Bibliographic Information

Invertebrate models for biomedical research

edited by Lee A. Bulla, Jr. and Thomas C. Cheng

(Comparative pathobiology, v. 4)

Plenum Press, c1978

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Note

Papers presented at two symposia held Aug. 21-26, 1977 at the 10th annual meeting of the Society for Invertebrate Pathology at Michigan State University, East Lansing

Includes bibliographies and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

On August 21-26, 1977, two symposia were included in the program of the 10th Annual Meeting of the Society for Invertebrate Pathology held at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan. One was entitled "Invertebrate Models for Biomedical Research" organized by Dr. Thomas C. Cheng, and the second, organized by Dr. Robert S. Anderson, was entitled "Cellular and Humoral Reactions to Disease by Invertebrate Animals." When the final manuscripts of the speakers were received, it became apparent that all of the papers were so closely related that the editors decided that they should be combined and published in a single volume of Comparative Pathobiology under the subtitle of Invertebrate Models for Biomedical Research. This volume is the result. We hope that volume four will provide the reader further insight into the complexity and comprehensiveness of pathobiology. Pathobiology encompasses not only the study of pathologic conditions but also the biology of causative agents and response reactions.

Table of Contents

Use of Schistosomes for Pharmacological Research.- Developing an Invertebrate Model for Chemical Carc inogenes is : Metabolic Act ivat ion of Carc inogens.- Alterations in Lipid Metabolism of Molluscs Due to Dietary Changes.- The Role of Lysosomal Hydrolases in Molluscan Cellular Response to Immunologic Challenge.- Effects of the Trematode Proctoeces maculatus on the Mussel Mytilus edulis.- The Role of Hemocytes in Melanotic Tumor Formation.- A Study of Granuloma Formation by Molluscan Cells.- Innate Cellular Defense by Mosquito Hemocytes.- The Inducible Immunity System of Giant Silk Moths.

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