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Recent discoveries in astronomy and relativistic astrophysics as
well as experiments on particle and nuclear physics have blurred
the traditional boundaries of physics. It is believed that at the
birth of the Universe, a whirlwind of matter and antimatter, of
quarks and exotic leptons, briefly appeared and merged into a sea
of energy. The new phenomena and new states of matter in the
Universe revealed the deep connection between quarks and the
Cosmos. Motivated by these themes, this book discusses different
topics: gravitational waves, dark matter, dark energy, exotic
contents of compact stars, high-energy and gamma-ray astrophysics,
heavy ion collisions and the formation of the quark-gluon plasma in
the early Universe. The book presents some of the latest researches
on these fascinating themes and is useful for experts and students
in the field.
The co-evaluation of plants and microbes has led to an elaborate
system of genes involved in recognitions, attack and defence. This
volume explores the genes and the regulation of their expression.
Topics covered range from considerations of population genetics to
the identification of defence-related genes and their regulation.
The book provides a concise review of the latest developments in
this rapidly developing field of agronomic importance.
Many fungi and bacteria that associate with plants are potentially
harmful and can cause disease, while others enter into mutually
beneficial sym bioses. Co-evolution of plants with pathogenic and
symbiotic microbes has lead to refined mechanisms of reciprocal
recognition, defense and counter defense. Genes in both partners
determine and regulate these mechanisms. A detailed understanding
of these genes provides basic biological insights as well as a
starting point for developing novel methods of crop protection
against pathogens. This volume deals with defense-related genes of
plants and their regulation as well as with the genes of microbes
involved in their interaction with plants. Our discussion begins at
the level of populations and addresses the complex interaction of
plant and microbial genes in multigenic disease resistance and its
significance for crop protection as compared to mono genic
resistance (Chap. 1). Although monogenic disease resistance may
have its problems in the practice of crop protection, it is
appealing to the experimentalist: in the so-called gene-for-gene
systems, single genes in the plant and in the pathogen specify the
compatibility or incompatibility of an interaction providing an
ideal experimental system for studying events at the molecular
level (Chaps. 2 and 4). Good progress has been made in identifying
viral, bacterial, and fungal genes important in virulence and host
range (Chaps. 3-6). An important aspect of plant-microbe
interactions is the exchange of chemical signals. Microbes can
respond to chemical signals of plant origin."
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