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Dual Fungal and Plant Cell Culture
2003Plant tissue cultures are now well-recognized as valuable experimental systems for use in the study of host-pathogen interactions. These techniques have obvious major advantages for the examination of obligately biotrophic fungi and also those with a necrotrophic life style, and it is in these areas that much research effort has been concentrated (1 ...
A, Donovan, S, Isaac, H A, Collin
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Large-Scale Culture of Plant Cells
2003The large-scale or mass cultivation of plant cells is the growth of plant cell suspensions at volumes above those normally produced in shake flasks, that is, above IL. Attempts to grow plant cells in fermenters or bioreactors started in the early 1960s with converted carboys.
A H, Scragg, M W, Fowler
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Culture establishment, plant cell
2010Alternatively to whole plants, plant cell cultures are used to produce bioactive substances for food industry, cosmetics and pharmacy. This mainly concerns secondary metabolites and recombinant proteins (so-called plant made proteins, PMPs). Among the employed culture types (which comprise suspension cultures, root cultures and shoot cultures), plant ...
Eibl, Regine +4 more
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Integrated Bioprocessing for Plant Cell Cultures
2001Plant cell suspension culture has become the focus of much attention as a tool for the production of secondary metabolites including paclitaxel, a well-known anticancer agent. Recently, it has also been regarded as one of the host systems for the production of recombinant proteins. In order to produce phytochemicals using plant cell cultures, efficient
J W, Choi, G H, Cho, S Y, Byun, D I, Kim
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2012
Part I. Introduction An Introduction to Plant Cell Culture: Back to the Future Victor M. Loyola-Vargas and Felipe Vazquez-Flota History of Plant Tissue Culture Trevor A. Thorpe Part II. Cell Culture and Plant Regeneration: The Fundamentals Pathogen and Biological Contamination Management: The Road Ahead Alan C. Cassells and Barbara M.
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Part I. Introduction An Introduction to Plant Cell Culture: Back to the Future Victor M. Loyola-Vargas and Felipe Vazquez-Flota History of Plant Tissue Culture Trevor A. Thorpe Part II. Cell Culture and Plant Regeneration: The Fundamentals Pathogen and Biological Contamination Management: The Road Ahead Alan C. Cassells and Barbara M.
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Secreted Proteins in Plant Cell Cultures
1993The possibility of in vitro culture of plant tissues and cells has provided a means of studying fundamental problems in plant biology. Two research areas especially have benefited from the use of plant cell suspension cultures. First, the analysis of plant primary cell walls has made considerable progress through the use of cell suspensions as a ...
van Engelen, F.A., de Vries, S.C.
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1994
Once protoplasts are separated from the isolation medium and transferred to a suitable growth medium, adaptation and regeneration processes begin. Adaptation is necessary because the growth conditions differ from those in the tissue’s previous environment. This can be synthetic or natural.
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Once protoplasts are separated from the isolation medium and transferred to a suitable growth medium, adaptation and regeneration processes begin. Adaptation is necessary because the growth conditions differ from those in the tissue’s previous environment. This can be synthetic or natural.
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Natural products from plant cell cultures
2007Plants produce complex small molecules - natural products - that exhibit anticancer, antimalarial and antimicrobial activity. These molecules play a key role in human medicine. However, plants typically produce these compounds in low quantities, and harvesting plant natural products is frequently expensive, time-consuming and environmentally damaging ...
McCoy, Elizabeth, O'Connor, Sarah E.
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Plant Cell Cultures: Bioreactors for Industrial Production
2010The recent biotechnology boom has triggered increased interest in plant cell cultures, since a number of firms and academic institutions investigated intensively to rise the production of very promising bioactive compounds. In alternative to wild collection or plant cultivation, the production of useful and valuable secondary metabolites in large ...
Ruffoni, B +3 more
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Plant Cell Suspension Cultures
1973Publisher Summary This chapter focuses on the applications of plant cell suspension cultures. Plant cell cultures have been used in a variety of ways to clarify normal and diseased growth and differentiation of plants. Cultures can be established and maintained either on agar or in liquid media.
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