An approach to modern biotechnology from a molecular basis using colorful illustrations and concise applications
1. Basics of Biotechnology 2. DNA, RNA, and Protein 3. Recombinant DNA Technology 4. DNA Synthesis and PCR5. RNA-Based Technologies 6. Immune Technology 7. Nanobiotechnology8. Genomics and Gene Expression9. Proteomics10. Recombinant Proteins11. Protein Engineering 12. Environmental Biotechnology 13. Synthetic Biology 14. Portable Biotechnology15. Plant Biotechnology 16. Transgenic Animals 17. Inherit Defects and Gene Therapy 18. Stem Cells & Applications19. Cancer20. Aging and Apoptosis 21. Viral and Prion Infections 22. Biowarfare and Bioterrorism 23. Forensic Molecular Biology 24. Bioethics in Biotechnology
David P. Clark did his graduate work on bacterial antibiotic
resistance to earn his Ph.D. from Bristol University, England. He
later crossed the Atlantic to work as a postdoctoral researcher at
Yale University and then the University of Illinois. Dr Clark
recently retired from teaching Molecular Biology and Bacterial
Physiology at Southern Illinois University which he joined in 1981.
His research into the Regulation of Alcohol Fermentation in E. coli
was funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, from 1982 till 2007.
In 1991 he received a Royal Society Guest Research Fellowship to
work at Sheffield University, England while on sabbatical
leave.
Nanette J. Pazdernik has devoted her career to the understanding of
molecular biology and biotechnology, and then disseminating that
knowledge by writing and teaching. She is a co-author of
Biotechnology, 2nd edition and Molecular Biology, 3rd edition, with
Dr. David P. Clark and Dr. Michelle McGehee. Both the second and
third edition of Molecular Biology won a Texty award from the
Textbook and Academic Authors Association. She has taught courses
in General Biology, Genetics, as well as Anatomy and Physiology at
Southwestern Illinois College, McKendree University, and
Harris-Stowe University. She received her BA in Biology from
Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin, and her PhD in
Molecular, Cellular, Developmental Biology and Genetics from the
University of Minnesota. Her doctoral thesis studied protein
structure-function relationships. Following her degrees, she
investigated the signal transduction pathways that control
apoptosis and immunity at Indiana University School of Medicine. In
a second post-doctoral position, she studied the various molecules
that maintain the stem cell niche in the Department of Genetics at
Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, MO.
Currently, Dr. Pazdernik works in the biotech industry as a
scientific writer.
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