ISBN: 0123386500
Author: John P. Helgeson,B. J. Deverall
Language: English
Publisher: Academic Pr (April 1, 1984)
Pages: 208
Category: Science & Mathematics
Subcategory: Other
Rating: 4.2
Votes: 666
Size Fb2: 1345 kb
Size ePub: 1834 kb
Size Djvu: 1366 kb
Other formats: mobi doc mbr txt
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Use Of Tissue Culture.
New Biological Books. Use of Tissue Culture and Protoplasts in Plant Pathology. John P. Helgeson, B. J. Deverall. A. D. Krikorian, "Use of Tissue Culture and Protoplasts in Plant Pathology.
Scowcroft WR, Larkin PJ, Brettell RIS (1983) In: Deverall BJ, Helgeson JP (eds) The Use of Tissue Culture and Protoplasts in Plant Pathology, Academic Press, Sydney, in pressGoogle Scholar. Secor GA, Shepard JF (1981) Crop Sci. 21: 102–105CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Sharp WR, Evans DA (1982) In: Fujiwara A (ed) Plant Tissue Culture 1982, Jap. Assoc. Cite this chapter as: Larkin . Brettell . Ryan . Scowcroft W. (1983) Protoplasts and Variation from Culture. In: Potrykus . Harms . Hinnen . Hütter . King . eds) Protoplasts 1983. EXS 46: Experientia Supplementum, vol 46. Birkhäuser, Basel.
In DS Ingram, JP Helgeson eds, Tissue Culture Methods for Plant . INGRAM DS 1980 Tissue culture methods in plant pathology. Adv Virus Res 19: 1–le Scholar.
In DS Ingram, JP Helgeson eds, Tissue Culture Methods for Plant Pathologists, Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford, Boston pp 203–208Google Scholar. In DS Ingram, JP Helgeson, eds, Tissue Culture Methods for Pant Pathologists, Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford, Boston, pp 3–9Google Scholar.
Application of plant cell and tissue culture to agriculture and industry. This volume serves as a follow-up to our previous book, Hybridomas: A New Dimension in Biological Analyses. We continue the theme of monoclonal antibodies and their applications, attempting to cover some of the areas not covered in the previous volume. We again include an appendix de scribing methods useful to those who ar-e beginning to apply these techniques in their own laboratories.
We receive 1 copy every 6 months. ISBN13:9780123386502.
These plants were particularly good sources of protoplasts and routinely yielded 10–20 million . Test lines were chosen because of desirable disease resistances or markers that could be used for studies of somaclonal variation and somatic fusions. Stock plants and test lines.
These plants were particularly good sources of protoplasts and routinely yielded 10–20 million protoplasts from 1 g of leaf tissue. All tested clones yielded some viable protoplasts and all but three yielded protoplasts that were capable of at least one cell division. Callus tissues were obtained from 32 of the 36 clones and 22 of these produced shoots. Stock plants and test line. ONTINUE READING.
Plant tissue culture is a collection of techniques used to maintain or grow plant cells, tissues or organs under sterile conditions on a nutrient culture medium of known composition. It is widely used to produce clones of a plant in a method known as micropropagation.
Tissue culture techniques had been used successfully to identify and select plants with desirable traits, resistance to. .In Helgeson, J. Deverall, . Ed. New York: Academic 73, pp.
Tissue culture techniques had been used successfully to identify and select plants with desirable traits, resistance to disease inclusive (Daub, 1986). Thus, investigation of host-pathogen interactions in vitro is an efficient way of gaining a faster and comparatively cheaper method of studying plant response to pathogen invasion (Huang, 2001). This study was aimed at screening in-vitro regenerated plantlets of four Nigerian cowpea varieties for resistance to ted fungal wilt pathogen, Fusarium oxysporum . p.