Results
… 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 …
Learn more
… 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 …
Learn more
DAN: Alright, so I think we’ve covered a little bit about why they’re important. But one of the things I did want to … – how bacteria or other organisms communicate and how and why secondary metabolites are being produced in the … live in the root nodules of plants. And these guys were sequenced, and you can see that different Frankia have …
Learn more
… development of complex biomolecules — which can include antimicrobial and anti-pest compounds. The program is working … interactions, focusing on how environmental stress and microbial communities affect plant growth and productivity. … manipulation in the laboratory. Both germplasm (sequenced mutants and natural accessions) and protocols …
Learn more
… including fungal and bacterial symbionts, detrimental microbial pathogens, and associated viruses that all … how plants self-organize, influence, and are influenced by microbial partners. We use a variety of genomics-powered …
Learn more
A deep dive into microbial genomics reveals one bacterial species is made of … of SAR324 cells and their gene expression, the team then sequenced community genomes and expressed gene transcripts … ecotypes because, historically, they have used the sequence of a “marker gene,” namely the 16S ribosomal RNA …
Learn more