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… want to note that this episode will be monumental as the last episode with Alison as my co-host. We recorded this an … that there was almost nothing. Now, this is back in the 1970s. So, I thought to myself, maybe I can use my … Institution of Oceanography, which of course is part of the University of California San Diego. I walked into the …
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… Alison and I talk to Roger Linington, from Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, Canada. This is the last of the podcasts we recorded in my hotel room at SIMB, … about the topic we cared about. And that gave us about 12,000 molecules. And that was enough for us to build a …
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… have our conversation with Professor Eric Schmidt, from the University of Utah. I’ve known Eric for a long time – we … on the amazing John Faulkner’s work, who passed away about 17 years ago now. It looked really interesting. He was … of them are mollusks – and so we’ve had a chance in the last couple of years to go back to the sea slugs. And we do …
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… welcome back to Natural Prodcast, and this will be episode 11. This continues our little sprint on genome mining. In the last episode , Alison and I talked about the basics of … our conversation with Marnix Medema , from Wageningen University in the Netherlands. Marnix is still pretty young, …
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… an Assistant Professor from the Chemistry department at the University of Utah, so that makes him one of Jackie’s … asking you know how did you get started. I know you’re not classically trained originally in natural products. And so do … like a nice summer day in Seattle I think this was like 2013 or 2014. And antiSMASH — I know you’ve interviewed Marnix …
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… with Dr Elizabeth (or Betsy) Parkinson from Purdue University. She’s in the Department of Chemistry and the … us a little bit of your background because you do-- you're classically trained as a synthetic chemist. BETSY PARKINSON: … people what that number is. BETSY PARKINSON: So micromolar, 10 to the negative 6th. Nanomolar, 10 to the negative 9th. …
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… of secondary metabolism. Welcome back. This will be episode 12 of Natural Prodcast. And it’s our conversation with Nadine Ziemert from the University of Tübingen in Germany. Like me, she’s a genome … from University of Tübingen. And did I pronounce your last name correctly, Nadine? NADINE ZIEMERT: Yes, perfect. …
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… being an optical engineering major after which was really laser physics, and then I switched to chemical engineering … so there are– I hesitate to make a guess but maybe 50 to 100 different strains and they are in individual tubules. … there are folks that are lucky enough to have them at their University. We are not one of them. And so our throughput …
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… stuff together. It’s been kind of a theme, I think, in the last couple of conversations that we’ve had on this podcast, … was actually when I was traveling at the end of first year University. Quite a lot of people in Europe do this … inside them. And this was, I think it must’ve been about 2001, maybe, and so it was before smartphones and before …
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… will provide access to its biorepository at Arizona State University, which contains representative samples of the …
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… to talk about all the cool work she’s doing over at the University of Utah. So, you’ll be hearing about microbiology … and Bryce Foster and too many others to name at JGI for the last two years or so. SMC is now released and ready for the … And you have these different types of particulate like 2.5, 10 PPMs and just the size of the particle and how far they …
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