Toxicogenomics is defined as an integration of genomics (transcriptomics, proteomics and Toxicogenomics) and toxicology. It is a scientific field that studies how the genome is involved in responses to environmental stressors and toxicants. It combines studies of mRNA expression, cell and tissue-wide protein expression and metabonomics to understand the role of gene-environment interactions in disease. Key features - Theoretical approaches, number of examples and references - Provides a broad, application-oriented overview - Real application scenarios, such as Toxicogenomics projects that require the use of a whole set of drug design tools - This appears to be an excellent series of textbooks for students, researchers and scientists - Provides a comprehensive, definitive, and up to date reference of the main areas of specialist and expert knowledge and skills used by those involved in all aspects of the new drug development research - Illustrations help readers understand the research methodology easily - Lists of Web resources serve as a gateway to important research centers, institutes, and other sources of information