Subjects

Abiotic Stress Adaptation in Plants
Physiological, Molecular and Genomic Foundation

Edited by Ashwani Pareek, S.K. Sopory, Hans J. Bohnert and Govindjee


Abiotic Stress Adaptation in Plants
Online price: £137.71
RRP: £153.00
You save £15.29 (10% discount)
Hardback, 526 pages
Published: February 2010

Category: Botany and Plant Sciences, Botany and Plant Sciences, Botany and Plant Sciences, Biochemical Engineering

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Environmental insults such as extremes of temperature, extremes of water status as well as deteriorating soil conditions pose major threats to agriculture and food security. Employing contemporary tools and techniques from all branches of science, attempts are being made worldwide to understand how plants respond to abiotic stresses with the aim to help manipulate plant performance that will be better suited to withstand these stresses. This book on abiotic stress attempts to search for possible answers to several basic questions related to plant responses towards abiotic stresses. Presented in this book is a holistic view of the general principles of stress perception, signal transduction and regulation of gene expression. Further, chapters analyze not only model systems but extrapolate interpretations obtained from models to crops. Lastly, discusses how stress-tolerant crop or model plants have been or are being raised through plant breeding and genetic engineering approaches. Twenty three chapters, written by international authorities, integrate molecular details with overall plant structure and physiology, in a text-book style, including key references.

Environmental insults such as extremes of temperature, extremes of water status as well as deteriorating soil conditions pose major threats to agriculture and food security. Employing contemporary tools and techniques from all branches of science, attempts are being made worldwide to understand how plants respond to abiotic stresses with the aim to help manipulate plant performance that will be better suited to withstand these stresses. The present book on abiotic stress is an attempt to search for possible answers to several basic questions related to plant responses towards abiotic stresses. This book presents a holistic view of the general principles of stress perception, signal transduction and regulation of gene expression. Further, chapters in this book analyze not only model systems but extrapolate interpretations obtained from models to crops. Lastly, we discuss how stress-tolerant crop or model plants have been or are being raised through plant breeding and genetic engineering approaches. Twenty three chapters, written by international authorities, integrate molecular details with overall plant structure and physiology, in a text-book style, including key references. This book serves as a complete package on the basics and applications for abiotic stress response sensing and genetic and metabolic response pathways in plants; it is designed for use by advanced undergraduate students, graduate students and beginning researchers in the area of stress biology, plant molecular biology, plant physiology, agriculture, biochemistry and environmental biology.

Dedication.-Preface.-The Editors.-List of Contributors.-Author Index.-Color plates.-1. Abiotic Tolerance and Crop Improvement.-I.Stress Perception and Signal Transduction:2.Sensors and Signal Transducers of Environmental Stress in Cyanobacteria.-3.Stress Signaling I:The Role of Abscisic Acid.-4.Stress Signaling II: Calcium Sensing and Signaling.-5.Stress Signaling III: Reactive Oxygen Species.-6.A Biotic or Abiotic Stress?.-7. Protein Kinases and Phosphatases for Stress Signal Transduction in Plants.-8.Chemical Root to Shoot Signaling via the Xylem under Drought.-II.Stress Regulation of Gene Expression:9.Abiotic Stress Responses: Complexities of Gene Expression.-10.Promoters and Transcription Factors in Abiotic Stress-responsive Gene Expression.-11.Epigenetic Regulation: microRNA Chromatin Modeling.-III. Physiology and Metabolism:12.Ion Homeostasis.-13.Glutathione Homeostasis: Crucial.-14.Water Balance and the Regulation of Stomatal Movements.-15.Responses to Macronutrient Deprivation.-16. Osmolyte Regulation.-17.Programmed Cell Death in Plant.-IV.Overcoming Stress:18. Breeding Efforts.-19. Transgenic Approaches.-20.Marker Assisted Breeding.-21.Stress, Mutators, Mutations and Stress Resistance.-22.Systems Biology of Abiotic Stress: the Elephant and the Blind Men.-23.Global Change, Stress and Plant Productivity.-Index.

From the reviews:
“The book focuses on the ‘physiological, molecular, and genomic’ components of the problems and emphasizes various aspects of overcoming stress through breeding, transgenics, and the identification of markers associated with plant responses to stress. … The quality of the 23 chapters is very high, and they include much very current information from some of the top practitioners in the field. Summing Up: Recommended. Academic libraries serving upper-division undergraduates and above.” (W. Loescher, Choice, Vol. 48 (4), December, 2010)
“This book serves as a complete package on the basics and applications for abiotic stress response pathways in plants’. Indeed, at over 520 pages, with 23 predominantly multi-author chapters arranged in four parts, it is a considerable compendium of information and references … . The book is aimed at ‘late undergraduate through to beginning researchers’ in many areas of science and technology. … it is most suited to libraries, where it should find readers and will be useful.” (David Lawlor, Annals of Botany, Vol. 107 (4), 2011)
“The book is an important and timely addition in view of the frightening global climate change ‘issues and concerns’. … we would like to congratulate the editors for bringing out this vitally useful volume. … the book is informative and innovative. Researchers, teachers, graduate students and advanced undergraduate students would benefit from it. We recommended it to all those interested in plants and microbes, and their biology. … We agree that this is an exciting addition in the field.” (Prasanna Mohanty, S. Rajagopal and N. Raghuram, Current Science, Vol. 99 (9), November, 2010)
“The book presents a standard monograph in which individual chapters are written by different authors. The book is divided into four parts and contains altogether 23 chapters. … the large amount of information contained in this book should be of interest for plant physiologists, stress physiologists, and molecular plant biologists, both researchers and students.”­­­ (J. Nauš, Photosynthetica, Vol. 48 (3), 2010)

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Publication Details:

Binding: Hardback, 526 pages
ISBN: 9789048131112
Format: 260mm x 193mm

BIC Code: PST, PSTD, PSTL, TCBG, TVB
Imprint: Springer


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