Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Preface
- About the authors
- Contributors
- PART 1 BASICS OF DNA, CHROMOSOMES, CELLS, DEVELOPMENT AND INHERITANCE
- 1 Basic principles of nucleic acid structure and gene expression
- 1.1 Composition of nucleic acids and polypeptides
- 1.2 Base pairing in DNA and RNA, the double helix, and DNA replication
- 1.3 RNA transcription and gene expression
- 1.4 RNA processing
- 1.5 Translation, post-translational processing, and protein structure
- Summary
- Further reading
- 2 Fundamentals of cells and chromosomes
- 2.1 Cell structure and diversity, and cell evolution
- 2.2 DNA and chromosome copy number during the cell cycle
- 2.3 Cell division and transmission of DNA to daughter cells
- 2.4 Structure and function of chromosomes
- Summary
- Further reading
- 3 Fundamentals of cell–cell interactions and immune system biology
- 3.1 Principles of cell signaling
- 3.2 Cell proliferation and programmed cell death
- 3.3 Cell adhesion and tissue formation
- 3.4 Immune system biology
- Summary
- Further reading
- 4 Aspects of early mammalian development, cell differentiation, and stem cells
- 4.1 Cell lineages and tissue differentiation in early mammalian development
- 4.2 Stem cells and cell differentiation
- Summary
- Further reading
- 5 Patterns of inheritance
- 5.1 Monogenic versus multifactorial inheritance
- 5.2 Mendelian pedigree patterns
- 5.3 Mosaicism and new mutations
- 5.4 Non-Mendelian characters
- Summary
- Further reading
- PART 2 UNDERSTANDING GENOMES
- 6 Core DNA technologies: amplifying DNA, nucleic acid hybridization, and DNA sequencing
- 6.1 Cloning DNA in bacterial cells
- 6.2 Amplifying DNA by in vitro DNA replication
- 6.3 Nucleic acid hybridization: principles and uses
- 6.4 DNA sequencing principles and Sanger dideoxy sequencing
- 6.5 Massively-parallel DNA sequencing (next-generation sequencing)
- Summary
- Further reading
- 7 Analyzing the structure and expression of genes and genomes
- 7.1 Genome structure analysis and genome projects
- 7.2 Basic gene expression analyses
- 7.3 High-throughput gene expression analyses
- 7.4 Single-cell genomics
- Summary
- Further reading
- 8 Principles of genetic manipulation of mammalian cells
- An overview of genome editing, gene silencing, and germ-line transgenesis
- 8.1 Artificial transfer of genetic material into mammalian cells
- 8.2 Principles of transgene expression in mammalian cells
- 8.3 Genome editing using homologous recombination
- 8.4 Genome editing using programmable site-specific endonucleases
- 8.5 Gene silencing
- 8.6 Germ-line transgenesis and transgenic animals
- Summary
- Further reading
- 9 Uncovering the architecture and workings of the human genome
- 9.1 An overview of the human genome
- 9.2 Gene organization and distribution in the human genome
- 9.3 Heterochromatin DNA and transposon repeats
- 9.4 A start on working out how our genome functions
- Summary
- Further reading
- 10 Gene regulation and the epigenome
- 10.1 Chromatin accessibility and conformation
- 10.2 Histones and other DNA-binding proteins
- 10.3 Regulation by DNA methylation and noncoding RNAs
- 10.4 X-inactivation, imprinting, and epigenetic memory
- 10.5 Making the transcript: promoters and enhancers
- 10.6 Post-transcriptional regulation
- Summary
- Further reading
- PART 3 GENETIC VARIATION BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS AND SPECIES
- 11 An overview of human genetic variation
- 11.1 Origins of DNA sequence variation
- 11.2 DNA repair
- 11.3 Population genomics and the scale of human genetic variation
- 11.4 Functional genetic variation and protein variation
- 11.5 Extraordinary genetic variation in the adaptive immune system
- Summary
- Further reading
- 12 Human population genetics
- 12.1 Allele frequencies and genotype frequencies: the Hardy–Weinberg relationship
