Genetic Engineering of Plant Secondary Metabolism
In this volume of Recent Advances in Phyhmistry you will find a record of the pioneering attempts of plant biochemists and molecular biologists to modify the patterns of secondary metabolism in plants, as presented at the 33rd annual meeting of the Phyhemical Society of North America, in Asilomar, California, on June 27 -July I, 1993. The studies described here represent a marriage of the newest of technologies with one of the oldest human activities, exploitation of plant chemistry. They also represent the beginning of a new era of phyhemical research, an era that will undoubtedly begin to provide answers to some of the long-standing questions that have absorbed plant biochemists for the past century. There is, for instance, a common deflating experience to which every worker in the area of plant secondary metabolism can probably relate. After hearing about the latest research findings regarding some aspect of remarkable compound "X", someone in the audience finally directs the inevitable question at the hapless speaker. "Tell me, is anything known as to the biological role of compound "X" in the plant?" The answer, in most cases, must be "essentially nothing"! This is a frustrating scenario for both the speaker and the audience, since the very fact that a complex biosynthetic pathway remains encoded in a plant genome points to an associated selective advantage. The problem is that establishing the nature and scale of that advantage is a very complex task.
"1012147655"
Genetic Engineering of Plant Secondary Metabolism
In this volume of Recent Advances in Phyhmistry you will find a record of the pioneering attempts of plant biochemists and molecular biologists to modify the patterns of secondary metabolism in plants, as presented at the 33rd annual meeting of the Phyhemical Society of North America, in Asilomar, California, on June 27 -July I, 1993. The studies described here represent a marriage of the newest of technologies with one of the oldest human activities, exploitation of plant chemistry. They also represent the beginning of a new era of phyhemical research, an era that will undoubtedly begin to provide answers to some of the long-standing questions that have absorbed plant biochemists for the past century. There is, for instance, a common deflating experience to which every worker in the area of plant secondary metabolism can probably relate. After hearing about the latest research findings regarding some aspect of remarkable compound "X", someone in the audience finally directs the inevitable question at the hapless speaker. "Tell me, is anything known as to the biological role of compound "X" in the plant?" The answer, in most cases, must be "essentially nothing"! This is a frustrating scenario for both the speaker and the audience, since the very fact that a complex biosynthetic pathway remains encoded in a plant genome points to an associated selective advantage. The problem is that establishing the nature and scale of that advantage is a very complex task.
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Genetic Engineering of Plant Secondary Metabolism

Genetic Engineering of Plant Secondary Metabolism

Genetic Engineering of Plant Secondary Metabolism

Genetic Engineering of Plant Secondary Metabolism

Paperback(Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1994)

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Overview

In this volume of Recent Advances in Phyhmistry you will find a record of the pioneering attempts of plant biochemists and molecular biologists to modify the patterns of secondary metabolism in plants, as presented at the 33rd annual meeting of the Phyhemical Society of North America, in Asilomar, California, on June 27 -July I, 1993. The studies described here represent a marriage of the newest of technologies with one of the oldest human activities, exploitation of plant chemistry. They also represent the beginning of a new era of phyhemical research, an era that will undoubtedly begin to provide answers to some of the long-standing questions that have absorbed plant biochemists for the past century. There is, for instance, a common deflating experience to which every worker in the area of plant secondary metabolism can probably relate. After hearing about the latest research findings regarding some aspect of remarkable compound "X", someone in the audience finally directs the inevitable question at the hapless speaker. "Tell me, is anything known as to the biological role of compound "X" in the plant?" The answer, in most cases, must be "essentially nothing"! This is a frustrating scenario for both the speaker and the audience, since the very fact that a complex biosynthetic pathway remains encoded in a plant genome points to an associated selective advantage. The problem is that establishing the nature and scale of that advantage is a very complex task.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781461360858
Publisher: Springer US
Publication date: 03/22/2013
Series: Recent Advances in Phytochemistry , #28
Edition description: Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 1994
Pages: 368
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.03(d)

Table of Contents

1. Progress in the Genetic Engineering of the Pyridine and Tropane Alkaloid Biosynthetic Pathways of Solanaceous Plants.- 2. Molecular Genetic Techniques Applíed to the Analysis of Enzymes of Alkaloid Biosynthesis.- 3. Polyketide Biosynthesis: Antibiotics in Streptomyces.- 4. The Biologist’s Palette: Genetic Engineering of Anthocyanin Biosynthesis and Rower Color.- 5. Engineering Altered Glucosinolate Biosynthesis by Two Alternative Strategies.- 6. Genetic Manipulation of Lignin and Phenylpropanoid Compounds Involved in Interactions with Microorganisms.- 7. The Genetic Origins of Biosynthesis and Light-Responsive Control of the Chemical UV Screen of Land Plants.- 8. Genetic Control of Monoterpene Biosynthesis in Mints (Mentha: Lamiaceae).- 9. Genetic Manipulation of Terpenoid Phytoalexins in Gossypium: Effects of Disease Resistance.- 10. Analysis of Secondary Metabolism in Arabidopsis.- 11. Polyphenol Oxidase.- 12. Genetic Regulation of Lignin Biosynthesis and the Potential Modification of Wood by Genetic Engineering in Loblolly Pine.
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