Modern bacterial taxonomy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Modern bacterial taxonomy
Chapman & Hall, 1993
2nd ed
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Note
Rev. ed. of: Modern bacterial toxonomy / Brian Austin and Fergus Priest. c1986
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This second edition of Modern Bacterial Taxonomy has been completely revised and expanded to include detailed coverage of molecular systematics including relevant aspects of nucleic acid sequences, the construction of phylogenetic trees, typing of bacteria by restriction fragment length polymorphisms, DNA hybridization probes and the use of the polymerase chain reaction in bacterial systematics.
Table of Contents
Preface. Introduction. Classification. Deficiencies of traditional classifications. The range of classifications. Merits of phenetic versus phylogenetic classifications. The choice between phenetic and phylogenetic classifications. References. Numerical taxonomy. Introduction. Strain selection. Test selection. Data coding. Computer analyses. Determination of taxonomic structure. Presentation and interpretation of results. Concluding remarks. References. Chemosystematics and molecular biology I: Nucleic acid analyses. Introduction. Chromosomal DNA. Analysis of RNA. References. Chemosystematics and molecular biology II: Proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and whole cells. Analysis of proteins. Cell envelope analyses. End-products of metabolism. Complete cells. Conclusions. References. Phylogenetics. General considerations. Data for phylogeny. Phylogenies from macromolecular sequences. Tree reconstruction. Cladistics and phenetics. Constancy of evolutionary rates. Gene transfer. Bacterial evolution. References. Nomenclature. The species concept. References. Identification and diagnosis. Sequential identification systems: dichotomous keys. Simultaneous identification: diagnostic tables. Computer-based identification systems. Serology. Commerical kits. Bacteriophage typing. Chemosystematic methods in identification. Hybridization probes. References. Interactions between taxonomy and allied disciplines. Ecology. Pathology. Genetics and molecular biology. Biotechnology. Culture collections. References. Conclusions and outlook. Glossary. Appendix A: Classification of the bacteria - the conventional approach. Appendix B: Classification of the bacteria - the phylogenetic approach. Index.
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