Liam Campbell

Liam Campbell
  • PhD
  • PhD Student at The University of Manchester

About

9
Publications
1,333
Reads
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599
Citations
Introduction
Current institution
The University of Manchester
Current position
  • PhD Student
Additional affiliations
September 2013 - present
University of Manchester
Position
  • PhD Student

Publications

Publications (9)
Article
Division of the cambial cells and their subsequent differentiation into xylem and phloem drives radial expansion of the hypocotyl. Following the transition to reproductive growth, a phase change occurs in the Arabidopsis hypocotyl. During this second phase, the relative rate of xylem production is dramatically increased compared with that of phloem...
Article
Full-text available
Rapid Alkalinization Factors (RALFs) are small, cysteine-rich peptides known to be involved in various aspects of plant development and growth. Although RALF peptides have been identified within many species, a single wide-ranging phylogenetic analysis of the family across the plant kingdom has not yet been undertaken. Here, we identified RALF prot...
Data
An annotated list of the 795 identified RALFs and the sources of the genomes used in this study.
Data
A comparison of the RALF identification methods used by our study and Pfam.
Chapter
Computational programs can be used in place of time-consuming, error-prone manual data collection. CellProfiler is a free, open source program that allows researchers to automate image analysis and collect large amounts of phenotypic data relatively easily. Here, we describe how to adapt CellProfiler to analyze cross sections of xylem tissue and us...
Article
Vascular tissue, comprising xylem and phloem, is responsible for the transport of water and nutrients throughout the plant body. Such tissue is continually produced from stable populations of stem cells, specifically the procambium during primary growth and the cambium during secondary growth. As the majority of plant biomass is produced by the cam...
Article
Secondary cell walls (SCWs) are produced by specialized plant cell types, and are particularly important in those cells providing mechanical support or involved in water transport. As the main constituent of plant biomass, secondary cell walls are central to attempts to generate second-generation biofuels. Partly as a consequence of this renewed ec...
Article
Full-text available
The woody tissue of trees is composed of xylem cells that arise from divisions of stem cells within the cambial meristem. The rate of xylem cell formation is dependent upon the rate of cell division within the cambium and is controlled by both genetic and environmental factors [1, 2]. In the annual plant Arabidopsis, signaling between a peptide lig...

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