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						New text investigates  plant-based bioactive compounds
Joseph Sherma, Larkin Professor Emeritus of Chemistry,  published a new book focusing on the topic of thin layer chromatograph  (TLC).
Entitled Thin Layer Chromatography in Phytochemistry,  Sherma authored two chapters and co-edited the text with Monika  Waksmundzka-Hajnos of the Medical University of Lublin, Poland, and  Teresa Kowalska of the University of Silesia, Poland. It is an  installment of the Chromatographic Science Series published by CRC  Press.
Thin layer chromatography is increasingly used in the fields of plant  chemistry, biochemistry, and molecular biology. Advantages such as  speed, versatility, and low cost make it one of the leading techniques  used for locating and analyzing bioactive components in plants.
Sherma’s new book is the first source devoted to supplying  state-of-the-art information on TLC as it applies to the separation,  identification, quantification, and isolation of medicinal plant  components. Renowned scientists working with laboratories around the  world demonstrate the applicability of TLC to a remarkable diversity of  fields including plant genetics, drug discovery, nutraceuticals, and  toxicology.
CRC Press describes Thin Layer Chromatography in Phytochemistry as “an essential bench-top companion and reference on using TLC for  the study of plant-based bioactive compounds.” Sherma published a  previous book on TLC applications in 2007 and another in the related  field of Preparative Layer Chromatography in 2006.
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