
Horizontal Gene Transfer
- 2nd Edition - December 19, 2001
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Authors: Michael Syvanen, Clarence I. Kado
- Language: English
- Hardback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 6 8 0 1 2 6 - 2
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 3 9 9 5 0 8 - 7
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 5 3 4 1 2 - 1
The second edition of Horizontal Gene Transfer has been organized to provide a concise and up-to-date coverage of the most important discoveries in this fascinating field. Writte… Read more

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Request a sales quoteThe second edition of Horizontal Gene Transfer has been organized to provide a concise and up-to-date coverage of the most important discoveries in this fascinating field. Written by the most prominent gene transfer and genome analytical scientists, this book details experimental evidence for the phenomenon of horizontal gene transfer and discusses further evidence provided by the recent completion of genomic sequences from Archea, Bacteria, and Eucarya members. The relevance of horizontal gene transfer to plant and metazoan taxonomy, GM foods, antibiotic resistance, paleontology, and phylogenetic reconstruction is also explored. Horizontal Gene Transfer is essential for microbiologists, geneticists, biochemists, evolutionary biologists, infectious disease specialists, paleontologists, ecologists, and researchers working in plant/animal systematics and agriculture with an interest in gene transfer. This includes scientific researchers from government and industry concerned with the release of genetically modified organisms.
- Up-to-the-minute reviews, maps, conclusions, urls to relevant websites and colour figures
- Unique chapters, for example one written by paleontologists presents data for horizontal gene transfer from fingerprints form the fossil record
Research-level microbiologists, infectious disease specialists, geneticists, biochemists, evolutionary biologists
ForewordPrefaceContributorsSection I Plasmids and Transfer Mechanisms in Bacteria Chapter 1 Recent History of Trans-kingdom Conjugation Chapter 2 Gene Cassettes and Integrons: Moving Single Genes Chapter 3 A Corynebacterium Plasmid Composed of Elements from Throughout the Eubacteria Kingdom Chapter 4 Horizontal Transfer of Naphthalene Catabolic Genes in a Toxic Waste Site Chapter 5 Horizontal Transmission of Genes by Agrobacterium Species Chapter 6 Horizontal Transfer of Proteins Between Species: Part of the Big Picture or Just aGenetic Vignette? Chapter 7 Transformation in Aquatic Environments Chapter 8 Pseudolysogeny: A Bacteriophage Strategy for Increasing Longevity In SituSection II Mosaic Genes and Chromosomes Chapter 9 The Dynamics of Bacterial Genomes Chapter 10 Bacterial Pathogenicity Islands and Infectious Diseases Chapter 11 Mosaic Proteins, Not Reinventing the Wheel Chapter 12 Evolutionary Relationships Among Diverse Bacteriophages and Prophages: All The World’s a Phage Chapter 13 Horizontal Gene Transfer in Bacteriophages Chapter 14 Horizontal Transfer of Mismatch Repair Genes and the Variable Speed of Bacterial EvolutionSection III Eukaryotic Mobile Elements Chapter 15 Evidence for Horizontal Transfer of P Transposable Elements Chapter 16 The mariner Transposons of Animals: Horizontally Jumping Genes Chapter 17 The Splicing of Transposable Elements: Evolution of a Nuclear Defense Against Genomic Invaders?Section IV Transfer Mechanisms Involving Plants and Microbes Chapter 18 Gene Transfer Through Introgressive Hybridization: History, Evolutionary Significance, and Phylogenetic Consequences Chapter 19 Gene Flow and Introgression from Domesticated Plants into their Wild Relatives Chapter 20 Search for Horizontal Gene Transfer from Transgenic Crops to Microbes Chapter 21 Gene Transfer in the Fungal Host–Parasite System Absidia glauca–Parasitella parasitica Depends on Infection Chapter 22 Automatic Eukaryotic Artificial Chromosomes: Possible Creation of Bacterial Organelles in Yeast Chapter 23 Bacteria as Gene Delivery Vectors for Mammalian CellsSection V Whole Genome Comparisons: The Emergence of the Eukaryotic Cell Chapter 24 Gene Transfers Between Distantly Related Organisms Chapter 25 Horizontal Gene Transfer and its Role in the Evolution of Prokaryotes Chapter 26 Horizontal Gene Transfer and the Universal Tree of Life Chapter 27 Endosymbiotic Gene Transfer: A Special Case of Horizontal Gene Transfer Germane to Endosymbiosis, the Origins of Organelles and the Origins of Eukaryotes Chapter 28 Dating the Age of the Last Common Ancestor of All Living Organisms with a Protein ClockSection VI Parallelisms and Macroevolutionary Trends Chapter 29 Character Parallelism and Reticulation in the Origin of Angiosperms Chapter 30 Temporal Patterns of Plant and Metazoan Evolution Suggest Extensive Polyphyly Chapter 31 Graptolite Parallel Evolution and Lateral Gene Transfer Chapter 32 Larval Transfer in Evolution Chapter 33 Macroevolution, Catastrophe and Horizontal Transfer Chapter 34 Horizontal Gene Transfer: A New Taxonomic Principle?IndexA Color Plate Section Appears between Pages 110 and 111
- Edition: 2
- Published: December 19, 2001
- No. of pages (Hardback): 445
- No. of pages (eBook): 445
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Language: English
- Hardback ISBN: 9780126801262
- Paperback ISBN: 9780123995087
- eBook ISBN: 9780080534121
MS
Michael Syvanen
Affiliations and expertise
University of California, Davis, U.S.A.CK
Clarence I. Kado
Affiliations and expertise
University of California, Davis, U.S.A.Read Horizontal Gene Transfer on ScienceDirect