The Plant Cell Wall Methods and Protocols
The cell wall and its constituent polysaccharides and proteins control nearly all plant-based biological and biophysical processes. Understanding the cell wall is, therefore, not only fundamental to the plant sciences but is also pertinent to aspects of human and animal nutrition and health as well...
Other Authors: | |
---|---|
Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Totowa, NJ
Humana Press
2011, 2011
|
Edition: | 1st ed. 2011 |
Series: | Methods in Molecular Biology
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | |
Collection: | Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa |
Table of Contents:
- Plant Tissue Cultures
- Computerized Molecular Modelling of Carbohydrates
- Oligosaccharide Mass Profiling (OLIMP) of Cell Wall Polysaccharides by MALDI-TOF/MS
- High-Voltage Paper Electrophoresis (HVPE) of Cell-Wall Building Blocks and Their Metabolic Precursors
- Carbohydrate Gel Electrophoresis
- Capillary Electrophoresis with Detection by Laser-Induced Fluorescence
- Monoclonal antibodies, Carbohydrate-Binding Modules, and the Detection of Polysaccharides in Plant Cell Walls
- Screening and Characterization of Plant Cell Walls Using Carbohydrate Microarrays
- Electron Tomography and Immunogold Labelling as Tools to Analyze de novo Assembly of Plant Cell Walls
- Analyzing Cellulose Biosynthesis with Confocal Microscopy
- Visual Mapping of Cell Wall Biosynthesis
- Atomic Force Microscopy of Plant Cell Walls
- Using Solid-State 13C NMR Spectroscopy to Study the Molecular Organization of Primary Plant Cell Walls
- Formation of Cellulose-Based Composites with Hemicelluloses and Pectins Using Gluconacetobacter Fermentation
- Structural Proteins of the Primary Cell Wall: Extraction, Purification, and Analysis
- New Insights into the Control of Cell Growth
- Extraction and Detection of Arabinogalactan Proteins
- Characterization of the Plant Cell Wall Proteome Using High Throughput Screens
- Knocking Out the Wall: Protocols for Gene Targeting in Physcomitrella patens
- Measuring In vitro Extensibility of Growing Plant Cell Walls