Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile

We report here on 32 laboratories from Argentina and Chile that include 55 research scientists. Most of these groups were constituted in the last ten years, usually by investigators returning from their postdoctoral training abroad. Some groups are based in institutions with a long tradition in plan...

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Autor principal: Mentaberry, A.
Formato: JOUR
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_07359640_v15_n2_p109_Mentaberry
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spelling todo:paper_07359640_v15_n2_p109_Mentaberry2023-10-03T15:37:48Z Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile Mentaberry, A. We report here on 32 laboratories from Argentina and Chile that include 55 research scientists. Most of these groups were constituted in the last ten years, usually by investigators returning from their postdoctoral training abroad. Some groups are based in institutions with a long tradition in plant biochemistry that are seeking to update their research. Others are organized under the National Institutes for Agronomic Research (INTA in Argentina and INIA in Chile) with the aim of introducing the techniques of molecular biology in their plant breeding programs. Several laboratories sharing similar research interests maintain collaborative links, and many of them participate in binational or multinational research programs. An interesting level of coordination is provided by REDBIO, the Latin American Network on Plant Biotechnology, which organized national and international meetings in both Argentina and Chile to promote biotechnological research. As a whole, the academic production of these groups has been steadily increasing. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_07359640_v15_n2_p109_Mentaberry
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
description We report here on 32 laboratories from Argentina and Chile that include 55 research scientists. Most of these groups were constituted in the last ten years, usually by investigators returning from their postdoctoral training abroad. Some groups are based in institutions with a long tradition in plant biochemistry that are seeking to update their research. Others are organized under the National Institutes for Agronomic Research (INTA in Argentina and INIA in Chile) with the aim of introducing the techniques of molecular biology in their plant breeding programs. Several laboratories sharing similar research interests maintain collaborative links, and many of them participate in binational or multinational research programs. An interesting level of coordination is provided by REDBIO, the Latin American Network on Plant Biotechnology, which organized national and international meetings in both Argentina and Chile to promote biotechnological research. As a whole, the academic production of these groups has been steadily increasing.
format JOUR
author Mentaberry, A.
spellingShingle Mentaberry, A.
Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile
author_facet Mentaberry, A.
author_sort Mentaberry, A.
title Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile
title_short Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile
title_full Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile
title_fullStr Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile
title_full_unstemmed Plant molecular biology in Argentina and Chile
title_sort plant molecular biology in argentina and chile
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_07359640_v15_n2_p109_Mentaberry
work_keys_str_mv AT mentaberrya plantmolecularbiologyinargentinaandchile
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