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Gordon G. Allison

Researcher at Aberystwyth University

Publications -  66
Citations -  3033

Gordon G. Allison is an academic researcher from Aberystwyth University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Miscanthus & Biomass. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 65 publications receiving 2786 citations. Previous affiliations of Gordon G. Allison include Max Planck Society & University of Liverpool.

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GC-MS libraries for the rapid identification of metabolites in complex biological samples

TL;DR: A platform for mass spectral and retention time index libraries that will enable metabolite profiling and should ameliorate many of the problems that each laboratory will face both for the initial establishment of metabolome analysis and for its maintenance at a constant sample throughput.
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Transgenic plants as factories for biopharmaceuticals.

TL;DR: Transgenic plant-derived biopharmaceuticals, such as glucocerebrosidase, could become much cheaper and more plentiful through production in transgenic plants, making immunization programs in developing countries cheaper and potentially easier to administer.
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Food vs. fuel: the use of land for lignocellulosic 'next generation' energy crops that minimize competition with primary food production.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the vision for bioenergy in terms of four major gains for society: a reduction in C emissions from the substitution of fossil fuels with appropriate energy crops, a significant contribution to energy security by reductions in fossil fuel dependence, for example, to meet government targets, new options that stimulate rural and urban economic development, and reduced dependence of global agriculture on fossil fuels.
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New opportunities for the exploitation of energy crops by thermochemical conversion in Northern Europe and the UK

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine the energy crop species that are suitable for Northern Europe; discuss the processes of combustion, gasification and pyrolysis, and explore how differences in chemical composition influence conversion efficiency.
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De novo assembly of red clover transcriptome based on RNA-Seq data provides insight into drought response, gene discovery and marker identification

TL;DR: This de novo assembly of a red clover transcriptome from leaf material of droughted and non-droughted plants provides a rich source for gene identification, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) and short sequence repeats (SSR).