The Plant Endoplasmic Reticulum: 4 (Plant Cell Monographs)


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Root hairs. Plant Cell Monographs, vol. 12

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  • Myosin-dependent endoplasmic reticulum motility and F-actin organization in plant cells | PNAS;
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English Choose a language for shopping. Not Enabled Word Wise: Not Enabled Enhanced Typesetting: Not Enabled Would you like to tell us about a lower price? So although they may be largely out of sight in their subterranean hideaway they are definitely not out of mind, as Emons and Ketelaar's Root hairs — which is devoted to many aspects of the biology of these fascinating protuberances — ably testifies.

Interestingly, although not explicitly stated, the book looks very much like a second edition — albeit much enlarged and revised — of Springer's tome edited by Ridge and Emons. The volume has 16 chapters cf.

Myosin-dependent endoplasmic reticulum motility and F-actin organization in plant cells

Some topics — although occasionally merged into a single chapter in — are retained: Others seem to have fallen by the wayside: Intriguingly, 's hormones chapter has been replaced by one devoted to auxin alone. Such changes no doubt reflect the shifts in research interests and directions over the intervening eight years.

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bahana-line.com: The Plant Endoplasmic Reticulum (Plant Cell Monographs) ( ): David G. Robinson: Books. Editorial Reviews. From the Back Cover. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER), called "the mother of all membranes," is spotlighted in this timely new book. The work.

The topicality of Root hairs is clearly reflected in those revised chapters in terms of post references: Up-to-datedness is also evident in the presence of new chapters in the volume dealing with phospholipid signalling and ROP GTPases, areas that have increased dramatically in root hair relevance and research interest since Whilst 33 authors contributed to the volume, 28 feature in the present volume of whom 18 are unique to this tome. What this may mean in terms of the individuals' careers in the intervening years is debatable; what it certainly implies is that research interest in root hairs is alive and well.

Editorial Reviews

The editors' chapter on intracellular organization curiously placed after Grierson and Schiefelbein's opening contribution on the genetics of root-hair formation is a useful scene-setter for the subsequent more molecular contributions, and reminds us that it is the cellular stage upon which the molecular players act out their dramas that is important in giving context to those studies.

Root hairs is well-illustrated throughout with images, some in colour.

Although each chapter is as self-contained as it can be, there is a good deal of cross-reference among the chapters, which makes for a satisfyingly integrated text. However, it is odd that these cross-chapter references are to a text entitled Root hairs: