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Author | Title | Accn# | Year | Item Type | Claims |
1 |
Petroski, Richard J |
Secondary-Metabolite Biosynthesis and Metabolism |
I05089 |
1992 |
eBook |
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2 |
De Boodt, Marcel F |
Soil Colloids and Their Associations in Aggregates |
I02951 |
1990 |
eBook |
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1.
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Title | Secondary-Metabolite Biosynthesis and Metabolism |
Author(s) | Petroski, Richard J;McCormick, Susan P |
Publication | New York, NY, Springer US, 1992. |
Description | XI, 383 p : online resource |
Abstract Note | This book was developed from the proceedings of the American Chemical Society, Division of Agricultural & Food Chemistry, subdivision of Natural Products Symposium "Biosynthesis and Metabolism of Secondary Natural Products" held in Atlanta, Georgia, April 1991. The objective of the conference was to bring together people from apparently diverse fields, ranging from biotechnology, metabolism, mechanistic organic chemistry, enzymology, fermentation, and biosynthesis, but who share a common interest in either the biosynthesis or the metabolism of natural products. It is our intention to help bridge the gap between the fields of mechanistic bio-organic chemistry and biotechnology. Our thanks go to Dr. Henry Yokoyama, co-organizer of the symposium, the authors who so kindly contributed chapters, the conference participants, and to those who assisted in the peer review process. We also thank the financial supporters of the symposium: ACS/AGFD, NIH General Medical Sciences, and the agricultural, pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and chromatography companies. A full list of the supporting corporations and institutions is given on the following page. Pharma-Tech and P.C., Inc. are manufacturers of instrumentation for high-speed countercurrent chromatography. We thank the Agricultural Research Service and the U. S. Department of Agriculture for granting me permission to co-organize the conference and for us to complete the book. Richard J. Petroski Susan P. McCormick USDA, ARS, National Center for Agricultural Utilization Research Peoria, IL 61604 June 10, 1992 vii CONTENTS ANTIBIOTICS Polyketide Synthetases: Enzyme Complexes and Multifunctional Proteins Directing the Biosynthesis of Bacterial Metabolites from Fatty Acids. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . . . . . |
ISBN,Price | 9781461530121 |
Keyword(s) | 1. Animal anatomy
2. Animal Anatomy / Morphology / Histology
3. BIOCHEMISTRY
4. Biochemistry, general
5. Biotechnology
6. BOTANY
7. EBOOK
8. EBOOK - SPRINGER
9. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
10. PLANT SCIENCE
11. Plant Sciences
12. Tree Biology
13. TREES
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Item Type | eBook |
Multi-Media Links
Please Click here for eBook
Circulation Data
Accession# | |
Call# | Status | Issued To | Return Due On | Physical Location |
I05089 |
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On Shelf |
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2.
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Title | Soil Colloids and Their Associations in Aggregates |
Author(s) | De Boodt, Marcel F;Hayes, Michael H.B;Herbillon, Adrien |
Publication | New York, NY, Springer US, 1990. |
Description | XVIII, 598 p : online resource |
Abstract Note | S. Henin Versailles, France It was a pleasure for me to take part in the NATO Advanced Study Workshop for studies of 'Soil Colloids and their Associations in Soil Aggregates'. The meeting provided me with a welcome opportunity to renew acquaintances with respected colleagues in the various fields of Soil Science, to listen to their presentations, and be involved in discussions which were at the frontiers of the science which deals with the structures and the associations of the soil colloidal constituents. In my view the rapid advances in Soil Science, and the great benefits to agriculture from these, have their origins in the emerging understanding of the structures and the associations of the different soil colloids. It is clear that much research is still needed before the molecular details of the most important of the structures and of the interactions are fully understood. The associations between the soil colloids, and the manner in which they bind to or hold the other constituents of soils in aggregates is fundamental to soil fertility. and the Modem intensive agriculture leads to the degradation of soil structure subsequent loss through erosion of a resource that is vital for the production of food. This degradation is considered to result primarily from the biological oxidation of the indigenous soil organic matter, and from the failure to return to the soil sufficient organic residues to compensate for such losses |
ISBN,Price | 9781489926111 |
Keyword(s) | 1. Animal anatomy
2. Animal Anatomy / Morphology / Histology
3. BOTANY
4. EBOOK
5. EBOOK - SPRINGER
6. PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY
7. PLANT SCIENCE
8. Plant Sciences
9. Tree Biology
10. TREES
|
Item Type | eBook |
Multi-Media Links
Please Click here for eBook
Circulation Data
Accession# | |
Call# | Status | Issued To | Return Due On | Physical Location |
I02951 |
|
|
On Shelf |
|
|
|
| |