John Wiley & Sons Molecular Mechanisms in Plant Adaptation Cover Plants are forced to adapt for a variety of reasons-- protection, reproductive viability, and enviro.. Product #: 978-1-118-86017-5 Regular price: $198.13 $198.13 Auf Lager

Molecular Mechanisms in Plant Adaptation

Laitinen, Roosa

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1. Auflage Juni 2015
256 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-118-86017-5
John Wiley & Sons

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Plants are forced to adapt for a variety of reasons-- protection, reproductive viability, and environmental and climatic changes. Computational tools and molecular advances have provided researchers with significant new insights into the molecular basis of plant adaptation. Molecular Mechanisms in Plant Adaptation provides a comprehensive overview of a wide variety of these different mechanisms underlying adaptation to these challenges to plant survival.

Molecular Mechanisms in Plant Adaptation opens with a chapter that explores the latest technological advances used in plant adaptation research, providing readers with an overview of high-throughput technologies and their applications. The chapters that follow cover the latest developments on using natural variation to dissect genetic, epigenetic and metabolic responses of plant adaptation. Subsequent chapters describe plant responses to biotic and abiotic stressors and adaptive reproductive strategies. Emerging topics such as secondary metabolism, small RNA mediated regulation as well as cell type specific responses to stresses are given special precedence. The book ends with chapters introducing computational approaches to study adaptation and focusing on how to apply laboratory findings to field studies and breeding programs. Molecular Mechanisms in Plant Adaptation interest plant molecular biologists and physiologists, plant stress biologists, plant geneticists and advanced plant biology students.

Chapter 1: Introduction

Dr. Roosa Laitinen, Max Planck Institute of Plant Molecular Physiology, Germany

Chapter 2: Technological advances in studies of plant adaptation

Dr. Norman Warthmann, The Australian National University, Australia

Dr. Korbinian Schneeberger, Max Planck Institute for plant breeding, Cologne, Germany

Dr. Alisdair Fernie, Max Planck Institute of Plant Molecular Physiology, Germany

Chapter 3: Mechanisms of plant responses to abiotic stresses

Dr. Mikael Brosché, Division of Plant Biology, University of Helsinki and University of Tartu, Estonia

Chapter 4: Mechanisms of pathogen response in plants

Dr. Shauna Somerville, Department of Plant Biology, Stanford University, USA

Dr. Joy Bergelson, University of Chicago, USA

Prof. Jane Glazebrook, Department of Plant Biology, University of Minnesota, USA

Chapter 5: Role of small RNAs in regulation of plant responses to stress

Dr. Jia-wei Wang,Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Shanghai, China
Dr. Sascha Laubinger, Center for Plant Molecular Biology, University of Tübingen, Germany

Chapter 6: Adaptation of flowers

Dr. Victor A. Albert, Department of Biological sciences, University of Buffalo, USA

Prof. Paula Elomaa, Department of Agricultural sciences, University of Helsinki

Prof. Teemu Teeri, Department of Agricultural sciences, University of Helsinki

Chapter 7: Epigenetic mechanisms in adaptive traits

Dr. Vincent Colot, Department of Biology, IBENS, France
Prof. Dr. Isabel Bäurle, Institute of Biochemistry and Biology, University of Postdam, Germany
Chapter 8: Use of natural variation in Arabidopsis thaliana to study adaptation

Dr. Roosa Laitinen, Max Planck Institute of Plant Molecular Physiology, Potsdam, Germany

Chapter 9: Modeling in understanding mechanisms of adaptation

Dr. Zoran Nikoloski, Max Planck Institute of Plant Molecular Physiology, Potsdam, Germany

Chapter 10: Translational prospects, field trials and applications in plant breeding

Dr. Roosa Laitinen, Max Planck Institute of Plant Molecular Physiology, Potsdam, Germany

Dr. Karin Köhl, Max Planck Institute of Plant Molecular Physiology, Potsdam, Germany