- 12.2 Haplotype frequencies and linkage disequilibrium
- 12.3 Changing allele frequencies
- 12.4 Population structure and inbreeding
- Summary
- Further reading
- 13 Comparative genomics and genome evolution
- 13.1 Comparative genomics
- 13.2 Gene duplication, species differences in gene number, and evolutionary advantages of exons
- 13.3 Evolution of mammalian chromosomes
- 13.4 Regulatory sequence evolution and transposon origins of functional sequences
- 13.5 Phylogenetics and our place in the tree of life
- Summary
- Further reading
- 14 Human evolution
- 14.1 Human origins
- 14.2 Human evolutionary history from genome sequences
- 14.3 Inferring female and male histories using mitochondrial DNA and the Y chromosome
- 14.4 Health consequences of our evolutionary history
- Summary
- Further reading
- PART 4 HUMAN GENETIC DISEASE
- 15 Chromosomal abnormalities and structural variants
- 15.1 Studying human chromosomes
- 15.2 Gross chromosome abnormalities
- 15.3 Structural variants, microdeletions, and microduplications
- Summary
- Further reading
- 16 Molecular pathology: connecting phenotypes to genotypes
- 16.1 Loss of function
- 16.2 Gain of function
- 16.3 Dynamic mutations: unstable repeat expansions
- 16.4 Molecular pathology of mitochondrial disorders
- 16.5 Genotype–phenotype correlations
- Summary
- Further reading
- 17 Mapping and identifying genes for monogenic disorders
- 17.1 Positional cloning seeks to identify disease genes by first mapping them to a precise chromosomal location
- 17.2 Haplotype sharing and autozygosity
- 17.3 Whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing allow an unbiased and hypothesis-free approach to identifying the cause of a monogenic condition
- 17.4 Strategies for exome-based disease-gene identification
- 17.5 Confirming that the candidate gene is the correct one
- Summary
- Further reading
- 18 Complex disease: identifying susceptibility factors and understanding pathogenesis
- Introduction
- 18.1 Investigation of complex disease: epidemiological approaches
- 18.2 Investigation of complex disease using linkage
- 18.3 Investigation of complex disease using association
- 18.4 The limitations of genome-wide association studies
- 18.5 What have we learned about the genetics of complex characters?
- Summary
- Further reading
- 19 Cancer genetics and genomics
- Introduction
- 19.1 Oncogenes
- 19.2 Tumor suppressor genes
- 19.3 Key oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes work mainly to regulate cell cycle checkpoints and genome maintenance
- 19.4 A genome-wide view of cancer
- 19.5 Using our new understanding of cancer
- Summary
- Further reading
- PART 5 APPLIED HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS
- 20 Genetic testing in healthcare and the law
- 20.1 What to test and why
- 20.2 Testing for a specific genetic variant
- 20.3 Clinical diagnostic testing
- 20.4 Population screening
- 20.5 Pharmacogenetics and personalized medicine
- 20.6 DNA forensics: identifying individuals and relationships
- Summary
- Further reading
- 21 Model organisms and modeling disease
- 21.1 An overview of model organisms
- 21.2 Cellular disease models
- 21.3 Origins of animal models of genetic disorders
- 21.4 How useful are animal models of genetic disorders?
- Summary
- Further reading
- 22 Genetic approaches to treating disease
- 22.1 An overview of treating genetic disease and of genetic treatment of disease
- 22.2 Treating disease with genetically-engineered therapeutic proteins
- 22.3 Basic principles of gene therapy and RNA therapeutics
- 22.4 The practice of gene augmentation therapy for treating recessively inherited disorders
- 22.5 RNA therapeutics, therapeutic genome editing prospects, and genetic approaches to preventing disease
- Summary
- Further reading
- Glossary
- Index