The green phoenix : a history of genetically modified plants
著者
書誌事項
The green phoenix : a history of genetically modified plants
Columbia University Press, c2001
- : hard
- : pbk
大学図書館所蔵 件 / 全3件
-
該当する所蔵館はありません
- すべての絞り込み条件を解除する
注記
Bibliography: p. 147-161
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Providing the first account of the story behind genetically engineered plants, Paul F. Lurquin covers the controversial birth of the field, its sudden death, phoenixlike reemergence, and ultimate triumph as not only a legitimate field of science but a new tool of multinational corporate interests. In addition, Lurquin looks ahead to the potential impact this revolutionary technology will have on human welfare. As Lurquin shows, it was the intense competition between international labs that resulted in the creation of the first transgenic plants. Two very different approaches to plant genetic engineering came to fruition at practically the same time, and Lurquin's account demonstrates how cross-fertilization between the two areas was critical to success. The scientists concerned were trying to tackle some very basic scientific problems and did not foresee the way that corporations would apply their methodology. With detailed accounts of the work of individual scientists and teams all over the world, Lurquin pieces together a remarkable account.
目次
Appendix 1. Cesium Chloride Density Gradients and Their Use in DNA Analysis. Appendix 2. Hybridization Experiments with DNA. Appendix 3. What Classical Genetics Says About Transformation Experiments. Appendix 4. Plasmids, Transposons, and Horizontal Gene Transfer in Bacteria. Appendix 5. Liposomes. Appendix 6. Cell Electroporation. 1. Where it all Began. 2. Genetic Experiments. 3. The Crown Gall Breakthrough. 4. Direct Gene Transfer. 5. Where We Are Now, and the Future.
「Nielsen BookData」 より