Overview
- Editors:
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Christine H. Foyer
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Crop Performance and Improvement Division, IACR-Rothamsted, Harpenden, UK
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Graham Noctor
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Institut de la Biotechnologie des Plantes, Université Denis Diderot Paris VII, Orsay, France
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Table of contents (16 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages I-CP-3
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- Christine H Foyer, Graham Noctor
Pages 1-22
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- P. Ananda Kumar, Martin A. J. Parry, Rowan A. C. Mitchell, Altaf Ahmad, Yash P. Abrol
Pages 23-34
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- Christian Meyer, Christine Stöhr
Pages 49-62
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- Werner M. Kaiser, Maria Stoimenova, Hui-Min Man
Pages 63-70
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- Bertrand Hirel, Peter J. Lea
Pages 71-92
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- Francisco J. Florencio, José C. Reyes
Pages 93-113
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- Alfred J. Keys, Richard C. Leegood
Pages 115-134
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- Jean Vidal, Nadia Bakrim, Michael Hodges
Pages 135-150
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- Per Gardeström, Abir U. Igamberdiev, A. S. Raghavendra
Pages 151-172
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- Greg C. Vanlerberghe, Sandi H. Ordog
Pages 173-191
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- A. Harvey Millar, David A. Day, Christel Mathieu
Pages 193-204
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- Anne Krapp, Sylvie Ferrario-Méry, Bruno Touraine
Pages 205-225
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- Tatsuo Sugiyama, Hitoshi Sakakibara
Pages 227-238
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- Gertrud Lohaus, Karsten Fischer
Pages 239-263
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- John A. Raven, Linda L. Handley, Mitchell Andrews
Pages 265-274
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Back Matter
Pages 275-284
About this book
According to many textbooks, carbohydrates are the photosynthesis and mitochondrial respiration fluctuate in a circadian manner in almost every unique final products of plant photosynthesis. However, the photoautotrophic production of organic organism studied. In addition, external triggers and environmental influences necessitate precise and nitrogenous compounds may be just as old, in appropriate re-adjustment of relative flux rates, to evolutionary terms, as carbohydrate synthesis. In the algae and plants of today, the light-driven assimilation prevent excessive swings in energy/resource provision of nitrogen remains a key function, operating and use. This requires integrated control of the alongside and intermeshing with photosynthesis and expression and activity of numerous key enzymes in respiration. Photosynthetic production of reduced photosynthetic and respiratory pathways, in order to carbon and its reoxidation in respiration are necessary co-ordinate carbon partioning and nitrogen assim- ation. to produce both the energy and the carbon skeletons required for the incorporation of inorganic nitrogen This volume has two principal aims. The first is to into amino acids. Conversely, nitrogen assimilation provide a comprehensive account of the very latest developments in our understanding of how green is required to sustain the output of organic carbon cells reductively incorporate nitrate and ammonium and nitrogen. Together, the sugars and amino acids into the organic compounds required for growth.
Reviews
"All chapters are excellent reviews of recent literature with conclusions for both the dvelopments of sicence, and praxis. [...] this is a basic book for plant physiological, biochemica, and genetic laboratories and libraries."
(Photosynthetica, 41:3 (2003)
Editors and Affiliations
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Crop Performance and Improvement Division, IACR-Rothamsted, Harpenden, UK
Christine H. Foyer
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Institut de la Biotechnologie des Plantes, Université Denis Diderot Paris VII, Orsay, France
Graham Noctor