Synopsis:
An understanding of the immune system is central to the understanding of how the body interacts with its surroundings, and how it both protects itself and responds to infectious disease. But what processes underpin the body's response to infection? How does our immune system remember its
previous encounters? And what happens when the tight regulation of the immune system fails?
Immunity: The Immune Response in Infectious and Inflammatory Disease presents an engaging insight into one of the most intricate yet conceptually challenging biological systems. With a unique emphasis on the immune response to infection, it presents the immune system as a dynamic interface with
the outside world.
Building up a complete picture of the subject, the book leads the student through both innate and adaptive immunity, how infection is detected, and how the cells of the immune system interact to generate a response, before examining the immune response to bacterial, viral, and fungal and parasitic
infections. Finally, the book explores the relationship between the regulation of the immune response and immunological diseases - how the immune system is controlled, and the implications for our health when this control is lost - and immune memory and the development of vaccines.
Immunity combines articulate prose with striking full colour illustrations, while the unique Primers in Biology modular structure integrates text, illustrations, definitions, and literature references for each topic into one double-page spread, bringing to the student's fingertips all the tools
that they need to master that topic.
The immune system is one of the most challenging yet rewarding biological systems to comprehend; Immunity: The Immune Response in Infectious and Inflammatory Disease is the ideal resource for any student wishing to develop a sound grasp of this fascinating subject.
Online Resource Centre
The Online Resource Centre features:
For lecturers
Figures from the book available to download, to facilitate lecture preparation
For students
Interactive self-assessment questions for each section of the book.
About the Author:
Anthony DeFranco is Chairman of the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of California San Francisco Medical School where his research explores the mechanisms of signalling by the B cell antigen receptor, and B cell autoimmunity.
Richard Locksley is Professor of Medicine and Microbiology and Immunology and Chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at the University of California, San Franciso. His primary research focus is on cellular immune responses to infectious and inflammatory diseases.
Miranda Robertson is Managing Director of New Science Press, was previously Biology Editor of Nature, and has worked on several outstanding textbooks including Molecular Biology of the Cell by Alberts et al., and Immunobiology by Janeway and Travers.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.