<p>This reference work provides a comprehensive review of cell and tissue differentiation and its role in the formation of specific secondary metabolites. Divided into five sections, this book covers the main cellular processes involved in the biosynthesis of secondary metabolites. Chapters from exp
Secondary Metabolism and Cell Differentiation
โ Scribed by Professor Dr. Martin Luckner, Dr. Lutz Nover, Dr. Hartmut Bรถhm (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 134
- Series
- Molecular Biology, Biochemistry and Biophysics 23
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
1. Secondary Metabolism and Differentiation In addition to the primary metabolic reactions, which are similar in all living beings (formation and breakdown of nucleic acids and proteins as well as of their precursors, of most carbohyยญ drates, of some carboxylic acids, etc. ), a vast number of metabยญ olic pathways lead to the formation of compounds peculiar to a few species or even to a single chemical race only. These reacยญ tions, in accord with CZAPEK (1921) and PAECH (1950), are summed up under the term "secondary metabolism", and their products are called "secondary metabolites. " The wide variety of secondary products formed in nature includes such well-known groups as alkaloids, antibiotics, cardiac glycoยญ sides, tannins, saponins, volatile oils, and others. A considerยญ able number of them are of economic importance in therapeutics or technology. Although secondary products are produced by microยญ organisms, higher plants, and animals (cf. LUCKNER, 1972), most of the substances are found in the plant kingdom. The lack of mechanisms for true excretion in higher plants may result in this unequal distribution, the "waste products" of metabolism in plants instead being accumulated in the vacuoles, the cell walls, or in special excretory cells or spaces of the organism ("metabolic excretion," cf. FREY-WYSSLING, 1935, 1970; MOTHES, 1966a, b, 1972; LUCKNER et al. , 1976. Many secondary substances have, however, a direct biologic funcยญ tion. They can be regulatory effectors, e. g.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-VI
Expression of Secondary Metabolism An Aspect of Cell Specialization of Microorganisms, Higher Plants, and Animals....Pages 1-102
Secondary Metabolism in Cell Cultures of Higher Plants and Problems of Differentiation....Pages 103-123
Back Matter....Pages 125-131
โฆ Subjects
Life Sciences, general; Biomedicine general
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