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As part of the Fundamentals of Biomedical Science series,
Medical Genetics and Genomics blends together theory and practice to provide a comprehensive overview of the subject of medical genetics and genomics, from basic to in-depth principles.
List of contents
- 1: Emanuela Volpi: Introduction
- 2: Lorna Tinworth: Human Nucleic Acids and Inheritance
- 3: Emanuela Volpi: Chromosomes in health and disease
- 4: Nirmal Vadgama, Shivani Shah, Hussein Sheikh Ali Mohamoud, and Jamal Nasir: Complex disorders and polygenic and multifactorial inheritance
- 5: Dianne Newbury: Genome sequencing
- 6: Drew Ellershaw: The genetic diagnostic laboratory
- 7: Heather Williams: The genetics and genomics of cancer
- 8: Vincenzo Torraca: Clinical microbiology in the genomic era
- 9: Angus Clarke and Nicola Taverner: Ethics in human genetics research and clinical genetics practice
- 10: Janine Lamb: Precision medicine
About the author
Professor Emanuela Volpi graduated in Biological Sciences at the University of Rome 'La Sapienza' and holds a PhD in Evolutionary Biology. She worked as a post-doctoral research fellow at Cancer Research UK in London and was subsequently appointed as a staff scientist by the National Research Council in Italy. Before joining the University of Westminster in 2013 as a reader in Biomedical Science, she was head of the Molecular Cytogenetics and Microscopy Core of the Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics in the Nuffield Department of Clinical Medicine at the University of Oxford. Her primary research and teaching expertise is in human and medical genetics. She is a member of the British Society for Genetic Medicine and the European Cytogeneticists Association and the Genetics Society, and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology and the Higher Education Academy.
Dr Lorna Tinworth graduated in Molecular Biology and Genetics at Queen Mary's, London, and undertook her PhD at King's College. It was in a post-doctoral role with the Cardiovascular Genetics research team at St George's Hospital, whilst teaching medical students, that Dr. Tinworth discovered her passion and talent for sharing bioscience knowledge. In 2010 she accepted a position at the University of Westminster where she continues to work as a senior lecturer in Molecular Biology. She holds an MA in Higher Education and is a Senior Fellow of Advance HE.