International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014
The field of proteomics has advanced considerably over the past two decades. The ability to delve deeper into an organism’s proteome, identify an array of post-translational modifications and profile differentially abundant proteins has greatly expanded the utilization of proteomics. Improvements to...
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| Format: | Online |
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Frontiers Media SA
2021
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| author | Joshua L. Heazlewood Jesus V. Jorrin-Novo Ganesh Kumar Agrawal Silvia Mazzuca Sabine Luthje |
| author_browse | Ganesh Kumar Agrawal Jesus V. Jorrin-Novo Joshua L. Heazlewood Sabine Luthje Silvia Mazzuca |
| author_facet | Joshua L. Heazlewood Jesus V. Jorrin-Novo Ganesh Kumar Agrawal Silvia Mazzuca Sabine Luthje |
| author_sort | Joshua L. Heazlewood |
| collection | Directory of Open Access Books |
| description | The field of proteomics has advanced considerably over the past two decades. The ability to delve deeper into an organism’s proteome, identify an array of post-translational modifications and profile differentially abundant proteins has greatly expanded the utilization of proteomics. Improvements to instrumentation in conjunction with the development of these reproducible workflows have driven the adoption and application of this technology by a wider research community. However, the full potential of proteomics is far from being fully exploited in plant biology and its translational application needs to be further developed. In 2011, a group of plant proteomic researchers established the International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) to advance the utilization of this technology in plants as well as to create a way for plant proteomics researchers to interact, collaborate and exchange ideas. The INPPO conducted its inaugural world congress in mid 2014 at the University of Hamburg (Germany). Plant proteomic researchers from around the world were in attendance and the event marked the maturation of this research community. The Research Topic captures the opinions, ideas and research discussed at the congress and encapsulates the approaches that were being applied in plant proteomics.The field of proteomics has advanced considerably over the past two decades. The ability to delve deeper into an organism’s proteome, identify an array of post-translational modifications and profile differentially abundant proteins has greatly expanded the utilization of proteomics. Improvements to instrumentation in conjunction with the development of these reproducible workflows have driven the adoption and application of this technology by a wider research community. However, the full potential of proteomics is far from being fully exploited in plant biology and its translational application needs to be further developed. In 2011, a group of plant proteomic researchers established the International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) to advance the utilization of this technology in plants as well as to create a way for plant proteomics researchers to interact, collaborate and exchange ideas. The INPPO conducted its inaugural world congress in mid 2014 at the University of Hamburg (Germany). Plant proteomic researchers from around the world were in attendance and the event marked the maturation of this research community. The Research Topic captures the opinions, ideas and research discussed at the congress and encapsulates the approaches that were being applied in plant proteomics. |
| format | Online |
| id | doab-20.500.12854ir-50523 |
| institution | Directory of Open Access Books |
| language | eng |
| publishDate | 2021 |
| publishDateRange | 2021 |
| publishDateSort | 2021 |
| publisher | Frontiers Media SA |
| publisherStr | Frontiers Media SA |
| record_format | ojs |
| spelling | doab-20.500.12854ir-505232024-04-05T17:31:21Z International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014 Joshua L. Heazlewood Jesus V. Jorrin-Novo Ganesh Kumar Agrawal Silvia Mazzuca Sabine Luthje QK1-989 Q1-390 inppo congress Meeting biotic stress Mass Spectrometry Proteomics Plants abiotic stress thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences::PST Botany and plant sciences The field of proteomics has advanced considerably over the past two decades. The ability to delve deeper into an organism’s proteome, identify an array of post-translational modifications and profile differentially abundant proteins has greatly expanded the utilization of proteomics. Improvements to instrumentation in conjunction with the development of these reproducible workflows have driven the adoption and application of this technology by a wider research community. However, the full potential of proteomics is far from being fully exploited in plant biology and its translational application needs to be further developed. In 2011, a group of plant proteomic researchers established the International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) to advance the utilization of this technology in plants as well as to create a way for plant proteomics researchers to interact, collaborate and exchange ideas. The INPPO conducted its inaugural world congress in mid 2014 at the University of Hamburg (Germany). Plant proteomic researchers from around the world were in attendance and the event marked the maturation of this research community. The Research Topic captures the opinions, ideas and research discussed at the congress and encapsulates the approaches that were being applied in plant proteomics.The field of proteomics has advanced considerably over the past two decades. The ability to delve deeper into an organism’s proteome, identify an array of post-translational modifications and profile differentially abundant proteins has greatly expanded the utilization of proteomics. Improvements to instrumentation in conjunction with the development of these reproducible workflows have driven the adoption and application of this technology by a wider research community. However, the full potential of proteomics is far from being fully exploited in plant biology and its translational application needs to be further developed. In 2011, a group of plant proteomic researchers established the International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) to advance the utilization of this technology in plants as well as to create a way for plant proteomics researchers to interact, collaborate and exchange ideas. The INPPO conducted its inaugural world congress in mid 2014 at the University of Hamburg (Germany). Plant proteomic researchers from around the world were in attendance and the event marked the maturation of this research community. The Research Topic captures the opinions, ideas and research discussed at the congress and encapsulates the approaches that were being applied in plant proteomics. 2021-02-11T16:32:52Z 2021-02-11T16:32:52Z 2017-07-06 13:27:36 2017 book 22912 16648714 9782889450602 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/50523 eng Frontiers Research Topics image/jpeg Attribution 4.0 International http://www.frontiersin.org/books/International_Plant_Proteomics_Organization_INPPO_World_Congress_2014/1120 http://journal.frontiersin.org/researchtopic/3125/inppo-world-congress-2014 Frontiers Media SA 10.3389/978-2-88945-060-2 10.3389/978-2-88945-060-2 bf5ce210-e72e-4860-ba9b-c305640ff3ae 9782889450602 407 open access |
| spellingShingle | QK1-989 Q1-390 inppo congress Meeting biotic stress Mass Spectrometry Proteomics Plants abiotic stress thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences::PST Botany and plant sciences Joshua L. Heazlewood Jesus V. Jorrin-Novo Ganesh Kumar Agrawal Silvia Mazzuca Sabine Luthje International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014 |
| title | International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014 |
| title_full | International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014 |
| title_fullStr | International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014 |
| title_full_unstemmed | International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014 |
| title_short | International Plant Proteomics Organization (INPPO) World Congress 2014 |
| title_sort | international plant proteomics organization inppo world congress 2014 |
| topic | QK1-989 Q1-390 inppo congress Meeting biotic stress Mass Spectrometry Proteomics Plants abiotic stress thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences::PST Botany and plant sciences |
| topic_facet | QK1-989 Q1-390 inppo congress Meeting biotic stress Mass Spectrometry Proteomics Plants abiotic stress thema EDItEUR::P Mathematics and Science::PS Biology, life sciences::PST Botany and plant sciences |
| url | 22912 |
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