Team:UCSF/Project
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<center><h3red>Can we engineer organisms to more efficiently produce a compound by harnessing symbiosis? </h3red></center> <br><p> | <center><h3red>Can we engineer organisms to more efficiently produce a compound by harnessing symbiosis? </h3red></center> <br><p> | ||
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+ | <regulartext>When we look at nature, we find that organisms both cooperate in nature to accomplish a task and tend to exploit others to obtain nutrients. Some organisms even collaborate to obtain a mutual evolutionary advantage. These various levels of cooperation are known as symbiosis. | ||
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+ | <b><u>We propose that instead of using one organism or strain to accomplish a task, it would be more efficient to get several strains to work together. The ability to "tune" the population ratios of the various symbiotic strains in order to maximize efficiency would also be extremely useful - especially in industrial situations. </u> </b> <br> | ||
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<regulartext>We are taking three different synthetic approaches to study tunable symbiosis. In the first, we use a model pathway (violacein production) to see if cells can work together to more efficiently produce a product. In the second two approaches we look at ways in which cells can be tuned to achieve ideal population ratios.</regulartext> <p> | <regulartext>We are taking three different synthetic approaches to study tunable symbiosis. In the first, we use a model pathway (violacein production) to see if cells can work together to more efficiently produce a product. In the second two approaches we look at ways in which cells can be tuned to achieve ideal population ratios.</regulartext> <p> |
Revision as of 14:51, 3 October 2012
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