Kostychev's Plant Respiration; Authorized Edition in English With Editorial Notes, by S. Kostychev, Translated and Edited by Charles J. Lyon
Author: Sergiei Pavlovich Kostychev
Publisher:
Published: 1927
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13:
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Author: Sergiei Pavlovich Kostychev
Publisher:
Published: 1927
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Hans Lambers
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Published: 2006-03-30
Total Pages: 265
ISBN-13: 1402035896
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRespiration in plants, as in all living organisms, is essential to provide metabolic energy and carbon skeletons for growth and maintenance. As such, respiration is an essential component of a plant’s carbon budget. Depending on species and environmental conditions, it consumes 25-75% of all the carbohydrates produced in photosynthesis – even more at extremely slow growth rates. Respiration in plants can also proceed in a manner that produces neither metabolic energy nor carbon skeletons, but heat. This type of respiration involves the cyanide-resistant, alternative oxidase; it is unique to plants, and resides in the mitochondria. The activity of this alternative pathway can be measured based on a difference in fractionation of oxygen isotopes between the cytochrome and the alternative oxidase. Heat production is important in some flowers to attract pollinators; however, the alternative oxidase also plays a major role in leaves and roots of most plants. A common thread throughout this volume is to link respiration, including alternative oxidase activity, to plant functioning in different environments.
Author: Guillaume Tcherkez
Publisher: Springer
Published: 2018-03-05
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 9783319687018
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThere are currently intense efforts devoted to understand plant respiration (from genes toecosystems) and its regulatory mechanisms; this is because respiratory CO2 productionrepresents a substantial carbon loss in crops and in natural ecosystems. Thus, in addition tomanipulating photosynthesis to increase plant biomass production, minimization ofrespiratory loss should be considered in plant science and engineering. However, respiratorymetabolic pathways are at the heart of energy and carbon skeleton production and therefore, itis an essential component of carbon metabolism sustaining key processes such asphotosynthesis. The overall goal of this book is to provide an insight in such interactions aswell as an up-to-date view on respiratory metabolism, taking advantage of recent advancesand concepts, from fluxomics to natural isotopic signal of plant CO2 efflux. It is thus a nonoverlapping,complement to Volume 18 in this series (Plant Respiration From Cell toEcosystem) which mostly deals with mitochondrial electron fluxes and plant-scale respiratorylosses.