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Contributing Authors Include Rufus Lumry, Henry Eyring, John R. Platt And Others.
Additional Editors Are Hermann J. Muller And Lauriston S. Taylor. Contributing Authors Include Norman H. Giles, Jr., J. Gordon Carlson, W. L. Russell And Others.
Additional Editors Are Hermann J. Muller And Lauriston S. Taylor. Contributing Authors Include Ugo Fano, L. D. Marinelli, L. S. Taylor And Others.
Additional Editors Are Arthur W. Pollister And Lewis J. Stadler. Contributing Authors Include Robert Livingston, L. J. Buttolph, J. A. Sanderson And Others.
The best protection against environmental mutagens is to identify them before they ever come into general use. But it is always possible that some substance will escape detection and affect a large number of persons without this being realized until later generations. This article considers ways in which such a genetic emergency might be promptly detected. A mutation-detecting system should be relevant in that it tests for effects that are as closely related as possible to those that are feared. It should be sensitive enough to detect a moderate increase in mutation rate, able to discover the increase promptly before more damage is done, responsive to various kinds of mutational events, and designed in such a way as to maxi- mize the probability that the Gause of an increase can be found. Methods based on germinal mutation necessarily involve enormous numbers of persons and tests. On the other hand, with somatic mutations the individual cell becomes the unit of measurement rather than the in- dividual person. For this reason, I think that somatic tests are preferable to germinal tests, despite the fact that it is germinal mutations which are feared.
The ready acceptance and wide demand for copies of the first two volumes of Chemical Mutagens: Principles and Methods Jar Their Detection have demon strated the need for wider dissemination of information on this timely and urgent subject.
Its Panel on Mutagenicity recommends that all currently used pesticides be tested for mutagenicity in several recently developed and relatively simple systems.
Omenn Dean, Public Health and Community Medicine University of Washington Seattle, Washington 98195 On behalf of the University of Washington, the City of Seattle, the sponsors and donors, and my co-organizers, I am delighted to welcome all of you to this Conference on Genetic Control of Environ mental Pollutants.
This symposium is the third in a series featuring the propaga tion of higher plants through tissue culture. One of the aims of these symposia was to examine the current state of-the-art in tissue culture technology and to relate this state of technology to practical, applied, and commercial interests.
to discuss both molecular and traditional approaches to plant genetic analysis and plant breeding. it also discusses how molecular biology approaches are being used to introduce new genes into plants for plant breeding programs.
The papers that follow are concerned with the analysis of single genes or small gene families. One involves isolating a gene from a cultivated plant, changing it in a specific way and then inserting it back into the same plant where it produces an altered gene product.
This symposium is the third in a series featuring the propaga tion of higher plants through tissue culture. One of the aims of these symposia was to examine the current state of-the-art in tissue culture technology and to relate this state of technology to practical, applied, and commercial interests.
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