This volume is dedicated to the memory of the late Professor WERNER BRAUN, one of the most devoted and active members of the Editorial Board of the Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology, who passed away, after suffering a heart attack, in November 1972. Dr. WERNER BRAUN was born in Berlin, Germany, on November 16,1914. During his highschool days in Berlin he did research work on problems of genetics as a young guest in the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut fur Biologie, in the department of Prof. R. GOLDSCHMIDT. I remember his colourful description of his discussions during this period, while still a teen-ager, with OTTO WAR BURG. He studied biology and medicine at the University of G6ttingen and received a Ph.D. degree in biology in 1936. In the same year he left Nazi Germany and came to the United States first as a Guest Investigator in Genetics at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and then in Berkeley, where he carried out his work in the Depart ments of Zoology and of Veterinary Science until 1948. He was engaged during this period in the study of problems concerned with physiological genetics, bacterial variation, immunology and biochemistry.
There is some doubt as to whether it was meant to be published, but it was not a review. The objective of reviews is frequently to bring order.
Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology / Ergebnisse der Mikrobiologie und Immunitätsforschung: Volume 65
Phenomena as diverse as tuberculin sensitivity, delayed sensitivity to soluble proteins other than tuberculin, contact allergy, homograft rejection, experimental autoallergies, and the response to many microorganisms, have been classified ...
The processes involved in herpesvirus replication, latency, and oncogenic transformation, have, in general, been rather poorly defined. A primary reason for this is the size and complexity of the herpesvirus genome.
Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology / Ergebnisse der Mikrobiologie und Immunitätsforschung
Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology: Ergebnisse der Mikrobiologie und Immunitätsforschung
These viruses, however, appear to replicate in certain heterologous host cells (LEvy and PINCUs, 1970; AARONSON and STEPHENSON, 1973; BENVENISTE et al., 1973b; LEvY, 1973). C. Host Range of Mouse Type-C Viruses in Homologous and ...
Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology / Ergebnisse Der Mikrobiologie und Immunitatsforschung
Phenomena as diverse as tuberculin sensitivity, delayed sensitivity to soluble proteins other than tuberculin, contact allergy, homograft rejection, experimental autoallergies, and the response to many microorganisms, have been classified ...
Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology: Ergebnisse Der Mikrobiologie Und Immunitatsforschung