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… comprising the largest public collection of plasmid sequences identified from genomes, SAGs, MAGs, metagenomes …
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… is like, what’s your origin story in natural products? Why are you doing this? JACLYN WINTER: I’ll kind of go back … that I never anticipated starting– that’s not why I came to the University of Utah– is looking at the … have an E. coli strain that we’ve been working on that we sequenced the genome. And it has 17 resistant genes on a …
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… then genomics happened. Dan: Yeah, I did my first genome sequence with you. Brad: That’s right, Dan: JGI did it in … working with you, Dan, on this one, and we said, “Well, why don’t we have you know, the bioinformaticians go against … get made fun of by my now-wife, because she was wondering why it is that we needed to produce more toxins in the lab …
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… out introns and dealing with, you know, weirdness in the sequence. You know, some clusters are not clustered… … it so easily with fungi. So… NANCY: Yeah, I don’t know why. For example, with that – actually there’s a good talk … this and that. They’re doing all this 16S and I said, “Why don’t you just include the ITS too? It’s so easy to add …
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I request a culture/slant/DNA of an organism that has been sequenced at the JGI? … How do I check the current status of …
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… about the basics of genome mining, which is using DNA sequence to identify and interpret biosynthetic, secondary … biological perspective, like what was this bacterium, and why did your group want to study it? Marnix Medema: You mean … had to scale also by orders of magnitude. And that’s why Satria figured out some new clever tricks to make an …
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And at the time, it was really exciting when people would sequence [DNA]. The genome was– well, that hadn’t really … polyketide synthase and then P3. We still don’t know why 20 years later. JACKIE WINTER: It’s pretty amazing, … And that’s what I really wanted to do. And that’s why I came back to academia. And I set that up. And we …
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The genes are pretty much 100% identical. We don't know why one is expressed over the other. As far as whether we're … usually serve as dimers, and then they will bind to certain sequences of DNA. And when they bind to those certain … are capable of making those strange ring systems. JACKIE: Why? Is it just because of ring strain or is it-- I guess, …
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… able to explore DNA sequencing and actually get to the DNA sequence – sequences for the genes that code for the … Something that’s you know … ALISON: Central! DAN: That’s why they called it that! But for, maybe, people who are less … biology perspective, like if you have a cluster of genes, why can’t you just engineer you know, a promoter or an …
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