Genetic Diversity of RNA Viruses
Many RNA viruses have been known for decades to be genetically and biologically quite variable. Some well-known examples are influenza viruses, foot and mouth disease viruses, and Newcastle disease virus. During the past decade, it has become clear that most, it not all. , RNA viruses (riboviruses and retroviruses) are much more mutable than was recognized previously, and that this great mutability generates extremely complex populations consisting of indeterminate mixtures of related variants (Le. , "mutant swarms" or "quasispecies" populations). This is also true of DNA viruses (such as hepatitis DNA genomes via RNA transcripts B virus) which replicate their that are reverse-transcribed back to DNA. This hypermutability of RNA replicons provides great biological adaptability for RNA virus genomes. It also allows (but does not necessitate) RNA viruses, so that they can extremely rapid evolution of evolve over a million times more quickly than their eukaryotic DNA-based hosts. The genetics of RNA replicons is so unusual (and often counterintuitive) that it has many important biological consequences which are neither readily apparent nor widely under­ stood. Failure to understand the distinctive aspects of RNA genetics frequently generates confusion and controversy and can adversely impact vaccine and antiviral drug programs and other applications of medical virology. The 14 chapters in this volume describe advances in a number of significant areas of RNA virus genetics and evolution.
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Genetic Diversity of RNA Viruses
Many RNA viruses have been known for decades to be genetically and biologically quite variable. Some well-known examples are influenza viruses, foot and mouth disease viruses, and Newcastle disease virus. During the past decade, it has become clear that most, it not all. , RNA viruses (riboviruses and retroviruses) are much more mutable than was recognized previously, and that this great mutability generates extremely complex populations consisting of indeterminate mixtures of related variants (Le. , "mutant swarms" or "quasispecies" populations). This is also true of DNA viruses (such as hepatitis DNA genomes via RNA transcripts B virus) which replicate their that are reverse-transcribed back to DNA. This hypermutability of RNA replicons provides great biological adaptability for RNA virus genomes. It also allows (but does not necessitate) RNA viruses, so that they can extremely rapid evolution of evolve over a million times more quickly than their eukaryotic DNA-based hosts. The genetics of RNA replicons is so unusual (and often counterintuitive) that it has many important biological consequences which are neither readily apparent nor widely under­ stood. Failure to understand the distinctive aspects of RNA genetics frequently generates confusion and controversy and can adversely impact vaccine and antiviral drug programs and other applications of medical virology. The 14 chapters in this volume describe advances in a number of significant areas of RNA virus genetics and evolution.
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Genetic Diversity of RNA Viruses

Genetic Diversity of RNA Viruses

by John J. Holland (Editor)
Genetic Diversity of RNA Viruses

Genetic Diversity of RNA Viruses

by John J. Holland (Editor)

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1992)

$109.99 
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Overview

Many RNA viruses have been known for decades to be genetically and biologically quite variable. Some well-known examples are influenza viruses, foot and mouth disease viruses, and Newcastle disease virus. During the past decade, it has become clear that most, it not all. , RNA viruses (riboviruses and retroviruses) are much more mutable than was recognized previously, and that this great mutability generates extremely complex populations consisting of indeterminate mixtures of related variants (Le. , "mutant swarms" or "quasispecies" populations). This is also true of DNA viruses (such as hepatitis DNA genomes via RNA transcripts B virus) which replicate their that are reverse-transcribed back to DNA. This hypermutability of RNA replicons provides great biological adaptability for RNA virus genomes. It also allows (but does not necessitate) RNA viruses, so that they can extremely rapid evolution of evolve over a million times more quickly than their eukaryotic DNA-based hosts. The genetics of RNA replicons is so unusual (and often counterintuitive) that it has many important biological consequences which are neither readily apparent nor widely under­ stood. Failure to understand the distinctive aspects of RNA genetics frequently generates confusion and controversy and can adversely impact vaccine and antiviral drug programs and other applications of medical virology. The 14 chapters in this volume describe advances in a number of significant areas of RNA virus genetics and evolution.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783642770135
Publisher: Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publication date: 12/08/2011
Series: Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology , #176
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1992
Pages: 226
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.02(d)

Table of Contents

List of Contents.- RNA Virus Populations as Quasispecies.- Genetic Recombination in RNA Viruses.- Foot-and-Mouth Disease Virus Populations Are Quasispecies.- Genetic Diversity and Rapid Evolution of Poliovirus in Human Hosts.- Mutations and All Hypermutations in Measles Virus Persistent Infections.- Evolutionary Processes in Influenza Viruses: Divergence, Rapid Evolution, and Stasis.- Genetic Diversity and Slow Rates of Evolution in New World Alphaviruses.- Emergence and Transmission of Influenza A Viruses Resistant to Amatadine and Rimantadine.- Selection of Zidovudine-Resistant Variants of Human Immunodeficiency Virus by Therapy.- Genetic Diversity and Evolution of Retroviruses.- Retroviral Reverse Transcriptases: Error Frequencies and Mutagenesis.- Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Quasispecies In Vivo and Ex Vivo.- Tracing the Origin of Retroviruses.- Replication and Evolution of Viroid-Like Pathogens.
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