Menu Expand
Carbohydrates

Carbohydrates

J. B. Harborne | P. M. Dey

(2012)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

The series, Methods in Plant Biochemistry, provides an authoritative reference on current techniques in the various fields of plant biochemical research. Each volume in the series will, under the expert guidance of a guest editor, deal with a particular group of plant compounds. Each will describe the historical background and current, most useful methods of analysis. The volumes include detailed discussions of the protocols and suitability of each technique. Case treatments, diagrams, chemical structures, reference data, and properties will be featured along with a full list of references to the specialist literature.
Conceived as a practical companion to The Biochemistry of Plants, edited by P.K. Stumpf and E.E. Conn, no plant biochemical laboratory can afford to be without this comprehensive and up-to-date reference source.
"As the chapters are written by many of the best people in the field, to own this book is certainly a must to the specialists in carbohydrate biochemistry, but it is also of interest to researchers working in related areas... The eighteen chapters in this book offer a wealth of analytical and biochemical methods, many of which are presented for the first time, and all chapters provide an updated and exhaustively documented review of the biological function of many sugar-like compounds and sugar derivatives... In summary, setting a new standard in plant biochemistry, this new volume is a very good but and well deserves its place in any plant biology library."
--JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
"This volume is directed at the plant biochemist, the phytochemist, and the plant physiologist as well... A must to the specialists in carbohydrate biochemistry, but it is also of interest to researchers working in related areas... Setting a new standard in plant biochemistry, this new volume is a very good buy and well deserves its place in any plant biology library."
--JOURNAL OF PLANT PHYSIOLOGY