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Metagenomics has taken off as one of the major cutting-edge fields
of research. The field has broad implications for human health and
disease, animal production and environmental health. Metagenomics
has opened up a wealth of data, tools, technologies and
applications that allow us to access the majority of organisms that
we still cannot access in pure culture (an estimated 99% of
microbial life). Numerous research groups are developing tools,
approaches and applications to deal with this new field, as larger
data sets from environments including the human body, the oceans
and soils are being generated. See for example the human microbiome
initiative (HMP) which has become a world-wide effort and the
Global Ocean Sampling (GOS) surveys. The number of publications as
measured through PubMed that are focused on metagenomics continues
to increase. The field of metagenomics continues to evolve with
large common datasets available to the scientific community. A
concerted effort is needed to collate all this information in a
centralized place. By having all the information in an Encyclopedia
form, we have an opportunity to gather seminal contributions from
the leaders in the field, and at the same time provide this
information to a significant number of junior and senior
scientists. It is anticipated that the Encyclopedia will also be
used by many other groups including, clinicians, undergraduate and
graduate level students, as well as ethical and legal groups
associated with or interested in the issues surrounding metagenome
science.
This book evolved from the editors strong belief that the
information and new developments that were evolving from the
rapidly growing field of genomics and that are happening primarily
in the developed world have not happened at a parallel rate in the
developing world. One would have hoped that by now the technologies
and approaches would have been adapted on a far greater scale. In
addition to this, the associated information is not always easily
accessible, and is not disseminated in a format that can become a
useful reference for scientists, students and others who reside in
developing countries.
PrefaceThe Human Genome and the Human Microbiome. Chapter 1The
Human Genome, Microbiome and Disease. Chapter 2Host Genotype and
the effect on Microbial Communities. Chapter 3 The Human Microbiome
and Host-Pathogen Interactions. Chapter 4 The Human Virome. Chapter
5 Selection and Sequencing of Strains as References for Human
Microbiome studies. Chapter 6 The Human Vaginal Microbiome. Chapter
7 The Human Lung Microbiome. Chapter 8 The Human Skin Microbiome in
Health and Skin Diseases. Chapter 9 The Human Oral metagenome.
Chapter 10 Infectogenomics: aspect of Host Responses to Microbes in
the Digestive Tract. Chapter 11 Autoimmune Disease and the Human
Metagenome. Chapter 12 Metagenomic applications and the potential
for understanding chronic liver disease. Chapter 13 Symbiotic gut
microbiota and the modulation of human metabolic phenotypes Chapter
14 MetaHIT: The European Union Project on Metagenomics of the Human
Intestinal Tract. Chapter 15 Implications of Human Microbiome
Research for the Developing World.
This collection of diverse articles by the pioneers of modern
genomics takes stock of the current state of the field and
elucidates the contribution that sequencing genomes has made to our
understanding of microbial metabolism and evolution. Through
twenty-eight thought-provoking chapters, the authors describe some
of the most common computational methods and their applications to
studying pathogenic microorganisms, show how genomics can be used
to reconstruct the history and dynamism of the microbial world, and
discuss issues as diverse as reconstruction of metabolic pathways,
cell cycle processes, microbial evolution, metagenomics, and
vaccine development. Additional chapters deal with microarrays and
expression analysis and the role of genomic in drug discovery.
The book brings a completely different perspective than available
books by combining the information gained from the human genome
with that derived from parallel metagenomic studies, and new
results from investigating the effects of these microbes on the
host immune system. Although there are a number of books that focus
on the human genome that are currently available, there are no
books that bring to the forefront the mix of the human genome and
the genomes and metagenomes of the microbial species that live
within and on us.
This book evolved from the editors strong belief that the
information and new developments that were evolving from the
rapidly growing field of genomics and that are happening primarily
in the developed world have not happened at a parallel rate in the
developing world. One would have hoped that by now the technologies
and approaches would have been adapted on a far greater scale. In
addition to this, the associated information is not always easily
accessible, and is not disseminated in a format that can become a
useful reference for scientists, students and others who reside in
developing countries.
This collection of diverse articles by the pioneers of modern
genomics takes stock of the current state of the field and
elucidates the contribution that sequencing genomes has made to our
understanding of microbial metabolism and evolution. Through
twenty-eight thought-provoking chapters, the authors describe some
of the most common computational methods and their applications to
studying pathogenic microorganisms, show how genomics can be used
to reconstruct the history and dynamism of the microbial world, and
discuss issues as diverse as reconstruction of metabolic pathways,
cell cycle processes, microbial evolution, metagenomics, and
vaccine development. Additional chapters deal with microarrays and
expression analysis and the role of genomic in drug discovery.
Metagenomics has taken off as one of the major cutting-edge fields
of research. The field has broad implications for human health and
disease, animal production and environmental health. Metagenomics
has opened up a wealth of data, tools, technologies and
applications that allow us to access the majority of organisms that
we still cannot access in pure culture (an estimated 99% of
microbial life). Numerous research groups are developing tools,
approaches and applications to deal with this new field, as larger
data sets from environments including the human body, the oceans
and soils are being generated. See for example the human microbiome
initiative (HMP) which has become a world-wide effort and the
Global Ocean Sampling (GOS) surveys. The number of publications as
measured through PubMed that are focused on metagenomics continues
to increase. The field of metagenomics continues to evolve with
large common datasets available to the scientific community. A
concerted effort is needed to collate all this information in a
centralized place. By having all the information in an Encyclopedia
form, we have an opportunity to gather seminal contributions from
the leaders in the field, and at the same time provide this
information to a significant number of junior and senior
scientists. It is anticipated that the Encyclopedia will also be
used by many other groups including, clinicians, undergraduate and
graduate level students, as well as ethical and legal groups
associated with or interested in the issues surrounding metagenome
science.
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