Skip to main content

Grapevine

Added-Value and Applications

  • 1st Edition, Volume 113 - January 16, 2025
  • Latest edition
  • Editor: Paula Filomena Martins Lopes
  • Language: English

Grapevine: Added-Value and Applications, Volume 111 in the Advances in Botanical Research series, highlights new advances in the field, with this new volume presenting in… Read more

World Book Day celebration

Where learning shapes lives

Up to 25% off trusted resources that support research, study, and discovery.

Description

Grapevine: Added-Value and Applications, Volume 111 in the Advances in Botanical Research series, highlights new advances in the field, with this new volume presenting interesting chapters on exciting and timely topics such as Biorefinery based bioproducts and future prospective of vineyard and winery waste, Side-streams of wine industry: insights and learned lessons for making real the vision of reliable pharmacological applications, Grapevine as a natural resource in the cosmetic industry, Biology of the main grapevine viruses and their effects on vine growth, yield, and grape chemical composition, Table grapes: Health implications and approaches to improve the quality during the cultivation, and more.

Additional sections cover topics such as Controlling authenticity throughout the wine production chain and Wine consumption versus health: the dilemma.

Key features

  • Provides the latest information on grapevine research
  • Offers outstanding and original reviews on a range of grapevine research topics
  • Serves as an indispensable reference for researchers and students alike

Readership

Undergraduates, graduates, academics, and researchers in the field of grapevine

Table of contents

Preface
Paula Filomena Martins-Lopes

1. Biorefinery based bioproducts and future prospective of vineyard and winery waste
Xiping Wang

2. Side-streams of wine industry: insights and learned lessons for making real the vision of reliable pharmacological applications
Ariel Fontana

3. Grapevine as a natural resource in the cosmetic industry
Carla Martins Lopes

4. Biology of the main grapevine viruses and their effects on vine growth, yield, and grape chemical composition
Sara Crespo-Martínez and Luis Gonzaga Santesteban

5. Table grapes: Health implications and approaches to improve the quality during the cultivation
Maria Luisa Ruiz del Castillo

6. Controlling authenticity throughout the wine production chain
Paula Filomena Martins-Lopes

7. Wine consumption versus health: the dilemma
Sandra Marlene Ribeiro Abreu, Cecília Morais and Margarida Liz Martins

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Volume: 113
  • Published: January 16, 2025
  • Language: English

About the editor

PL

Paula Filomena Martins Lopes

Paula Martins-Lopes, is an Associated Professor of Biotechnology and Comparative Molecular Genetics at the Department of Genetics and Biotechnology, University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro (UTAD), Portugal. Paula has a B.Sc. in Agriculture Engineering (1996), a M.Sc. in Genetic Resources and Plant and Forestry Breeding (1999), a Ph.D. in Genetics (2006) and Habilitation in Comparative Molecular Genetics (2019) from UTAD. The M.Sc. and Ph.D. research projects were performed in collaboration with the Cereals Department of the Cambridge Lab, John Innes Centre, Norwich, U.K. She is the Coordinator of the Research Polo of Biosystems & Integrative Sciences Institute (BioISI-UTAD), where she heads the DNA& RNA Sensing Lab, focusing on research related to food authenticity and safety (mainly dedicated to wine, olive oil and honey) strategies, on crop biotic stresses (e.g. Grape Trunk Diseases, Colletotrichum acutatum), studying the interaction host-pathogen and developing early diseases detection methods, and on genetic biodiversity studies. Has experience in several technologies associated to molecular biology, biosensing platforms and plant and animal cell culture and an international reputation in the authenticity of food product research. The most novel contributions to the field of food authenticity have been associated to the definition of multiple strategies to reduce DNA isolation protocols from complex food matrices and the development of PCR and DNA-Biosensing platforms suitable for the detection of specific targeted sequences. She has extended her technological development to fungus detection in food and plant samples, to SARS-CoV2 detection and to cancer-related biomarkers. As a result of the innovative technologies developed, she has registered several patents: one (national and international) related to a DNA extraction protocol from wine samples and three patents (national and international) related to different biosensing platforms. Her work has been granted several awards, amongst them: 1st place in the National Commission of the International Organization of Vine and Wine (CNOIV) innovation award (2018); 1st CNOIV Oenology prize (2020); 1st place of the MSc degree thesis in the 13rd Edition of the Fraunofer Challenge (supervision - 2022) and, 1st place in the 10th Edition of Innovation and Entrepreneurship Award of the “Caixa de Crédito Agrícola” (2023). During the pandemic she was Co-director of the UTAD COVID-19 Testing Center (2020-2022) and is Co-founder of the Genetics4U lab. She acts regularly as reviewer for multiple international scientific journals, funding agencies, and award committees.

Affiliations and expertise
DNA & RNA Sensing Lab, University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro, School of Life Sciences and Environment, Genetics and Biotechnology Department, Complexo Laboratorial, 5000-801 Vila Real, Portugal University of Lisbon, Faculty of Sciences, BioISI – Biosystems & Integrative Sciences Institute, Campo Grande, 1749-016 Lisbon, Portugal

View book on ScienceDirect

Read Grapevine on ScienceDirect