The Physiology of Characean Cells [electronic resource] /by Mary J. Beilby, Michelle T. Casanova.
by Beilby, Mary J [author.]; Casanova, Michelle T [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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MAIN LIBRARY | QK710-899 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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QA75.5-76.95 Mobile Web Information Systems | HD72-88 Knowledge as a Driver of Regional Growth in the Russian Federation | QP34-38 Pathologies of Calcium Channels | QK710-899 The Physiology of Characean Cells | R895-920 Radiology for PET/CT Reporting | QC770-798 The History and Science of the Manhattan Project | RE1-994 Microperimetry and Multimodal Retinal Imaging |
The Charophyte Plant -- Detached Cells in Steady-State – Electrophysiology and Transport -- Electrophysiology of the Detached Cell Under Stress -- The Whole Plant and Cell-to-Cell Transport.
This book describes the unique characean experimental system, which provides a simplified model for many aspects of the physiology, transport and electrophysiology of higher plants. The first chapter offers a thorough grounding in the morphology, taxonomy and ecology of Characeae plants. Research on characean detached cells in steady state is summarised in Chapter 2, and Chapter 3 covers characean detached cells subjected to calibrated and mostly abiotic types of stress: touch, wounding, voltage clamp to depolarised and hyperpolarised potential difference levels, osmotic and saline stress. Chapter 4 highlights cytoplasmic streaming, cell-to-cell transport, gravitropism, cell walls and the role of Characeae in phytoremediation. The book is intended for researchers and students using the characean system and will also serve as an invaluable reference resource for electrophysiologists working on higher plants.
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