Plant-Microbe Interaction - Recent Advances in Molecular and Biochemical Approaches: Overview of Biochemical and Physiological Alteration During Plant-Microbe Interaction, Volume One covers the role of these plant microbes and their interaction between plants and microbes. These beneficial microbes, such as bacteria and fungi are also known as plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) through a biochemical reaction that may improve induced systemic resistance in the plant host via indirectly (against phytopathogens) or directly (the solubilization of mineral nutrients) by producing phytohormones and specific enzymes such as 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate deaminase.
The book covers biochemical processes such as physiological, metabolic, etc. of plant and microbe interactions, the biochemistry of biological systems, the interaction of biological systems above-ground or within the rhizosphere, and the history of growth promoting microbiomes, their roles in phytoremediation efficiency, physiological and biochemical studies, chemical communication and signaling mechanisms.
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Dr. Prashant Swapnil is Assistant Professor in the Department of Botany, Central University of Punjab, Department of Botany, Punjab, India; Dr. Mukesh Meena is Assistant Professor, Department of Botany, Mohanlal Sukhadia University,
Udaipur, India; Dr. Harish is Assistant Professor, Department of Botany, Mohanlal Sukhadia University,
Udaipur, India; Dr. Avinash Marwal is based at the Department of Biotechnology, University College of Science, Mohanlal Sukhadia University, Udaipur, India; Dr. Selvakumar Vijayalakshmi is based at the School of Food Science and Biotechnology
Kyungpook National University, Republic of Korea; and Dr. Andleeb Zehra works at the Department of Botany,
Institute of Science, Banaras Hindu University, India.
Mukesh Meena is an assistant professor at the Department of Botany at Mohanlal Sukhadia University, Udaipur, Rajasthan, in India. His areas of research and work expertise are; plant-microbial interactions, fungal biology, toxic metabolites, plant-pathogen interaction, plant growth promoting microbes, fungal bio-molecules, induced resistance, programmed cell death, biological control, rhizobacteria, environment, heavy metal stress, and molecular markers. He has been honored with several fellowship awards in his career including Rajiv Gandhi National Fellowship (RGNF), UGC Research Fellowship in Science. He has authored several research articles related to isolation and characterization of fungal toxins, applications of fungal glucose oxidase, fungal toxins, production and technological applications of enzymes from microbial sources, beneficial microbes for disease suppression and plant growth promotion. He has published more than 80 peer reviewed international publications and more than 45 book chapters. He has also published three books with international publishers.
Biochemistry plays a very important role in between interaction of plants and microbes. The chemical communication in between plant roots and microbes followed in a sophisticated manner within the rhizosphere. Their interaction undergoes biofilm formation with those microbes which are beneficial to plants and these interaction helps in microbe-assisted phytoremediation to adapt in metalliferous environments. These beneficial microbes such as bacteria and fungi are also known as plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR), through biochemical reaction may improve induced systemic resistance in the plant host via indirectly (against phytopathogens) or directly (the solubilisation of mineral nutrients) by producing phytohormones and specific enzymes such as 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate deaminase). As we know that plant-plant and plant-microbes interactions have been studied so well over recent years but the chemical process which are involved in communication is not well known. Therefore, this book will discuss the biochemistry which occurs during the interaction and help to understand the proper mechanism of the interaction biochemical as well as molecular. The biochemical process such as physiological, metabolic, etc. of plant and microbe interactions are much different as above and below the ground. The biochemistry of biological system will help in metabolomics studies to profile endo- as well as exo-metabolites which participate and drive in physiological processes. The interaction of biological systems above-ground or within the rhizosphere highlight the assistance that biochemical approaches refers mass spectrometric-based metabolomic process will offer the study of plant-beneficial microbes interaction by knowledge of more than 100s compounds.
The book focuses on the history of growth promoting microbiomes, their roles in phytoremediation efficiency, physiological and biochemical studies, chemical communication and signalling mechanism during interactions. This volume also focuses the evolutionary studies of plant–microbe interactions.
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Zustand: New. Über den AutorrnrnDr. Prashant Swapnil is Assistant Professor in the Department of Botany, Central University of Punjab, Department of Botany, Punjab, India Dr. Mukesh Meena is Assistant Professor, Department of Botany, Mohanlal Sukhadia U. Artikel-Nr. 585467727
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Taschenbuch. Zustand: Neu. Neuware - Plant-Microbe Interaction - Recent Advances in Molecular and Biochemical Approaches: Overview of Biochemical and Physiological Alteration During Plant-Microbe Interaction, Volume One covers the role of these plant microbes and their interaction between plants and microbes. These beneficial microbes, such as bacteria and fungi are also known as plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) through a biochemical reaction that may improve induced systemic resistance in the plant host via indirectly (against phytopathogens) or directly (the solubilization of mineral nutrients) by producing phytohormones and specific enzymes such as 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate deaminase. The book covers biochemical processes such as physiological, metabolic, etc. of plant and microbe interactions, the biochemistry of biological systems, the interaction of biological systems above-ground or within the rhizosphere, and the history of growth promoting microbiomes, their roles in phytoremediation efficiency, physiological and biochemical studies, chemical communication and signaling mechanisms. Artikel-Nr. 9780323918756
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