The influence of cooperative bacteria on animal host biology

Author(s)

    • McFall-Ngai, Margaret Jean
    • Henderson, Brian, PhD
    • Ruby, Edward G.

Bibliographic Information

The influence of cooperative bacteria on animal host biology

edited by Margaret J. McFall-Ngai, Brian Henderson, Edward G. Ruby

(Advances in molecular and cellular microbiology, 10)

Cambridge University Press, 2005

  • : hbk

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Ninety percent of the cells in the human body are bacteria, and humans may be host to many thousands of different species of bacteria. These striking statistics are part of a new paradigm in microbiology in which bacteria are no longer viewed as disease-causing killers but more as lifelong partners which are often essential for the survival of their host. This book brings together a group of diverse scientists - evolutionary biologists, immunologists, molecular biologists, microbiologists, pathologists and mathematicians - to discuss the evolution and mechanisms of bacteria-host interactions at all levels of complexity. Chapters deal with the evolution of these interactions over the last 60 years (since the introduction of antibiotics) to a period of 3.8 billion years (since the evolution of single-celled life) and discuss bacterial interactions with multicellular life forms from coral reefs to humans. Researchers and graduate students across the life sciences will find this book of interest.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. Evolutionary Biology of Animal Host-Bacteria Interactions: 1. How have bacteria contributed to the evolution of multicellular animals? Carol Hickman
  • 2. The interface of microbiology and immunology: a comparative analysis of the animal kingdom Margaret McFall-Ngai
  • 3. Co-evolution of bacteria and their hosts: a marriage made in heaven or hell? Joerg Hacker, Ulrich Dobrindt, Michael Steinert, Hilde Merkert and Ute Hentschel
  • 4. Industrial revolution and microbial evolution Fernando de la Cruz and Julian Davies
  • 5. Bacteria evolve and function within communities: observations from experimental Pseudomonas populations Paul B. Rainey
  • Part II. Bacterial Ecology and the Host as an Environment: 6. Coral symbioses: the best and worst of three kingdoms Eugene Rosenberg
  • 7. Interactions between inherited bacteria and their hosts: the Wolbachia paradigm Zoe L. Veneti, Max Reuter, Horacio Montenegro, Emily A. Hornett, Sylvain Charlat and Gregory D. Hurst
  • 8. Microbial communities in lepidopteran guts: from models to metagenomics Jo Handelsman, Courtney J. Robinson and Kenneth B. Raffa
  • 9. Commensal diversity and the immune system: modelling the 'host-as-network' Robert M. Seymour
  • Part III. Cellular Interactions at the Bacteria-Host Interface: 10. Beneficial intracellular bacteria in the Dryophthoridae: evolutionary and immunological features of a pathogenic-like relationship Abdelaziz Heddi and Caroline Anselme
  • 11. Regulation of Bordetella-host interactions: mechanisms and evolution Seema Mattoo and Jeff F. Miller
  • 12. Resident bacteria as inductive signals in mammalian gut development Lora V. Hooper
  • 13. Virulence or commensalism: lessons from the urinary tract Goeran Bergsten, Bjoern Wullt and Catharina Svanborg
  • Part IV. Bacterial Interactions with the Immune System: 14. Host responses to bacteria: innate immunity in invertebrates L. Courtney Smith
  • 15. Bacterial recognition by mammalian cells Clare E. Bryant and Sabine Toetemeyer
  • 16. Moonlighting in protein hyperspace: shared moonlighting proteins and bacteria-host crosstalk Brian Henderson
  • 17. Cell signalling pathways as targets for bacterial evasion and immunity Andrew N. Neish
  • 18. Shaping the bacterial world by human intervention Rino Rappuoli.

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