The book focuses on interesting topics in plant biotechnology and its applications. The first section covers a number of specific medicinal plants and their secondary metabolites using genetic and metabolic engineering. The pharmaceutical uses of these plant bioactive compounds and their applications in treating a variety of diseases including cancer, as well as recent works on in silico and bioinformatic analysis are described. The second section deals with innovative plant molecular pharming approaches and reviews the potential for using various plant host systems to design and produce effective new drugs to treat different illnesses and diseases such as HIV, infectious diseases, and other human and livestock diseases.
Part 1-Plant Secondary Metabolism 1. Withania somnifera: A Future Pharma Factory 2. Biotechnological Approaches for Tropane Alkaloids Production 3. Anticancer Mechanisms of Plant Secondary Metabolism 4. In silico and Computational Analysis of Plant Secondary Metabolites from African Medicinal Plants 5. Botany, Phytochemistry, Pharmacology and Toxicity of the Southern African Strychnos Species 6. Preference of Agrobacterium rhizogenes Mediated Transformation of Angiosperms Part 2- Plant Molecular Pharming 7. Plant Molecular Pharming: Methods, Tools, Challenges Ahead for Production of Recombinant Proteins, and Potential Solutions 8. Plant-based Vaccines against Livestock Diseases: Way to Achieve Several Sustainable Development Goals 9. Chloroplast Biotechnology Tools for Industrial and Clinical Applications 10. Plant Virus-Based Expression Vectors and their Applications in Foreign Protein/Antigen Expression 11. Plant Molecular Pharming of Biologics to Combat HIV
Professor Abdullah Makhzoum received his PhD from the University of Tours in France, and completed his postdoctoral fellowship as well visitor Scientist at Western University in Ontario, Canada. Abdullah has published numerous research papers, chapters and reviews, and he is now working as an associate professor in the department of Biological Sciences and Biotechnology at BIUST University. His research interests include most aspects of plant biotechnology and its applications such as plant secondary metabolites, plant molecular pharming, phytoremediation and Plant Bioinformatics. Professor Kathleen Hefferon received her PhD from the Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Cornell University. Kathleen has published several research papers, chapters and reviews, and has written three books. Kathleen is the Fulbright Canada Research Chair of Global Food Security and has been a visiting professor at the University of Toronto over the past year. Her research interests include virus expression vectors, food security agricultural biotechnology and global health. Kathleen lives in New York with her husband and two children.