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J. P. Knox

Researcher at University of Leeds

Publications -  5
Citations -  1480

J. P. Knox is an academic researcher from University of Leeds. The author has contributed to research in topics: Epitope & Cell wall. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 1379 citations.

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Book ChapterDOI

Pectin: cell biology and prospects for functional analysis

TL;DR: Current knowledge of biosynthetic enzymes, plant and microbial pectinases and the interactions of pECTin with other cell wall components and the impact of molecular genetic approaches are reviewed in terms of the functional analysis of pectic polysaccharides in plant growth and development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generation of a monoclonal antibody specific to (1→5)-α-l-arabinan

TL;DR: A rat monoclonal antibody specific to a linear chain of (1→5)- α - l -arabinan which is a structural feature of the side chains of pectins will be useful for the localization of arabinans in plant tissue and will have uses in the analyses of pECTin structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cell wall evolution and diversity

TL;DR: For diverse green plants (chlorophytes and streptophytes) the rapidly increasing availability of transcriptome and genome data sets, the development of methods for cell wall analyses which require less material for analysis, and expansion of molecular probe sets are providing new insights into the diversity and occurrence of cell wall polysaccharides and associated biosynthetic genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antibody-based screening of cell wall matrix glycans in ferns reveals taxon, tissue and cell-type specific distribution patterns

TL;DR: The data sets indicate that cell wall diversity in land plants is multifaceted and that matrix glycan epitopes display complex spatio-temporal and phylogenetic distribution patterns that are likely to relate to the evolution of land plant body plans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fingerprinting complex pectins by chromatographic separation combined with ELISA detection.

TL;DR: The sugar composition of the AGII positive populations eluting off the WAX column shows the presence of significant amounts of rhamnose and galacturonic acid, which indicates a possible linkage between RGI and AGII.