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4.1
30 reviewsFollowing a general introduction, this exciting volume includes details of metabolomics of model species including Arabidopsis and tomato. Further chapters provide in-depth coverage of abiotic stress, data integration, systems biology, genetics, genomics, chemometrics and biostatisitcs. Applications of plant metabolomics in food science, plant ecology and physiology are also comprehensively covered.
Biology of Plant Metabolomics provides cutting edge reviews of many major aspects of this new and exciting subject. It is an essential purchase for plant scientists, plant geneticists and physiologists. All libraries in universities and research establishments where biological sciences are studied and taught should have a copy of this Annual Plant Reviews volume on their shelves.Content:
Chapter 1 Plant Metabolomics in a Nutshell: Potential and Future Challenges (pages 1–24): Robert D. Hall
Chapter 2 Metabolite Analysis and Metabolomics in the Study of Biotrophic Interactions between Plants and Microbes (pages 25–59): John Draper, Susanne Rasmussen and Hassan Zubair
Chapter 3 Abiotic Stress and Metabolomics (pages 61–85): Jairus Bowne, Antony Bacic, Mark Tester and Ute Roessner
Chapter 4 A Role for Metabolomics in Plant Ecology (pages 87–107): Nicole M. van Dam and Eddy van der Meijden
Chapter 5 Metabolomics of a Model Fruit: Tomato (pages 109–155): Ric C. H. de Vos, Robert D. Hall and Annick Moing
Chapter 6 Metabolomics of Arabidopsis Thaliana (pages 157–180): Michael H. Beale and Michael R. Sussman
Chapter 7 Crops and Tasty, Nutritious Food – How Can Metabolomics Help? (pages 181–217): Derek Stewart, Louise V. T. Shepherd, Robert D. Hall and Paul D. Fraser
Chapter 8 Genetics, Genomics and Metabolomics (pages 219–259): Alisdair R. Fernie and Joost J. B. Keurentjes
Chapter 9 Data Integration, Metabolic Networks and Systems Biology (pages 261–316): Henning Redestig, Jedrzej Szymanski, Masami Y. Hirai, Joachim Selbig, Lothar Willmitzer, Zoran Nikoloski and Kazuki Saito
Chapter 10 Progress in Chemometrics and Biostatistics for Plant Applications, or: A Good Red Wine is a Bad White Wine (pages 317–342): Joachim Kopka, Dirk Walther, J. William Allwood and Royston Goodacre
Chapter 11 Spatially Resolved Plant Metabolomics (pages 343–366): Lloyd W. Sumner, Dong Sik Yang, Bennie J. Bench, Bonnie S. Watson, Chao Li and A. Daniel Jones
Chapter 12 Data Processing, Metabolomic Databases and Pathway Analysis (pages 367–406): Oliver Fiehn, Tobias Kind and Dinesh Kumar Barupal