High-throughput molecular technologies (omics) can help to decipher the contributions of different physiological systems and identify candidate molecules that are representative of different physiological pathways thereby allowing the discovery of biomarkers. Notably the omics technologies along with and computational methods bioprospecting and artificial intelligence will continue to lead to better understanding of biological mechanisms that are responsible for physical attributes or phenotypes. Research breakthroughs obtained through these technologies can be used to enhance productivity of food animals meet the increasing demand for animal-sourced foods enhance high-quality nutrient availability ensure nutrient safety mitigate the effects of climate variability and result in new technologies that provide continued improvement in food security worldwide. Such breakthroughs are an urgent necessity because over the past 50 years there has been an unprecedented increase in the world’s population which will reach ten billion by the year 2050. Innovative and technological advancements that enhance all aspects of food production will arise from basic fundamental research. Besides food animal by-products have found many applications in the fields of pharmaceuticals cosmetics and household and industrial products. Hence the need to ameliorate the productivity reproductivity growth performance and disease resistance in animals has created a worldwide interest in gaining a deeper understanding of animal biology biotechnology and genomics and proteomics. The present volume thoroughly discusses the omics studies in domestic and non-domestic animals and their role in mitigation of various challenges ahead. The volume thus focuses on i. Omics (genomics proteomics transcriptomics metabolonomics) technologies in identifying characterizing biodiversity ii. Role of molecular techniques for improvement of domestic and non-domestic organisms iii. Animal and alternative model systems (using stem cells tissue engineering cell free systems 3D platforms etc. ) for studying life phenomena iv. Genetically modified organisms as factories for the products | Genomic Proteomics and Biotechnology
High-throughput molecular technologies (omics) can help to decipher the contributions of different physiological systems and identify candidate molecules that are representative of different physiological pathways thereby allowing the discovery of biomarkers. Notably the omics technologies along with and computational methods bioprospecting and artificial intelligence will continue to lead to better understanding of biological mechanisms that are responsible for physical attributes or phenotypes. Research breakthroughs obtained through these technologies can be used to enhance productivity of food animals meet the increasing demand for animal-sourced foods enhance high-quality nutrient availability ensure nutrient safety mitigate the effects of climate variability and result in new technologies that provide continued improvement in food security worldwide. Such breakthroughs are an urgent necessity because over the past 50 years there has been an unprecedented increase in the world’s population which will reach ten billion by the year 2050. Innovative and technological advancements that enhance all aspects of food production will arise from basic fundamental research. Besides food animal by-products have found many applications in the fields of pharmaceuticals cosmetics and household and industrial products. Hence the need to ameliorate the productivity reproductivity growth performance and disease resistance in animals has created a worldwide interest in gaining a deeper understanding of animal biology biotechnology and genomics and proteomics. The present volume thoroughly discusses the omics studies in domestic and non-domestic animals and their role in mitigation of various challenges ahead. The volume thus focuses on i. Omics (genomics proteomics transcriptomics metabolonomics) technologies in identifying characterizing biodiversity ii. Role of molecular techniques for improvement of domestic and non-domestic organisms iii. Animal and alternative model systems (using stem cells tissue engineering cell free systems 3D platforms etc. ) for studying life phenomena iv. Genetically modified organisms as factories for the products | Genomic Proteomics and Biotechnology
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