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  • 1
    Schlagwort(e): Electronic books.
    Materialart: Online-Ressource
    Seiten: 1 online resource (253 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783662650837
    Sprache: Deutsch
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Dordrecht :Springer Netherlands,
    Schlagwort(e): Stem cells. ; Physiology, Comparative. ; Electronic books.
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Here is evidence that there is more than human and mouse stem cells to learn from. Reflecting the enormous growth in our knowledge of stem cells, the book presents the subject's conceptual language as well as a summary of the advances in our understanding.
    Materialart: Online-Ressource
    Seiten: 1 online resource (200 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781402082740
    DDC: 571.835
    Sprache: Englisch
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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  • 3
    Online-Ressource
    Online-Ressource
    Vienna :Springer Wien,
    Schlagwort(e): Cytology. ; Electronic books.
    Materialart: Online-Ressource
    Seiten: 1 online resource (159 pages)
    Ausgabe: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783709118962
    DDC: 577.85
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- 1: Introduction: The Holobiont Imperative -- 1.1 Of Complex Diseases and Animals as Complex Systems: Why Bacteria Matter -- 1.2 The Complexity of Coevolved Animal Communities Was Discovered in 1877 in Kiel, Germany -- 1.3 Looking for a Term for the Functional Entity Formed by a Host and Its Associated Microbial Symbionts -- References -- 2: Major Events in the Evolution of Planet Earth: Some Origin Stories -- 2.1 Microbes Were First: Bacteria Have Existed from Very Early in the History of Life on Earth -- 2.2 Life Did Not Take Over the Globe by Combat, But by Networking -- 2.3 The Transformation of the Biosphere at the Ediacaran-Cambrian Boundary -- 2.4 Our Bacterial Ancestry Is Reflected in Our Genomic Signature -- 2.5 Genomes of Early Emerging Metazoans, Similar to Humans, Contain a Considerable Fraction of Genes Encoding Proteins of Bacterial Origin -- 2.6 The CRISPR/CAS System as Window into Ancient Holobionts -- 2.7 Origins of Complexity: What Makes an Animal? -- 2.8 Multicellularity Requires Cooperation of Cells -- 2.9 Genomes of Early Emerging Metazoans Reveal the Origin of Animal-Specific Genes -- References -- 3: The Diversity of Animal Life: Introduction to Early Emerging Metazoans -- 3.1 How Old Are the "Early Diverging" Animal Phyla? -- 3.2 Cnidarians: The Closest Relatives of "Higher" Animals (Bilateria) -- 3.3 Sponges: One Phylum or More? -- 3.4 The "Comb Jellies": The Enigmatic Phylum Ctenophora -- 3.5 Placozoans: The Simplest Extant Animals? -- 3.6 Eyes, Nervous Systems, and Muscles -- 3.7 The Closest Unicellular Relatives of Extant Animals -- 3.8 The Paucity of Data on Symbioses Involving "Lower" Animals -- References -- 4: Phylosymbiosis: Novel Genomic Approaches Discover the Holobiont -- 4.1 Animal Life and Fitness Is Fundamental Multiorganismal. , 4.2 Phylosymbiosis and Coevolution -- 4.3 Microbiota Diversification Within a Phylogenetic Framework of Hosts: Insights from Hydra -- References -- 5: Negotiations Between Early Evolving Animals and Symbionts -- 5.1 Cnidaria Use a Variety of Molecular Pathways to Elicit Complex Immune Responses -- 5.2 How Do Cnidarians Distinguish Between Friends and Foes: Insights from Corals and Hydra -- 5.3 Selection Can Favor the Establishment of Mutualisms and Animal-Microbe Cooperation -- 5.4 Rethinking the Role of Immunity -- Conclusion -- References -- 6: Role of Symbionts in Evolutionary Processes -- 6.1 Microbes as the Forgotten Organ -- 6.2 Developmental Symbiosis -- 6.3 The Role of Symbionts in Evolutionary Processes -- 6.4 Nematostella, an Early Metazoan Model to Understand Consequences of Host-Microbe Interactions for Rapid Adaptation of a Holobiont to Changing Environmental Conditions -- 6.5 Rapid Adaptation to Changing Environmental Conditions: The Coral Probiotic Hypothesis -- 6.6 The Role of Symbionts in Speciation -- References -- 7: The Hydra Holobiont: A Tale of Several Symbiotic Lineages -- 7.1 Rationale for Studying Host-Microbe Interactions in Hydra -- 7.2 The Hydra Microbiota -- 7.3 Linking Tissue Homeostasis, Development, and the Microbiota -- 7.4 Hydra's Mucus Layer Plays a Key Role in Maintaining the Necessary Spatial Host-Microbial Segregation -- 7.5 Microbes Differ in Embryos and Adult: Embryo Protection -- 7.6 Antimicrobial Peptides Function as Host-Derived Regulators of Microbial Colonization -- 7.7 Symbiotic Interactions Between Hydra and the Unicellular Algae Chlorella -- Conclusion -- References -- 8: Corals -- 8.1 The Case of Reef Building Corals: A Complex Association Between Animal, Algal, and Bacterial Components. , 8.2 Attempts to Generalize About Coral-Microbe Interactions Are Complicated by the Evolutionary and Physiological Diversity of Corals -- 8.3 The Complexity of Coral Microbial Communities -- 8.4 Where Are the Bacteria Located? -- 8.5 Transmission Mode and Ontogeny -- 8.6 Key Components of the Coral Microbiome -- 8.7 Nitrogen-Fixing Bacteria Are Intimately Associated with Corals -- 8.8 Probiotic Microbes and Antimicrobial Peptides -- 8.9 Coral-Bacterial Interactions Modulate Local Climate Via Sulfur Metabolites -- Conclusion -- References -- 9: Bleaching as an Obvious Dysbiosis in Corals -- 9.1 The Complex Relationship Between Stress Sensitivity and the Transmission Mode and Diversity of Symbionts -- 9.2 Do Bacteria Cause Coral Bleaching? -- 9.3 Coral Disease and the Significance of Opportunistic Pathogens -- 9.4 Changes in Coral-Associated Microbial Consortia Under Stress -- 9.5 Symbiodinium as a Recent Intruder on Preexisting Coral-Bacterial Mutualisms -- 9.6 Coda: Are Coral Reefs Doomed? -- 9.6.1 The Geological Perspective: The Persistence of Coral Reefs -- 9.6.2 Impacts of Ocean Acidification on Corals -- 9.6.3 What About the Direct Impact of Thermal Stress or Elevated CO2 on Corals? -- 9.6.4 Can Corals Evolve Fast Enough to Keep Pace with the Rate of Climate Change? -- Conclusion -- References -- 10: The Hidden Impact of Viruses -- 10.1 Beneficial Viruses -- 10.2 Viral Communities in Hydra Are Species Specific and Sensitive to Stress -- 10.3 Bacteriophage Therapy in Corals? -- Conclusion -- References -- 11: Seeking a Holistic View of Early Emerging Metazoans: The Power of Modularity -- 11.1 Animals Are Mobile Ecosystems Carrying a Myriad of Microbes with Them -- 11.2 The Power of Modularity -- References -- Further Reading -- Index.
    Standort Signatur Einschränkungen Verfügbarkeit
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