Fr. 94.00

Immunology - The Making of a Modern Science

English · Hardback

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Description

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Immunology has progressed in spectacular fashion in the last four decades. Studies of the response to infectious agents, transplanted organs and tumours (and the potential to manipulate that response), and the study of the immune system as a model system in molecular cell biology have yielded dramatic advances in our understanding of the mechanisms of immunity.The field has attracted a continuous stream of the brightest theoretical and experimental scientists for over forty years. This book conveys the philosophies and approaches of sixteen of the most successful of these scientists in the form of a series of narratives that describe the circumstances that led to a major discovery in immunology. Contributors not only recall an exciting period of research that helped shape modern immunology, but set it in the personal context of place and time. Jacques Miller, for example, describes the discovery of the function of the thymus, Rolf Zinkernagel explains how experiments on viral immunity led to the discovery of MHC restriction and Susumu Tonegawa provides an account of how antibody gene structure was defined. Medically-important discoveries include descriptions of early studies of autoimmunity by Noel Rose and of tumour immunology by George and Eva Klein.Far from being a collection of disinterested, historical accounts, this volume comprises a series of passionately biographical, personal essays that provide an unusually intimate insight into the scientific process. This book will be essential, and fascinating, reading for all those with an interest in immunology, and in the life sciences in general. For students and teachers, this will provide the background necessary for a true understanding of immunology, and to place subsequent discoveries in perspective.

List of contents

Introduction: The Historical Origins of Modern Immunology. Theories of Immunity: Origins of the Cell Selection Theories of Antibody Formation. One Cell-One Antibody. Roof of and Routes to Autoimmunology. The Cellular Basis of Immunity: The Mystery of the Lymphocyte. The Discovery of Thymus Function. The Discovery of MHC-Restricted T Cell Recognition. Two Signal Nodels of Lymphocyte Activation. Ontogeny of the Immune Response. The Molecular Basis of Immunity: The HLA Story. Early Investigations on Antibody Structure and Idiotypy. The Contribution of the Cytokine Concept to Immunology. Discovery of Antibody Gene Structure. Discovery of the T Cell Receptor. Immunology and Medicine: Organ Transplantation and the Revitalization of Immunology. Immediate Hypersensitivity, A Brief History. Tumour Immunology. Hepatitis B Virus and Vaccine. Studies of Thyroid Autoimmunity: Their Role in Shaping Modern Immunology.

Summary

Documents the history and development of modern immunology from the early 1960s. The book presents first-hand accounts by the contributors to the major advances in the field.

Product details

Authors Richard B. Gilder Gallagher
Assisted by Richard Gallagher (Editor), Richard B Gallagher (Editor), Richard B. Gallagher (Editor), Gallagher Richard B. (Editor), Jean Gilder (Editor), Gilder Jean (Editor), Gustav J.V. Nossal (Editor), Gustav J V Nossal (Editor), Gustav J. V. Nossal (Editor), Gustav J.V. Nossal (Editor), Sir Gustav J. V. Nossal (Editor), Gaetano Salvatore (Editor), Salvatore Gaetano (Editor)
Publisher ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 14.07.1995
 
EAN 9780122740206
ISBN 978-0-12-274020-6
No. of pages 246
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Biology > Biochemistry, biophysics

SCIENCE / Life Sciences / Biochemistry, biochemistry, Biochemical immunology

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