Overview
- Editors:
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Klaus Palme
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Table of contents (24 chapters)
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- A. Lyndsay Drayer, Peter J. M. van Haastert
Pages 3-34
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- P. Ferreira, A. Hemerly, M. Van Montagu, Dirk Inzé
Pages 53-67
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- Ed D. L. Schmidt, Anke J. de Jong, Sacco C. de Vries
Pages 69-77
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- Tedd D. Elich, Joanne Chory
Pages 79-91
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- Anthony Trewavas, Marc Knight
Pages 93-105
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- Kiyotaka Okada, Yoshiro Shimura
Pages 121-141
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- François Côté, Michael G. Hahn
Pages 143-175
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- Herman P. Spaink, Ben J. J. Lugtenberg
Pages 177-186
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- Daniel F. Klessig, Jocelyn Malamy
Pages 203-222
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- Günther Sembdner, Rainer Atzorn, Gernot Schneider
Pages 223-245
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- Břetislav Brzobohatý, Ian Moore, Klaus Palme
Pages 247-261
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- Lawrence Hobbie, Candace Timpte, Mark Estelle
Pages 263-283
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- Richard Walden, Klaus Fritze, Hiroaki Hayashi, Edvins Miklashevichs, Hinrich Harling, Jeff Schell
Pages 285-292
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- Jérôme Giraudat, François Parcy, Nathalie Bertauche, Françoise Gosti, Jeffrey Leung, Peter-Christian Morris et al.
Pages 321-341
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- Thomas I. Zarembinski, Athanasios Theologis
Pages 343-361
About this book
Plants offer exciting opportunities to understand major biological questions, i.e. the regulation of development and morphogenesis. How are changes of the environment, developmental cues, and other signals perceived and transduced in physiological responses? What are the elements of plant signalling pathways and what is their organization? The panoply of molecular tools and techniques as well as the blossoming field of plant genetics are providing an exciting ground for major breakthroughs in unravelling the fundamental mechanisms of plant signalling. The present book establishes a state-of-the-art framework spanning the wide spectrum of perception, signal transduction events and transport processes, including cell proliferation and cell cycle regulation, embryogenesis, and flowering. Moreover, the volume emphasizes the role of the major plant signalling substances known to date (the phytohormones and more recently studied substances) and summarizes what we know on their molecular mechanisms of action. The book emphasizes how the use of molecular technology has made plant signalling processes accessible to experimental test.
Reviews
`The book is an excellent overview of the many kinds of singalling processes in plants. It is of high interest to established plant scientists and also to graduate students, and will stimulate new research to further reveal the remaining secrets in the signalling pathways of plants. The book can be recommended to all plant biologists and should be present in the book shelves of general libraries and plant biology institutions. Many plant physiologists will find it useful to possess a personal copy.'
Journal of Plant Physiology, 147 (1995)
`...this book is very worthwile reading in order to keep up with new developments in the field of plant physiology and to translate it to applicable knowledge in horticulture and agriculture.'
Scientia Horticulturae, 68 (1997)