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… 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 … live in the root nodules of plants. And these guys were sequenced, and you can see that different Frankia have … It kind of looks like a sock puppet of a Yeti with a large purple lollipop attached to its mouth. We’ll have to put a …
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… of viral infection cycle in wild populations of green sulfur bacteria with long standing virus-host interactions. ISME J. … et al. (2019) Cryptic inoviruses revealed as pervasive in bacteria and archaea across Earth’s biomes. Nature …
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… to explore the vast and diverse world of microbes. Studying bacteria and archaea, including those associated with … to explore microbial diversity — with an emphasis on bacteria and archaea, and including those associated with … microorganisms, by sequencing large populations of bacteria and archaea in their natural environments using …
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… manipulation in the laboratory. Both germplasm (sequenced mutants and natural accessions) and protocols …
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… learned a lot so much history from this conversation about why the ocean was basically unexplored until the 70s, and … into the secondary metabolism of some more novel marine bacteria. You know, I first met Bill as a postdoc working … forward to seeing the data when it finally gets off the sequencers. The pandemic has obviously slowed JGI down a …
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… cell types and associated organisms, including fungal and bacterial symbionts, detrimental microbial pathogens, and … This is a dynamic and complex ecosystem that includes bacteria, fungi, viruses. Resident viruses can be found in a myriad of bacterial strains, whereby they can modulate host …
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… through end-to-end automation — and further advancing sequence applications, single cell genomics, biodesign, and … [QA/QC]), large-scale liquid handling automation, and sequence analysis. … access to cutting-edge cell sorting, DNA amplification, and sequence analysis to recover the genomes of uncultivated …
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… there are any kind of dated references to the news, that’s why. But it was a really fun conversation. And I think … they spread, why do they spread in a certain way from one bacteria to another, how do they change then, and why are … it would work, but we actually found fosmids. And we sequenced the whole fosmid at the time with Sanger …
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… When submitting sequences to the JGI DNA Synthesis program, please include … Sequence files for all constructs should be emailed to … several easy-to-use open source tools for converting DNA sequence files into well-formed GenBank files. ApE is an …
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… about something I can kind of see like the squid and the bacteria and how the chemistry is going back and forth … does some really exciting work there. And I thought, well, why don’t we try to go to Alaska and see what we can find … with any kind of gene cluster identification, doing it with sequence alone you have to have some kind of a template to …
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… And a lot of us moved on to work in simpler systems, like bacteria, where we figure we can make more progress faster, … you maybe explain what’s going on with their biology and why they’re so important to natural products? ERIC: Sure. … turns a peptide, for example, from a disordered sequence into an antibiotic that kills bacteria through a …
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… of microbial metabolism towards a minority of cultivated bacteria, still persists to date. Research Team … show that the gap between cultivated and uncultivated Bacteria and Archaea has steadily been widening since 2005. … is also reflected in the strongly biased representation of sequenced genomes in the public domain, the bulk of which …
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