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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 … on identifying and characterizing haloperoxidases from bacteria. And with Christian, I started getting a little bit … 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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… colleagues. Aaron is doing some cool stuff with cool bacteria that I’m fascinated to learn more about. He works … of their synthases so that we can start to use the DNA sequence to predict or just understand better the language … your interest in getting into natural products. DAN: Why are you here at SIMB? AARON PURI: Yeah. Thanks Jackie. …
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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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… to explore the vast and diverse world of microbes. Studying bacteria and archaea, including those associated with … resequencing, RNA sequencing and epigenomics. Expansion of sequence space: The JGI generates reference genomes from diverse bacterial and archaeal lineages to improve …
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When submitting sequences to the JGI DNA Synthesis program, please include the following items: … 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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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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… work like ActDES, which is a curated database of actinobacteria for evolutionary studies, and hopefully we can … least, talk to us, first about my definitions of things and why I am wrong, and also talk about some of the great … to approach it is more related to what JGI does, which is sequence genomes. And we just published last year in the …
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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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… the paradigm of how to discover natural products. So, why I’m very excited to be working with Dan, you, with the … develop enabling technologies. ie how to translate the ATGC sequence into discrete small molecules. So, Dan, I’m very … origin is around 30,000 from fungal, and a 40,000 from bacteria. Okay? And among the 40,000 from bacteria, there’s …
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… (see Auspice Statement below) for the generation of sequence or metabolomic data, DNA synthesized, and any other … is done in a timely fashion. The publications resulting from such efforts should specify the collaborative nature of … annotation, comparative analysis, and interpretation of sequence, metabolomics, and functional genomics data types …
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… more than 50,000 genomes that we derived from meta-genome sequences. As always, you’ll find transcripts and show notes … find, things that are of interest. And usually, in terms of bacteria and secondary metabolism, those things that we want … for us– what organisms people use for genome mining, why it’s called genome mining, how the biosynthetic gene …
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