G
Geoffrey A. Lane
Researcher at AgResearch
Publications - 63
Citations - 2702
Geoffrey A. Lane is an academic researcher from AgResearch. The author has contributed to research in topics: Endophyte & Ergovaline. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 63 publications receiving 2522 citations. Previous affiliations of Geoffrey A. Lane include Massey University & Industrial Research Limited.
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Journal ArticleDOI
A proposed framework for the description of plant metabolomics experiments and their results
Helen Jenkins,Nigel Hardy,Manfred Beckmann,John Draper,Aileen R. Smith,Janet Taylor,Janet Taylor,Oliver Fiehn,Royston Goodacre,Raoul J. Bino,Robert Hall,Joachim Kopka,Geoffrey A. Lane,Markus Lange,Jang R Liu,Pedro Mendes,Basil J. Nikolau,Stephen G. Oliver,Norman W. Paton,Sue Rhee,Ute Roessner-Tunali,Kazuki Saito,Jørn Smedsgaard,Lloyd W. Sumner,Trevor L. Wang,Sean Walsh,Eve Syrkin Wurtele,Douglas B. Kell +27 more
TL;DR: A data model for plant metabolomics known as ArMet (architecture for metabolomics) is presented, which encompasses the entire experimental time line from experiment definition and description of biological source material, through sample growth and preparation to the results of chemical analysis.
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Pastoral and species flavour in lambs raised on pasture, lucerne or maize
TL;DR: It was concluded that 3-methylindole was the major cause of pastoral flavour in sheepmeat, and that fat oxidation products represented a background flavour that varied quantitatively but not qualitatively with fatty acid profile.
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A complex ergovaline gene cluster in epichloe endophytes of grasses.
Damien J. Fleetwood,Damien J. Fleetwood,Barry Scott,Geoffrey A. Lane,Aiko Tanaka,Richard D. Johnson +5 more
TL;DR: A genetic foundation for elucidating biochemical steps in the ergovaline pathway, the ecological role of individual ergot alkaloid compounds, and the regulation of their synthesis in planta is provided.
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Alkylation or Silylation for Analysis of Amino and Non-Amino Organic Acids by GC-MS?
TL;DR: The widely used TMS derivatization method showed poorer reproducibility and instability during chromatographic runs while the MCF derivatives presented better analytical performance, and seems to be preferable for the analysis of polyfunctional amines, nucleotides and organic acids in microbial metabolomics studies.
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Extracellular metabolomics: a metabolic footprinting approach to assess fiber degradation in complex media.
Silas G. Villas-Boas,Samantha Joan Noel,Geoffrey A. Lane,Graeme T. Attwood,Adrian L. Cookson +4 more
TL;DR: The implementation and optimization of a method for high-throughput analysis of metabolites produced by the breakdown of natural polysaccharides by microorganisms are reported, and it is demonstrated that the metabolic footprinting profile data distinguish among sample types such as typical metabolomics data.