in the area of gel electrophoretic and
proteomics technologies and applications. Dr Dunn was for many
years a Senior Deputy Editor of Electrophoresis and he is now
Editor in Chief of the journal, Proteomics, launched in 2001 and
published by Wiley-VCH. This monthly journal is devoted to all
areas of proteomic technology and applications.
Shankar Subramaniam is a Professor of
Bioengineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry and Biology and Director
of the Bioinformatics Graduate Program at the University of
California at San Diego, USA.
He also has adjunct Professorships at the Salk Institute for
Biological Studies and the San Diego Supercomputer Center. Prior to
moving to UC San Diego, Dr. Subramaniam was a Professor of
Biophysics, Biochemistry, Molecular and Integrative Physiology,
Chemical Engineering and Electrical and Computer Engineering at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC). He was also the
Director of the Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Program at
the National Center for Supercomputing Applications and the
Co-Director of the W.M. Keck Center for Comparative and Functional
Genomics at UIUC. He is a fellow of the American Institute for
Medical and Biological Engineering and is a recipient of
Smithsonian Foundation and Association of Laboratory Automation
Awards.
"I am pleased to recommend it heartily as a essential reference tool…should remain the definitive work…for many years to come." (The Chemical Educator, November/December 2006) "…Jorde…and co-editors have done a remarkable job in coordinating this information, distilling it into a package that is both easy to navigate and over-flowing in discovery." (Electric Review, September/October 2006)
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